In ConnCAN’s updated policy goals for the year, Gordon and her team are focused on investing in assessments of student learning that provide information directly to parents so they are empowered to make informed decisions on behalf of their children, equitable funding for all types of schools so parents can have real choices, and free digital devices that parents control and can put to use for learning inside and outside of school.
- The task this week is to insist that any assessment data goes to families at the same time it goes to schools so that they are empowered with the information they need to be true partners is the key decisions that need to be made on behalf of their kids.
Watch the full 10-minute interview here.
Problem-Solve With Students Rather than For Them
“At a time when students need adults to show up for them and connect with them in greater ways, many of our well-intentioned inclinations miss the mark,” writes DelawareCAN executive director Atnre Alleyne in The Grio. “There is empowerment and real education in telling students the truth, being honest about what adults haven’t figured out, and allowing them to participate in problem-solving.”
Learning, by necessity, is now centered more around students than ever before because students and their families are filling in the gaps created by school building closures. Our plans for re-opening schools in the fall should build on this student-centered reality rather than seek to go backwards to a normal that far too often left students’ voices out.
“This is a perfect time to bring students to the table to wrestle with the many hard, logistical and learning decisions that need to be made,” Alleyne argues. “If this is the future we want, we should do something about the wise but sobering words one of my high school mentees once said about how adults ‘engage’ students: ‘We’ve been moved from the kiddie table to the adult table but our portions remain the same.’”
For DelawareCAN, that means new goals for 2020 focused on an education innovation fund that supports new student-centered approaches to summer learning loss, parent empowerment, and school-community partnerships and new support services for undocumented students to be full participants in their education. Across the 50CAN network, local leaders are working to ensure that as new plans are put in place, the voices of students are central to the conversation.
- The task this week is to ensure that the power that has shifted to students and their families in directing their education during this time of crisis is not lost as we turn our attention to the plans for reopening schools in the fall.