Showing posts with label student mental health and wellness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student mental health and wellness. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Five Essential Skill Sets for Middle and High School Students During Uncertain Times

Future-Proofing Their School Success—Now and After Graduation


Listen to a summary and analysis of this Blog on the Improving Education Today: The Deep Dive podcast on Spotify.

     Hosted by popular AI Educators Angela Jones and Davey Johnson, they provide enlightening perspectives on the implications of this Blog for all of Education.

[CLICK HERE to Listen to this Popular Podcast]

(Follow this bi-monthly Podcast to receive automatic e-mail notices with each NEW episode!)

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[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

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Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   I am currently serving as an Expert Witness in a Federal Court case involving a middle school student with a disability who has basically “given up” and is no longer paying attention in class, participating in group assignments, or completing her homework.

   As a practicing psychologist and school psychologist for over 40 years, I have “seen this movie” countless times before.

   And since the pandemic ended—now almost four years ago—I hear the same concerns from teachers and other educators about many similar students nationwide. . . and, especially, many who are “typical” learners.

   Indeed, a nationally-representative survey of 1,268 teachers, principals, and district leaders by the Education Week Research Center last month indicated that:

·       82% of the teachers said students have become less independent than students from a decade ago—with 68% of the surveyed school leaders, and 55% of the district leaders agreeing; and 

·       Students’ declining ability to direct their own learning and advocate for themselves is hurting their academic achievement and could hurt their future employability.

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   As usual. . . without looking at the many root causes underlying students’ disengagement or lack of motivation—for example, missing independence or self-efficacy skills, digital technology or social media-dependence, learned helplessness or negative expectations, helicopter or similarly disengaged parents, and the like. . .

. . . everyone seems to have a recommendation on what to do.

   And yet, many of these suggestions are too global.

   They are focusing on big-picture systemic, curricular, and teacher-instructional changes, and not on the incisive changes that are really needed. . . those directly involving the students, how they are trained, and how they are held accountable (and self-accountable).

   Metaphorically, schools are using hacksaws when they need to be using scalpels.

   More critically, few schools are asking the students themselves what is going on, and what they need to become more responsible, responsive, and self-reliant.

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Today’s Blog

   My last Blog discussed the “Essential Strategies for School Leaders during Uncertain Times.”

[CLICK HERE to REVIEW this Blog]

[CLICK HERE to LISTEN to the Podcast Version]

   In this Blog, we will discuss the future-proofing “Skill Sets” that middle and high school students need to be successful academically and socially “during uncertain times.”

   Critically, these Skill Sets will not focus on academic skills. Instead, we will describe the underlying “meta-skills” that facilitate students’ learning and mastery of their academic skills.

   And while these Skill Sets are important at the middle and high school levels, students necessarily begin to learn them during their elementary school years. . . both in school and at home.

   Finally. . . the “uncertain times” addressed in this Blog are less prompted by the state of education in our country right now, and more by the fact that the path through middle and high school to graduation is an “uncertain” one for most students given their curvilinear “journey” through adolescence.

   As such, the Skill Sets below help students navigate the curves—preparing them both for today’s and tomorrow’s successes.

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 The Five Skills Sets to Future-Proof Students’ Success

   Students’ middle and high school years present unique opportunities and challenges as they pass through increasingly complex academic and social demands while experiencing significant physical, cognitive, and emotional changes.

   Long-standing and contemporary research shows that integrating cognitive and metacognitive, organizational and self-management, social and interpersonal, health and mental health, and self-awareness and self-efficacy skill sets create a comprehensive infrastructure that supports adolescent development and students’ academic and social success.

   These findings are particularly robust across diverse student populations. Thus, they provide an important starting point for all schools.

   The five research-to-practice Skill Sets described below are:

·       Skill Set #1. Goal-Setting, Active Learning, and Metacognition Skills

·       Skill Set #2. Time Management, Organization, and Study Skills

·       Skill Set #3. Interpersonal, Communication, Networking, and Collaborative Learning Skills

·       Skill Set #4. Stress Management, Self-Care, and Emotional Resilience Skills

·       Skill Set #5. Self-Awareness, Self-Evaluation, Self-Efficacy, and Self-Accountability Skills

   These five Skill Sets are most successfully taught and best applied when integrated systematically across the curricula and culture in a school, when used consistently by all educators and students, and when supported by students’ different peer groups and their parents.

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Skill Set #1. Goal-Setting, Active Learning, and Metacognition Skills

   Goal-Setting. Research highlights the importance of goal-setting in education. Studies show that students who know how to set realistic and attainable short- and long-term goals demonstrate more ownership and agency over their learning, higher levels of motivation and self-management, and more successful academic and social successes.

