Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Thankful for Opportunities

The priorities of our schools should be as follows: #1. Equip students with the skills they will use in life. #2. See number 1. Many of the greatest experiences that our students have in preparing them for their future take place outside of the walls of the classroom. In addition to the academic skills needed, students need opportunities to work as part of a team, to adapt to situations on the fly, to problem solve, to resolve conflict, to struggle, fail and figure things out on their own.
We had two outstanding opportunities for some of our students prior to Thanksgiving Break that put them in situations to stretch themselves and get them out of their comfort zones.

What a performance!

Annie, Jr.
We had over 100 students involved as part of the cast and crew in three amazing performances of the musical Annie Jr. which is based on the popular comic strip and adapted from the Tony Award-winning Best Musical. What you see as an audience member at ShowTime is middle school students running and performing a musical with great confidence like seasoned veterans. The singing, acting, timing, scene changes and organization feels more like an off-Broadway production than that of a musical put on by adolescents. It was astonishing!

What you don’t see as an audience member at Showtime is the amount of work that went into this on the part of our students. It’s practice, practice, and more practice. It is at times a series of rehearsals that can look like a clunky mess of poor timing, self-doubt, and bits & pieces that surely will never be connected into anything meaningful. Yet, students continue to work. Students continue to grind, to practice, to persevere. And in time, self-doubt fades into great confidence, and what once seemed impossible to pull off becomes this amazing experience that we see as members of the audience. All of the skills that our young people need to be successful in their future were taking place behind the scenes at each of those rehearsals and on stage in front of our very eyes as the curtain went up. We should all be impressed with their performance, but we should be even more impressed by what took place to get to that point.

Students listening to the Mayor outside of City Hall

Enterprise America
Our entire 7th grade class had the opportunity to spend a day at WCNY’s Enterprise America. Enterprise America is a hands-on co-curricular program for middle-school students. The first of its kind in New York State, the program involves classroom instruction aligned to state and 21st century learning standards followed by the Enterprise America experience, with students spending a day in WCNY’s Enterprise America city, which they were responsible for operating.

Accountants busy managing the books
All of our students became business entrepreneurs and employees, consumers and citizens in this city for the day and were put in challenging and uncomfortable situations as they learned to manage money and time, and work with others to run a successful business.  Students were absolutely uncomfortable and somewhat stressed as they worked through the day, but they rose to the occasion. In fact, on the second day, our 7th graders had the most businesses pay off their business loan and become profitable than any other school to date at Enterprise America. Pretty impressive! Perhaps some of them could take their financial management skills to Albany and Washington.

Hard at work in the Cafe
We were very fortunate to have adult volunteers in each business to assist, support and guide students as needed. Teachers, teaching assistants, administrators, members of the Camillus-Solvay-Geddes Rotary Club and WESTAR Federal Credit Union employees were on site both days to support this experience. The hardest part as an adult volunteer was to step back and allow students to struggle and figure things out for themselves. This is true as a teacher in the classroom or as a parent at home. The greatest gift we can give our kids is the freedom to struggle, make mistakes, and empower them to persevere through adversity. We need to be there to help pick them up and/or offer advice along the way, but we can’t do things for them – the best lessons learned in life don’t come via a lecture or conversation, they come through real experiences. Step back and let them struggle. 

Both Annie Jr. and Enterprise America were invaluable experiences that helped to teach some of those important life lessons and allow our students to develop and foster those essential skills that they will need for their future.  In the end, that is our number one priority as a school and it is something that I am so grateful for and proud that as a District we can provide those opportunities for our kids. 

Continued Success,
Steve Dunham
Twitter: @Sdunhamwgms