TEACHER VOICES: Michele Godwin, #2

“I’ll try mayonnaise.”

Michele GodwinEd. note: Michele Godwin is beginning her 14th year of teaching high school. She’s back at Leadership High School, where she taught from 2001 to 2008. An English teacher by training and experience, Michele has changed her focus to build a library for Leadership. In addition to her fundraising and library organizing, she is an 11th grade adviser. These are her musings from the past few weeks. Please donate!

favicon Wednesday, 9/3 – 3:30 p.m.
Professional Development. A panel of six junior and senior boys talk to the staff about what it means to teach boys. They are poised and thoughtful and appreciate the opportunity to share their thoughts. When asked, “What do you want us to know about you?” one boy tells us that it takes some time for him to settle into school in the morning, that he must act tough in his neighborhood and on the long commute on BART. He has to let down his guard when he arrives to LHS, and that takes effort.

Wednesday, 9/10 – 1:15 p.m.
Family meeting with an advisee and her parents. We discuss her behavior and the frequency with which she is asked to leave class for disrupting. She describes what “sets her off,” not realizing how “meta” she is being. She is a junior and has run out of time for messing around and not being in class. She knows this, and it adds to her anxiety. The more anxious she is, the more likely she is to lose her temper. It is a cycle of behavior that she struggles to get out of.

Thursday, 9/11 – 4:05 p.m.
No one at school acknowledges the events of 9/11, when my advisees were a year old. I’m reminded: Just because I think something is important doesn’t mean my students do.

Wednesday, 9/17 – 3:45 p.m.
Professional Development and we begin with connections. A teacher shares she is feeling connected to loss and grief. So soon in the school year, and a middle school boy has been stabbed to death because of an argument over social media. Many of our students feel connected to the lost boy, by neighborhood or family or friendship. Others can’t help but see themselves in the boy’s fate. All of us feel the hole in our stomachs where hope is supposed to be.

Thursday, 9/12 – 2:15 p.m.
Another family meeting, this time with a boy, his parents, and a Spanish-speaking translator. When asked to describe his goals for the year, the boy tells me he wants As and Bs. I show him his grades, his transcript, where Cs and Ds live. He falls silent as he gets an earful from the translator, the Spanish teacher and Madre to all. The boy’s parents listen carefully, the boy hangs his head, and Madre tells him, “Only you can make a future for yourself.” I feel bad for him; he wasn’t expecting two advisors. I text him later, asking if he prefers mayonnaise or mustard on his sandwiches. He refuses to respond. I’ll try mayonnaise.

Wednesday, 9:17 – 10:15 a.m.
The first day of the new and improved, school-wide, independent reading program. Every adviser has 25 brand-new books. The students have looked through them, examined their covers, written down the ones they might be interested in. For me, the past two months have led up to this moment. My goal: every student in the school gets lost in a story.

Same day, 2:25 p.m.
I hear from my colleague, who happened to be walking around the school during independent reading time. She says she’s never heard the school so quiet, that she walked into classrooms and every one was reading. I pat myself on the back, but only for a minute. There’s lots more work to do. favicon

Getting the new Kindle Voyage? Donate your old Kindle to my students!

Kindle Voyage-578-80favicon Wow, the new Kindle Voyage is beautiful.

I’ll be getting one. How about you?

If you get one, I have a proposition: Donate your old Kindle to my students!

For the past four years, generous people from across the country have given me their used Kindles so that I can encourage high school students to read.

My students and I would like you to do the same!

The Kindle Classroom Project now serves 166 students in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and Hayward.

If you donate now, your Kindle will be the 167th in the collection!

Donating is really easy. Just fill out a quick form on this page, and then I’ll let you know next steps.

Hope to hear from you soon! favicon

Recommended Reading: “Why Poor Students Struggle”

favicon I appreciated Vicki Madden’s recent op-ed piece, “Why Poor Students Struggle,” in the New York Times. Her argument is nothing new — that the achievement gap does not explain why poor students have low college graduation rates (see “Who Gets to Graduate,” by Paul Tough). For Ms. Madden, an instructional coach and former teacher, the issue is social and emotional. It’s an issue of belonging.

But the article did get me thinking: What’s the role of a high school, given limited time and resources? Let’s say that a student is poor and enters high school several years below grade level. What’s the best approach?

If you’re a school, what do you do with those four years?

Excerpt
“As the income gap widens and hardens, changing class means a bigger difference between where you came from and where you are going. Teachers like me can help prepare students academically for college work. College counselors can help with the choices, the federal financial aid application and all the bureaucratic details. But how can we help our students prepare for the tug of war in their souls?.”

Source: http://j.mp/1mqecR8 (via Pocket). You can also find this article at Iserotope Extras, a curated list of my favorite articles about teaching, reading, and technology. favicon

Here’s what students in Hayward are reading and saying about their Kindles

EastOfEdenfavicon Today I had my first meeting with about 25 ninth graders from Hayward. It was really fun! The students and I talked books, and they got to share with me their first impressions using a Kindle.

This is what a few of them said:

+ Destiny
Now reading: Thirteen Reasons Why, by Jay Asher
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I love the long-lasting battery.”

+ Matthew
Now reading: The Lightning Thief, by Rick Riordan
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like the size management of the letters.”

+ Alex
Now reading: Life of Pi, by Yann Martel
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like how the Kindle is slim.”

+ Flor
Now reading: What Happens Next, by Colleen Clayton
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like that it has many books I want to read.”

+ Kevin
Now reading: The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like that it runs out of battery slowly.”

+ Rogelio
Now reading: East of Eden, by John Steinbeck
Thoughts about the Kindle: “It’s easy to read on.”

+ Luz
Now reading: Before I Fall, by Lauren Oliver
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like that you can only use it for reading.”

+ Bamery
Now reading: Orange is the New Black, by Piper Kerman
Thoughts about the Kindle: “I like that it reads to me.”

I enjoyed spending time with the students, getting to know them more, and reiterating my promise: that if they want to read a book that’s not currently in the Kindle library, I’ll purchase it for them.

Plus, I gave each student a business card so they can contact me and spread the word about the Kindle Classroom Projectfavicon