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Friday, November 22, 2024

Who, am I, I am a teacher whose pedagogy is my humanity

 




Central Connecticut State University 

Center for Excellence Social Emotional Learning Symposium 11/21/24 

Keynote Dr. Jesse P. Turner CCSU Literacy Center Director 




Who, am I, I am a teacher whose pedagogy is my humanity



A little historical background about the CESEL

Welcome, to our CESEL Symposium, it is an honor to open our symposium. The whole idea of Social Emotional Learning Center began years ago shortly after the December 14, 2012, mass shooting occurred at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown. 20 children between the ages of 6 and 7, and 6 school staff were brutally murdered.  A tragedy that indicated school as usual was no lingered an option. In those early days, you could hear and see the  whispered dreams of faculty in Counselor Education and Family Therapy, Education Leadership, the Dean’s office, Special Education, and other departments like my own Literacy, Elementary Education. Former Dean Mike Alfano and Nelbra Marguez Green were part of those whispered dreams, and of course Dr. Peg Donohue as were others who should be named, but time prevents me from giving all the respect and honor they deserved. Something grew out of a pain too deep to bury inside. I am a believer in the whispered dreams of all of you here today, and of all those who came before. 

Love wins
We were inspired by a grieving mother with a Love Wins sign. Our School Counseling program was emerging out of the efforts of the Department of Counselor Education and Family Therapy to change school as usual. That department would lead the efforts to see a certification for school family councilors in Connecticut.  Dr. Donohue and Dr. Ryan can fill in the gaps better than I later on today. Find the time to asked her about those dreams, and the efforts to keep those dreams alive. After Sandy Hook, I could not begin without saying school as usual is over. The kids are not alright, I am not sure if they ever were. Now, it is time to share my story. 

Why me?

I am Dr. Jesse P. Turner the CCSU Literacy Center Director, that temple of hope, diverse books across the hall, where children are more than test scores. My nickname is “Readdoctor”, over the past few decades I have earned a reputation as a teacher who inspires a love of reading for those who struggle with reading. I am an old Civil Rights Activist who has walked 400 miles to Washington DC twice in the past 14 years protesting failed high-stakes testing policies that have cost our nation’s taxpayers some three trillion dollars. I have occupied the United States Department of Education in DC, with a dedicated group of activist educators twice. I am known as an education activist nationally.  Why, because our nation spends 23 billion dollars more every year on Wealthy predominantly White Schools than on predominately Black and Brown schools in poor communities. We also spend 1. 9 billion on high stakes testing whose results do not even come back until our children have gone on to the next grade. 24. 9 billion dollars chasing the wrong data, the wrong policies, and wrong reforms. In 2018 even our own Connecticut State Supreme Court ruled that the richest state in the union is not responsible for giving Black, Brown, and Special Education children an equal and high quality education, merely access to a basic one. The kids are not alright, schools are not alright, and neither are our teachers and counselors. I have been arrested in acts of Civil Disobedience advocating for a Moral Budget, for Black Lives Matter and for Labor. I am one of the ones you called when you want to load the Paddy Wagon for just causes. But most of all I am a teacher whose pedagogy is rooted in Humanity. 

My Introduction to Humanity came in strangers

I like to begin where I first witnessed this Pedagogy of Humanity. I was a child suffering from childhood trauma. My father an abusive alcoholic, screaming, breaking things, and yes hitting us were the norm in my childhood. Mothers and children live with trauma, not because they want to, but because they see no way out. Children live with trauma, not because they want to, but because they have no choice. Teachers teach children living with trauma not because they want to, but because they have no magic wands to wash it away. 

Before I go further, you should know I love my father, I forgave him, and held his hand as he left this world. At the age of 10, one night my father came home in a rage, screaming, breaking things, and he raise his hand to slap my mother. I stepped in between that blow, and the fighting ended, and by the next night he had left us. No note, just gone. I come to understand he left, because he loved us too much to hurt us anymore. 

My mother was a waitress working six days a week for nickels and dimes. Without my father she could not afford the rent, we would soon be evicted. For the next two years we were homeless. My mother’s days were spent trying to earn enough for a night in a flop house single room occupancy hotel. Often the choice was food or a bed. Many nights we found ourselves on the wooden benches of our local train station. The station had clean bathrooms, even showers, and the local police were kind enough to ignore us. The custodians were even kinder, they would close the men’s rest room so my mother could help me shower in the men’s bathroom, and brush my teeth. These small acts of kindness from strangers became my first glimpse of humanity. A few years ago, I visit that train station and there were sign hanging down near every bench, you can only sit here for two hours. Where is the humanity in that? 


