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Supporting Students in High-Poverty Schools

“How Are Things Working for You? What Do You Need?” - Supporting Students in High-Poverty Schools

“How Are Things Working for You? What Do You Need?” - Supporting Students in High-Poverty Schools

Written by Tiffany Anderson

As the superintendent (since 2012) of the Jennings, Missouri, urban school district (bordering Ferguson, Missouri), in which 100 percent of the students receive a free or reduced-price lunch, I’ve seen what can happen when we make it a habit to check in and connect with students and staff members many times throughout the day. Fostering a real sense of community defines our schools as more than buildings. We focus on what’s possible and communicate shared responsibility. It starts with the simple questions, “How are you? How are things working for you and what do you need?” How we respond, through words and actions, proves our desire to understand and address those needs. 

It’s time we accept that schools are a place to address more than academic needs. The trauma inherent in a high-poverty environment—homelessness, violent deaths, and dealings with the criminal justice system—is not going away. At Jennings, staff members are trained in trauma-informed care, a structure that responds to all types of trauma that impact emotional, psychological, and physical safety and gives survivors and care providers a sense of control and empowerment (http://traumainformedcareproject.org/). Exploring social justice, poverty, and mental health issues helps staff members become more aware of their own emotions and biases. They learn how to choose their words and actions in ways that help children and themselves transcend difficulty (https://www.pbis.org/). We’ve learned how to identify and understand the context of a situation before reacting—never perfectly, human beings aren’t perfect—through systems that show us how to be better than we might be on our own. 

One simple action that reinforces the relationships necessary for this work is the daily check-and-connect, providing reliable, coordinated care for each student and staff member:

Daily Check & Connect

               

 For  Students

  • MORNING: The principal, teachers, and/or I greet students as they arrive at school and enter the building. If we notice students who are emotionally unstable, we make sure they get immediate attention. We don’t dismiss this behavior as a “bad mood” but show these students we care enough to figure out why and how we can help.
  • AFTER MORNING ANNOUNCEMENTS: Students and staff members participate in a whole-school breathing exercise to promote mindfulness and self-regulation. We discuss ways to stay in touch with our own body (noticing facial expressions, tension, posture, disengagement).
  • THROUGHOUT THE DAY: All students have access to a “peace corner” where they can think, write, draw, and complete puzzles to stimulate other cognitive activities and to diffuse anger and feelings of loss of self-control.

http://www.mindfulteachers.org/p/free-resources-and-lesson-plans.html

For Teachers

  • TEACHER ALLIES: Each teacher has an ally whose job is to encourage and empower and to help diffuse responses to trauma in the classroom or in the teacher’s personal life that may impact the classroom. Teacher allies check in with each other day, because individuals don’t always ask for help when they need it. When traumatic events do occur, having an ally lets teachers know they are not alone, have someone who will listen and help them continue to support children.
  • PEACE/WELLNESS ROOM: Separate from the teachers’ lounge is a calming, peaceful environment in which teachers can practice mindfulness exercises. Teachers who struggle are encouraged to visit this room for self-care. Most teachers it very day.

Many schools create similar opportunities, but at Jennings staff members and students depend on these moments to solve problems. The “safety net” metaphor describes how we hope these systems will function. Too often the net is weak, relying on the strength of a single thread, and many students are not caught. At Jennings, each person, each system, reinforces the other so that the net can hold the weight of any child’s problem. If something is “off,” people know that someone will be there to help them. I won’t pretend that we’ve always had the just-right solution at the moment we notice something awry, but rather that we’ve shown care and paid attention and then followed through with some positive alternative to being stuck in difficulty. 
The graphic below takes one specific challenge in a classroom and considers two outcomes, one in which staff members are isolated and another in which staff members and children have a real sense of accountability and of being supported by the other adults in the district. 

CHALLENGE: Ajahn tells his teacher he didn’t do his homework because she’s an idiot. Ajahn can’t/doesn’t wish to articulate that he is struggling to read texts he thinks should be easy for him. Doing homework is unlikely anyway; he has to feed and care for his siblings until his dad returns from work, and the family has not had electricity for several months. Ajahn doesn’t believe that becoming a good student is possible for someone like him. He’s thinking of skipping class tomorrow. 

 Before Supports Are in Place

 After Supports Are in Place

His teacher, Sara, wonders whether she can get Ajahn removed from class so she can focus on her other students. Despite all her work, Sara doesn’t feel she is making the kind of difference she wants to make. She doesn’t know how to make things better.

Sara asks Ajahn, “How are you? How are things working for you and what do you need?” She may decide to propose one positive action or delay solutions until she’s talked with her teacher ally and principal. She might also:

  • Connect Ajahn with a counselor whose first role is to listen. What are Ajahn’s coping mechanisms and greatest needs? Meeting those needs are prioritized.
  • Make sure Ajahn receives careful check-and-connect attention and flag him for a home visit.
  • Tell him about space in school where he can do and get help with his homework.
  • Let him know about in-school resources that help him access things he might be missing by not having electricity: computer access, laundry, food preparation.
  • Acknowledge that Ajahn is under a lot of pressure and talk with him about how to create time for his own self-care.
  •  

The classroom aide, Mark, recognizes that the teacher/student behavior is destructive. He wants to support Sara and Ajahn but isn’t sure what to do.

