Consent Matters….

I absolutely loved my time in the classroom.  With my blue wall standing at attention, my illegal scentsy wafting vanilla through the room, and my students streaming into my classroom, I always stood at the door with some sort of prop greeting them.  Skeleton Hand, yes, please.  Giant Gandalf staff, I had that too.  I once confiscated these plastic Halloween finger props that looked like witch’s fingers complete with long nails.  

“Hello, my pretties!”  I would say to my kids as I wiggled my witch’s fingers at them.  

“Ms. Kinder,” they retorted back, “You do too much.”  Which was usually true; I do too much, but you can never say I didn’t have a blast every single day in my classroom that felt like my home away from home.

Back in 2015, I had a little girl in my class that was just plain going through it.  Her mom called me in a panic and asked if I could keep snacks for this sweet girl in my room, so she didn’t have to go to the lunchroom which was a huge source of stress and anxiety for her.  Let’s call her, Kayla.  My answer: “Of course.”  Little did I know how much Kayla was actually in trouble at the time.  I just made my room available to her for lunch, so she felt safe.  When the snacks got low, I purchased some backups.  

After a while, Kayla asked if a few other girls could come eat lunch in my room too.  “Of course,” I said, and I was pleased she had made some friends, and so was her mom.  It turned into a little, girl-led therapy circle most days.  These girls were grappling with puberty, who they wanted to be, who they didn’t want to be, and sometimes the topics ranged from something light like favorite foods to deeper things like a fear of someone hurting them or taking advantage of them.

The best teachers help kids come to their own conclusions by asking open-ended questions to create meaningful discussions without telling kids how and what to believe.  I won’t pretend that there weren’t tears sometimes because this space that Kayla cultivated with my help was a safe one.  By April, we were averaging 30 girls deep at lunch on any given day.     

One particular day, one of the girls from ‘lunch bunch’ aka ‘girls’ club’ came storming in mad as a hornet.  She had on a skirt with a t-shirt and she was rocking Vans to boot.  The other girls were eating and gabbing and laughing and came to a complete halt when this girl stomped in.  

“This is why we can’t wear skirts anymore,” she lamented.  “Some guy just came up behind me, put one hand on my waist and the other up my skirt.  When I pushed him off of me, he just ran away laughing with his friends.”  

I sometimes used this time to catch up on emails while the girls ate, but this had me up out of my seat in a flash, “Excuse me!” I yelled.  “That is assault!  Who was it?!”  But try as I might, I couldn’t get the young lady to tell me the who behind it for fear of retaliation.  

“Girls,” I said, “You are the boss of your bodies, and no one gets to touch you without your permission.  Consent matters!”  

“Yeah,” they all agreed.  “We are the bosses!”  

I went home that night and looked at my own daughter and son and began the dialogue of consent, bodies, and respectful behavior.  My goal as a mom is to always keep the lines of communication open.  That when something crazy happens, instead of them being fearful to talk to me, they will run toward my safety net of love.  “My mom will know what to say/do.”  That is my hope.

The next day at school there was a commotion in the hallway.  The girls from my lunch bunch all had skirts on and white t-shirts with the words, “CONSENT MATTERS,” emblazoned on the front of each shirt; put on haphazardly with black sharpie markers.  They were marching down the hall yelling, “We are the bosses of our BODIES!”    

“Oh no,” I thought to myself.  “This is going to be a thing all day.”  And a thing it was.  My principal, one of the best I ever worked with, sauntered over to me.  “Is this your doing?” He smiled and asked.  “No,” I said, “I just told them they were the bosses of their bodies and no one is allowed to touch them without their permission!  The matching outfits and skirts were all them!”  

He chuckled, “This is going to be a day!”  He was right; it was a day.  Complete with an impromptu, emergency assembly for all 8th grade boys and girls in the gym to talk about appropriate behavior.  Things can escalate quickly in middle school without those pre-frontal lobes fully developed.

I stayed close with these girls for the rest of the year, especially Kayla.  When 8th grade graduation came around, Kayla, surrounded by her lunch bunch, cried tears of sadness and joy at the end of their middle school life.  Pictures were taken, promises to keep in touch were made, and the year had come to an end, but that wasn’t the end of the story.  

Years later, I took a job as an Instructional Coach, teaching and supporting teachers, at a completely different school in the Fall of 2020 when things were far from normal in a school setting.  On the first day the students came back into the building, complete with masks hiding their faces, and masks hiding ours, it was pouring down rain.  It was a mess.  I stood at the door greeting students in my Ms. Kinder way, but I knew no one.  I felt sadness and ached for my classroom with the blue wall and students and staff I missed fiercely from the previous years.  When all of a sudden a woman approached me, “Are you Ms. Kinder?!” She asked, “From Cooper Middle School.”  

“Yes,” I answered, and I pulled my mask down.  She pulled hers down and burst into tears.  

“I owe you my daughter’s life,” she sobbed through tears.  “I’m Kayla’s mom, and you did something back in 2015 that made her not take her own life by suicide when she was in 8th grade.  You talked her out of hurting herself.”  Kayla’s mom clung to me in this rainstorm while we both sobbed.  Kayla’s younger brother had changed schools, and was attending the school I was placed at as an Instructional Coach.  Now, in 2015, I didn’t know Kayla was in as grave danger as she was; I just filled up her snack drawer, and gave her a place to belong.  But looking back on it now, I can see the gravity of the situation.  I don’t remember what I said to keep her from hurting herself, but as Kayla’s mom hugged me and cried that day, I was humbled at the impact that not only I had on Kayla’s life, but the impact she had on mine.

As teachers, sometimes we don’t know or feel the true impact of what we do until years later.  Sometimes, never.  When I do professional development workshops for educators all over the nation, I have my attendees think of a teacher, someone impactful in their school lives, and I challenge them to find that teacher on social media and tell that teacher what she/he meant to them.  So many times, the teachers I teach will reach out and say, “I found Mr./Ms. ___________ and I said thank you to them like you said to, and it made all the difference in the world in my mood and theirs.”

Teach on, my most beautiful warriors!  We have almost made it to the end of the year.  

-Katie Kinder   

 #katiekinderfromokc   #relatetheneducate  #oklaed    #teachercoach #teacherlife #professionaldevelopmentforteachers  #thespringshift  #thebreakroom  #thebluewall  #hallwayleadership  #premierprofessionaldevelopment  #untoldteachingtruths   

                         

10 Ideas to End the Year Strong…

Don’t phone it in; it is hard.  Testing is in progress or over; the kids are fried.  The teachers are definitely fried; the principals have a constant walkie talkie attached to their ears while they run from fire to fire, figurative, sometimes literal.  Spring has sprung, so if you are a teacher of kids between 11-18 years old, then the romances are in full bloom, and the drama has ensued.  Some kids are ecstatic that summer is upon them; some kids are terrified that summer is upon them.  Some kids are devastated that summer is upon them.    

Teachers have a countdown going in their heads, on their calendars, and with their teacher besties when they exhaustedly mumble to each other in the hall, “32 ½ more days.”  Hair askew, two different shoes on, workout pants disguised as dress pants, “These are yoga slacks, okay.  There is a seam and that signifies dress pants.” 

“No one asked; we are just glad you showed up today,” says any principal on any given day in the 4th quarter to any teacher on their staff.     

THE POINT IS… This is hard; don’t phone it in.  Here are some ideas to end the year that are engaging, fun, and full of awesome life lessons.  Email me if you want the lesson with more details or the entire lesson plan from start to finish!   

1. Hack School- Have students create their dream school in pairs!  It has to be serious.  Architecture, floor plans, what kinds of classes do they need/want? Use AI and Chat GPT as resources!  

2. Student Job Fair- wrap curriculum around this one.  Done in pairs, create a company, design logos, do research, make posters, write interview questions, and then have an actual job fair in your room, and invite other classes in to interview.  So Fun!  

3.Design a Brochure to give to the upcoming grade: I.E. “How to survive 7th grade” Trifold, design, color, information.  Give the kids choice on their brochure.  Have them create a PSA on bullying or a charity or a cause near and dear to their hearts.  To present to each other, do a jigsaw!  

4.End of Year Stations: Move every fifteen minutes, and each station has a small project to complete.  Thank you letter to a teacher/principal, blackout poetry, legos, play dough, the ideas are limitless.  

5.Teach them to Debate.  Have a true FishBowl discussion or a speed discussion.  Socratic Seminars are awesome.  Secure a different place to have a debate and invite other adults to come judge the debate.  Library, Gym, Empty classroom.  

6.Have the kids work in pairs to create a podcast!  

7.Write letters to congress about an environmental issue or social issue that is near to their hearts.  

8.Have them mindmap their futures!  

9.Have them make a movie trailer about their lives.  Who would play them?  Or create a screenplay for a movie they’d like to see come to fruition.  Have them mesh genres: Think, Abraham Lincoln The Vampire Hunter!    

10.Gamify EVERYTHING!  What non tech games can you play?  Trashketball,  Jeopardy, Family Feud, Whack A Mole, Pictionary, 100,000 Pyramid?  

Teachers, we can do hard things!  Don’t take your decorations down even if you are moving schools or rooms.  Don’t succumb to saying the words: “Free Time!”  Don’t do it!  Don’t succumb to watching Disney + every day while you sleep with your eyes open at the back of the room!   Finish Strong while you wear your yoga slacks with mismatched shoes while you mumble the countdown to your teacher besties!  

TEACHERS, what other ideas do you incorporate into your end-of-year curriculum?  Share!  That is why we are here, to help each other through.  What lessons have been powerful for the end?  Tell me everything!  

Teach On, Beautiful Warriors!  

-Katie 

P.S. (I’ve been busy booking summer dates for keynotes, end of year workshops, and I’ve started to book August dates and school contracts for 23-24!  Reach out with your PD needs!).  I’d love to help train your baby teachers, kick off your convocation, and better yet, get a contract for multiple professional development dates!  I promise fun, and practical strategies, innovation, and inspiration!  Let’s work together.