Board Meeting Summary for November 12, 2024
- November 21st, 2024
Study Session Reading of Strategic Plan Vision, Mission, Values, and Priorities:00:59 Board...
Education is, as the cliche goes, a journey– but unpacking the adage reveals something important. Travel is to investigate and explore, to meet new people and walk their ways, to become someone different by sunset than who you were at sunrise– it’s growth through empathy.
It’s a value that all travelers intuit, and that great teachers– teachers like world traveler and Dixon Middle School’s History Teacher, Allie Stewart– keep in mind, daily.
I interviewed Stewart in September, asking her “why for teaching,” as well as how she approaches teaching, the challenges she faces as a teacher in 2023, and her hope for incoming and departing students (which, as you might expect, is related to empathy.)
Read her interview below.
A: Honestly, my desire to teach comes from traveling– I love traveling. I love learning about other people and other cultures.
My parents took me all over the US, and we traveled to Europe when we got older.
And I love my summers. Teachers enjoy summer! Who else can spend a month in Japan like I did, or a month in Paris?
A: I value using their background knowledge to pull students in.
Just yesterday, we started the lesson by discussing three regions in Utah, and my students needed help with the concept. I told them, “Guys– it’s just like Minecraft,” and when we dug into the Minecraft analogy, students got it– the lightbulb went off.
Using their background knowledge gets that buy-in from the beginning.
A: I don’t get into it, but politics and the world and people’s beliefs. Navigating that is tricky.
That and learning disparities– you get kids that don’t know how to read– you get kids starting in different places.
Like I’m teaching a class in Spanish. Some students have only been here for a month– and they’re with me in US history! That is tricky.
A: So it’s a standards-based unit, and we start with the First Americans. I try to get authentic objects into the hands of students. They’re feeling pottery; they prick their fingers on genuine arrowheads; they use molcajete to grind corn. We’re trying stuff like that as often as possible.
A: First, that they learn history. “Those that don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat themselves” is a renowned quote for a reason.
I want them to remember the content, sure, but more importantly, I want them to learn empathy.
If you can learn from other people’s perspectives and be a nice human being– that’s what I hope they can take away.
A: I’m watching a K-Drama right now that is pretty good. It’s called “Mr. Sunshine,” and it’s all about turn-of-the-20th-century Korea when Japan took over.
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