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OUR UE MODEL AND SERVICES

IMPLICIT BIAS: ACKNOWLEDGING ITS IMPACT ON OUR CITIZENS, YOUNG AND OLD

10/12/2016

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I’m not sure how many of you tuned in to the first Presidential and Vice Presidential debates of the season, but if you did, you may have heard the words “implicit bias” surface during each. While the time spent on this topic was disappointingly brief, the fact that it was raised on such a national platform and was brought to the attention of approximately 84 million viewers across the nation feels like progress in the right direction.

During a discussion about healing race relations, Hillary Clinton shared, “I think implicit bias is a problem for everyone, not just police… Too many of us jump to conclusions about each other… We need all of us to be asking hard questions about why am I feeling this way…”
Recent research out of the Yale Child Study Center supports Clinton’s statement that implicit bias is a problem for everyone. We have had engaging conversations and trainings here at Seneca about how implicit bias affects the education system and our students – and as an early childhood educator – I was intrigued by a story on NPR last week that highlighted this research out of Yale in a segment titled: Bias isn’t Just a Police Problem, it’s a Preschool Problem.


This was a fascinating study conducted with early childhood educators who were asked to watch videos of preschool children in the classroom setting and be prepared to signal when the first signs of behavioral challenges occurred. The trick was that none of the children in the videos displayed behavioral challenges, and the researchers were actually tracking the eye movements of the educators to better understand where they were looking.

"What we found was exactly what we expected based on the rates at which children are expelled from preschool programs," the researcher reported. "Teachers looked more at the black children than the white children, and they looked specifically more at the African-American boy." This study demonstrates just one way in which implicit bias deeply affects students of color. It is common sense that "If you look for something in one place, that's the only place you can typically find it."
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And while implicit bias is just one piece of the comprehensive set of factors that influence racial injustice and systematic oppression, it is an important one to talk about. As Tim Kaine said during the Vice Presidential debate, “People shouldn’t be afraid of bringing up implicit biases in law enforcement, and if you’re afraid to bring up the problem, you’ll never solve it.”
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If you’d like to explore this topic further I encourage you to visit the Project Implicit website
, developed in collaboration by researchers studying this topic in universities across the nation. The website provides a variety of implicit bias tests that you can take yourself if you’re interested!
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Blog posted by:
Jenny Ventura, Director of Model Implementation and Assessment

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STAFF HIGHLIGHT

10/5/2016

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Name: Marika Minczeski
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Position:
 Occupational Therapist

What led you to your current position?
I chose occupational therapy as a career because it enhances an individual’s ability to participate in the daily activities life has to offer, regardless of learning differences or disability. The environment or tools can be adapted or modified to make participation more accessible, while regaining muscle strength or acquiring more proficient motor skills. Seneca’s All-In! model mirrors occupational therapy in so many ways- providing supports and strategies to enhance student participation, sense of self-efficacy and community-regardless of current difficulties or challenges. These parallels were immediately very apparent, and it’s been a wonderful fit professionally!

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Fun Fact or Quote:
A story that has always inspired me comes from Paraguay, South America, where students create their own musical instruments out of recycled materials from a landfill that receives over a ton of trash and recycled goods daily. Instruments are made out of old oil cans and discarded wood. This resulted in a beautiful group of children and adults who play their music in “The Recycled Orchestra”. Beautiful things can be created and emerge when we use our imaginations, and think “outside-the-box”.

What does your average day look like?
Providing direct occupational therapy interventions for students (ages 5-13) here in Oakland, offering alternatives to the team to promote endurance, coordination and regulation. It’s all about increasing daily participation in academic, leisure and self-care activities.  

Why do you do this work?
Nothing is more rewarding than seeing students meet their academic and personal goals, whether it is participating in a game of 4-square at recess, completing an art project, tying their own shoelaces, or actively writing their own ideas down on paper. I get to engage students in activities that are motivating and fun using a multi-sensory approach; so sometimes students think we’re playing a game or making a craft for fun, but really these activities help them acquire new motor skills. It’s a joy to witness!


What hope do you have for the future of All-In?
I hope the Unconditional Education model continues to become available to many students in need, across widespread communities. We are so fortunate to have these providers and interventionists in the behavioral, academic, social-emotional strands. As the studies and research comes in to show the benefit of this model to children and families, I think similar implementations may become a reality in other school districts here in California and beyond.
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DISORDER OF COGNITIVE ABILITIES

10/5/2016

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As an educator and school psychologist, I have often been asked to provide information about different learning disabilities. In my past blogs, I have written about processing disorders or learning challenges that are more common such as auditory or visual processing. However, in this post I am hoping to shed light on an area of processing that is often unclear or misunderstood due to lack of familiarity or experience with the terms. Admittedly, this area of processing was the least familiar to me as a school psychologist and as such I have spent quite a large amount of time learning and researching the definitions to gain better understanding. My goal in this post is to share the information I have acquired, expose more of educators to the terms and definitions of Cognitive Abilities: Conceptualization, Association and Expression and deepen our understanding of how these processing disorders impact our students.

In order to clearly understand the disorder of cognitive abilities, it is important to acquire a few basic understandings. First, the disorder of cognitive abilities is comprised of three categories: Conceptualization, Association, and Expression. Secondly, each of these categories is distinctly different for one another and impacts distinct cognitive domains. Lastly, the way each of these categories presents in a student is distinctive and not necessarily interrelated.
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To further understand the disorder of cognitive abilities, it is important to have a clear definition of each of the categories, the cognitive domains most likely impact, and examples of how it may present in the students we support. Below is a table with this information:
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In order to support students with this processing deficit, it would be most effective to identify the cognitive domain most impacted (i.e. Long-term memory, short-term memory, processing speed, crystallized knowledge, fluid reasoning, etc.) and then tailor instructional interventions and accommodations to those areas of deficit. For example, if a student was struggling with cognitive conceptualization, it would be most useful to identify strategies to support a student with fluid reasoning deficits.  I hope this information will help in planning for our students with disorders in cognitive abilities, as well as, other learning challenges. 
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Blog post written by:
Meka Tull, Director of School Partnerships & Director of Special Education at
​Lighthouse and Lodestar

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