Creative ways to get kids to thrive in school | Olympia Della Flora

78,051 views ・ 2019-04-15

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Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
This is an elementary school in Columbus, Ohio.
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And inside of this school there was a student named D.
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When D started school here he was six years old:
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cute as a button,
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with a smile that brightened the entire room.
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But after a few months in school,
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D became angry,
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and that smile faded.
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D began to do things like flip tables,
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throw desks and chairs,
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yell at teachers,
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stand in windowsills,
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run in and out of the classroom
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and even running out of the school.
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Sometimes these fits of anger would put the entire school into lockdown mode
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until D could get himself back together,
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which could sometimes take over an hour.
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No one in the school knew how to help D.
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I know this because I was the principal at this school.
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And what I quickly and collectively learned with my staff
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was that this situation was more extreme
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than anything we had ever been trained for.
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Every time that D lashed out,
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I kept thinking to myself:
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what did I miss during my principal prep coursework?
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What am I supposed to do with a kid like D?
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And how am I going to stop him from impeding the learning
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of all the other students?
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And yet after we did everything that we thought we knew,
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such as talking to D
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and taking away privileges
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and parent phone calls home,
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the only real option we had left to do was to kick him out,
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and I knew that would not help him.
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This scenario is not unique to D.
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Students all over the world are struggling with their education.
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And though we didn't come up with a fail-safe solution,
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we did come up with a simple idea:
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that in order for kids like D to not only survive in school
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but to thrive,
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we somehow had to figure out a way
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to not only teach them how to read and write
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but also how to help them deal with and manage their own emotions.
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And in doing that, we were able to move our school
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from one of the lowest-performing schools in the state of Ohio,
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with an F rating,
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all the way up to a C in just a matter of a few years.
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So it might sound obvious, right?
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Of course teachers should be focused on the emotional well-being of their kids.
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But in reality,
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when you're in a classroom full of 30 students
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and one of them's throwing tables at you,
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it's far easier to exclude that child
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than to figure out what's going on inside of his head.
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But what we learned about D,
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and for kids like D,
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was that small changes can make huge differences,
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and it's possible to start right now.
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You don't need bigger budgets or grand strategic plans,
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you simply need smarter ways of thinking about what you have
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and where you have it.
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In education, we tend to always look outside the box for answers,
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and we rarely spend enough time, money and effort
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developing what we already have inside the box.
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And this is how meaningful change can happen fast.
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So here's what I learned about D.
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I was wanting to dig a little bit deeper to figure out how he had become so angry.
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And what I learned was his father had left the home
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and his mother was working long shifts in order to support the family,
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which left no adult for D to connect with --
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and he was in charge of taking care of his younger brother
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when he got home from school.
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Might I remind you that D was six years old?
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Can't say that I blame him for having some trouble
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transitioning into the school environment.
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But yet we had to figure out a way to help him with these big emotions
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all while teaching him core skills of reading and math.
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And three things helped us most.
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First, we had to figure out where he was struggling the most.
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And like most young kids,
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arrival at school can be a tough transition time
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as they're moving from a less structured home environment
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to a more structured school environment.
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So what we did for D was we created a calming area for him
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in our time-out room,
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which we had equipped with rocking chairs and soft cushions and books,
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and we allowed D to go to this place in the morning,
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away from the other kids,
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allowing him time to transition back into the school environment
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on his own terms.
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And as we began to learn more about D,
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we learned other strategies that helped him calm down.
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For example, D loved to help younger students,
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so we made him a kindergarten helper,
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and he went into the kindergarten classroom
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and taught students how to write their letters.
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And he was actually successful with a few of them
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that the teacher was unable to reach.
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And believe it or not,
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D actually helped calm some of those kindergarten students down,
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signalling to us that the influence of peers on behavior was far greater
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than anything we adults could ever do.
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We used humor and song with him.
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Yes, I know it sounds really silly
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that the principal and the teachers would actually laugh with kids,
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but you can imagine the shock on D's face
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when the principal's cracking a joke or singing a song from the radio station,
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which almost always ended in a laugh,
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shortening the length of his outburst
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and helping us to connect with him in his world.
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So I know some you are like,
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"It's really not practical to lay on this kind of special treatment
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for every student,"
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but we actually made it happen.
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Because once we figured out the tools and tactics that worked for D,
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our teachers were able to roll that out and use them with other students.
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We began to proactively address student behavior
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instead of simply react to it.
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Our teachers actually took time during the lesson plan
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to teach kids how to identify their feelings
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and appropriate, healthy coping strategies for dealing with them,
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such as counting to 10,
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grabbing a fidget spinner
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or taking a quick walk.
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We incorporated brain breaks throughout the day,
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allowing kids to sing songs,
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do yoga poses
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and participate in structured physical activities.
