Transcript Slide 1

Healthy Active Schools and Student
Success
Bruce Ferguson
SickKids and U of T
HASC, Belleville
February 29, 2008
Our Vision
Success is ...
Competence – academic, social, physical
Character
Caring
Connections
Confident
What parents want ….
Parents want their children to be happy and well-balanced –
active participants in and contributors to society. They want
them to be confident of their future and to be eager to have
children of their own.
Our children force us to go beyond the present to ask what sort
of world will the future produce.
Education
Traditionally, Education has often been likened to a three-legged stool,
which will always adjust to the most uneven surface (unlike a fourlegged chair)
The Home (Emotions)
The Community (Inspiration)
The School (Intellectual)
Progressively, however, modern society had attempted to define
Education as Schooling and has defined schools as having a similar
three parts
- Academic, Socialization and Control
Education
It is my observation that, over the last 50 years we have come
to expect schools/teachers to do it all – neglecting our
knowledge that real education of young people requires the
responsive and responsible involvement of parents and the
whole community! We now need to find a way back from our
“default position” of asking the schools to do it all.
Involving the whole community produces “social capital”!
To blame schools for the rising tide of
mediocrity is to confuse symptoms with
disease; schools can rise no higher than the
expectations of the community which
surrounds them.
Dr. Ernest Boyer
President of the Carnegie Foundation and
Former US Commissioner for Education,
commenting on the Excellency Report of 1984
Promoting Success
Student
Engagement
Teacher
Engagement
Parent
Engagement
Community
Engagement
Making our children and youth successful
 Healthy families
 Healthy schools
 Healthy communities
How are we doing?
In international tests of academic proficiency, Canadian (and
Ontario) students are performing very well!
However, there is more to this story – the UNICEF Report
Card
Report Card 7 Child poverty in perspective:
An overview of child well-being in rich
countries
A comprehensive assessment of the lives and well-being
of children and adolescents in economically advanced
nations.
UNICEF, 2007
“You can’t expect children to grow up to
be intelligent, in a world that is not
intelligible to them”.
John Abbott
We must always think of education/schooling in the
context of the world we all inhabit
the information age – the communication revolution
- the nature of work
- the globalization of the market economy – economic changes
- demographic imperatives – aging populations
- immigration and multiculturalism
- changes in families, communities and governments
- concerns for a sustainable world
– global warming and biodiversity
- happiness/the meaning of life – spirituality/ religion
- our society’s view of children and adolescents
-
Economic globalization, income gaps, concerns
for a sustainable world, global warming and
biodiversity
-
income gaps – first and third worlds – in Canada??
So what?
- sustainability – Ronald Wright Massey lectures
Why we should worry!
“If civilization is to survive, it must live on
the interest, not the capital, of nature.
Ecological markers suggest that in the
early 1960’s, humans were using 70% of
nature’s yearly output; by the early
1980’s we’d reached 100%; and in 1999
we were at 125%.
Ronald Wright
A Short History of Progress 2004
Student Success - Ontario Ministry of Education
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COMMUNITY CULTURE
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CARING
Community
safety – physical and psychological
belonging – entitlement and responsibility
participation – academic, social and physical
shared values – value learning, value people, etc.
Culture
fairness – both school and classes
respect – diverse backgrounds and needs
expectations/aspirations – Rosenthal effect
professionalism – high quality instruction
Caring
educators care – and show it!
kids care – and show it!
make it “cool” to care
Healthy schools = community + culture + caring!
How do we make our kids successful?
By being understanding, flexible and proactive
By being engaged and engaging them
By living with an attitude of “trust”
By helping them learn self-awareness, selfmanagement, decision-making, social awareness, and
relationship building
By living the way we want them to live
What should we be teaching our students?
According to Ferguson:
• Excellent strategies for learning and thinking
• Their strengths and weaknesses as
learners/thinkers
• How to know when they know
• To take control of their learning
• And, of course, lots of useful content
Cognitive Apprenticeship
1.
2.
3.
4.
Modeling
Scaffolding
Fading
Discussion
... a way of "going beyond what comes naturally". A form of
intellectual weaning that balances the rate of physical
maturation.
John Abbott
How can we make our students successful?
By creating healthy schools
 The best models/mentors are competent, confident,
connected, caring teachers/adults who consistently
demonstrate the character we wish our students to have!
 When every teacher commits to the success of every student!
How do we make them
successful?
By having every adult
commit to the success
of every child!
Why do this!
It is the morally correct (and
Canadian) thing to do
Our children and youth deserve no less
than our best
Our children and youth make up 25%
of our population but represent
100% of our future
To make Ontario and Canada the best
place in the world to be a
child/youth!
Finlay and Moby
Why have Children?
(Children are not just for Christmas)
Why do we have children?
For the pure joy of having
them in our world!
WE MUST GIVE THEM THEM
OPPORTUNITY TO BE AS GOOD
AS THEY CAN BE!