New Terrain

Jessica Shyu, who taught special education for two years at an American Indian reservation school in New Mexico, is a program director for Teach For America in Washington, D.C., where she supports and trains TFA teachers. In this blog, Jessica will write about the lives of new teachers in today's schools, exploring their practice, experiences, and career challenges and opportunities. Opinions expressed in the blog are Jessica's own and do not represent the views of Teach for America or teachermagazine.org.

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The loudest changes of all

I met a teacher in her classroom after school yesterday for a meeting, and the students banging and clashing across the hall practicing for drum line try-outs was so loud, we had to take our meeting to the other side of the school. It was so awesome.

Because, as the teacher explained to me, at this public high school in DC, there was no marching band last year. There were no after school activities. After the last school bell, you could rarely find a teacher staying after to prep or work with kids. And there was no football field. Kids didn't stay after school for activities-- they were roaming the neighborhood streets.

While we-- the folks on the teaching end of things-- are prioritizing our time on less visible things to close the achievement gap, such as backward planning and modifying IEP goals, the village is coming together. As one teacher at the school said, it is so cool how a quickly repaired football field could change the tone of the school so quickly. The community was actually proud to congregate and cheer on their team.

There is so much to do in DC-- as evidenced by the dismal standardized assessment proficiency rates posted in the school offices. It's energizing to know that changes are happening in our schools in the loudest ways possible.

Comments

I loved how your post started with saying the loud banding of the drum line in the hallways was awesoome. I think that a community coming together to promote afterschool activities and a healthy environment for students is so important- especially with teens. It sounds like the positivity that has come out from the changes in schools is contagious. I think that students will find the benefits very rewarding of putting hard work into practicing afterschool and cleaning up the campus. As a teacher, I think it's important to channel some of my energy into promoting these afterschool activities. Perhaps it should be a requirement for faculty memebers to be a part of some club or extracurricular activity in order to advertise and promote after school activities and campus involvement.

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Jessica Shyu

Jessica Shyu.

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