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A brief introduction to the MAKE A WAY program for schools.
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A High Relevancy Education Program
that brings RESULTS!
Created by Educational Success Strategist Hotep, Founder of MAKE A WAY
MAKE A WAY is a high relevancy educational program that targets at-risk and underserved
populations of youth and adults to transform the climate and culture of poverty, excuse making
and helplessness into one of empowerment, resiliency and success!
The MAKE A WAY program and materials are used in over 1,000 schools. We conduct staff trainings and keynotes throughout the U.S.
How was
MAKE A WAY started?
The Hustler’s 10 Commandments has been compared to:
Think and Grow Rich
The Art of War
Rich Dad, Poor Dad
7 Habits of Highly Effective People
(STORY TIME)
And then the teachers started catching on…
Fulton Library System
Decatur, Illinois School System
And that’s when he realized why the book was successful…
RelevantResilient
LeadershipTransition
Relevancy
Resiliency
Transition
Leadership
Today, our program and materials are used in over 1000 schools and we conduct staff trainings and keynotes throughout the U.S.
Philosophy of theMAKE A WAY
PROGRAM
Success is not due to WHO we are
butHOW we are.
Success is not due to WHO we are, but because of HOW we are!
Erin Gruwell
Ron Clark
BEHAVIORis a
SYMPTOMnot the
PROBLEM.
Suspension/ Expulsion/ Arrest due to fighting.
Change in behavior is impossiblewithout first changing what people
BELIEVE.
Strategies of theMAKE A WAY
PROGRAM
PROACTIVE EDUCATION
Do they feel tired, but good? Do they feel satisfied like they put in a good day’s work and are ready to go home, relax? Almost
like one might feel after a good workout?
IS THIS YOUR STAFF?
Do they feel worn out, worn down and exhausted; like they have battled their way through the day? Did they look forward to the end of each class? Do they have a stack of infraction slips? Are
they ready to get home so they can “pass out”; or raid the fridge, for some alcohol because “they really need it?”
IS THIS YOUR STAFF?
The difference in the way you answer these questions has a lot to do with whether or not they spent the day proactively, in control
of when and how things happened in their classrooms or reacting to one and then another and another situation as
behavior problems interrupted their lessons again and again.
Proactive Reactive
TRANSFORMINGCLASSROOM
CLIMATE
Use your differencesto MAKE a difference!
-Hotep
AlternativeTeachingModels
TraditionalTeaching
Model
•Teacher•Student•Class•Classroom
Teacher as a BOSS
Teacher as a COACH
Other Models:
Teacher as a TRAINER.MASTER.JUDGE.
DOCTOR.GENERAL.PARENT.
AUTHENTIC TEACHERS
Help teachers use alternative teaching models to transform their school
climate, to better engage their students, and use their differences to make a difference in their schools.
EXPERIENTIALEDUCATION
Experiential education is a philosophy that informs many methodologies in
which educators purposefully engage with learners in direct experience and focused reflection in order to increase
knowledge, develop skills, clarify values, and develop people's capacity to
contribute to their communities.
Tell me and I will forget.
Show me and I may remember.
Involve me and I will understand.
~Chinese Proverb
Strengths of theMAKE A WAY
PROGRAM
ACROSS THE BOARD BUY-IN(RELAVANCY):
Students love to learn it.Teachers love to teach it.Parents love to discuss it.
Administrators love the results.
U.S. Vice President’s brother, Frank Biden
FLEXIBILITY:
The MAKE A WAY program can be used for: Positive Behavior Support
Book StudyMorning Activity
After School ProgramIn-School Suspension Activities
Class meetings
FLEXIBILITY:
The MAKE A WAY program can be used in a variety of
settings including: Whole classroom
Small group1-on-1
Self DirectedIn-School Suspension Activities
Class meetings
LESSON GUIDES:
Common Core Aligned3 Part Lesson
Pacing/ Monitoring GuideR.T.I. Ready
Parent Inclusion Activities
MEANINGFUL ACTIVITIES:
Thought ProvokingHigh Impact
Promote: Reading, Writing and Speaking
Encourage Discussion & DebateHonor Different Learning Styles
“IMAGE IS EVERYTHING.”
Chapter 2: IMAGE IS EVERYTHING
Lesson 2: Activity Page
1. ACTIVITY #1: Which One? (For groups of 2-5)
Which person would you select for each statement below? Write A, B or C on the space provided. Then discuss your answers with your group members.
This person is a businessman. _______This person is a criminal. _______This person is intelligent. _______This person is a millionaire. _______This person is a high school dropout. _______This person is successful. _______This person sells drugs. _______This person is funny. _______I can trust this person. _______
CURRENTRESEARCH
DRIVEN
The Gallup Student Poll surveyed nearly 500,000 students in grades five through 12 from more than 1,700 public schools in 37 states in 2012. We found that nearly eight in 10 elementary students who participated in the poll are engaged with school. By middle school that falls to about six in 10 students. And by high school, only four in 10 students qualify as engaged. Our educational system sends students and our country’s future over the school cliff every year.
Student engagement with school and learning is a gold standard that every parent, teacher, and school strives to achieve. If we were doing right by our students and our future, these numbers would be the absolute opposite. For each year a student progresses in school, they should be more engaged, not less.
The drop in student engagement for each year students are in school is our monumental, collective national failure. There are several things that might help to explain why this is happening -- ranging from our overzealous focus on standardized testing and curricula to our lack of experiential and project-based learning pathways for students -- not to mention the lack of pathways for students who will not and do not want to go on to college.
What’s more, among the many types of students whose engagement wanes during their time in the educational system are those who have high entrepreneurial talent. These are literally our economic saviors -- the future job creators for America.
GALLUP, January 7, 2013
SPEAKING ABOUT JOBS…
93% Employers strongly agree:
A candidate's demonstrated capacity to think critically, communicate clearly, and solve complex problems is more important
than undergraduate major.
They also want to ensure that every college graduate, no matter what their major is, achieves much higher levels of evidence-based reasoning, research skills and complex problem-solving skills [along with] ethical decision-making.”
Another important criterion for employers, is that graduates demonstrate practical experience applying what they have learned.
Want employees to demonstrate that they have the knowledge, and that they have the experience putting the knowledge to use in real-world settings.
'More Than a Major'April 10, 2013By Zack BudrykAssociation of American Colleges and Universities
…in other words, successful programs:
ARE RELEVANT
TEACH RESILIENCE
AID INLEADERSHIP
HELP PEOPLE TRANSITION
INTO THE REAL WORLD
Copyright 2013 Hustle U Inc.
MAKE A WAYprogram available: