Saturday, December 11, 2010

How Key Is Approachability for a Principal?

How Key Is Approachability for a Principal?



How does anyone lead other intelligent human beings without being approachable? The question for ourselves as leaders (when we find ourselves in a leadership role ... and most aduts in area of life are in a eadership role with someone else) is, "How do I conceptualize my work?"

If encouraging others -young or old- in thoughtful exploration of ideas/processes, is an integral part of our work, then we indeed need to practice reasonable degrees of aproachability ...set up structures, times, places for dialogue and exploration.  Unless we are in the military where direct orders are the name of the game always -without exploration, translation, discussion, or collaboration- then communications usually need clarification and some dialogue to effectively take root and flourish.  This means collaboration...approachability matters.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

UpperSchoolArmory: Mighty Giraffe Models for Us

UpperSchoolArmory: Mighty Giraffe Models for Us: "Mighty Giraffe Making by Eduardo B. Giraffe…greatest view holder of all our wild ones eating tops of..."

Mighty Giraffe Models for Us

Mighty Giraffe Making


        by Eduardo B.

Giraffe…
greatest view holder of all our wild ones 
eating tops of living plants 
freshest, nearest father sun and mother sky.

Like Sun-drenched Vegetation...human thoughts
Grown in High Road Mind Become
Food for Good Thought, Food from Good Thoughts 
Allowing us to walk our talk! 

Giraffe glides ...
No need to rush ...when will we learn as well? 
When ready to run 
Massive territory becomes Giraffe's Great Drum.


Eduardo B. (UpperArmoryfirstyear) in collaboration with Palladio (Big Sis) Nadja P.
Note: Eduardo's Contribution of Great Merit is working with Professing Teacher Christopher, currently visiting from British Columbia, Canada.  

... Professor Christopher (aka Prof Chris) brings to Palladio International Campus extraordinary savvy from his  persevering pioneering efforts in the design of P-12 curriculum for the newly evolving  field of "World Music."

Eduardo and Professor Chris suggest that you listen to the following music source as you read and reread the poetic expression above, Mighty Giraffe.  Give it a rhythm of your making! Record this...and share it here with us, or YouTube...and then send us the link here so all can enjoy.   Professor Chris' research project will include your entries with your name.

(You might extend your powerful experience also when you Google "African Drumming" and find related contemporary and folk music cited below on YouTube!)

Google World Music:
Africa, origins of humankind, offers African Drumming, uses the Djembe creating the master flow –contemporary and folk- African rumba, jazz, Ethiopia, Senegal, Gambia, Ivory coast, Mali, Guinea.
Website:   (comment here with the ones you listen to and like...there are many to be enjoyed!)                                    
Purchase: Putumao World Music 411 Lafayette St, NY,NY 10003 (212-625-1400)         

My shared reading report from The Long Winter- by Frederic C.

Durng The Long Winter, the Ingalls family roused themselves from discouragement and feeling cold to the bone.  To do this they read whatever was in their tiny house that was inspirational.  More than that, the kids (and the parents) recited great pieces of literature from their memories.  I could'nt believe American kids once did that.  That gave  me the cornerstone for my graduation service project: Great Ideas from the Past!  My council approved my project outine last night ... and thanks to my Palladio "Sister," Harmony Brook.  She insisted  that I read that book by Laura Ingalls Wilder.  At first, I was insulted, "That's a girls book, I can't read that with you! Can't you find one by Walter Dean Myers we can read together?"

Harmony's eyes narrowed, "Myers is great, but I want you to tap into America's rugged past.  Unless we review the past, we forget how much wnet before us.  I am doing everything in my power  so you don't make a common mistake when recommending change in your lifetime.  And you will be a change-maker when you mature, Frederic!"