   But goal-setting is a learned skill that requires ongoing instruction, modeling, practice, feedback, and application across time, settings, and the wide variety of academic and extra-curricular situations in a school.

   One popular and frequently used approach to goal-setting involves the use of  SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound) goals.

   When students learn, write out, and use SMART academic and social, emotional, and behavioral goals, they have an explicit plan that identifies their desired outcomes, the steps and behaviors needed to attain them, and the ways to evaluate their success. Because the plan identifies the skills and interactions needed to attain their goals, it enhances students’ confidence and motivation, maximizing their probability for success.

   Active Learning. Successful students don't just passively absorb information—they need to actively engage it. Using their SMART goals, successful students recognize that learning is about trying new things, making and correcting “mistakes,” and not worrying about immediate success or perfection.

   These attributes need to be continuously reinforced by teachers during all instruction and learning processes. And they need to be a conscious part of how student learning is formatively and summatively evaluated.

   In the end, students learn best when they have positively practiced their skills to a level of automaticity. This involves their active participation. . . something that cannot be circumvented or faked. Practice opportunities need to be built-into all learning activities, and students need to be accountable for their active engagement and involvement.

   Metacognitive Skills. Metacognitive strategies help students understand how they learn best, how to take control of their own learning, and how to monitor their own progress.

   Students benefit from regularly asking themselves questions like: "What do I already know about this topic?" "What am I still confused about?" and "How can I approach this problem differently?"

   These self-reflection and self-quizzing practices—when used over time—build deeper understanding and longer-lasting retention of new or complex material while also fostering independence.

   Other metacognitive techniques—like creating concept maps and teaching material to someone else—are far more effective than passively highlighting or re-reading text(s).

   When students learn to evaluate their own understanding, they develop the self-awareness needed for long-term academic success. In fact, recent research has demonstrated that explicit metacognitive prompts used during problem-solving significantly improved secondary students' performance, particularly for those who initially struggled with the material.

   Many metacognitive strategies are embedded in the Five Skills Sets described in this Blog. Here are a few more examples:

·        Planning and Time Management

 

Setting clear goals before starting a task (e.g., "What do I want to accomplish?").

 

Previewing material or outlining key points before diving into a lesson or reading.

 

Breaking down tasks into smaller, manageable chunks.

 

Allocating specific time for study sessions and sticking to it.

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·        Prior Knowledge Activation and Self-Questioning

 

Reflecting on what they already know and connecting it with new information.

 

Asking questions like "What do I already know about this topic?" and "What do I still need to learn?"

 

Actively asking "why," "how," and "what if" questions to deepen understanding.

 

Participating in discussions to clarify concepts.

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·        Organizing Information and Monitoring


Using tools like graphic organizers, concept maps, or outlines.


Highlighting or annotating key points while reading.


Asking themselves questions while learning (e.g., "Does this make sense?").


Checking their own understanding and adjusting strategies if needed.


Using self-testing or quizzes to gauge retention.

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·        Summarization and Adopting Multiple Perspectives


Summarizing lessons or readings in their own words to solidify understanding.


Considering different approaches to solve a problem or alternate interpretations of material.

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·        Error Analysis and Using Mnemonics


Identifying patterns in their mistakes (e.g., "Do I always miscalculate fractions?") and strategizing ways to address them.


Employing memory aids like acronyms, rhymes, or visualization techniques to remember information.

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·        Utilizing Feedback and Evaluation

 

Actively seeking out and applying constructive feedback to improve performance

 

Reflecting on what worked well and what didn’t after completing a task.

 

Reviewing mistakes and analyzing how to avoid them in the future.

 

Keeping a journal to track progress over time.

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·        Goal Adjustment


Revising goals if they prove too easy or too challenging to ensure optimal growth and engagement.

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·        Teaching Others


Explaining concepts to a peer or family member to reinforce their understanding.

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Skill Set #2. Time Management, Organization, and Study Skills

   Time Management and Organization. As students’ coursework increases in depth, breadth, and complexity, strong time management and organizational skills become critical. Students need systematic approaches to manage homework, projects, and exams across multiple subjects. Indeed, teaching students to prioritize tasks and realistically estimate time and work requirements gives them greater control over their success.

  More specifically, digital or paper planners, structured study schedules, and breaking large assignments into manageable tasks help all students avoid last-minute cramming—reducing their anxiety, and increasing the quality of their learning.

   Regular weekly planning sessions where students review upcoming deadlines and set specific goals have also been shown to significantly reduce their stress levels while improving their academic outcomes.

   Study Skills. As above, structured study routines and effective study skills are the cornerstones to middle and high school students’ academic success.

   Students need to learn and use—independently over time—techniques such as time-blocking, active reading, note-taking, and mnemonic and rehearsal strategies. Providing students with periodic workshops or classroom training sessions on these skills can empower them to take ownership of their academic responsibilities—encouraging them to study on a consistent schedule in distraction-free spaces.

   All of these strategies are backed by research that has demonstrated that:

·        Goal-setting interventions incorporating specific implementation plans and progress monitoring lead to significant improvements in GPA and course completion rates among secondary students.

 

·        Digital planning tools combined with self-monitoring protocols improve both academic performance and self-efficacy among high school students, with particularly strong effects for students with executive functioning challenges.

 

·        Early adolescents who develop strong time management skills and structured homework routines show better academic outcomes and lower school-related stress and procrastination.

 

·        Organization and time management skills more strongly predict adolescent students’ academic performance than their IQ.

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Skill Set #3. Interpersonal, Communication, Networking, and Collaborative Learning Skills

   Adult and peer relationships become increasingly complex for middle and high school students. Explicit instruction in social, interpersonal, and collaboration skills like active listening, following directions, asking for help, accepting constructive feedback, and respectful disagreement prepares students to work successfully in project-based workgroups and to engage competently in other, non-academic social interactions.

   Systematically teaching students how to collaborate in dyads and small groups—where they learn to communicate, participate, make decisions, and take on specific academic and group process roles—builds students’ confidence, self-efficacy, and academic proficiency. This instruction includes explicitly teaching prosocial scripts and behaviors, providing role-playing exercises and opportunities, and participating in alternative-perspective-taking discussions and conflict resolution simulations.

   Research in this area shows significantly positive effects when students learn structured collaborative and cooperative learning approaches, along with social skill and peer-assisted learning strategies. These effects include increases in academic engagement and achievement, social competence and psychological health, positive peer relationships and classroom discipline, and higher graduation rates.

   Communication Skills. Communication skills are integral to student success. Research demonstrates that students with strong communication skills—including active listening, understanding nonverbal cues, and expressing ideas clearly—are better equipped to build relationships and advocate for themselves.

   This, once again, involves explicit skill instruction, and creating opportunities for students to practice their skills in structured group discussions, presentations, and collaborative project reports. Ultimately, these skills contribute to higher levels of student engagement, confidence, motivation, and leadership in academic and other school settings.

   In the end, collaborative learning environments and positive teacher-student and student-peer relationships create a sense of belonging for students, and establish positive classroom and school climates. This results in higher attendance, classroom engagement, student learning, grades, and school satisfaction.

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Skill Set #4. Stress Management, Self-Care, and Emotional Resilience Skills

   Adolescents face unprecedented pressures that can impact both their mental health and academic performance. Teaching practical stress management techniques that address emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills/resilience—including deep breathing, relaxation, and positive self-talk—give students the tools to regulate their emotions during challenging situations.

   Complementing this skill instruction should be discussions that help students understand the connections between health, mental health, wellness, and self-care—specifically, sleep, nutrition, exercise, drugs and alcohol, risky behaviors, burnout, peer pressure, and controlling the screentime on their smart phones and computers.

   Establishing regular check-in routines where students assess their current stress levels and identify specific self-care actions promotes their emotional awareness, the prevention of emotional challenges “down the road,” and the use of proactive coping strategies.

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Skill Set #5. Self-Awareness, Self-Evaluation, Self-Efficacy, and Self-Accountability Skills

   A middle or high school student’s belief that (a) skills and proficiencies can be developed through dedication and hard work, and that (b) she or he is willing and able to invest that time and effort is particularly important during adolescence. Similarly, students’ ability to view “mistakes” as learning opportunities that can be corrected through self-evaluation, revisiting the task, and persistence are likely to develop resilience and self-efficacy.

   All of these characteristics and attributes develop over time through mentoring, peer support, self-awareness, self-talk, and a belief in oneself and one’s capacity for growth.

   Adolescents develop this self-efficacy through a combination of experiences, support systems, and personal reflections.

   Some of key pathways that lead to this outcome include:

·       Mastery Experiences: Success in tasks, whether academic, athletic, or creative, builds a sense of competence. Overcoming challenges reinforces the belief that effort leads to achievement.

·       Social Modeling: Observing peers, mentors, or role models who succeed in similar tasks inspires adolescents to believe they can succeed too. Role models who overcome adversity are particularly impactful.

·       Social Persuasion: Encouragement and positive reinforcement from parents, teachers, friends, and coaches boost self-confidence. Constructive feedback helps adolescents learn to trust their abilities.

·       Emotional Self-Management: Managing stress and emotions plays a big role. When adolescents learn techniques to stay calm and focused during challenges, they build resilience and self-efficacy.

·       Opportunity to Make Choices: Encouraging autonomy and decision-making fosters a sense of control, which strengthens self-efficacy.

·       Exposure to Varied Experiences: Trying new activities or taking risks (in safe environments) helps adolescents explore their capabilities and expand their confidence.

   In the end, adolescents’ positive attributions regarding their skills and success are an essential ingredient within this Skill Set. These cognitive-behavioral attributions include their attitudes, beliefs, expectations, interpretations, self-statements, and conclusions regarding their performance in different situations.

   Critically—as with many of the skills and behaviors discussed throughout these five Skill Sets—these self-perspectives and self-statements can be learned.

   All of this weighs into students’ self-efficacy, and their decision to hold themselves accountable for both their successes and their missteps.

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Summary

   In this Blog, we discussed the future-proofing “Skill Sets” that middle and high school students need to be successful academically and socially during uncertain times. The Skill Sets focused on the “meta-skills” that facilitate students’ learning and mastery of their academic skills. And the “uncertain times” reflect the fact that the path through middle and high school to graduation is often uncertain and unpredictable for many adolescents.

   Five research-to-practice Skill Sets were described:

·       Skill Set #1. Goal-Setting, Active Learning, and Metacognition Skills

·       Skill Set #2. Time Management, Organization, and Study Skills

·       Skill Set #3. Interpersonal, Communication, Networking, and Collaborative Learning Skills

·       Skill Set #4. Stress Management, Self-Care, and Emotional Resilience Skills

·       Skill Set #5. Self-Awareness, Self-Evaluation, Self-Efficacy, and Self-Accountability Skills

   The behaviors and interactions within these five Skill Sets are best attained when they are systematically taught and applied across the curriculum, and when they are consistently used and supported by all educators and students.

   Students’ middle and high school years present unique opportunities and challenges as they pass through increasingly complex academic and social demands while experiencing significant physical, cognitive, and emotional changes.

   Long-standing and contemporary research shows that integrating cognitive and metacognitive, organizational and self-management, social and interpersonal, health and mental health, and self-awareness and self-efficacy skill sets create the infrastructure that supports adolescents through their middle and high school years as related to their academic and social success.

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The “Improving Education Today” Podcast: A New Professional Development Resource Complementing this Blog

   This past January, we announced a new partnership and resource for you.

   The partnership is with popular AI Educators, Davey Johnson and Angela Jones. . . and the resource is their Podcast:

Improving Education Today: The Deep Dive 

   For each published bimonthly Blog, Davey and Angela summarize and analyze the Blog in their free-wheeling and “no-holds-barred” Podcast. . . addressing the topic’s importance to “education today,” and discussing their recommendations on how to apply the information so that all students, staff, and schools benefit.

   You can find the Podcast that accompanies this Blog message at the following link:

Improving Education Today: The Deep Dive | Podcast on Spotify

   Davey and Angela have also created a Podcast Archive consisting of all of this year’s Blog (Volume 3), as well as those from 2024 (Volume 2), and 2023 (Volume 1).

   The Podcasts are posted on Spotify, and you can “Follow” the Podcast Series so that you will be automatically notified whenever a new Podcast is posted.

   Many districts and schools are using the Podcasts in their Leadership Teams and/or PLCs to keep everyone abreast of new issues and research in education, and to stimulate important discussions and decisions regarding the best ways to enhance student, staff, and school outcomes.

   If you would like to follow a Podcast up with a free one-hour consultation with me, just contact me and we will get it on our schedules.

   I hope to hear from you soon.

Best,

Howie

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[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

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[To listen to a synopsis and analysis of this Blog on the “Improving Education Today: The Deep Dive” podcast on Spotify: CLICK HERE]

Saturday, December 28, 2024

Education’s 2024 Year in Review

The Themes that Captured Our Time, Attention, Concern, and Consternation

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

 

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   Today’s Blog closes out my 10th full year of writing these bi-monthly Blogs.

   Over the past 231 Blogs—with topics ranging from research to reflections to rants—I have tried to analyze current topics, reports, and practices in education, psychology, and organizational change, emphasizing effective practices that improve student, staff, school, and systems-level outcomes. 

   I have done this in the spirit of “paying it forward”. . . and while it may result in a keynote invitation or a workshop presentation or a needs assessment or on-site consultation. . . the time I spend thinking about and writing these pieces really is the best “compensation.”

   The world has dramatically changed over the past ten years. . . our country has seen significant challenges and advances. . . and education—in its widely diverse areas—has selectively experienced innovation, inertia, stagnation, and regression.

   Rather than review an entire decade, let’s reflect instead just on the past year, and the “top areas” that caught my (and, hopefully, your) attention.

   Below, I have clustered (with some reordering) all 24 of this past year’s Blogs into organizational areas. While each cluster has a brief introduction, I will leave it to you to personally and professionally reflect on these areas. . . perhaps, revisiting a full Blog message or one that you missed.

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This Year’s Blogs: Themes and Clusters

   While some Blogs could have been clustered into more than one theme, and the theme titles below are broad, this year’s 24 Blog messages can be organized in the following areas:

·       Theme 1: School Improvement: Changing Thinking, Processes, and Practices to Change Outcomes

·       Theme 2: Choosing Effective School-Wide Programs and Practices: Avoiding Media Hype While Facilitating Staff Consensus

·       Theme 3: Students’ Engagement, Behavioral Interactions, and Mental Health

·       Theme 4: Improving Multi-Tiered and Special Education Services: Bridging the General Education and Special Education Wall

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Theme 1: School Improvement: Changing Thinking, Processes, and Practices to Change Outcomes

   Districts, schools, and other educational agencies or settings must continually evaluate their student, staff, school, and system outcomes—especially in the continually changing social, political, economic, and demographic world that we live in.

   Education is not a “one size fits all” undertaking. It needs to be responsive to many different stakeholders, constituencies, and consumers, and yet it also needs to be effective and efficient.

   Strategic planning, needs assessments, resource analyses, and formative and summative evaluations are conscious, continual processes that are essential for school improvement and success.

   But these processes need to be grounded in innovative thinking, evidence-based blueprints, and proven practices and strategies.

   Our 2024 Blogs in this area were [CLICK DATE to Link to Blog]:

·       November 23, 2024 School Improvement Requires Changing Thinking, Not Just Changing Programs: The “Moneyball Thinking” Needed in Education

Using the movie “Moneyball” as a metaphor, we suggest that many districts and schools are locked into antiquated data analysis and school improvement thinking. We advocate that they use “Moneyball Thinking” to rethink and revolutionize their thinking and practices, applying these to linking Needs Assessment results to more successful strategic planning and action.

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·       July 13, 2024  The Seven Sure Solutions for Continuous Student and School Success: “If You Don’t Know Where You’re Going, Any Road Will Get You There” (Part I)

This Blog discusses the Seven Sure Solutions to school improvement and students success as significant numbers of students continue to academically under-perform and demonstrate social, emotional, and behavioral challenges in the classroom and across their schools. Too many schools still focus on how many students “pass the state test.” While they avoid school improvement status, millions of students are not proficient and unprepared after graduation.

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·       August 10, 2024  Will Your School “Win the Gold” for Your Students This Year? Why the U.S. Women’s Gold Medal Olympic Gymnastics Team is a Model for All Schools (Part III)

This Blog discusses the courage, characteristics, and conditioning that educators need to consider so that their schools are successful for all students—especially as a new school year approaches. This Blog uses the Gold Medal-winning Women’s Olympic Gymnastics team—at this year’s Paris Olympic Games—as a model and analogy of what schools need to do to “Win the Gold” in these three areas for every one of their students.

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·       October 19, 2024  Speed Counts When Making Successful Changes Across Your District or School—When to Go Slow and When to Go Fast

This Blog emphasizes that the success of a district or school’s change process or initiative often rests on the speed of its implementation. We review ten variables that help determine if a change process needs to be implemented slowly or quickly, and provide two Case Studies that apply these principles and practices.

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·       November 9, 2024  Delegating Duties and Decisions in a Shared Leadership School: Avoiding Staff Reservations or Resentment

This Blog discusses the significant benefits of having a Shared Leadership structure and process in every school across the country. The structure is defined by seven research-to-practice components evident in all successful schools. These are aligned to six school-level committees—each responsible for their part of the school success operation. The process is defined by describing the different ways to make school and schooling decisions, and the importance of staff training in this area.

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·       January 13, 2024  While Grades May Be Meaningful, It’s Still About the Skills. “Resolving” to Recognize that Report Cards are Less Meaningful than Student Mastery

This Blog reviews a major study demonstrating that high school grades across the country have been inflated from 2010 through 2022. At the same time, it emphasizes that grades are less important than the mastery of specific academic skills when predicting success in the next course, the next level of education, or a graduate’s performance once employed.

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Theme 2: Choosing Effective School-Wide Programs and Practices: Avoiding Media Hype While Facilitating Staff Consensus

   Anyone can buy a website, garner some testimonials, collect some “data,” post a TikTok, and claim that their “new and improved” curriculum, intervention, application, or product has “changed the life” of a student or school.

   That is not research. It is marketing.

   In our quest for educational innovations that work, we need to apply sound, objective social media and product evaluation principles and skills to cut through the hype and get to the heart.

   We need to recognize and reject the fads, and embrace the fact that success in school takes time, resources, training, and persistence. . . and that it does not often occur immediately or without periodic challenges and temporary setbacks.

   It takes at least 12 to 14 years to educate a qualified high school graduate.

   Surely, we—the educators—can invest the time to validate the approaches that we select and deliver to these students. . . to ensure the optimal readiness for their post-graduation lives.

   Our 2024 Blogs in this area were [CLICK DATE to Link to Blog]:

·       March 16, 2024  Helping Schools Pick and Implement the Best Evidence-Based Programs: Avoiding Mistakes, Best Practices, and Pilot Projects (Part II)

Continuing this two-part Series, this Blog Part II discusses the evaluative criteria used by the What Works Clearinghouse and Evidence-Based Practices Resource Center to rate the validity of curricula and approaches in educational settings. We then summarize the five “mistakes” that educators should avoid when choosing evidence-based programs, and explain why education should change the term “Best Practices” to “Effective Practices,” and “Pilot Projects” to “Field-Testing.”

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·       September 7, 2024  How Fad or Flawed School Programs Increase Poor Teacher Morale and Resistance to Change: When Education Keeps Adopting the Same Shaky Stuff, It Will Keep Getting Repeated Rocky Results (Part V)

This Blog reviewed and integrated recent articles reporting that (a) teachers’ job satisfaction and mental health worsened last year, as did the need for student supports and interventions; and (b) districts and schools continue to adopt unproven programs and practices as part of a fad-driven decision-making process. . . with no end in sight. An analysis emphasized the need for data-driven decision-making, and suggested that ineffective practices negatively impact teacher morale and create a resistance to future practices that will effect change.

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·       February 24, 2024  What Super Bowl Commercials Teach Education About Media and Product Literacy: The Language and Process that Helps Schools Vet New Products and Interventions (Part I)

Metaphorically using the commercials at the Super Bowl as a guide, this Blog emphasized and outlined (applying the goals and questions within a sound middle school Media Literacy program) why educators need to be both Media and Product Literate when reviewing and evaluating the marketing materials or on-line reviews of new products or services.

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·       March 30, 2024  How Cognitive Biases Affect Student Perceptions and Educator Decisions: Making the Unconscious, Conscious and the Implicit, Explicit

This Blog defines Cognitive Bias, discusses how eight specific biases affect educators’ positive and negative perceptions of students, staff, and systems, and then address how they similarly impact judgments at the individual, grade, and school levels. We especially focus on how to understand, prevent, or address the implicit or unconscious biases or explicit and conscious biases that interfere with or undermine productive interactions and objective decision-making.

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·       April 27, 2024  Social Media and the “Double-Edged” Sword of Damocles: Survival Rests on Humility, Self-Control, and the Principles of Public Relations

This Blog discusses Social Media as a “Sword of Damocles”  that hangs above us with the power to enhance or destroy those who use it. We can control the power by (teaching) self-control, humility, common sense, and the ability to honestly self-reflective before making a social media faux pas.

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Theme 3: Students’ Engagement, Behavioral Interactions, and Mental Health

   A clear post-pandemic theme—that persisted through 2024—involved issues related to (a) students’ chronic absenteeism and “quiet quitting” of public schools; (b) classroom disengagement and inappropriate behavior toward teachers; (c) social media addiction and peer-to-peer bullying; and (d) mental health concerns—including real concerns about school and personal safety.

   While these issues need data-driven analyses as to their root causes and multi-tiered solutions, easy-fix Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) solutions are continually cited. . . even as virtually any solution is touted as an “SEL solution.”

   During this year, we addressed the SEL bandwagon (and most of the other issues above) head on. . . we discussed the root causes. . . and we detailed the prevention, response, and intervention approaches needed.

   If you are amazed that 2024 is over. . . you understand the importance of time.

