We continue our conversation with Grace Alli Brandstein, a school improvement and instructional coach supporting struggling high schools in the Bronx. This week, Ms. Brandstein focuses on humane, antiracist education, and explains Dr. Gholdy Muhammad’s construct of literacy as identity, skills, intellect, criticality, and joy. She also speaks about the conditions for successful adult learning, giving teachers the training they need to lead one another and the space to coalesce around a shared vision, expectations, and protocols.
Overview
00:00-00:58Intros
00:58:-03:59Coaching: whom, theory of action, teachers’ feelings
03:59-09:56Key elements of school improvement
09:56-13:12Adult learning
13:12-15:04Self-reflection and culturally-responsive teaching: importance of knowing the “why”
15:04-21:30Culturally responsive education in practice; Dr. Gholdy Muhammad
21:30-29:36Examples: a biology lesson on testosterone; Project Soapbox; Facing History; 1619 Project; NY Times writing curriculum
29:36-34:00Bettina L. Love: We Want to Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching and the Pursuit of Educational Freedom