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SoundOut is an
expert assistance program focused on promoting
Student Voice and Meaningful Student Involvement
throughout education.
We work with K-12
schools, districts, state and provincial education
agencies, and nonprofit education organizations
across the United States and Canada.
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A New Vision for
Students
in School Reform
by
Adam Fletcher
The following is a vision for schools,
written in response to the National Day of Blogging for Real Education Reform, a
project of the American Association of School Administrators and ASCD. After 10
years of working with K-12 schools, districts, state agencies, and national
education organizations across the US and Canada focused on Meaningful Student
Involvement, I am confident in saying the following vision is absolutely
essential for school improvement. Here's why:
The essential partner in
school reform- students- are not routinely, systemically, or
systematically engaged in the process of school reform; more
so, their role is continuously relegated to that of "recipient."
Their roles must change in order for ANY school reform to be
effective. The change that is required is the fostering of
Meaningful Student Involvement.
The greatest challenge facing schools today is not the literacy
deficit or even the achievement gap, as tragic and real as both
those are. The single problem plaguing all students in all
schools everywhere is the crisis of disconnection. It is
disconnection from learning, from curriculum, from peers, from
adults; it is disconnection from relevance, rigor, and
relationships; it is disconnection from self and community; it
is simple disconnection. While it doesn't only affect schools,
is does plague schools in a special way.
The cure to disconnection is
meaningfulness. Meaningful Student Involvement happens when the
roles of students are actively re-aligned from being the passive
recipients of schools to becoming active partners throughout the
educational process. Meaningful Student Involvement can happen
in any location throughout education, including the classroom,
the counselor's office, hallways, after school programs,
district board of education offices, at the state or federal
levels, and in other places that directly affect the students'
experience of education. Real learning and real purpose take
form through Meaningful Student Involvement, often showing
immediate impacts on the lives of students by actively
authorizing each of them to have powerful, purposeful
opportunities to impact their own learning and the lives of
others.
As we see increased interest in the entwined topics of student
engagement and student voice throughout schools, it becomes easy
to misunderstand the relationships between these topics and
Meaningful Student Involvement. Student voice is any verbal,
visual, or other expression learners make regarding education.
This can include students sharing their life stories in class,
or graffiting on the hallway wall. Student engagement is the
outcome of learners' emotional, social, cultural, psychological,
or other bonds towards school; it is a feeling. Meaningful
Student Involvement is the process of engaging students as
partners in every facet of school change for the purpose of
strengthening their commitment to education, community and
democracy. It can be said, then, that Meaningful Student
Involvement strengthens, supports, and sustains student voice in
order to foster student engagement for every student in every
grade in every school.
Over the last 10 years more than 350 K-12 schools in dozens of
districts across the US and Canada have used my Frameworks for
Meaningful Student Involvement to reconsider their approaches to
learning, teaching, and leadership in schools. Following are six
hallmarks of Meaningful Student Involvement that form my new
vision for students in school reform.
Hallmark #1: School-wide Approaches to Meaningful Student
Involvement. All school reform measures include
opportunities for all students in all grades to become engaged
in education through system-wide planning, research, teaching,
evaluation, decision-making, and advocacy, starting in
kindergarten and extending through graduation. This includes a
variety of opportunities throughout each students' individual
learning experience as well as those of their peers; within
their school building; throughout their districts, and; across
their states.
Hallmark #2: High levels of Student Authority through
Meaningful Student Involvement. Students' ideas, knowledge,
opinions and experiences in schools and regarding education are
actively sought and substantiated by educators, administrators,
and other adults within the educational system. Adults'
acknowledgment of students' ability to improve schools is
validated and authorized through deliberate teaching focused on
learning about learning, learning about the education system,
learning about student voice and Meaningful Student Involvement,
and learning about school improvement.
Hallmark #3: Interrelated Strategies Integrate Meaningful
Student Involvement. Students are incorporated into ongoing,
sustainable school reform activities through deliberate
opportunities for learning, teaching, and leadership throughout
the educational system. In individual classrooms this can mean
integrating student voice into classroom management practices;
giving students opportunities to design, facilitate, and
evaluate curriculum; or facilitating student learning about
school systems. In the Principal's office it can mean students'
having equitable opportunities to participate with adults in
formal school improvement activities. On the state school board
of education it can mean students having full voting rights, and
equal representation to adults. Whatever the opportunities are,
ultimately it means they are all tied together with the
intention of improving schools for all learners all the time.
Hallmark #4: Sustainable Structures of Support for
Implementing Meaningful Student Involvement. Policies and
procedures are created and amended to promote Meaningful Student
Involvement throughout schools. This includes creating specific
funding opportunities that support student voice and student
engagement; facilitating ongoing professional development for
educators focused on Meaningful Student Involvement; and
integrating this new vision for students into classroom
practice, building procedures, district/state/federal policy,
and ultimately engendering new cultures throughout education
that constantly focus on students by constantly having students
on board.
Hallmark #5: Personal Commitment to Meaningful Student
Involvement. Students and adults acknowledge their mutual
investment, dedication, and benefit, visible in learning,
relationships, practices, policies, school culture, and many
other ways. Meaningful Student Involvement is not just about
students themselves; rather, it insists that from the time of
their pre-service education, teachers, administrators,
paraprofessionals, counselors, and others see students as
substantive, powerful, and significant partners in all the
different machinations of schools. When they have this
commitment every person will actively seek nothing other than to
fully integrate students at every turn.
Hallmark #6: Strong Learning Connections Within Meaningful
Student Involvement. Classroom learning and student
involvement are connected by classroom learning and credit,
ensuring relevancy for educators and significance to students.
This deliberate connection ties together the roles for students
with the purpose of education, thoroughly substantiating
student/adult partnerships and signifying the intention of
adults to continue transforming learning as learners themselves
evolve.
This new vision for students provides all people in schools,
young and adult, with opportunities to collaborate in exciting
new ways while securing powerful new outcomes for everyone
involved, most importantly students themselves. The impacts
Meaningful Student Involvement has are only beginning to be
shown; with time, expanded practice, and investment, I am
convinced that this vision will fully demonstrate not only the
efficacy of the practice, but ultimately, of education,
community, and democracy itself. There can be no lesser goal for
any school, nor should their be.
About SoundOut
SoundOut has worked in more than 100 K-12 schools and districts
across the United States and around the world. Learn more
about us,
and for more information
contact us.
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