About This Webinar
Join Mica Pollock, Professor of Education Studies and Director of Schooltalking, and Share My Lesson for a webinar on Schooltalk.
Words matter. Everything that is—and isn’t—communicated to and about students has serious implications for their success. The offhand remark to a student or parent about the community in which she lives; the way groups—based on race, “culture,” and income—are discussed in faculty meetings about test scores and data; the assumptions and communication breakdowns between counselors and teachers that cause kids to fall needlessly through the cracks; or the deflating comment to a young person about his college prospects: all these words have tremendous power. They are, in fact, actions that undermine efforts to maximize the potential and talent of all students, every day.
In this essential workshop for nurturing equity in our schools, Dr. Pollock will challenge us to seriously reflect on and rethink what we say about---and to---students. Participants will engage in personal and organizational reflection via common scenarios, and be provided with suggestions for concrete actions, as well as valuable resources for matching their speech to their values. Learning experiences in this workshop are designed to empower teachers, administrators and support staff who work with young people in our schools to foster more student and school success and more equitable student outcomes.
Hi,
This recorded webinar was the 2nd I have done in so many days that I don't seem to get the complete survey or button for submission. Schooltalk impressed me so that I need to comment. The presentation seemed like a lot of book promotion but was mixed with the goal of a webinar. Possibly as a result, the techniques were inefficient -- too many complete sentences and too many lines on slides that need to support but conflicted with the speaking. Attendees might have to choose between listening and reading; I stopped the recording in order to read, then listened to the speaker. I would offer more feedback if the professor would like contact.