I found humanity at church and the library

On Sundays we would go to church. I learned to love services in between the free hot chocolate and donuts. My mother high school friend work at the local library, and after school she looked after me until my mother came home from work. Another act of humanity. I was the only child who was given hot soup, chocolate and cookies. What more could a child ask for than the warmth of a library, books, and some soup. These acts of humanity made life bearable. 


Now, about school during that first homeless year. I was trouble, hungry, cold, angry I was explosive, and could launch into hitting, biting, kicking, and throwing things. I have no clue how my teachers dealt with me. I could not share that child until some years ago. Trauma has a way of burying itself deep inside. I would begin to share that child with the teachers I teach, not because I felt like sharing war stories, but because I recognized in them, they were living their own Trauma into their own schools. 

Why they call it a school-to-prison pipeline

I am 69 years old, in my days there were no school counselor, no education psychologist, no social worker, no free breakfast, no free lunch. None of these things were available in the ghetto schools of 55 years ago. Even today there are schools in our poorest communities who lack these services, and free school lunch programs are always targets for conservative leaders. No, wonder, Dr. Michelle Alexander in her Seminal work: The New Jim Crow” refers to our public schools in poor communities of color as the School to Prison Pipeline. Don’t you dare blame my teachers did the best they could with what they had with me that year. Sometimes we had no bed at night, but we had food to eat, sometimes we had a bed, and nothing to eat, and sometimes we had both. My teachers could not change that for us, and trust me I was not the only child in these circumstances. I have no doubt I was headed down that school-to-prison pipeline, the gangs were calling me. A kid who loved to fight was always on their radar.  

My humanitarian guard dogs

My mother and her librarian friend would not let the gangs have me. They were my guard dogs watching a child enthralled with hoodlum life. I wanted in, I felt like I belonged, but I could not break the broken heart of a mother whose heart had been broken too many times. My mother had no problem telling the badgang bangers hands off her son. Our meek librarian chased them away many a day.

My Introduction to the Pedagogy of Humanity

In year two of my homelessness, I first met this pedagogy of humanity in Mr. B, I would meet my pedagogical hero. At school, I had failed every subject even gym.  My mother who was a high school graduate, whose three daughters were as well, feared I was destined to become a dropout and like my father. However, the librarian little Jess is smart, he reads, he loves books. The kid is reading far above his grade. He has read all Dickens books, Victor Hugo’s books, and eats Alexander Dumas’s Three Musketeers, The Count of Monte Christo, and The Man in the Iron Mask. My mother’s Librarian friend said at first Margie, I thought he was pretending, trying to impress me, but I started asking him questions about what he was reading, the boy remembers and knows it all. She knew books were my escape, my refuge, and heaven.  My escape from the hell we were living. Still, none of it came through at school until Mr. B, began to feed me. 

Breaking the cycle

Some educators follow test scores and grades, seeing deficits, numbers, and harsh realities. God answered my mother’s prayers, he sent her an angel in the classroom. A teacher who follows the child, a kid watcher, who looks behind the data, and sees the child. That teacher was Mr. B. I went to school when physical punishment was allowed. Two years before Mr. B.  Our fifth-grade teacher whose pedagogy was rooted in some kind of Toxic Masculinity. It was back in the day when the whole school would wait outside in class lines, rain or shine. He used to tell all the boys to tighten their arms, and put out your arms. He would proceed to punch us to see how much a man we were before we went in. If we flinch, he hit us again. I used to pride myself in never crying, never showing any pain, showing my manliness. I was being immersed in the same Toxic Masculinity my father followed along with most of the men in our community. Although I did not show it, it was breaking me. When people tell me schools have not changed, I know better. Enough toxicity, better days would come. 


Now back to Mr. B, my Pedagogical Humanity Hero. He was new, they gave him the toughest kids, the lowest kids, the trouble ones. In those days there were no free and reduced lunch programs. No school cafeterias, you either brought your lunch to school or walked home to eat. I had no home or lunch. Children who brought their lunch were expected to eat in the school year. Mr. B allowed us to sit in the classroom, where it was warm and dry. During those first 2 weeks, he noticed the boy who had no lunch. The kid who always said that he hated lunch. I have no idea what pedagogies Mr. B’s professors at university exposed him to, but I have come to know that his pedagogy was his humanity. A pedagogy fed by love. 

He had a way of finding out stuff about us, that is to say, he never talked at you, but with you. He knew I like Liverwurst. He thought it funny that the kid who hated liver did not realize that Liverwurst was a liver product. Mr. B at lunch one day open his lunch bag and shouted out, crap my wife made me two Liverwurst sandwiches, I hate Liverwurst. Then he said Jesse, you like Liverwurst, can you help me out, and eat one for me. He fed me for a year, and he gave me new gloves, socks, and even a coat. He said he found these things in the lost and found box. His humanity broke me down, lifted me up, and broke the cycle of toxic anger in me. I blossomed into the smartest kid in the room, and I would never know anything but As for the rest of my life. I found deeper meaning in church services, and developed a sense of humanity of my own. 


Breaking the chains of Masculinity 

More importantly, he taught me a new kind of masculinity, one rooted in kindness, sharing, and caring. Kindness was as manly as it gets for him. Mr. B would eventually call my older sister Jessica when he found out about my living conditions, she was a young newlywed and a former student. He would tell her about where my mother and I were living,.He knew she was a young newlywed, but he would ask her if she and her husband could take me in. My brother-in-law did not have a college degree, but he led with his humanity. Mr. B, was my savior, so was my sister, my brother-in-law, and so was my mother. It took my mother years until she had her own place. I moved back home at 18. I lived with her for my undergraduate years at university. Those years were golden. 


I live my own Pedagogy of Humanity

57 years later I have traveled the path from homeless kid to honorable son, brother, uncle, husband, father man of peace, to Ph.D. from classroom teacher to blogger, activist, and to the teacher, Mr. B would be proud of. I only started sharing my childhood with my teachers. Childhood trauma gets buried deep in side, it seldom sees the light of day. I started sharing my childhood story after realizing many of the teachers I prepared were living in trauma of their own, low pay, lack of resources, lack of respect, and too high expectations from administrators. I watch some of the best walk away from teaching. I thought sharing the story of Mr. B, might help them see why they should stay. 

There are other pedagogical heroes in my story, feel free to visit me across the hall in our CCSU Literacy Center. Come learn about Mrs. Stanfield, Mrs. Sanchez, Coach Greer, Professors Dorothy Menosky, Yetta Goodman, Rudine Sims-Bishop, Louise Rosenblatt, Dorothy Strickland, Denny Taylor, and others. Best of all, listen to me talk about the children I have taught in our public schools, here in our CCSU Literacy Center, for they are my inspirations, real teachers, and greatest heroes. These days I am wearing my latest gift from another hero a second-grade girl who solved Dr. Turner's wedding band problem.  

Mr. Rogers ask, “who are the people in your neighborhood”. I say find the people who lead with humanity and love.

Peace, thank you for listening to my story,                                                                                                   Dr. Jesse P. Turner                                                                                                                                     CCSU Literacy Center Director 


Our CCSU Pedagogy Humanity Posse
If you like to listen to the song that inspired my morning walk, it was Cat Steven's "King of a land"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5XM5btvU0Q&list=RDp5XM5btvU0Q&start_radio=1





Thursday, November 21, 2024

The Research Confirms Moral Failure Everywhere

 


I study the research, 

I study best practices, 

I study education reforms,

I study policies,

I study the standards,

I analyze and evaluate the data,

People ask what works,

What did I find?


Everything works in Affluent Schools,

Every reform fails in Poor Schools,

Everything fails in an education reform world where we annually spend 23 billion dollars more on wealthy predominantly White Schools than on our Poor mainly Black and Brown schools,

Another 1.9 Billion annually on Standardized High-Stakes Testing data that has failed to change anything in over 100 years.


No Education reforms work without equity,,

No School Choice Policies work without equity, 

No new Standards work without equity, 

No catchy slogans work without equity work,

Leave No Child Behind, failed,

Race To The Top, failed,

Every Student Succeeds Act failed.


Policymakers point to Finland and other nations,

Say go see what they do.


I say go to our wealthy predominately White Schools, 

See how that 23 billion more every year helps,

Then give our poor predominately Black and Brown schools exactly what those rich schools get,

Then we can talk about what works and does not work.


Just Saying,

Dr. Jesse P. Turner 

CCSU Literacy Center Director

Uniting to Save Our Schools,

Badass Professor.

