Kaleidoscope – March 2016

Kaleidoscope – March 2016

Kaleidoscope: The many colorful things happening at Rainbow, from the Executive Director

Hello beautiful Rainbow Community.ย  I am so happy spring is here!ย  It was a mild winter in terms of weather, but emotionally speaking, I found it hard to keep the olโ€™ disposition sunny during the dark days of winter.ย  How about you?ย  Was it a little harder to be patient with your family or community?ย  At school, the kids seem fine with the darker days. In fact, in our fast-paced, extroverted world, the slower, inward days of winter are a time for the children to focus on academics.ย  At your childโ€™s conference, you will find they have accomplished a lot over the winter months.

No matter what oneโ€™s age, the gloriousness of spring lifts the spirits, and it is good to see everyone outside more often.ย  Every grade, K-8 is busy with their citizen science outdoor projects.
What is citizen science?ย  It’s the collection and analysis of data that is contributed to national scientific projects.ย  So essentially, our students are participating in collaborative projects with professional scientists throughout the year to help identify trends or changes locally, regionally and nationally!ย  Here are the ย projects our students are participating in:

  • Kindergarten and 2nd grade – Nature’s Notebook – recording observations of local plants and animals.
  • First grade – Project Squirrel – tracking our squirrel population.
  • Third, fourth and fifth grade – Project eBird – tracking bird populations on our campus and other local areas.
  • Omega – ย Project Budburst – tracking plant phenophases throughout the year.

Speaking of science, did you see the cool one minute video that Michael and Ange made from the Design Fair and Science Fair? If not,ย CLICK HERE, and be sure to share it on social media!

Keeping Tuition Affordable: Help Crack the Nut!ย It sounds like there is going to be good attendance at this Community Circle meeting coming up on Tuesday, March 22nd, 4 โ€“ 6pm in the 4thย Grade Classroom.ย  Child care is free during the meeting. Please be a part of this important discussion.ย  (More information is at the bottom of thisย Kaleidoscope.)

YOU make all the difference in the world
One of the strategies for โ€œcracking the nutโ€ is to raise grant funds, but this requires proof that our program works.ย  That requires lots of data, and YOUR data counts, literally!ย ย PLEASE CLICK HERE NOW, and complete the research survey that PhD candidate, Alan Bush, has created.ย  Alan is tabulating all the answers and providing us with a report.ย  What an awesome opportunity โ€“ donโ€™t miss it!

YOUR CHILDREN make all the difference in the world
Our Rainbow kids never cease to amaze me. I recently received this message from the highly esteemed Dr. Theo Dawson:

Hi Renee,

I’ve been checking out your students’ Reflective Judgment scores today and I think they may well be the most impressive results we’ve ever seen. It’s making my heart sing!

Warmly,
โ€”Theo

Dr. Dawson, and her team at Lectica, has spent almost three decades creating tests that can assess studentโ€™s complexity of thinking and ability to reason ethically. This work is based out of research from the Mind, Brain, and Education program at Harvard Graduate School of Education, and the work of Kurt Fischer.ย  Rainbowโ€™s fourth through eighth graders took the Reflective Judgment test, which reveals how they think aboutย inquiry,ย evidence,ย learning & the mind,ย truth & certainty,ย conflict resolution,ย persuasion, andย deliberation.

As you can imagine, I was pretty thrilled to get a personal email from the head of the Lectica saying our studentsโ€™ scores may be the best they have ever seen!! Soon, we will be receiving the formal score reports and sharing them with your children and with the world.ย  It is so exciting to finally have real scientific evidence proving what we already knew โ€“ Rainbowโ€™s holistic program creates kids who are highly ethical, empathetic, and cognitively developed to a level of sophistication that is beyond their years. (Of course, Rainbow students score very well on traditional standardized tests too, but those tests only show a small sliver of rote skill attainment, without showing complexity of thinking or soft skill development.)