   We need to make sure that every school and schooling moment is well spent.

   Our next generation of leaders are in our classroom seats today. We don’t have time to waste on generic suggestions, self-serving frameworks, and unproven practices.

   Our 2024 Blogs in this area were [CLICK DATE to Link to Blog]:

·       January 27, 2024  Strategies for Safe, Productive Classroom Conversations on Race, Religion, and National/World Events: It’s Not If, It Should Be When

Many challenging, controversial, and emotional social issues have impacted the climate and interactions across students, staff, and schools. To ensure that discussions around these issues are safe and productive, staff need to be trained to teach and guide students in the necessary discussion expectations, ground rules, and conflict prevention and resolution strategies. This Blog describes seven phases to accomplish this, providing specific guidance and examples. The Blog also includes a YouTube video of a recent Education Talk Radio interview summarizing and extending the discussion to the next level.

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·       August 24, 2024  Students' Health, Mental Health, and Well-Being Worsens Over the Past 10 Years: Summary of the August 2024 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Report (Part IV)

This Blog summarizes the CDC’s national 2013-2023 Youth Risk Behavior survey results for high school students. Detailing the shaky emotional status of our students, the Blog asserts why students need multi-tiered services and supports, and that an evidence-based social skills program—based on cognitive-behavioral and social learning theory research—should anchor the core preschool through high school universal instruction.

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·       July 27, 2024  Are Schools Really Prepared to Address Educators’ Biggest Behavioral Student Concerns Right Now? “We’ve Got Serious Problems and We Need Serious People” (Part II)

This Blog discusses the significant classroom and school social, emotional, and behavioral challenges demonstrated by students this past year as identified in a recent national survey by K-12 school leaders. Using three quotes from a national presentation, short- and long-term solutions are recommended that will result in real and sustained success.

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·       May 25, 2024  Increasing Student Engagement: The New School Year Begins Before this “Old” Year Ends. How to Prepare and What Needs to be Done

This Blog discusses the importance, need, and how to identify, analyze, and plan interventions for disengaged students before the end of the current school year so that the re-engagement interventions selected can occur either during the summer or immediately at the beginning of the new school year.

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·       June 22, 2024  Does Your School’s SEL Program Teach Social Skill Behaviors, or Just Talk About What Students “Should Do”? If We Taught Reading the Way We Teach SEL, None of Our Students Would Learn How to Read

This Blog discusses the building blocks needed when teaching students—from preschool through high school—the social skills they need to be successful. Described are the specific skills, teaching steps, and scripts—using the Stop & Think Social Skills Program as an exemplar—to help students learn, master, and easily apply their social skills to real-life situations.

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·       June 8, 2024  Revisiting Title IX’s Sexual Harassment Requirements While Avoiding Secondary Victimization: A Procedural Primer. Why Do Too Many Districts Not Know (or Abdicate) their Responsibilities?

This Blog provides a detailed overview of the federal Title IX Sexual Harassment law—describing definitions, required procedures, and sample district policies in specific areas relative to responding to and investigating allegations. It also discusses the psychological impact of sexual harassment on school-aged students, and the importance of avoiding secondary traumatization.

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·       September 21, 2024  Research Teases Out the Impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences. . . But Many Educators Still Don’t Understand Social-Emotional Screeners, and the Limitations of ACEs-Only Assessments 

Given the school-related challenges since students returned from the pandemic, this Blog discusses (a) the characteristics and concerns with social-emotional screening, and with only using an ACEs tool; (b) how to interpret a recent ACEs study that found ACEs correlations for young students’ social-emotional status, but not for their academic performance; and (c) the serious limitations with ACEs assessments’ validity and ability to causally explain students’ social-emotional—and, especially, trauma-related—difficulties. We identify many reasons (beyond traumatic events) that explain students’ significant social-emotional challenges, and discuss Tier 2 and 3 interventions available to help.

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·       February 10, 2024  Michigan Mother Found Guilty of Manslaughter in Her Son’s School Shooting: Should Schools Lean-In to Hold Parents More Accountable for their Children’s Behavior? 

On February 6, 2024, Jennifer Crumbley was found guilty of four counts of involuntary manslaughter for allowing her son to bring a gun to school where he killed four and injured seven others. This Blog analyzes the case and asks schools: Will this decision move the pendulum toward greater parental accountability when schools recommend outside supports to address their children’s significant health, mental health, and wellness needs; Will the threat of litigation motivate these parents to take timely and effective action—consistent with the recommendations; and Will schools become more assertive in their interactions with parents, especially when there is a documented threat of student, staff, and school violence?

