I am an After School Coordinator in Vallejo, CA. In this role, I organize and run my school’s expanded learning programming and oversee my after-school staff. The school is located in an area where children are lacking resources. I particularly connect with these children because I’ve lived in those areas throughout my life. With that said, I think it’s no coincidence that I am there.
This school year, during our monthly professional development and site coordinator inquiry with Lead by Learning I decided to focus on second graders in our program because of the transitions these students experienced starting at the beginning of school when a teacher they had become attached to in the previous school year left suddenly. They were placed with a school site-based substitute for a short period until a “permanent teacher” was assigned. By November, they had 3 different teachers.
I started to notice behaviors among students that created a hostile environment. There was bullying, fighting, and mean verbal words towards one another. We decided as a staff that we would focus on creating a Kindness Revolution to build our students’ SEL skills in after school. We started with these tools:
During the Kindness Revolution, we collected data as site coordinators with Lead by Learning. What stood out for me in terms of street data was hearing the students say thank you and allowing others to go in front of them in lines. My favorite piece of street data was looking at Panorama Survey responses and seeing that they were using the word kind in their answers. For example, one of my focal students said, “I like that my school is kind.” And, as the school year came close to ending, the more acts of kindness we saw!
The Lead by Learning staff was instrumental in giving us the tools needed for success in our “Kindness Revolution.” During our sessions I got ideas about using incentives to encourage acts of kindness, using the one mic rule during circle, and always being encouraging. Each session also had a warm welcome, and these icebreakers were very thoughtful and reflective for me. Lead by Learning was encouraging in a gentle, supportive manner, which worked perfectly for our goals.
I think my self-reflective moments came from my “think alone time” and also my time spent with my peers, the Lead by Learning staff, as well as my awesome district leader, Carol Lewis. I was able to hear things shared and apply them to our kindness journey. This fits into my mindset of “The Village.” I truly believe that “It takes a village to raise a child.” I remember a principal, Roxanne Tuggle telling me about an African village that would say “If the children are ok, the village is ok.” For the children to be ok, we have to collectively work together as a community.
My biggest takeaway from this Kindness Revolution is that with passion, commitment, and consistency, we can truly help children become loving, compassionate individuals. Also, while taking this journey, I myself became more aware of how to treat others.
By doing simple acts of kindness for others,
We can’t help but lift ourselves up, too!
Interested in working with Lead by Learning to support professional learning for your Expanded Learning staff? Connect with a member of our team to learn more about our partnerships.