I started to get my back up with that hint that I had a way to go in my maturation process, but she stopped me,"Reading The Long Winter, will open your eyes, Frederic!  We will have important insights to discuss during our dinner meetings.  It's my job to help you identify deep truths about life and human nature.  I mean to do my best in that regard.  You'll get the real meaning in adages like the one you heard from Giovanni last week: "Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater."

Well, Harmony was right! See, here in this report, I can only open a tiny peephole (like Laura and Carrie made in their window looking out onto the blizzard for seven months).   All I learned, about what's really important about family life, community life, school life, and inside each person, is so amazing that it has become the foundation for my Contribution of Great Merit.

The  kids I tutor in Brooklyn, will benefit immediately -starting in Saturday School!  They will begin to memorize proverbs - and make sense of them by journalling connections all week long -and through events and relationships in their everyday lives.  Kids that can memorize proverbs will graduate onto paragraphs from great books (like The Long Winter- but I will type a variety of paragraphs onto sheets of paper -so there's no illustrations to distract them like I was before I knew better).

So here's a taste to whet your appetite throughout this amazing, multi-age, international campus! 
Appetizer ... 


The scene: Chapter 22 THE COLD AND DARK 
Two months of blizzards one after the other. The house is so cold their breath frosts in the air unless thyey are sitting around the wood stove. That's colder than I ever imagined.  And the family is running out of food ,and fuel to stay warm.  Try having brown bread for breakfast, lunch and dinner...except at lunch yo get a boiled potato -and sorry guys, no butter, no gravy, no greese even.   They are loosing their minds with the constantly howling winds, grinding wheat, twisting hay into thick sticks, and sitting in the dim kitchen all day to stay warm. 

Except that Pa and Ma get them back on track as soon as they veer off.  They make them do family chores morning, noon and night.  Nobody gets a free ride here, except three year old Grace. Ma doesn't let them get away with feeling sorry for themselves, even for one minute. She makes them recite inspiring words from great thinkers.  She makes them remember and act out beautiful writing too. Carrie and Laura recite a scene with the character Ellie, from The Swan's Nest, that changes how they feel inside ... and this changes their experience of their freezing cold house:


On page 232, the author says, "The air was warm and quiet there, the grass was warm in the sunshine, the clear water sang its song to istself, and the leaves softly murmured.  The meadow's insects drowsily hummed. While they were there with Ellie, laura and Carrie almost forgot the cold. They hardly heard the winds and the whirling hard snow scouring the walls."


The moral of this section: Our mind is a powerful place and we can learn to control how we think and what we think.  Because... if we don't, someone else will! That could be better for you but it could really be worse...depends on the goodness of the messages around you ... in the news...on the radio...and in the lyrics to music we play over and over.
Think about it, (my new "Signature")
Frederic C. 
UpperArmory:  Little BroSis Club
..

Friday, December 3, 2010

Palladio NLP Resource Center News Release to Upper Armory Interns

When your audience changes, do you shift in accord?


We asked this question in Council on Tuesday after reviewing videos from Interns working with primary students at Delacorte then reporting their results to the entrepreneur reps on their councils.  We are asking this question to raise awareness of need to look at ourselves fom third person perspective -particularly when we shift audiences and the impact of our presentation matters!

Head of Teacher Apprenticeships, Professor Byron Fogarty, reports comprehensive research that indicates elementary teachers (who excell in communicating with and motivating young students) are devalued and discounted when they publicly address parents, businessmen, and politicians.  WHY?

While research cannot "prove" anything, the results indicate that teachers who are exceptional at drawing out top performance from young learners may actually "turn-off" adults who have not learned to appreciate rapport-building skills of primary and elementary -even some middle school teachers!

The stylistic features mastered from rapport-building and instructing from a zone that facilitates success in young learners (facial expression, body posture, voice tone, wide-eyed explanations, encouraging gestures, tempo, and tendency to model childlike qualities of wonder and enthusiasm) seems out-of-sync with adult audiences from "other" fields.

We have heard the saying,"Don't mistake my kindness for weakness."  In light of master teachers at elementary levels, we might begin to include synonyms for kindness - gentleness, youthfulness, wide-eyed enthusiasm, soft and encouraging voice, tone of wonderment ...etc.

Let's hear more from our audience of professional teachers,  apprentices, interns (all school levels, please), principal teachers, council representatives, global parents, students...

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Starry, Starry Night with our Kim Chi Ensemble

Friday evening's GOODNEWS helicopter poised over Central Park's 79th Street western edge. Our view revealed a pulsing ribbon of multimedia aficionados moving toward the Swedish Cottage.  Inside this thoughtfully appointed nineteenth century schoolhouse,  hours of preparation -and years of training - would herald many 'firsts.'

The most obvious 'first' was Kim Chi's enactment of the avante-guarde dance performed decades ago at Lincoln Center by venerable multimedia artist, Elaine Summers.  Summers, now in the winter of her Rainbow-rich SkyTime adventure, cheered on the live ensemble of musicians, lighting and laptop technicians, and of course the dancer!

Kim Chi, still in the springtime of her life, moved like a butterfly emerging ever so slowly from an invisible cocoon.  Elaine's legacy of of choreographing kinetically-aware dance held the audience in suspension  -we could hear a pin drop!  Time virtually stood still for ten full minutes -eyes entranced- as Kim Chi allowed the inner momentum alive within the tiniest of muscles move her practiced body gracefully from the floor to standing!

"No one had ever done this before," intimated choreographer Elaine Summers - referring to her first performance of this particular dance forty years earlier.  Acknowledging each one of the artists, critics who attending the very first production, and the organizations that supported and publicized this innovation, Elaine simply sparkles with appreciation, sizzles with zeal!

This list of contributors and benefactors are readily available at 
www.Skytime.org.

There is one more first to report!  Anticipating many more than the Cottage could comfortably seat, the UArmory Planning Council requested nearby installation a Big Screen - so the performance inside the  1876 Centennial celebration by Sweden, was projected outside for thousands to see outside! Blankets and sit-upons made a patchwork quilt of enthusiastic viewers -international visitors to the Big Apple, as well as athletes and families here for Sunday's marathon (Good luck today, guys and gals!)

GOODNEWS Reporter, Bendt Woulfe, FirstYear Palladio

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Team Project Announcement: Applications open through 11/13.

"Please take a look at these pictures from last week ... on the sidewalks of New York," reports 1stYearUS, Tienna Navarro.  Interested in dogs, since the age of three, Tienna wants to start a new club during her first year of middle school ...  Caring for Our Furry Friends.  


She needs one Teacher, one Delacorte 6thYear, and One Global Parent to join her Club Council.  She aready knows her focus for her graduation project.  "We may be Middle School, but we are not living in the Middle Ages.  That's when folks didn't know about germs and refuse, illness and prevention.  Without this knowledge they were known to dump such stuff out their windows and front doors ... sullying everyone's path!"

I make it my duty to educate all dog owners/walkers - calling forth their civic duty - to dispose of refuse properly! Give us our streets ... especially our sidewalks... clean for little children to walk upon, strollers to return dooty-free to family apartments, and pedestrians to trust that the cracks in our track shoes remain empty and buoyant!  And what about the health and sensitivity of our city street workers?!"

Being a team learner, Tienna is  recieving applications from fellow first years. Please visit her website where you can download and upload your application, if interested.  Tienna also posted more pictures...you'll be disgusted enough to be motivated to doooo something positive!  She will select two promising applicants who will partner with Tienna over the next two years to initiate a needed Contribution of Great Merit, temporarily entitled: DOOTY-FREE (from the Sidewalks of New York).

(Interview with Tienna Navarro, 1stYearUS, 11/2/10, on the way to the polls ...oops! by Janna Simon)

What's in our word choice, a word like "Armory?"