Rainbow studentsโ€™ high level of social/emotional skills will serve them very well when applying to colleges. The most prestigious universities are now changing their application processes to make the SAT optional, and to stress empathy as the most important quality– and this trend is going to become much stronger by the time your kids are applying for college.ย  I recommend clicking the link for the following Washington Post article:ย ย To get into college, Harvard report advocates for kindness instead of overachieving.ย 

Everyone a Changemaker!
Rainbowโ€™s new Director of Equity, Kyja Wilburn, and I attended an Ashoka Changemaker Summit in February.ย CLICK HEREย to view Kyjaโ€™s presentation on our experience at the summit, information about the Changemaker network, and some of her thoughts about building equity in schools.ย  If you havenโ€™t met Kyja yet, this is a great introduction.ย  Incidentally, Kyja and first grade assistant, Clarissa, also coached Odyssey of the Mind this year, and our team is going to state!

Smart People Strategizing
On Wednesday, March 16, one of my professors from Columbia University Teacherโ€™s College, Lyle Yorks, and his colleague, Harold Penton, are consulting with the Rainbow board on something called Blue Ocean Strategizing, and they will be interviewing various people on campus for research they are conducting.ย  (Another great opportunity for Rainbow!) I hope you get to meet them.

I canโ€™t wait for Domain Day!
Domain Day is Friday, March 18, and the whole school is celebrating.ย  Children will spend almost the whole day โ€œspecializingโ€ in one of their favorite domains in multi-age groups. I am one of the leaders for the spiritual domain.ย  Chris Weaver and I will be taking eight young children on a magical heroโ€™s journey for the day.ย  I LOVE my job!

Rainbow-ize everything!
It will take many years before the new section of campus is โ€œRainbow-izedโ€ like our old campus, but we make creative progress little by little.ย  This weekend, community muralist, Ian Wilkinson is painting a rainbow and a sun on the front of the Rainbow Community Center (auditorium) building.ย  Ian has created more than 40 murals in Asheville. His most famous is the chess player painted on Lexington Ave underneath Highway 240.

As promised above, more information on the upcoming Community Circle:
Onย Tuesday, March 22ndย fromย 4-6pm,ย in theย Fourth Grade Classroom, RCS will hold a Community Circle meeting.ย No fee forย childcare during the meeting. As a community we have such amazing ideas and we each have incredible contributions to make to our school. We work together to solve so many challenges.ย  At this meeting, weย need the collective wisdom of our community members to “help crack the nut!โ€

Rainbow Community School needs to solve the largest puzzle that we have.ย  The board calls it โ€œthe nut we have to crack.โ€ย  Essentially, the โ€œnutโ€ is that we charge tuition and that makes it hard to serve a wide array of families.ย  The โ€œnutโ€ is trying to figure out how to keep tuition as low as possible, so that Rainbow education isnโ€™t just for those in the highest social-economic demographic. At the same time, we need to have enough revenue coming in to pay our staff, maintain/improve facilities, and to keep a low teacher/student ratio and all the quality programming that we have.ย Currently, we do it by paying our staff very low salaries.ย  Rainbow lead teachers make, on average, about $7,000 less a year than Buncombe County teachers and North Carolina ranks 46thย in teacher pay in the US.

The board has decided that we have two major equity issues to tackle โ€“ racial equityย andย teacher pay equity.ย  There are only two ways to solve the teacher pay equity issue โ€“ either save money by staffing more kids per teacher or increase revenues.ย  Doing the former would compromise our quality, so that means focusing on the latter.
So, how can we increase revenues?ย  Tuition is our only consistent source of funding, and it makes up 95% of our revenues. Currently, tuition goes up quite a bit every year, just to keep up with the 3%-6% salary raise teachers receive annually.ย  If we started providing larger staff raises, tuition would have to increase immensely.

Howย elseย can we raise more revenueย — A LOT of revenue, like $200,000/year more– without making Rainbow totally unaffordable?ย  We could have a much larger annual campaign, but the $80,000 we currently have is not easy.ย  We could raise tuition steeply, but on a sliding fee scale.ย  This has its obvious drawbacks.ย  People have also suggested we have an additional fee each year and families below a certain income wouldnโ€™t have to pay it.ย  Again, this has some major drawbacks.ย While we may have to consider some of these options, the ultimate goal is to get creative and find funding โ€“ย consistentย annual funding — from outside the parent body.

COME TO THE COMMUNITY CIRCLE MEETING ONย MARCH 22ndย TO HELP US FIGURE THIS OUT ANDย MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD!

We need the collective wisdom of our community members to crack this nut!

We hope to see you there.

Is your child an introvert?

Is your child an introvert?

Rainbow Community School has always been a safe haven for introverted children. ย In a world where social aggressiveness has be glorified, especially in the competitive public education model, Rainbow has always had a way of understanding and honoring the power of the introvert.

Three insights from Rainbow on educating introverts:

1. ย Provide “in-breath and out-breath” time. ย At Rainbow, we have active and “outward” times of day; but unlike most schools, those are balanced with “inward” times. ย Every day has moments of silence, such as when we take three breaths together at morning centering, or when we watch nature, or when we decide to have a meditational lunch.

2. Provide many speaking opportunities where introverts can share about something they are passionate about in a safe space — with their classmates. ย That eventually builds up to speaking in front of the whole community. ย However, if they are actually terrified, allow them to “pass” until they are comfortable. ย It takes time to build trust.

3. Allow introverts to find a role they are comfortable with. ย Instead of forcing a terrified child to sing in a performance, a Rainbow teacher might ask them to take on another role, such as being in charge of costumes or props. ย Such a role actually makes them a leader in the eyes of their peers, and builds confidence.

How Parents And Teachers Can Nurture The ‘Quiet Power’ Of Introverts

Empowered Teachers = Empowered Students

Empowered Teachers = Empowered Students

Why does Rainbow have such dedicated, mindful, creative, and loving teachers? Because we follow every single one of the recommendations in this article. Teachers are still treated like blue-collar workers by politicians. At Rainbow they are highly respected professionals who are provided time to collaborate with one another, autonomy to run their classroom, consistent and relevant professional development, and balance in their lives so they aren’t burned out. The result? Students who are dedicated, mindful, creative, and loving. Empowered teachers create empowered students.

A National Strategy to Improve the Teaching Profession

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Spiritual and Religious Education

Spiritual and Religious Education

Religious children are meaner than their secular counterparts, study finds by Harriet Sherwood for The Guardian

If this study is accurate, and religious children are less compassionate, what about spiritual children? If we put people into four categories:
1. religious and spiritual
2. religious and NOT spiritual
3. non religious and spiritual, and
4. non religious and not spiritual
Years of studies by Lisa Miller, director of clinical psychology at Columbia Teacher’s College, reveal that the traits of spiritual children, whether in the religious or non religious category, are far more positive than children who were not spiritual. There we 80% less likely to suffer from depression and far less likely to engage in risky behaviors. Miller defines spirituality as having a sense of some unifying force, whether that force is thought of as God, nature, the universe, or any other term/concept. ย Spiritual children had higher self-esteems and displayed far greater compassion and happiness.

So if spirituality raises healthier, happier, wiser, more responsible children, the question is “How do we promote spirituality?” And we ask this question regardless of whether they are religious or not. ย Since 1977 Rainbow Community School has made spiritual development a core part of our holistic program. (See The Spiritual Domain for an explanation of how it is implemented.)

What about religious children? ย It is interesting to note that religiosity does not inherently generate spirituality. While the children who were religious and spiritual conveyed all the benefits of spirituality, of the four categories, the children who were religious and NOT spiritual were at the highest risk for substance abuse, risky sexual behavior, and depression. ย It is important that people don’t read this article by the Guardian and draw the conclusion that religion is bad. Religion is perhaps more about customs and ethnicity–nothing wrong with that! Religion is only a problem if it gets in the way of compassionate spirituality.ย