A+ For Empathy
After that, they head for the red rug and Morning
Meeting, which includes a greeting (“Say hello to the other students as a
character in a book” may be the opener), sharing, activity, and news and
announcements.
“Let’s start a pass-along story,” says Hamilton.“ Once upon a time . .
.”And so the story goes around the class, becoming a tale of a Valentine bear
who has to go to the pharmacy to take care of cuts and bruises from a lightning
bolt.
They also talk about what they plan to do during
the upcoming vacation week. “Sleep in!” says one student. “How late do you
sleep in?” asks another, showing an example of “active listening.”
(
Above) Teacher Amy Hamilton shares an encouraging morning message with some of her fourth graders. “A school system has to create an environment where learning is a positive experience and the climate in the school is such that it supports children taking risks, feeling safe, feeling accepted,” Berman says. He adds that the instructional program and social and emotional initiatives are “mutually beneficial and necessary.”The Importance of Structure
“It puts a really specific structure to the classroom,” says Hamilton,
referring to both Morning Meeting and the end-of-the-day, reflective Closing
Circle. “That’s important because kids need to know what to expect. It makes
them feel secure.”
Morning Meeting is part of a program called Responsive Classroom that addresses
young people’s social and emotional needs as well as their academic needs. And
the social and emotional aspect of education, says Hudson Public Schools
Superintendent Sheldon Berman, “is an essential and central element” of
district-wide reform.
“A school system has to create an environment where learning is a positive
experience and the climate in the school is such that it supports children
taking risks, feeling safe, feeling accepted,” Berman says. He adds that the
instructional program and social and emotional initiatives are “mutually
beneficial and necessary.”
A 1998 survey of Hudson parents confirms the importance of programs that address
students’ social and emotional needs, both for behavioral and academic
results. The survey found that parents believe that safety and a caring
environment, fair treatment, and responsiveness of the faculty to parents’
concerns are the top indicators of the success of a school system. Challenging
academics came in fourth.
Empathy, Ethics, and Service
When Berman, who has a background in conflict resolution as a founder of Educators for Social Responsibility, came to Hudson 11 years ago, a group of teachers unhappy with destructive student behavior asked him to tighten the discipline code. He felt that harsher punishments weren’t the answer. He formed a committee to consider the request and the consensus was that a discipline code alone would not create an atmosphere of respect and responsibility. What would, though, members decided, was a comprehensive program of social-emotional learning, service learning, and character education: “Empathy, ethics, and service” is a favorite district refrain.
The district has a variety of programs designed
to build respect and a caring community: Responsive Classroom, Second Step (an
empathy development and conflict resolution program), and a program of service
learning from prekindergarten through grade 12 that has received wide
recognition. Responding to research showing the academic and social benefits of
small schools, Berman is creating high school student “clusters” who stay
together for three years with one teacher. Berman has even appointed one of the
nation’s few district-wide directors of community service learning and
character education, Mary McCarthy.
(Above) Mary McCarthy, director of Community Service Learning and Character Education, and Hudson Schools Superintendent Sheldon Berman display the banner the
district received from the Character Education Partnership.Hudson Public Schools was the only district in
the country to receive the 2001-2002 National Schools of Character Award from
the Character Education Partnership. Berman cannot break down how much
specific reforms — curricular and social-emotional — contributed to
positive changes in the district, but says improvement won’t come without
both. He notes that since he took over as superintendent, test scores are up,
absences down, and more students are seeking to come into the district than
leave it, a reversal of the situation when he started.
Karen Rundlett, a teaching assistant, says that during her recess duty she
sees evidence of the success of Second Step lessons she teaches a half hour a
week to different classes at Mulready. “I hear students say, ‘We’ll use
I-messages.’ Rather than ‘You were mean,’ they say, ‘I feel bad when
you call me a name. ’That’s exciting. I think they get it, and they really
enjoy it.”
A Second Step lesson on empathy, for example,
recently involved looking at a laminated card with a picture of two young girls
who had broken a neighbor’s window with a baseball. Part of the discussion
included the fact that nobody had seen them throw the ball. What to do? Do you
tell the neighbor you broke the window and offer to make reparations? Do you run
and not say anything? Students answer in a variety of ways, Rundlett says. But
they always have to ask themselves four questions: Is it safe? Is it fair? Will
it work? and How will people feel? Once the students answer the questions for
themselves, they do role-playing on the question.
Sue O’Keefe, a psychologist at Farley Elementary School, also trains teachers
in Second Step. “The empathy portion is the foundation of the program.
That’s why I like it so much,” O’Keefe says. She says the program has
definitely changed the climate of the school from one in which students acted
out, called each other names, and got physical when there was a dispute to one
in which they try to understand the other person’s point of view and come to a
verbal resolution of a dispute.
In the Responsive Classroom program, the first six weeks are considered crucial for creating a feeling of safety and belonging, setting reasonable limits and boundaries for behavior, introducing the schedule, routines, physical environment, and materials of the classroom, and establishing expectations about the curriculum and how the children will be taught. Guided discovery, in which children have practice sessions of important behavior, such as eating in the cafeteria, sitting down in the school bus, or using materials properly, is also an important element of Responsive Classroom. Other features of the program include rules and logical consequences, academic choice in which children get to choose a project, family communication, and strategies for arranging materials, furniture, and displays to encourage independence, promote caring, and maximize learning.
And the effort to create a caring community
with involved students who feel they belong never stops. In the works now are
plans for a cluster model of high school organization, in which students are
grouped into units of 100 to 150. The clusters would be based on broad areas
of student interest such as communications, media, and the arts; science,
health, and the environment; technology, business, and engineering; or social
service, education, and social policy. Students would stay in the same cluster
for three years and work together on service projects, presentations, and
cluster discussions, as well as take some courses together. Student government
representatives would be chosen from clusters, thus giving more students an
opportunity to lead.
Berman is also instituting the practice of providing clusters with an hour a
week of school time to, among other things, discuss and solve issues of
importance to the school as a whole. Students, Berman says, will even have a
say in hiring.
One of the reasons Berman’s character and service approach to learning has caught on is that he lets the results speak for themselves. He never mandated that Responsive Classroom be used. Instead, he offered training in it to a few teachers. Their colleagues then saw the changes in classroom atmosphere and student learning and voluntarily joined the program. Today, 90 percent of the elementary and middle school teachers in the Hudson Public School District practice Responsive Classroom.
[For more information:
pages 14 and 15 www.glef.org | E d u t o p i a | S p r i n g 2 0 0 3 George Lucas Educational Foundation ("GLEF") http://www.glef.org/EdutopiaPDF/Spring03.pdf