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Building for Middle Level Success: Advisory & Advocacy Programs www.amle.org
As you come in, please
take a sticky note, write
down what you want to
learn from this session,
& post it to the wall!
Thanks!
Who is AMLE?
The Association for Middle Level Education •Where you can find us:
– www.amle.org•Who we are:
– The Association for Middle Level Education is the leading organization advancing the education of all students ages 10 to 15, helping them succeed as learners and make positive contributions to their communities and to the world.
•What we do:– We provide vision, knowledge, and
resources to over 30,000 middle level educators and leaders around the world. We help middle grade educators reach every student, grow professionally, and make great schools!
Who is AMLE?
VIsit AMLE at www.amle.org
Follow on Twitter: @amle
[email protected] on Twitter:
@DruTomlin_AMLE
AMLE2014AMLE’s
Annual Conference for Middle Grades
EducationNovember 6-8,
2014 in Nashville, TN!
How is advisory part
of Curriculum,
Instruction & Assessment?
How is advisory part
of Leadership & Organization
?
How is advisory part of
Culture & Community?
What do we know?
5 Characteristics of the Young Adolescents We Serve
1. Physical
2. Cognitive-Intellectual
3. Moral
4. Psychological
5. Socio-Emotional
How can advisory serve these
student achievement
areas?Snowball!
What are the threats to Advisory?
Lack of focus for the
program
Lack of profession
al developme
nt
Organization & size of advisory
groups
Lack of shared
vision & norms
Teachers’ discomfort
with subjects raised by students
Inadequate length of time for advisory
Lack of district supportLack of
coordination with families
1. Who teaches/coaches each advisory “class”?
2. How do we assign students?
3. What’s the curriculum going to be?
4. How do we orient students & staff at the beginning of the year?
5. How do we prep families & community?
6. How will we evaluate the success of the program?
Key Decisions for a Successful Advisory Program
The Inquisitive Parent Scenario!
Why does every adolescent need an adult to be
his/her advocate daily in school? What does that really
provide? What’s advisory about anyway?
TEAM Time!
How did it all happen?(1)Teachers in the building were thirsty for a better
“homeroom” concept. It was 20 min at end of the day with low fidelity and high frustration;
(2) A committee of teachers, counselors, and the principal met before the school year to discuss the vision, mission, and logistics of the advisory program –when in the day, days of the week, who would do it, number of students per group, curriculum for program, staff development;
(3) A special meeting during pre-planning was had with all staff members about the advisory program. The principal led the meeting, took questions, etc.;
TEAM Time!
(4) The counselor and the committee worked on the curriculum for the advisory by linking it with a weekly character ed program.
How did it look?
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
S.O.A.R.=Success isOpennessAboutReadiness
CoachApproach!
D.E.A.R.=DropEverythingAndRead
CoachApproach!
ETC.=Eagles areTalkingCollaboratively!
1. A committee of teachers and administrators decided that the current advisory program needed to be changed. Was homeroom.
2. Film Clips resource was explored as a way to infuse character education and increase dialogue between staff & students. The committee decided that all staff members would have a WATTS Up group. Theme-based WATTS Up plans were created to help teachers & staff conduct conversations about film clips.
3. Master schedule was created so there was a compromise between instructional time and advisory. Decided to rotate WATTS Up and DEAR Time every Thursday for 25 min. in the afternoon.
4. Climate survey was given to students before & after WATTS Up to measure effectiveness.
How did it happen?Websters Are Talking Together!
TEAM Time & WATTS Up?
1. Staff development should include video examples of what an effective advisory looks, sounds like.
2. You must monitor teacher/staff implementation.
3. When it’s not working for a certain teacher/staff, pair him/her up with an effective advisory teacher.
4. Maintain a committee of people to work on the curriculum for the program.
5. Get feedback from students and parents, too –but be careful what you do with it.
6. Need to have spaces for student concerns if you go with a curriculum (like Film Clips).
What did we learn?
An Advocacy Program is…
Key Questions to Ask:1.Why do you want to do it?2.Who are you serving?3.How will you identify the students in the program?4.How will inform parents of selected students?5.Who is going work with the students?6.How do you train your volunteers?7.What activities will you have for students in the program? Who will monitor each one?8.How will you involve community agencies?9.When does it happen? –afterschool, during day, both?
An Advocacy Program is…
•PATHWAY: •Who? Recommended & identified discipline kiddos. Letter to parents•When? During and after school. Sometimes with YMCA•Monthly events: 1 – 2- 3 •Basis: relationship only –no grades examined/discussed at length
•CHECK & CONNECT• Who? Recommended & identified kiddos•When? During school•Quarterly check-in events (one week @ end of quarter; mentor selected the day w/ mentee)•Basis: relationship and skills
1. What does the school’s mission statement say regarding advisory and advocacy?
2.What does the advisory program mission statement say?
3. What does “advocacy” mean? What are the parameters?
4. Who in the school will “manage and maintain” the advisory and advocacy programs?
5. How and when will the advisory and advocacy programs be evaluated?
The following are some questions that may prove useful for purposes of
discussion, implementation, clarification, direction, and evaluation…
AMLE’s 16 Characteristics of an Effective Middle School from This We Believe
Questions, Comments,
etc.?
Thanks for being a part
of the magnificent
middle level!
www.amle.orgDru Tomlin, Director of Middle Level [email protected]