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Metro “Grows Our Own” Future Teachers

MAYA MCFADDEN PHOTO Tomorrow's teachers? Metro "Educators Rising" students discuss student mindsets.

by MAYA MCFADDEN The new haven independent

Some students remained after school at Metro Business Academy Tuesday to start getting a sense of what it might be like one day to come back — as teachers.

Students work on skit to discuss student engagement tactics.

They came to a second-floor classroom to participate in a program called “Educators Rising,” part of the district’s “grow your own” initiative that provides students with hands-on experiences to learn directly about careers in teaching and public education.
The program is one way New Haven Public School (NHPS) is trying to address the district’s staff shortages. 
Metro history teacher Julia Miller leads the course. She worked to make the district’s educators pathways curriculum with Wilbur Cross English teacher Akimi Nelken, who is leading an “Educator Pathway” course in partnership with Southern Connecticut State University at Cross. Students enrolled in Miller’s class will also get college credit for a prerequisite education course at Quinnipiac University. 
“We can solve our own teacher shortage crisis,” Miller said.
For the first half of the year, Miller led the program as an after-school club where students were introduced to a series of public education speakers, trips to college education programs, and volunteer opportunities at Conte West Hills Magnet School. 
During Tuesday’s after-school meeting, Miller led an hour-and-a-half-long lesson focused in “What Motivates Students to Learn.” Eight juniors and seniors participated.
The class meets once a week. The group has so far dived into topics such as why public education matters and what makes a great teacher. In recent weeks, the students completed a project tasking them with writing a letter to a teacher who impacted them at any point in their lives to demonstrate the impact and importance of teaching. Students concluded with delivering their letters to the educators. 


The class discussed the differences between a student with a “growth mindset” and a student with a “fixed mindset.”

Junior Makayla Kidd described a growth mindset as guiding a student who believes they can improve abilities but are not there yet. Students with a fixed mindset, Kidd said, “think if they can’t do it right now, then they’re going to cheat or just give up.” 
Kidd added that in addition to how students are taught at home, the school system’s traditional numeric grading system contributes to the type of mindset a student will develop. She said a mastery-based grading system is more effective because it identifies where a student has room for growth and improvement rather than just basing work on a pass or fail numeric or letter scale. 


“How do you teach a student who’s been taught to give up on things from their parents?” Kidd asked.

Junior Natalie Alas responded to Kidd’s question with her firsthand experience: When she arrived to Metro as a freshmen, it was the first time she was given encouragement and motivation for her writing skills. In the past, she said, teachers told her she couldn’t improve. At Metro, her English teacher celebrated her skill in writing poetry and encouraged her to further develop her writing skills. 
The class then moved on to discussing Schlechty’s five levels of engagement, which are described as “engaged, strategic compliance, ritual compliance, retreatism,” and “rebellion.”
The students split into two groups of four. They spent the remainder of the class acting out skits of each level of engagement, discussing how to encourage students to grow at each level. 
Miller offered the students tips, such as:

Metro’s Julia Miller: New Haven can solve teacher shortage on our own.

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