While the history of our "US" building precedes the Civil War, few may know that it began as The Arsenal. When Palladio International was being designed our founders decided to examine this history and name metaphysically... no surprise here!  Dr. Prof. Rene Renard (Doc Ray as she is fondly known to US students) goes on to inform, " Our Founders felt that in a very real way Palladio International's constitution and mission refer to the ways many human beings have simply evolved from using a physical 'arming' to activating our spiritual/emotional arming.  We consciously practice The Principles and a curriculum that activates our Power of Twelve.  Since the word arsenal would refer to things, and our school refers to people ... middle school people developing diverse internal powers of thought and vision...  founders dialogued until the word  'armory' agreed with everyone present. (Voila...WE are where we store and cultivate such 'armor.')  Thus, our students become in a very real sense 'armed'...thus, our word choice ARMORY."
(Interview with DocRay, 11/3/10, in The Children's Garden, by Roan Nievey 2ndYearUS)

For historic details and more, visit ...
 http://www.centralparknyc.org/maps/

ElderFair - A Contribution of Great Merit by Harmony Brook

Our UpperSchool ("US") June graduate (2010), Harmony Brook, hasn't stopped contributing to the improvement of ElderLife.  Despite her move onto the campus of Palladio High Academy, Harmony wends her way past The Dairy to our campus each Tuesday at ClubTime.  Harmony has recruited and leads a large group of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd "US" Years committed to furthering ElderFair initiatives voted upon last May.

The first decision the group made was to name themselves, ElderFaeries ... magically making good things happen behind the scenes for all the elders in our lives around the world.  In fact, ElderFaeries are now in search of a new meeting room that better accomodates thirty to fifty active middle school students.  Spacious rooms on our affiliate Columbia campus promise not only roomier surroundings, but also ongoing support from last fall's recruits into Columbia's TeacherIntern Program.

Harmony hopes for an adult/student ratio of 1/4.  Great ongoing results accrue from last summer's workshop series (Cooperative Group Model, by the extraordinary Patterns for Thinking trainer, Robyn Fogarty).  Each group is now using a different strategy to to conduct their project research and construct their action goals.  All teams would benefit though from Debriefing during the last fifteen minutes so that "loose ends" get resolved, and a steady pace resumes in the week following. Despite crowded conditions in our current location, Harmony expects ElderFaeries to double next spring's outreach results!


"The culture of our elders' world is rapidly advancing in quality because BabyBoomers are an informed generation, and because our world is finally realizing the great value of elders common to the Great Indian Nation (my geneology and personal legacy) and because as an international campus we benefit from incoorporating the thinking and ways of "Elder-Rich" cultural traditions of Eastern Nations. I especially thank my peers who have taught  their ways with me, Nadja, Kim, and Raj." (Interview with Harmony Brook, by Weston Scott Davis -3rdYear, on Tuesday 11/2/10.)

 To begin exploring facets of the elderworld, visit...
http://www.eldercarelink.com/Go/Nursing-Homes/Investigating-the-Culture-Change-in-Nursing-Home-Care.htm

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Ruff News

Hi Roughly Everyone!
Tootsie, who graduated with honors from our Walking Companions Program (WCP) last month, has just turned one year old.  This completes qualfications for serving the younger kids walking back and forth between home and Delacorte Campus. Tootsie is the first one year old however given the long distance walk from Sheep's Meadow.  Of course, scoring a top five on the rubric in every category, made it possible that Tootsie would earn this rigorous assignment.  
To see the rubric for yourself, go to www.Taskstream.com/rubric/walkingcompanionsprogram.  
To catch the highpoints of Tootsie's birthday celebration with her Global Family at the Washington Square Farmer's Market on Saturday, go to www.upperkidsnews.org/happybirthdaytoots. 
This is Eduardo reporting for Ruff News, a second order of Meritorious Contribution to WCP (a first order of Meritorious Contribution) created by Nadja (for her UpperSchool Thirdyear  service project). Outstanding contribution of great merit, Nadja!