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Theme 4: Improving Multi-Tiered and Special Education Services: Bridging the General Education and Special Education Wall

   The research has continually demonstrated that most “students with disabilities” do not have pervasive educational challenges. . . they have “niche” areas where their disability impacts their academic or behavioral progress.

   As such, these students are more typical than atypical, and their instruction is best guided by general education teachers in the general education curriculum in their general education classrooms.

   At the same time, special education teachers are important and needed. . . as consultants to their general education colleagues (and vice versa). . . and as direct instruction co-teachers and teachers for students with more strategic or intensive multi-tiered needs.

   But there should be no general education-special education “divide”. . . there should only be an educational “continuum.”

   Our 2024 Blogs in this area were [CLICK DATE to Link to Blog]:

·       December 7, 2024  Improving Special Education Services for our Students: What the New Administration Must Do on this 20th Anniversary of IDEA 2004

This Blog uses the 20th anniversary of the signing of the last reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA 2004), and the coming second Trump administration to analyze, critique, and make recommendations on how to improve special education services in our country’s K-12 schools.

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·       October 5, 2024  Breaking Down the Wall Between General and Special Education Teachers in Our Schools: How Organizational Missteps Create Classroom Barriers

This Blog discusses the institutionalized wall between General Education and Special Education Teachers that has existed since Students with Disabilities were fully included in our nation’s public schools in the mid-1970s. Organized in five “columns,” the Blog identifies bricks that need to be dislodged (i.e., changed) so that the Wall can come down. Many of the recommendations focus on changing staff and administrative beliefs, policies, procedures, or practices.

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·       May 11, 2024  When a School’s Multi-Tiered System of Supports Needs Support: How Do You Motivate Educators and Avoid Educational Malpractice?

This Blog discusses the multi-tiered systems of support process, how to best prepare for MTSS Case Study meetings using six “First Things First” activities, the implications—through a Case Study—when these activities are not completed before an MTSS meeting, and what to do when staff refuse to prepare and participate in the MTSS process with intent and efficacy. The Blog asks, “Should school staff be cited, like doctors and nurses, for ‘Educational Malpractice’ when they have consciously and egregiously violated MTSS protocols and harmed students?”

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·       April 13, 2024  Laundromats, Lawyers, Learning Loss, and Life: An Autobiographical Day in Education 

This Blog described an autobiographical day in the educational life of a school psychologist who works nationwide as a consultant. He reflects on the harsh and sometimes fixed realities he observed in a laundromat, on a special education due process conference call as an Expert Witness, and during his work in a rural school district with barely enough staff to address its students’ complex needs.

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Summary

   Once again, today’s Blog closes out my 10th full year of writing these bi-monthly Blogs. Over the past 231 Blogs, we have tried to analyze current topics, reports, and practices in education, psychology, and organizational change, emphasizing effective practices that improve student, staff, school, and systems-level outcomes.

   The world has dramatically changed over the past ten years. . . our country has seen significant challenges and advances. . . and education—in its widely diverse areas—has selectively experienced innovation, inertia, stagnation, and regression.

   Rather than review an entire decade, this Blog reflected instead just on the past year, and the top areas that caught my attention. To do this, we clustered all 24 of this past year’s Blogs into organizational areas:

·       Theme 1: School Improvement: Changing Thinking, Processes, and Practices to Change Outcomes

·       Theme 2: Choosing Effective School-Wide Programs and Practices: Avoiding Media Hype While Facilitating Staff Consensus

·       Theme 3: Students’ Engagement, Behavioral Interactions, and Mental Health

·       Theme 4: Improving Multi-Tiered and Special Education Services: Bridging the General Education and Special Education Wall

   We hope that this analysis will help you to personally and professionally reflect on your year in Education. . . helped, perhaps, by revisiting a full Blog message or one that you missed.

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   Meanwhile. . . . as 2024 turns to 2025, and our students and colleagues return from their Holiday Break, I hope that your break was restful and filled with much cheer and joy.

   The “second half” of the school year gives us all an opportunity to rededicate ourselves to excellence and effectiveness. . . to improvement and success.

   If you experienced success during the first part of the school year, I hope that you continue to go “to the next level of excellence.”

   If you were not happy with your success—or need assistance with your next challenge, know that I am always available for a free “check-in” Zoom or conference call with you and your team.

   June will be here in six months. . . one way or the other.

   If you have a choice to act now or in June to improve your school or educational setting on behalf of your students or clients. . . which one will you choose?

   I look forward to hearing from you.

Happy New Year,

Howie


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