This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
This
history-making, UT-AISD Ethnic Studies Summit is taking place on
Friday, March 2, 2018, from 5-8:30PM, dinner reception included. Please
click here to RSVP. Open
to the public, this program aims to inform the community at UT about
the first year of the Ethnic Studies roll out in AISD. Ethnic Studies is
currently taught in 8 AISD schools and is already showing promising
results to which this summit shall speak.
This
summit seeks to provide a unique opportunity for Ethnic Studies faculty
and students at UT to hear from AISD staff, faculty, and students on
their experiences this year with implementing this novel program that
plans to extend to all AISD high schools by 2018-19.
Event Details [link to Facebook event page here; and download flyer here]:
Where: Gordon-White Building, Multi-Purpose Room (GWB 2.206) | UT Austin
The
Texas Center for Education Policy (TCEP) at the University of Texas at
Austin is very grateful to the following event co-sponsors:
Austin Independent School District (AISD)
Center for Mexican American Studies (CMAS)
Latino Research Initiative (LRI)
Department of Mexican American and Latino Studies (MALS)
Center for Asian American Studies (CAAS)
Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS)
Institute for Urban Policy Research & Analysis (IUPRA)
Special
thanks to Lizbeth Lynch in Education Policy and Planning, Sandra Telles
Rojas, my Graduate Assistant, and CMAS Operations Manager, Alberto
Gonzalez and MALS Events Coordinator Luis V. Guevara for logistical
support.
So very proud of my UT Cultural Studies in Education doctoral student, Macario Hernandez, for this extraordinary achievement. Mr. Hernandez is principal of Dallas ISD's Trini Garza Early College High School. His early college campus was just recognized by the Texas Education Agency as "one of the nation’s top schools for low-income students." As you can read for yourself below, he was one of two schools statewide that received this recognition.
Aside from being a Title I principal extraordinaire and a "hidden gem" himself in DISD, Macario is also researching "homegrown teachers." These are educators that are from the community that have worked in their communities—sometimes for decades—as teachers. He himself is both a homegrown teacher and principal and is a testament to the power of this model of which I myself am an advocate [Keyword "GYO," "GYO Teachers," and "NLERAP" on this blog for prior references to this national agenda for change.]
"G-Y-O works! It save lives," he expressed, as a featured speaker at a national Grow Your Own Educator Summit held here in late January in Austin, Texas. As mentioned in this Dallas Morning News article that correctly notes his and the school's philosophical underpinnings in caring relationships, people can indeed work together in unison and improve their children's lives while enhancing the quality of relationships in the larger community, as a whole. Relationship-building, respect, and caring have to reside at the core of one's intention and practice. Keeping schools small also helps.
Felicidades, Macario! Congratulations! You are the embodiment of the very GYO dispositions that all of our leaders and teachers need to have if we are to be positively oriented in a culturally relevant and attuned manner to the wishes, hopes, and desires of our communities.
You have at Trini Garza what every kid on the planet wants. To be cared for, valued, and loved in a culturally relevant, genuine, in-it-for-the-long-haul, way. It's additive, not subtractive. It's about extending students' resources and potentialities rather than about subtracting them, turning on its head the demonstrably wrong-headed project of assimilating youth in a culturally and linguistically eviscerating way.
We are all so incredibly proud and happy for you and the many lives that you generously and graciously touch!
Dallas early college campus singled out as one of the nation’s
top schools for low-income students
by Corbett Smith| Staff writer
It is
fitting that Macario Hernandez’s office at Dallas ISD’s Trini Garza Early
College High School has a window that faces one of the school’s main
thoroughfares. If a student or teacher needs a word, it’s easy to flag down
Hernandez, the school’s principal, and pop in for a chat.
Those connections — built with
students, parents and the Oak Cliff community — are what Hernandez points
to when asked to describe his campus’ successes.
"Relationships are the
foundation for everything we do on this campus," he said. "Being able
to make a connection with that student, it's profound because you're vested in
that student, vested in the community."
Located on the Mountain View College
campus, Garza was selected by the Texas Education Agency as a National Title I
Distinguished School, one of only two schools in the state to receive such a
designation for the 2016-17 school year. The other is Houston ISD's
charter Project Chrysalis Middle School.
The award, presented to Hernandez
and three of his teachers by the National Title I Association earlier this
month at a conference in Philadelphia, honors high-poverty schools that excel
in student performance or closing achievement gaps. One of DISD’s first early
college high school efforts, with a student body that’s 86 percent
socio-economically disadvantaged, Garza was one of 34 schools across the nation
to be praised “for exceptional student performance for two or more consecutive
years.”
Here is a great experiment simulating a dictatorship in one teacher's classroom taught annually by Diana Leygerman as part of her George Orwell unit with students' reading of his classic text, Nineteen Eighty-Four—that all of us people of conscience must really read—or re-read—as it is so appropriate to these times. However, this year, the experiment didn't work with Leygerman expressing in the strongest of terms that our generation has a lot to learn from new, powerful voices of young high school students who have well-organized, passionate views on the education to which they are simply entitled, among other things.
How encouraging as we think, in particular, about the amazing voices of high school students that are participating in DREAM Act struggles and more recently, gun policy involving youth activists from Florida in the wake of the tragic killings of 17 fellow students there. Despite these difficult and horrific circumstances, this is assuring that the next generation will help to get us back on track in a world that otherwise seems to be spinning out of control. -Angela
Each year that I teach the book "1984" I turn my classroom into a totalitarian regime under the guise of the "common good."
I run a simulation in which I become a dictator. I tell my students that in order to battle "Senioritis," the teachers and admin have adapted an evidence-based strategy, a strategy that has "been implemented in many schools throughout the country and has had immense success." I hang posters with motivational quotes and falsified statistics, and provide a false narrative for the problem that is "Senioritis."
I tell the students that in order to help them succeed, I must implement strict classroom rules. They must raise their hand before doing anything at all, even when asking another student for a pencil. They lose points each time they don’t behave as expected. They gain points by reporting other students. If someone breaks the rule and I don’t see it, it’s the responsibility of the other students to let me know. Those students earn bonus points. I tell students that in order for this plan to work they must "trust the process and not question their teachers." This becomes a school-wide effort. The other teachers and admin join in.
I’ve done this experiment numerous times, and each year I have similar results. This year, however, was different.
This year, a handful of students did fall in line as always. The majority of students, however, rebelled.
Photo by Diana Leygerman, used with permission.
By day two of the simulation, the students were contacting members of administration, writing letters, and creating protest posters. They were organizing against me and against the admin. They were stomping the hallways, refusing to do as they were told.
The president of the Student Government Association, whom I don’t even teach, wrote an email demanding an end to this "program." He wrote that this program is "simply fascism at its worst. Statements such as these are the base of a dictatorship rule, this school, as well as this country cannot and will not fall prey to these totalitarian behaviors."I did everything in my power to fight their rebellion.
I "bribed" the president of the SGA. I "forced" him to publicly "resign." And, yet, the students did not back down. They fought even harder. They were more vigilant. They became more organized. They found a new leader. They were more than ready to fight. They knew they would win in numbers.
I ended the experiment two days earlier than I had planned because their rebellion was so strong and overwhelming. For the first time since I’ve done this experiment, the students "won."
What I learned is this: Teenagers will be the ones to save us.
Just like Emma Gonzalez, the teen activist from Marjory Stoneman Douglas, my students did not back down nor conform. They fought for their rights. They won.
Adults can learn a lot from the teens of this generations. Adults are complacent, jaded, and disparaged. Teenagers are ignited, spirited, and take no prisoners. Do not squander their fight. They really are our future. Do not call them entitled. That entitlement is their drive and their passion. Do not get in their way. They will crush you.
Foster their rebellion. They are our best allies.