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Saturday, June 13, 2015

When the School Becomes the Graduation Sheriff - Teacher in a Strange Land - Education Week Teacher

When the School Becomes the Graduation Sheriff - Teacher in a Strange Land - Education Week Teacher:

When the School Becomes the Graduation Sheriff





 Several years ago, I was traveling across the state with then-President of the MI Education Association, Julius Maddox, and our conversation wandered into territory where I had some strong opinions: the overuse of praise, awards and celebrations in schools.

I thought that kindergarten "graduations" with tiny mortarboards and grandma snapping pictures were overkill--and endless middle school Award Nights where making the B+ honor roll was worthy of a certificate and applause were just not necessary. High school graduation? Sure. A real accomplishment. But I had seen enough calligraphy-scribed honor certificates dumped into the trash by heedless 8th graders to have developed a cynical perspective on celebrating each and every minor milepost.
Maddox soundly but thoughtfully disagreed: For kids whose future is assured by vigilant parenting and adequate resources--those whose expectations automatically include high school, college and career--perhaps an end-of-kindergarten ceremony is meaningless, he remarked. But for other children, the future is a crapshoot.
In his district, parties marking the successful end of middle school were part of the culture. Gifts were welcomed--a card from Auntie Mae with five dollars could go into a college fund. It was reason to gather family, celebrate and push a youngster into the next level, buoyed by plenty of recognition, praise and encouragement. We applaud at every level, he said. There's no worry about too much joy or pride.
I remembered our discussion when the story emerged, last week, about the superintendent in Senatobia, Mississippi pressing charges against family members who cheered for high school graduates. The charges were quickly dropped--but the superintendent made his point: We don't like the way you choose to celebrate. And we're in charge.
I've been to more school commencement exercises than I care to remember--usually directing the When the School Becomes the Graduation Sheriff - Teacher in a Strange Land - Education Week Teacher: