More Happy Talk From Seattle Schools

Seattle Schools has a Facebook page and, as you might imagine, it's a happy place where only bland announcements are made and good news stories abound. But one SPS reply to a post had me rolling my eyes.

The post was this:

It was a full circle moment for 25 graduating seniors from schools including Lincoln, Ballard, Ingraham, and Roosevelt high schools. They all took a trip together, back to where it all started—McDonald Int'l Elementary School. 
 
It was here, in the Spanish immersion program where they all started kindergarten together. Their teacher, Diana Einmo, aka "Profe Diana" would go on to teach this same group of students through 5th grade. 
 
Now, they're all graduating from high school. Before graduation, all of the students got together to surprise her and say "gracias, profe!"

It is a lovely story and what a dedicated teacher in Ms. Einmo.

So a couple of commenters said that they hoped that might mean SPS would add more dual language offerings. 

Then there was this:

I thought this post was both cool but immensely ironic given all the talk of SPS shutting down dual-language immersion programs and options in general. It’s almost like the social media arm of SPS doesn’t talk to the rest of SPS.
 
And several commenters agreed.  Here's what the SPS reply was (and they printed it twice to reach both people who spoke of the disconnect). 
 
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on social media content. The goal of SPS social media is to honor and celebrate all the great things that are happening in our schools, despite “all the talk”. Our students and staff are doing amazing things and they deserve to be recognized. This was a great story that came to us from families who felt it would be nice to share — we agreed. We look forward to highlighting more good news from across the district. We hope you will be there to celebrate with us
 
"All the talk?" Yes, there are good things happening in SPS. However, with the budget crisis, looming school closures and the murder at Garfield High School, I think most parents believe this is a sober time. That reply from SPS sure could use some balance to reflect that. 
 
I note that in the post with the message from Superintendent Brent Jones about the murder, they shut off any comments. So you can comment on the good news but not the bad.  

 
I do want to let parents know about a good offering from SPS:
 
Attention High School Students! This summer, Seattle Skills Center has some great opportunities for you to earn Career and Technical Education (CTE) credits needed for graduation. 
 
All current 8th-11th grade students can take introductory versions of our school year career-connected classes at several locations around the city—classes like Maritime Vessel Operations, Careers in Education, and Construction Trades, and more! 
 
Learn more about the Seattle Skills Center’s summer program at: https://buff.ly/3xBh8TW
 
 
 
Two items from the Seattle Times.


At this point — after multiple shootings around Garfield High School, a dead student in the parking lot, and two others killed at Ingraham and near Chief Sealth High in less than two years — it is irresponsible to believe that good intentions will keep students safe in Seattle Public Schools. 

Educators like to talk about preventing violence before it happens by “wrapping their arms” around kids with more counselors and psychologists. That may be necessary. But it is insufficient, possibly naive. Not every kid who brings a gun to school has a mental health problem, though the students who’ve witnessed deadly shootings are surely suffering real trauma. 

Co-president (of the PTSA) Alicia Spanswick says students have told her “They want to feel secure and safe — real safety, not theater.”

Without a visible presence like guards or weapons detectors, school security does indeed feel performative.

Here's one of the main issues that needs to change:

The state requires all districts to have “threat assessment” protocols, which can range from creating supervision schedules for certain students to removing weapons from their homes. But relying on these plans is a fallacy. The freshman who murdered 17-year-old Ebenezer Haile in the halls at Ingraham High was a known threat — he’d brought weapons to school only a month before. Clearly the safety plan created for him, if any, was inadequate. As a result, the school district is now facing a $45 million wrongful-death suit from Haile’s family.

Yes, the student at Ingraham who murdered the other student was KNOWN to SPS. My impression is that the district has tied the hands of many principals. It appears that restorative justice may not be the answer for all these issues and frankly, if at student brings a weapon to school, that student should be expelled. 

Yup, I said it.

One thing is clear: It is unrealistic and unfair to expect educators to handle this profound social problem on their own. It is bigger than schools, and the mayor and Seattle City Council must sustain their involvement beyond the immediate aftermath of the latest tragedy.

But there are more targeted approaches. Yakima educators, for example, receive reports each morning from city police, alerting them to gang activity or domestic violence that could spread from the community into school hallways.

Yakima also has weapons-detection hardware at one high school, and is spending $1 million for an alert system that gives every adult in every building the power to immediately summon help — including for school lockdowns.

Superintendent Trevor Greene says these measures have made a real difference in creating greater security for students and staff.

Again, yup.

For its part, Seattle Public Schools cannot treat summer vacation as a breather. This is the time to conceive a new approach to security for the 2024-25 school year — even if it costs extra money. 

Which swings me back to Jones' remark about a "season" of grief and "a season" to plan. The time is now.  It will be interesting in the face of all that has happened, if Jones asks for a raise and the Board gives it to him.  

 

The other article is this on titled - Violence prevention programs in school are one way to keep kids safe, experts say.

Of course, the irony is that Amarr Murphy-Paine was trying to stop a fight and died for his efforts. 

Every time this happens, I feel like I haven’t done enough or we are too slow,” said Roger Kluck, the director of the Alternative to Violence Project. Kluck’s program provides a workshop where students do activities and play games to help build self-confidence, bond with each other and brainstorm how to solve problems and understand the underlying causes of violence.

Kluck and other experts said prevention can make a difference for students as they learn to deal with the big emotions that can lead to violence. Ideally, lessons should begin at the start of a student’s education and not as a stopgap measure once students are already in high school or after a tragedy has occurred.

Social-emotional learning programs that teach self-regulation, problem-solving and communication skills are crucial as early as preschool and throughout elementary school, said Tia Kim, a developmental psychologist and a vice president at Committee for Children, a Seattle-based nonprofit that works in over 45,000 K-12 schools in the country. Research shows these skills foster emotional safety, which in turn helps reduce violence. 

I would agree with the thrust of the article which is to start early and keep the work up all through high school. 

Remember that City money for mental health? Here are some answers that raise questions:

Citing graduation planning and the recent events at Garfield, a spokesperson for Seattle Public Schools was not available to comment on exactly which violence programs are offered at district schools. But Seattle students do get some instruction aimed at teaching conflict resolution skills and social-emotional regulation. The district offers its own programming and several area nonprofits contract with individual schools. 

And the city has committed up to $10 million aimed at youth mental health and safety for the coming school year, according to a Friday announcement by the mayor’s office. An initial $2.4 million will go to providing increased access to telehealth therapy services for students, starting this summer.

The Communications Department is too busy to find out what prevention programs are in Seattle Schools? Wouldn't this be a logical question you would know might come from a journalist? 

I'm not the only one wondering; I see this called out in the comments. 

Educators should also work to develop strong relationships with students and promote a positive school climate to keep students invested in school and away from problematic behavior, Kim said. Involvement in sports, activities and academics also helps keep kids safe.  

“High academic performance is typically a really good protective factor to youth violence,” Kim said. 

In 2019, the Legislature required that one state-funded professional development day for educators be focused on social-emotional learning every other year beginning in 2021.

Comments

Anonymous said…
“All the talk” LOL - could also refer to the district and Board’s own navel gazing their way through running a district. How much damage is done when you say that the Governor reopening schools in COVID-times is “white supremacy,” or that the district needs a Department of Liberation Studies (liberating students from what? The District itself?) at the expense of more teachers in the classrooms. I would love to see the Board feature more stories like this at their meetings and less focus on wet blanket topics like why they are not clearing homelessness encampments from campuses. Yes, these are high impact issues that need to be daylighted, but those meetings are some anti-commercials for why families should enroll at SPS, leading middle class families to bail on a district the rich left a long time ago.

SPS Chatter

Anonymous said…
How would the conversation around discipline/expulsion change if a student was diagnosed with a developmental disability? What questions would the public be asking about services provided to students and families? Especially in the era of “inclusion” for all?
- Heartbroken Advocate
Heartbroken, that's a great question.
Anonymous said…
What idiotic posts on disability. Both the comments above and the main thread in a previous post are thoughtless.