Mark knows his position makes him an ideal intermediary between the school and home and volunteers to visit Ajahn’s home. He and Sara have received extensive co-training regarding situations like this, so they are prepared for him to be able to offer in-the-moment support. If necessary, he encourages Sara to take a break to take care of herself while he steps in.

The principal, Luiz, knows that Ajahn has an attendance problem and is not succeeding academically but isn’t sure what to do other than schedule another parent/teacher meeting.

 

Luiz takes responsibility for connecting Ajahn’s family with resources and orchestrating home visits. He matches Ajahn with an ally—a staff member, current student, or former student, but ideally a peer who has lived through similar experiences and overcome them.

Luiz considers how Ajahn interacts with other staff members and students to ensure that he receives support throughout the day. He tracks Ajahn’s attendance, academic performance, and behavior.

The superintendent, Dora, charged to lead thousands of students, numbers Ajahn among those whose absenteeism and academic difficulties are buried in statistics she shares with the school board. After many years as superintendent and several million dollars of school district investment, she feels defeated by the increase in achievement gaps for members of marginalized communities.

 

Every month Dora reviews data regarding students’ access to support systems and how the school might better address individual and group trends (for example, a pattern of self-destructive behavior in the winter, when poverty’s influence feels keener).

She models self-care actions and positive school relationships: she shares success stories, makes home visits, takes a shift as a crossing guard—anything she hopes staff members will replicate.

 
OUTCOME: Ideally, ongoing support helps Ajahn becomes more able to articulate his needs at school and to seek help from adults he knows he can rely on when he feels overwhelmed.   

The home lives of too many children today contain too much adversity for an individual teacher to handle alone, but we can handle it together. For schools to disrupt the cycle of poverty, we need to support healing and recovery. We can transform the culture of a school and children’s learning by focusing on positive behavior and continually assessing needs and successes. We know we’ve disrupted a negative cycle when children are able to advocate for themselves. 

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anderson-jpgDr. Tiffany Anderson has been a public school educator for 23 years and the majority of that time has been as a superintendent. She closed achievement gaps in rural, urban and in suburban public school districts.  The Washington Post and NPR referenced Dr. Anderson as, “The superintendent who made schools work for poor children.” After successfully serving as an assistant superintendent in the 23,000 Rockwood School District in St. Louis County which is accredited with distinction, Dr. Anderson was the first female and first African American superintendent in Montgomery County Public Schools in Virginia, a district that served 23 schools in 4 different localities. During her tenure, the district moved from having 7 schools accredited to having all schools accredited under her leadership and multiple schools were recognized under the Virginia Governor’s Competence to Excellence Award.  When Dr. Anderson moved back to Missouri, she led University Academy, a college prep charter, to accreditation with distinction. In July 2012, Dr. Anderson joined as Superintendent the Jennings School District, a district bordering Ferguson with 100% free lunch.  Under Dr. Anderson’s leadership, Jennings School District regained full accreditation, a distinction the district lost decades ago. Jennings is a national model of excellence in serving the whole child.  They improved from meeting 57% of state standards when Dr. Anderson arrived in 2012 to meeting 81% and reaching a 93% graduation rate.  On July 1, 2016 Dr. Anderson became the first African American female leading the 14,000 Topeka Public Schools, in Topeka, Kansas where the landmark Brown vs. Board case ended legal segregation.

Dr. Anderson’s publications include her book, Closing the Achievement Gap and her book Transforming Schools for Excellence and numerous articles.  Dr. Anderson’s recent work led to beginning the process of creating the first trauma informed school district in St. Louis, Missouri. Dr. Anderson earned her undergraduate degree, and later her doctorate, from Saint Louis University in 2001 where she met her husband, Dr. Stanley Anderson who is an accomplished OBGYN and robotic surgeon. Together they work to support children in having a healthy start so children can succeed in school. In 2016, Dr. Anderson received her second doctorate, the Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Eden Theological Seminary for her service to the community and society.  Dr. Anderson is adjunct faculty for ASCD (Association for Schools and Curriculum Development) and she serves on their 9 member national poverty cadre.  Dr. Anderson is a national presenter and among her various awards, in 2014, Dr. Anderson earned the national recognition from Education Week as one of the national 16 Leaders to Learn From. Dr. Anderson has also been awarded the Salute to Excellence for Women by the Urban League, the Person of the Year in St. Louis, the Stellar Performance award by the St. Louis American and the St. Louis Business Journal’s award for diversity in business as some of her recognitions. She is a lifetime member of the NAACP and is nationally known for her innovative work serving schools in high poverty communities and for her work with implementing trauma-informed practices that improve school communities.