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And for those kids that struggle with sitting for long periods of time,
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we invested in flexible seating,
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such as rocking chairs and exercise bikes,
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and even floor elliptical machines,
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allowing kids to pedal underneath their desks.
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These changes encouraged kids to stay in the classroom,
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helping them to focus and learn.
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And when less kids are disrupting,
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all kids do better.
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And here's the magical thing:
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it didn't cost us a whole lot of extra money.
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We simply thought differently about what we had.
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For example, every public school has an instructional supply line.
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An instructional supply could be a book,
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it could be a whiteboard,
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it could be flexible seating,
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it could be a fidget spinner,
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it could even be painting the walls of a school a more calming color,
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allowing students to thrive.
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It's not that we didn't invest in the academic tools --
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obviously --
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but we took the social tools seriously, too.
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And the results speak for themselves.
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By taking the emotional development of our kids seriously
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and helping them manage their emotions,
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we saw huge growth in our reading and math scores,
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far exceeding the one year of expected growth
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and outscoring many schools with our same demographic.
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The second thing we did to help our kids manage their emotions
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was we used leverage.
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As a not-so-funded public school,
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we didn't have the support staff
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to address the chaos that our kids might be facing at home,
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and we certainly weren't trained or funded to address it directly.
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So we started to reach out to local groups,
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community agencies,
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and even the Ohio State University.
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Our partnership with the Ohio State University
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afforded us college students
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not only studying education
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but also school psychology and school social work.
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These students were paired with our teachers
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to help our most struggling students.
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And everyone benefitted
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because our teachers got access to the latest college-level thinking,
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and those college students got real-world, life experiences
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in the classroom.
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Our partnership with our local Nationwide Children's Hospital
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afforded us -- they're building us a health clinic within our school,
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providing health and mental health resources for our students.
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And our kids benefitted from this, too.
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Our absences continued to go down,
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and our kids had access to counseling
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that they could access during the school day.
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And perhaps the biggest change was not in D or in the kids at all.
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It was in the adults in the room.
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Teachers are typically good
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at planning for and delivering academic instruction,
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but when you throw in disruptive behavior,
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it can feel completely outside the scope of the job.
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But by us taking the emotional development of our kids seriously,
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we moved from a philosophy of exclusion --
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you disrupt, get out --
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to one of trust and respect.
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It wasn't easy,
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but we felt at heart,
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it was a positive way to make change,
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and I'm in awe at the teachers that took that leap with me.
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As part of our personal professional development plan,
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we studied the research of Dr. Bruce Perry
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and his research on the effects of different childhood experiences
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on the developing child's brain.
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And what we learned was that some of our students' experiences,
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such as an absent parent,
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chaotic home life,
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poverty and illness,
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create real trauma on developing brains.
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Yes, trauma.
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I know it's a very strong word,
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but it helped us to reframe and understand the behaviors that we were seeing.
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And those difficult home experiences
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created real barbed-wire barriers to learning,
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and we had to figure out a way over it.
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So our teachers continued to practice with lesson plans,
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doing shorter lesson plans with a single focus,
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allowing kids to engage,
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and continued to incorporate these movement breaks,
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allowing kids to jump up and down in class and dance for two minutes straight,
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because we learned that taking breaks helps the learner retain new information.
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And might I add that the "Cha-Cha Slide" provides a perfect short dance party.
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(Laughter)
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I saw teachers say, "What happened to you?"
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instead of "What's wrong with you?"
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or "How can I help you?" instead of "Get out."
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And this investment in our kids made huge differences,
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and we continue to see rises in our academic scores.
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I'm happy to say that when D got to fourth grade,
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he rarely got into trouble.
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He became a leader in the school,
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and this behavior became contagious with other students.
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We saw and felt our school climate continue to improve,
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making it a happy and safe place not only for children
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but for adults,
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despite any outside influence.
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Fast-forward to today,
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I now work with an alternative education program
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with high school students
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who struggle to function in traditional high school setting.
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I recently reviewed some of their histories.
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Many of them are 17 to 18 years old,
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experimenting with drugs,
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in and out of the juvenile detention system
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and expelled from school.
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And what I discovered was that many of them exhibit the same behaviors
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that I saw in six-year-old D.
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So I can't help but wonder:
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if these kids would've learned healthy coping strategies early on
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when times get tough,
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would they now be able to survive in a regular high school?
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I can't say for sure,
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but I have to tell you I believe that it would've helped.
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And it's time for all of us to take the social and emotional development
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of our kids seriously.
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The time is now for us to step up and say what we need to do for our kids.
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If we teach kids how to read and write, and they graduate
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but yet they don't know how to manage emotions,
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what will our communities look like?
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I tell people:
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you can invest now or you will pay later.
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The time is now for us to invest in our kids.
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They're our future citizens,
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not just numbers that can or cannot pass a test.
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Thank you.
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(Applause and cheers)
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