Oh Tara……..once again your words speak right to my heart! In our district we have spent many hours talking about looking through a different lens with our students……a trauma sensitive lens………one where we see the students heart and soul and not just the child in front of us who might be defying us with every inch of their soul……challenging us beyond belief……..really seeing them for who they are and not the behaviors they are displaying at the moment! And yet……..for some it is difficult……….for me…….growing up in a dysfunctional family…….with uncertainty on a daily basis………makes it easy for me to understand…….to get it………to share my story with my students and show them that they can come out of this okay………that what we experience doesn’t have to define us and can truly make us stronger!! I tell my students often that I would not change a thing that happened to me in my life as it has shaped me into the person I am today…….a very empathetic……understanding and caring person who loves her students very much!! So…….I press on…….I talk with my co-workers…….I write like you and share my thoughts and experiences with my students in my classroom with the hope that people will see it and get a glimpse into how important they are to their students each and every day. I repeat over and over that every child is one caring adult away from being a success story…….as it was the caring adults who saved me in my young life!! I am so inspired by what you write and I share your thoughts with my co-workers as much as I can! Little by little……..slowly but surely……..we can make our schools the safe space for all of our students………for isn’t that what they truly deserve? A place to come to to feel loved……..and cared about………and wanted…….and safe! 🙂 Thank you for being the light in some of my darker days!! You truly are a wonder!!
Dawn, thank you for all of your sweet support. I’m honored you shared so much of your story in this comment. YOU, my friend, are a bright spot for many students. Keep shining and encouraging the little girls with crooked pigtails (and the little boys, too); they need YOU! ((hugs))
So true, Tara. My 4th grade grandson struggles in school so its not a place he feels successful. Today he scored a basket at his basketball game. Being the smallest on his team, and the least experienced (it took him a long time to agree to play on a team) this was a great accomplishment. I face-timed him just to tell him how proud I am of his accomplishment on the court today. He smiled so bright it lit the room. He so needs to feel ‘successful’ at something and not feel like a failure in this thing called life. Piece by piece school tears him down with outdated assessments – memorizing 15 dictionary (who still has a dictionary anyway) definitions, then getting a “fill in blank” and “matching column” test. When will we get the message that we must give students options of different ways to learn and options in the way they demonstrate their learning and in the ways we assess their learning. Thanks for your post. It really resonated with this Grammy!
Judy, your response is heartfelt and beautiful. Thank you for sharing. Yes. Yes. Yes. Your little guy needs to feel valued. We all have so many things to offer the world and our precious packages aren’t the same; that’s the beauty of being fearfully and wonderfully made. It melts me that he is having a poor experience in school. However, I’m so very grateful he has a wonderful Grammy like you to be his “mirror holder”–holding up the mirror and showing him all of his awesomeness.