I am an elementary school principal, and I've been thinking about
how things change and continue to evolve. The students in my
school have just completed this round of state testing, and without
taking any stance one way or another on this, I can tell you without
hesitation that it consumed a significant amount of time and energy,
both for our staff and for me personally. The tests may not have been
the way any of us (students included) would have chosen to allocate
instructional time, but our students mostly sailed through without
incident, despite some technical glitches. The real burden fell, as it
often does, to staff and administration. I was physically and mentally
exhausted after this week, and I know that our teachers were feeling
much the same.
After a bit of time to reflect, it struck me that while there are many
things that are "new" about the state tests, from an administration
and student impact standpoint, the tangible toll it took was not
dissimilar to other new tests during the first years of administering
those assessments. I say that not to dismiss any of the
conversation or concern about common core and this assessment,
but to remark on the way we currently experience change as a
society. New initiatives are announced much more loudly and
common experiences are felt much more strongly than was true even
twenty-five years ago. Social media and media in general connects
us in a way that brings a new gravity to every change and every
event. Think of the way we anticipate and brace for weather systems
we wouldn't have even been able to see coming 15 years ago!
At times that connection helps us to recognize the impending reality
of change and react to it with appropriate levels of concern; other
times that instant delivery of information can bring an intensity that
might cause us to react too quickly, without fully understanding the
deeper implications of a new situation. How have we reacted to
PERA (Phonics and Early Reading Assessments)? Or to the
Danielson frameworks, and having to interpret them ourselves? To
having learners with exceptionalities included in our classrooms
without specified training and development? To the ever-changing
landscape of technology? To the impending measurements of
student growth as part of our evaluations?
The inevitability of change alongside the reliability of new state
mandates demands a teacher who is responsive and flexible in
virtually every situation (domain 3c for those Danielson-ites keeping
score at home). However, I believe the skill we should seek isn't the
ability to transform immediately; it's the adaptability of quality
instruction. The basic truth held in common by everything in the
previous paragraph is simple: if we strive for truly excellent
instruction, we will meet the need of every mandate, so long as we
are willing to adapt our language a bit to reach the ears of our
evaluators.
In discussing this, I am reminded that no on will argue with you that
music isn't important. What we have to show that is that music is
relevant. Every teacher in your building is being asked to provide
quality instruction, to differentiate, to assess with integrity and
fidelity, and to provide students with experiences that will allow them
to grow as learners and as citizens—we are no different as
music teachers. We are also (all) asked to reflect, and the discover
the areas that we can all grow as educators—because even
though it may be true that "music teachers naturally and inherently
already do all of those things" (as we often say), it is also true that
not one of us still drawing breath is done growing as an educator. It
is our responsibility to engage—not necessarily in creating
something to "fit" the next mandate, but in self-reflection and honest
self-assessment that will help us ensure that the instruction we
provide is consistently meaningful, consistently of the highest
quality, and consistently relevant.
How will you do this? Perhaps you carve out time for daily or at least
weekly reflection about your own teaching—if not, try it!
Perhaps you will pull out a handout from a workshop or conference
session and take the time you promised yourself to think about how
you can really apply this to your classroom. Perhaps you can
commit a day to sharing and reflecting with some colleagues, or
connect with a friend over a cup of coffee and "talk shop" for a few
minutes—it may inspire you both! Whenever the time,
whatever the process for that reflection, make the commitment to
capture it (and then document it, because that's domain 4a behavior
you just demonstrated!). While we may sometimes need to adapt a
bit, we ARE relevant, and we don't need to "change" to prove it.