The figures above were created by Mark, my very own 5th grade superhero, and evolved into puppets. |
With a 5th grader,
two 3rd graders, & a 1st grader all under my roof, I have enjoyed
(understatement) seeing how my own children's learning has developed within and
beyond the walls of their schools. Further, from an academic programming
standpoint, two of my daughters are English Language Learners, having joined
our family three years ago from Ethiopia. Three of my children have
participated in reading intervention, two in speech and language support, and
one in academically talented services. As an educator and a mom, I
understand how varied the needs of children can be and how much of a challenge
it can be to both enrich and support.
I also know the incredible gift
of seeing creative energy unfold in my own children aside from any of the ways
we might describe their academic path; I believe all children have this within. In recent weeks, I read and
commented on Day 5: Dreaming About Education by@stumpteacher #12DOD on Brett Clark's blog.
Josh Stumpenhorst's
post mentioned engaging children at school at the level they are engaged at
home and the need for parents and teachers to come together, among many
other points you I recommend you take time to read and consider. I considered
these words as a mom rather than simply a school principal and shared this:
So many items here that I agree with as an educator
and a mom, Josh. Wondering if I could do better as a mom to share out the
engaged learning that happens in my home. Recently our basement has been
transformed into 'Hogwarts' where my kids and their cousins created a class to
teach one another. My son and his friends also took sidewalk chalk to the
unfinished basement floor a different day to draw bases for their Star Wars
ships as they mapped out what my son calls a figure battle. How do we share
what happens unprompted in our homes with a larger community to demonstrate
what can happen? I know as an educator, I've considered and reconsidered a lot
from observing this in my own home coupled with my conversations with educator/parents
like you.
So as educators and
parents, how DO we harness this creative energy? How do we make that super
power a way of being and not just a fleeting moment when they are very young?
How do we know that the spirit we see in kindergarten can continue to shape
them as learners beyond? While this can indeed lead into some complex
conversations from homework to developmentally appropriate practice and beyond,
start by thinking what you can do in your role whether it be parent, teacher,
administrator, or teacher of teachers to promote and value student creativity;
it is probably more than you realize.
I think back to
visiting a class the last week before winter break that was being led by a
substitute teacher. As the children prepared to color seals, the substitute
talked about what color seals should be and what colors or patterns they are
simply not. I couldn't help but smile as I watched twenty-four little
kindergarten heads shake back and forth in disagreement. One girl stated, “It
is okay for my seal to have stripes if I want. My teacher said.”
Let’s pledge to encourage that creativity where we can, celebrate it when we see it, and be outspoken about “permission”. If you feel the same and are a teacher, do your students know you’re inspired by their creativity and want them to use that gift? If you’re an administrator and you agree, do your teachers know where you stand? Do they know creative sometimes trumps “right”? And back to the initial question I posed to Josh, how do we showcase that creativity so that its difference-making power shines through?
This post was originally written for Kinderchat, as part of NaPoBloMo, and published there this 3rd day of January.
Let’s pledge to encourage that creativity where we can, celebrate it when we see it, and be outspoken about “permission”. If you feel the same and are a teacher, do your students know you’re inspired by their creativity and want them to use that gift? If you’re an administrator and you agree, do your teachers know where you stand? Do they know creative sometimes trumps “right”? And back to the initial question I posed to Josh, how do we showcase that creativity so that its difference-making power shines through?
This post was originally written for Kinderchat, as part of NaPoBloMo, and published there this 3rd day of January.