Social Justice Standards and Affinity Groups at PHS
Featuring Dr. Elizabeth Denevi
Hosted by The PHS Multicultural Leadership Team
Social Justice Standards and Affinity Groups at PHS Featuring Dr. - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Social Justice Standards and Affinity Groups at PHS Featuring Dr. Elizabeth Denevi Hosted by The PHS Multicultural Leadership Team Program Overview Welcome Intro to Social Justice Standards and Overview of Faculty Professional
Featuring Dr. Elizabeth Denevi
Hosted by The PHS Multicultural Leadership Team
➔ Welcome ➔ Intro to Social Justice Standards and Overview of Faculty Professional Development ➔ Plans for Middle School Affinity Groups ➔ Elizabeth Denevi: The Value of Affinity Groups ➔ Parent/Guardian Affinity Group Experience ➔ Closure and Survey
A Framework for Anti-Bias Education
➔ Written by Teaching Tolerance, inspired by the work of Louise Derman-Sparks ➔ Anchor standards and age appropriate learning outcomes organized into four domains Justice Teaching the four domains allows educators to focus on both prejudice reduction as well as collective action Action Identity Diversity
Monthly Equity and Inclusion Faculty Meetings
Planned by MLT Co-Facilitators and Admin Team
Deep Dive into The Social Justice Standards
Sara Wicht January 2018
Equity As Academic Excellence
Elizabeth Denevi August 2017
Affinity Group Facilitation Training
Elizabeth Denevi January 2018
2017-2018 School Year
Snapshots from classrooms
Alignment with PHS Benchmarks Text Selection for Critical Literacy Essential Question Design Community Building Activities
History of Affinity Group Work At PHS
1990s
Early Days
PHS has had affinity groups in the past, when we had a Diversity Coordinator on staff and strong parent advocacy for neurodiverse
and changed over time and the affinity groups program did not maintain and develop over these changes.
Under Recent Leadership
The Diversity Committee began work on school-wide equity concerns and faculty development; affinity groups was a topic that came up as something for the future once important faculty and other work had become more established. 2000s
Getting Ready
MLT sub-committee research and discussion, outreach and info from
strong desire amongst faculty and admin (and some parents and students) to get affinity groups happening soon, seen as something “missing” for our students Last few years
Now
Here we are, Affinity Groups 2.0, we have experienced and practiced as adults, received further information and training, we are starting with middle school and starting “small” 2017-2018
Plans for Spring 2018
1 S h a r e A f f i n i t y G r
p O p t i
s
S t u d e n t s w i l l l e t u s k n
w h i c h a f f i n i t i e s / i d e n t i f i e r s / g r
p s t h e y w
l d b e m
t i n t e r e s t e d i n a t t e n d i n g a n d a l s
f e r t h e i r
n s u g g e s t i
s f
p
s i b l e g r
p s . 2
R e v i e w S t u d e n t F e e d b a c k
The faculty will review student feedback, decide which groups to offer, and determine which adults will facilitate each group. Faculty facilitators will agree upon protocols and goals for each meeting.
3 Students Select Groups
Groups will meet three times this year, once a month, beginning in
remain in the same group for all three sessions. In May we will solicit and review feedback from students and faculty to inform approach for next school year.
Potential Identity Groups
➔ Students who are adopted ➔ Students who are in families with divorce (or “non-traditional” families) ➔ Students of color ➔ Neurodiversity ➔ Students who identify as girls ➔ Students who identify as boys ➔ Students who identify as LGBTQ+ or questioning ➔ Students for whom English is not the primary language spoken at home.
Progressive Ed was developed out of socio-economic inequality and reactions to the rise of industrialism in the US. It emphasized children as children, not widgets, and put kids at the center of learning. Multicultural Ed continues the progressive tradition, but adds in the importance of racial identity and the role of the teacher in promoting excellent learning. Coming out of the Civil Rights era, it looked at the social construction of racial identity between children and adults and the best conditions for learning.
Cultural appreciation groups
under-represented communities to share/celebrate their culture
community and beyond
Affinity groups
under-represented communities to have a “safer space” where the focus is on reflection, self- learning, and empowerment
in the community and beyond and articulate ways to address them
identity
Climate of Engagement:
Affirming Identity, Building Community, Cultivating Leadership
“Recognizing the importance of engagement across difference is an essential dimension of preparing the next generation for effective participation in a pluralistic world.” Affirming identity “is not contradictory to, but rather a prerequisite for building community” and that “students who feel that their own needs for affirmation have been met are more willing and able to engage with others along lines of difference.”
identity as they get older. Without exploring this part of their identity, children are left without the language or skill to process their social experiences in a healthy way.
safe way to reduce racial stress (H. Stevenson), address what they see in the world, and enhance their own identity development.
(African American Youth) to be the most powerful factor in protecting children from the sting of discriminatory behavior. It directly and positively related to three out of four academic outcomes – grade point average, educational aspirations, and cognitive engagement.”
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Session #1 – Names and Norms; “If I were a superhero…” Session #2 – Trust building exercise Session #3 – Story Time: Using the stories of others to illuminate our own experience (The Letter Q exercise) Session #4 – Exploring our identity – Using active movement to push the conversation forward: what gets in the way of being your best self? Session #5 – Review of the sessions and what we have learned Curriculum based → Positive and affirming Creating Safety → Practicing language