In a previous post, a faux-concerned sped teacher wrings his hands about the impact of school closures on the disabled students at Graham Hill. The fact is, larger schools are better resourced to have a wider range of services and are MORE equipped to handle students with a wide array of disabilities because they can provide a continuum of alternate placements, meeting the needs of nearly all students with disabilities in a region. That is why all middle and high schools serve nearly all the students with disabilities in their assignment areas. They are bigger. IDEA also requires students attend the same school as their nondisabled peers to the maximum extent possible as well as a continuum of alternate placements. Larger schools makes that more likely. Of course, there are always a very few students with truly unique needs who fall outside the capacity of any continuum and even outside the district’s capacity. The teacher posits that because service delivery is so unregulated and haphazard, that those with disabilities will somehow get the short end of the stick or need special care during closures. The two problems are not related. Haphazard special education with no oversight is indeed a problem, no matter how schools are arranged or closed. Larger schools means oversight is more likely.

Next up, a so-called Heartbroken Advocate asks “what if the shooter had a developmental disability”? Or maybe they meant “what if the disciplined student has a dreaded developmental disability”? What if they did??? Firstly, Developmental Disability is not an IDEA category. So what is HA even talking about? Washington State Division of Disabilities Administration defines Developmental Disability as: “Another neurological or other condition similar to intellectual disability”. So, is he saying the shooters are intellectually disabled? Highly unlikely. Students with intellectual disabilities are generally confined to highly supervised settings similar to preschool classrooms and those are not the students doing the shootings. For a few students with intellectual disabilities who are NOT self-contained… are they the ones with the capacity to obtain weapons, ability to plan, and the ones with the follow through with committing murder? Are they committing murders? Any data on that? Maybe the sniveling advocate is complaining that the intellectually disabled aren’t expelled enough? Research presented by OSPI suggests students with any disability are far more likely to be expelled than others unless they are already confined to a special education self contained classroom (which is really another form of expulsion). Because of the widespread use of suspension and expulsion against students in regular education with disabilities, IDEA now requires manifestation determinations for such district actions. Schools can’t expel their way out of teaching the disabled though they try as hard as they can to do it. And what is the “era of inclusion for all”? Is it a bad thing? All means all, doesn’t it? The reality is, SPS is a highly UNinclusive district even in Washington. There is no era of inclusion in SPS. Heartbroken, get a clue. Intellectually disabled students aren’t the shooters, and they are disproportionately expelled, and they are segregated everywhere you look. But yes, your kid might have to sit next to one, so best to make peace with that.

Old Time Advocate






"Larger schools means oversight is more likely." In SPS, I would not believe this true at all.
Anonymous said…
Then Melissa, you have not much experience in special education either as a parent or a staff. Yes I know one of your kids got a couple years of special ed at Roosevelt. Your sample size is minuscule. I can tell as both a parent and a staff member who has worked at many schools. Small schools might seem comfortable for a few but it is mostly inefficient and ineffective in the end. When smaller schools don’t work out, which occurs extremely often, kids are shipped out…. to anywhere, most likely another small school that doesn’t work out. Social ties are repeatedly ruptured. There have countless media reports on this. Teachers have nobody to collaborate with, because small schools can not support multiple teachers in one building. Weird teacher belief systems are never checked and students get no benefits of multiple teachers for the duration of their time in the school. And for our poor students in self contained programs, they are often stuck in wide ranging classrooms. K-5 or worse, K-8. Not a lot of learning goes on there! Better for everyone to stay in the same school, move to different rooms if and when something doesn’t work out. That is impossible in a small school with only resource room or resource room + 1 other thing. And for “inclusion” that Heartless Advocate is so worried about, more staff makes that more likely.

Old Timer
Old Timer, you don't know my children. My son didn't have Special Ed at Roosevelt. You have no idea about the real story.

I bow to your great experience except that my son's is not my only one. I've spoken to so many Special Education parents over the years. I follow the Seattle Special Education page on Facebook so I'm keeping my ear to the ground.

You are certainly entitled to your beliefs, based on your long experience in SPS, but you are not going to discount mine.

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