If you lie to listen to the tune that inspired my morning walk today, its the Play for Change cover of "Teach Your Chil". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5AuFDHdrrg




Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Teach Proud, Teach Loud, Teach Truth

Teach The Truth Campaign link Dr. Jesse P. Turner Brainwaves Video Anthologies link:
https://youtu.be/HB4jadlOPCc?si=p45pfeT05nZUwhB6

I have been thinking about how to react to this President-Elect, and his plans to end DIE. There is a line in the song "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down "I swear by the mud below my feet
You can't raise a Kane backup when he's in defeat"
The way I see Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity is our President-Elect and his appointments need to ask themselves these simple questions:
1. Do you understand that Diversity isn't an idea? It simply is who America is? You can't kill what is.
2. What do you have against inclusion, or who are the people you want to exclude?
3. What about the word Equity stirs up negativity in your thinking? Can you tell which people you think don't deserve equity?

Now, I can't do much, but I can:
Teach Proud,
Teach Loud,
Teach Truth.

So, I dug up this Brainwaves Video Anthology clip about the Uniting to Save Our Schools Teach Truth Campaign. We did not change the world but drew a line in the sand that said truth matters.

Come May 2025, I shall once again participate in Teach The Truth Day.
I am a teacher,
I don't have time to be depressed,
I am too busy teaching the truth.

Blessed by teachers who taught the truth,
Dr. Jesse P. Turner
Uniting to Save Our Schools
Proud Badass Teacher  

If you want to listen to the song that inspired my morning walk this day...its Rachel Platten's "Fight Song"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xo1VInw-SKc&ab_channel=RachelPlattenVEVO 




Monday, November 18, 2024

My Pedagogy is seen through the lens of my heart

Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry, author and aviator, lost his life in World War II. He wrote "The Little Prince." It is only with the heart that one can see clearly. What is essential is invisible to the eye.


There is plenty of talk about explicitly teaching children the skills they need to become readers. I have no problem with teaching skills. However, if all a teacher has is skill lessons, they forget that children need a greater purpose in becoming readers. Honestly, teachers, have little or no say in the curriculums their school selects. 

Curriculum, decisions seldom include teachers, parents, or children. State and national mandates, standards, frameworks, and funding for literacy programs come not from teachers. They are heavily influenced by publishers, testing companies, and lobby groups. So, please don't point fingers at teachers over curriculums.

Of course, while we don't have much choice in what we teach, we do have a say in how we teach. Curriculum programs often fail to understand the motivational nuances of how children learn to read. Teachers, make it funny, joyful, interesting, personally and socially meaningful, and occasionally sad. Some researchers point to pedagogies, Critical, Traditional, Systematic, Constructivist, Progressive, Best-Practices, or Science-Based. The literature has many informative studies, books, and peer-reviewed articles about all of the above. They inform my thinking; and helps to guide me in positive directions. Research informs me, and so does the data living and breathing right in front of me. There is no data more informative than the data I see before me. 

However, the pedagogy that informs me most; is the Pedagogy of Humanity. This pedagogy has helped me strive for 40 years. It never let me down. It isn't focused on saving all, but one at a time. So, I spend my days looking for ways to invite and engage children in joyful and meaningful reading journeys in diverse books. I am not saying the other pedagogies are not important sources of best practices. The data that informs my pedagogy is not seen on your data walls, or in Power Schools. It can be hard to find in a world of constant data crunching, and struggling with fidelity to those curriculum boxes. It can't be found on any Excel sheet, in a computer program, or uploaded to the cloud. The data that best informs my instruction is seen with the heart. I find it standing right in front of me. I am not much different than the Little Prince. 

I see with a different set of data eyes; others look at test scores. errors, and deficits. I see the data in the smiles, laughs, and tears of the child next to me. I hear my data speaking to my heart, I am what Dr. Yetta Goodman called a Kid Watcher. I pay attention to the quantitative data, but I see the data on the face child next to me first and foremost.

I am constantly searching for materials, books, and games that would motivate one child at a time. Policymakers, Ed Reformers, and testing publishers can see one child at a time.  I can’t help passing by a bookstore, library, garage sale, or a magazine rack. I am addicted to the things that inspire reading. You can't sell this way of thinking in a box. 

On Friday 11/15/24, I took a friend out to lunch at RAWA’s in New Haven CT. They serve Middle Eastern food. While we were eating, I said feel like visiting my favorite bookstore just a few blocks from here? Well, next thing, we were at Possible Futures  > https://www.possiblefuturesbooks.com/ < Now my friend must have spent a few hundred dollars there, you tend to do that on your first visit. I  keep my eyes, open for books that might inspire our children who come to our CCSU Literacy Center. As sure as sunrise follows the moon they find me.  

