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Donna Lupatkin, Facilitator Jane Taubenfeld Cohen, Guest. PEJE DIVERSE LEARNERS CoP June 4, 2007 Community Support for Program Development and Implementation for the Diverse Learner. Conference Call Etiquette. Remember to mute your phone by pressing *1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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PEJE DIVERSE LEARNERS CoPJune 4, 2007
Community Support for Program Development and Implementation for
the Diverse Learner
Donna Lupatkin, Facilitator
Jane Taubenfeld Cohen, Guest
Conference Call Etiquette Remember to mute your phone by
pressing *1. Press *1 again, when you would like
to speak. Do not use your phone’s HOLD or
mute button. If you do, your music will be broadcast to all of us on the call.
3
Agenda Welcome and Old Business Goals Introduction to the Consultancy Protocol Meet Jane Taubenfeld Cohen Protocol in Action Reflection Next Steps Plans for Summer and Fall 2007
*1 to mute
Results from the Literacy and Technology Conference Call
What new information did you take back to your school following our March call-Literacy and Technology?
Which new technology tools did you try out?
How did they work?
Goals of Today’s Session Learn about the Consultancy Protocol as a
means for collaborative problem solving. Learn what one school has already
incorporated into their mission in order to meet the educational needs of its Diverse Learners.
Generate ideas about how to attend to the needs of different stakeholders.
The Consultancy Protocol A structured process for helping a team think
more expansively about a concrete dilemma Outside perspective is critical to this protocol
working-differing perspectives are desirable Offers a guided set of steps to assure
conversation
Factors to Consider This is the first time we are trying this in our CoP.
We can learn what works and what does not. We may or may not know one another and what we
bring to the discussion. We can’t see each other during this session—no
visual cues via facial expression or body language. We come with different areas of expertise and
different perspectives—which will enrich the experience.
The Consultancy Protocol:6 Steps
1. Presenter describes the dilemma and frames the question (5-10 minutes)
2. The Consultancy Group asks clarifying questions (5 minutes)
3. The Group asks the presenter probing questions, allowing the presenter to restate the question (10 minutes)
Consultancy Protocol4. Only the Group talks with each other about
the dilemma to define the issues more thoroughly and objectively (15 minutes).
5. Presenter reflects on what she heard and on what she is now thinking with the group (5 minutes).
6. Facilitator leads a brief conversation about the Group’s observation of the consultancy process (5 minutes).
Meet Jane Taubenfeld Cohen
Jane has been the Head of the South Area Solomon
Schechter Day School (soon moving to Norwood, MA) for 18
years. She is the past president of the Solomon Schechter
Day School Association Principal’s Council and is a recent
recipient of the Covenant Award. Jane has worked closely
with Gateways and the Jewish Special Education
Collaborative to ensure that a wide range of learners are
successful at her school.
SOUTH AREA SOLOMON SCHECHTER DAY SCHOOL
18 years old with over 200 students Located 15 miles south of Boston (the Greater Boston
area has 14 day Schools) Collaborates with Gateways and the Jewish Special
Education Collaborative Provides services to children with mild AND moderate
special needs, as well as training all teachers in differentiated instruction.
The mission is to find ways to meet the needs of all kinds of learners in their school
Step 1: 5-10 minutes Jane provides an overview of the
dilemma and poses a framing question for the group to delve into.
QuestionI am constantly put in the position of fighting the fight, that we should have programs for the learning disabled in the Day Schools, that we should be spending money on it, and that it makes our school better. This challenging conversation occurs with members of my board and segments of the parent body. It used to happen with teachers, but no longer. With the community as a whole, we are sometimes labeled as a special needs school. I feel that this battle takes time and energy away from the actual work. As I have some success, another rock is unturned, and another problem creeps in. Because of the high cost of doing this work, stakeholders sometimes use money as an excuse for their protests. I have heard this from many other professionals as well who are facing similar struggles. I think that this issue, rather than being a school by school challenge, must be bumped up to a more global Day School issue and we must also broaden the base of support for such programming. I want to join with other school leaders to create a national conversation. My question is-”Is there something more as a Jewish Day School leader and as an active part of the greater Day School community that I can do to create a more welcoming context for the vision of a school that includes diverse learners?”