There are three Muslim Girl Cousins who love reading biographies of famous women. They read everything about famous women in history. Can you imagine the battle over who gets to read “Muslim Girls Rise” this afternoon?
Now, there is the data that counts, and there is the data that really matters. I follow smiles, curious looks, questioning faces, and those informative data words “Dr. Turner, this book rocks”. 

For a look at how my data-crunching brain works. Take a trip inside my mind in this link: 






In my world, "The Little Prince would be required, reading for all teachers. 
See the child, not the data,
Dr. Jesse P. Turner 
CCSU Literacy Center Director  

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Our Policymakers, Lesigislators & Ed Reformers have no clue


Henry David Thoreau wrote: " The Mass of men, lead lives of quiet Desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation. From the desperate city, you go into the desperate country and have to console yourself with the bravery of minks and muskrats".
 
Children ask teachers the most interesting questions, pay close attention to what we say, and observe us closely. They are also extremely creative and generous. 

A while back, a second-grade girl asked if I was married. I said yes, and I have been happily married for 40 years. Then she followed up, "Why don't you wear your wedding ring?" (-: 

I explained that I have tiny fingers that swell up in the morning and become less swollen later in the day. Over the years, I have lost five gold wedding rings. After the fifth one, my wife said, "This is costing us a fortune...No more wedding rings for you, old man." 

Now, that seemed to take care of it that day. Two weeks later her teacher brought her to see me. She said A has a gift for you. She showed me one of those rings kids make with beads, it was elastic. 

I said wow, you made a nice ring for yourself. She said, it is not for me. The ring is for you, Dr. Turner. I know you love your wife, daughter, and your dog Toast, because you talk about them to us a lot. Especially, when you share silly Dad Jokes.  You say... I am going to share this one at dinner tonight. So, I thought about your problem with wedding rings. Wedding rings are important. You can't lose this one. 

You can bet your bottom last dollar that this ring will be on me in our Literacy Center for the rest of the semester. This is why I love this work. The kindness and generosity of children have no limits.  Much like the generosity of teachers. 

There is the data that counts, and then there is the data that really matters. The data that really matters, informs my thinking that 7-year-olds listen, care, and are natural problem solvers.

See the wonder, not the test score,                                                                                                                Dr. Jesse P. Turner 
CCSU Literacy Center Director 

If you like to listen to the song that inspired my morning walk this morning...its Malvina Reynolds "Little Boxes" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5IKpHTEuY0

Friday, November 8, 2024

I am a teacher, I don't have time to be depressed

I am a teacher, I don't have time to be depressed

I thought I saw Joe Hill walking over that hill with Congressman John Lewis last night. God has blessed me so many times by sending me role models of integrity.

On one of my trips to the Selma Jubilee, I was blessed with a two-minute conversation with my hero Congressman John Lewis at a Selma Gala. The Supreme Court has just ruled to weaken the Voting Rights Act. Everyone was depressed that year, but not Congressman Lewis. I ended up in line with him.

We exchanged greetings, and he said: "Why so sad young man"

I responded by saying how shocking the Supreme Court decision was. He said:
"Young man we don't have time to be depressed. He said, there is work to be done, let us do the work that needs doing.
I said, BUT...
Again, with his big, beautiful smile, he said: "Young man, you know there were 3 marches from Selma to Montgomery, 
The first two were met with brutal violence, 
On the first one, they fractured my skull, 
But I would not let bullies intimidate me, 
So I just got back up and did the work. 
I have been doing the work since 1965,
The work:
Lifts me, 
It is far from done, 
To be honest, 
I am not sure the work will ever be done, 
But doing this work,
Inspires me, 
Lifts me, and 
Sustains my soul,
Young man, 
I expect to see you march across that Edmond Pettus Bridge on Sunday with us." 

I was on the bridge with three other Uniting to Save Our Schools members when Congressman Lewis marched for the last time, just months before he would go on to glory. 
The day after the election, I think how many elections did not turn out Congressman Lewis's way. It never once let him stop doing the work. Elections don't get the work done, people gathering, organizing, and marching get the work done. I feel some marching coming. 

I shall honor God's blessing of those two minutes with Congressman Lewis, by doing the work that needs doing. The work inspires me, lifts me, and sustains me.

Call me Dr. Good Troubles,
Jesse The Walking Man Turner 

As long as I have music, I can go on, here is my walking song this morning link: One day when the Glory Comes Common John Legend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUZOKvYcx_o