Step 2: 5 minutes The group asks Jane clarifying
questions that require brief factual answers.
Clarifying Questions What is being communicated to the
community already? What have other school leaders said? What is the verbiage used with parents and
boards?
Please hit *1 to mute.
Step 3: 10 minutes The group asks Jane probing questions,
worded in such a way as to to help her expand her thinking and learn more about her question and dilemma.
Jane may respond to the questions, but there is no discussion by the group of the responses.
Jane restates her question to the group.
Probing Questions How does the community hear about differentiated instruction at other schools? What about your conversations with other heads of school in the Boston area? What kind of data do you have or have you presented to your parents about how
mainstream students are doing since you implemented this program? How do you define “diverse learners”? Do they think you mean lack of intelligence?
Restatement of the Question:Is there something that I/we can be a part of that will help build a foundation for the kind
of the work we are doing in our school so that each school leader does not have to face this challenge?
Press *1 to MUTE. Do not put your phone on hold.
Step 4: 15 minutes The group (excluding Jane) talks with each
other about the dilemma presented; e.g., What did we hear? What didn’t we hear that might be relevant? What assumptions may be operating? What questions does the dilemma raise for us? What do we think about the dilemma? What might we do if faced with a similar dilemma? What have we done in a similar situation? What can we recommend?
Suggestions Children go to schools outside of their community
and this presents a challenge. Schools start to become labeled as a special
education school. Perhaps involve agencies (e.g., SAGE). Are they
putting out PR materials—with a unified message. Provide resources to lots of schools to create abilities
of different schools to meet students’ needs. Is this a marketing issue? Can there be a marketing
campaign to change the language and the discourse.
More Suggestions The conversation can be broadened to include learning
styles re all students—the crux of differentiation. More focus on learning affecting all students might help people to listen better about these issues.
Share stories about how individual students succeed. Convening a meeting at Jane’s school among leaders
to generate ideas together. Bring Rabbis into schools for tours to see programs in
actions. Then they can spread the word.
Step 5: 5 minutes
Jane reflects on what she heard and shares with the group anything that particularly resonates with her.
What Jane Heard Convening the meeting. Compile success
stories from across schools about how all children learn.
Power of hearing stories, maybe at a national level, perhaps through a national organization.
Start talking to Rabbis re success and have them help with PR (e.g., sermons)
Step 6: 5 minutes Donna leads a brief
conversation about the group’s observations of the Consultancy process.
Reactions What did you like?
Deliberate structure helped to channel the conversation. Some things don’t get said, but become food for thought. Recognize that the problems are universal. Get strength from other people. Good to see the notes during the discussion.
What did you not like? Challenges? Music in background was distracting and chopped up the
conversation. Need for reminder of the core question to keep the focus. Hard to shape a question when you do not know who the
“consultants” would be? What about bringing in people with another “outside” point of
view?
Next Steps How do the strategies we crafted compare to
the ones you already use?
How would these strategies meet the needs of your school?
What would it take to implement?
*1 to mute
Your Ideas
Continuing the Conversation on www.community.peje.org
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Summer and Fall 2007 Watch for Survey Monkey in your inbox. Tell me what worked for you this year. Tell me what you would like for next year. Stay tuned for exciting conference calls and the
PEJE Assembly next year! EMAIL me directly if you wish with any comments
at [email protected] or call me at 781-942-6311.
Thank youEveryone has worked very hard this year to make our CoP a successful endeavor. We all look forward to continuing our learning and community building next year. I will be available all summer for conversations with individual members. I invite communication!
PEJE wishes to thank the sponsor of our Diverse Learners CoP