Monday, November 1, 2010

Hope at Work in Our Schools and Communities

Way back on January 1 of this year, I wrote about how hard it is to find a hopeful news story. Since that time I have been a little preoccupied with the number of schools who are interested in working with hope and have missed many opportunities to share what I have noticed since. So when my husband passed a page from the Edmonton Journal to me this morning, like he does whenever he sees something that will elevate my hope, I decided it was time to address the letters to the editor under the heading "Growing up on 'rez' what you make of it' in today's Edmonton Journal!!   Students from Ermineskin in Hobemma wrote in response to "Ermineskin students find oasis of calm in a story place: School's steady, relentless approach held as a model for First Nations," The Journal Sept 20.

The letters written by 13, 14, and 15 year old students and especially Teisha's comment, "Just remember, it's not the place, it's the people," remind me of how I felt when students from Montana shared their artistic representations of  hope with us at the Hope Foundation some three years ago.  I remember leaving that conversation wondering how we could, as a community, work to magnify the hope that they depicted alongside the hopelessness that we so often focus our attention toward.  

The letters in today's Edmonton Journal, represent, in my opinion, an example of how applied hope, or in this case, 'paying attention to hope', which is one of five hope-focused practices in the Nurturing Hopeful Souls resource, enhances quality of life for both the students, community members and those who live outside the community.   I believe the letters ask us to consider what and who nurtures the hope(s) of ALL students and how we might contribute to their hopes from the perspective of what is meaningful to them.  

Monday, September 13, 2010

Working With Hope


 Audrey, who is a good friend and mentor to me, sent this podcast http://www.cbc.ca/podcasting/includes/tapestry.xml  with a note to me that said, "Although not complete as it did NOT include the Hope Foundation of Alberta http://www.ualberta.ca/HOPE/, CBC radio had an interesting discussion on HOPE today."

Listening to this podcast I thought about a comment I heard from an individual who participated in a teleconference that I presented last week on hope and resilience to mental health professionals working in schools who said, "Imagine what it will be like in ten years when we won't question what it means to work with hope-focused strategies."

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Newspapers as Vehicles of Hope

"I had to read to page seven in the newspaper today to find a good news story."  I hear comments like this from Bart regularly at the breakfast table.  I choose not to read the paper, but look over the headlines from across the table to see what I need to know as a way of keeping myself up to date. 

I am not burying my head in the sand or pretending that horrible things are not happening on our streets and homes.  I believe, instead, that it helps us to work toward solutions when hopeful actions, thoughts, feelings, and relationships are made visible and accessible.   

This leads me wonder if more people, like myself, would read newspapers, if like Bart suggested, the good news story had been placed on page one.  

HOPE WEEK (February 1 - 6) would be a great time to experiment.  What do you think?

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Good Read

I am off to the library to get my copy of one of the new additions in the Hope-Lit Data Base that caught my attention. I need to get it from the library because it does not have the HF label attached to the title. Anything in the hope-lit data base with HF means it is available in the Jack Chesney resource centre at the Hope Foundation (11032-89 Ave., Edmonton, Alberta). Please - do not put a hold on it till January 5, 2010 because I hope to have it till then.

Holleran, K. E. (2009). Meaningful matters: An autoethnography of hope for academically gifted high school achievers. Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences, 70(1-A).

Abstract: Written as an autoethnography, this study explores the experience of six academically achieving gifted high school students alongside my experiences as a school counsellor working with gifted academic achievers in the Province of New Brunswick. Recent research in the area of gifted students suggests that high achieving students are at least as well adjusted as any other student in life; however, research also suggests that gifted students have a distinct set of qualities that may complicate their ability to set goals and to remain resilient against adversities. Research in the area of hope suggests that students with higher levels of hope indicate more satisfactory levels of academic achievement and greater competence in interpersonal relations than compared to students with lower levels of hope. Although hope has been studied in educational settings, researchers have not examined hope and how hope may be maintained with achieving gifted students who face the inevitable challenges that

competition and high achievement in school impose on a regular basis. Interactive interviews, stematic self-introspection, and retrospective observations were used to collect data detailing accounts concerning how academically achieving gifted individuals described their educational encounters and their experiences of hope on the educational landscape. Reflections from the participants are laid alongside my own accounts of hope and giftedness in high school education. Descriptions are presented as interwoven narratives and include my current thoughts as a researcher, my past experiences and observations as a school counsellor, and my understandings of the participants' stories. Several key ideas emerged from the collection of data. Hope for these six gifted academically achieving students was described as a dynamic and energetic sense of confidence about their own futures. Early high school years (grades nine and ten) often served as a meaningless period in their educational careers that stifled their hopes. Enriched classes and independent studies in later years (grades eleven and twelve) offered students hope in their learning, because the independent learning style often focused on application and exploration of knowledge which made the learning process more meaningful. Further, these academically achieving students often felt as though their hope was challenged as they struggled to belong and fit-in with their peers, evaluated their performance against their peers on a regular basis, and attempted to manage the pressures from teachers, parents, and themselves. These struggles often led the students to believe that their marks defined them, restricted what was possible, caused the students to dissociate from the learning process, and overshadowed meaning and hope within the classrooms. Possible implications for teachers, parents, school counsellors, and academically achieving gifted students are offered and implications for further research are suggested.

 

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Life Changing Moments

This morning one of the amazing teachers with whom I am interacting in the Hope-focused Service-learning program had this to say:

"I want this class to be one of those life changing moments in the students' lives. I want students to look back on this class as a memorable event in their schooling. I want it to be a time for the students to make personal shifts in who they can become."

I left our conversation wondering what learning would look, sound and feel like if these statements became the educational outcomes we focused on achieving in the 21st Century. 




Monday, November 16, 2009

Hope Tool # One

So here's the thing. I need to create a new hope kit to help me on my next leg of my journey. As many of you know, I am working to understand why we need to make hope visible in the lives of students in the classroom as part of my doctorate. Since I am in my first year of the doctorate program, I have not started my research per se. However, I have been doing lots of writing, conversing and story telling, which has led me to realize that I need new hope tools. 

The first hope tool that I am going to add to my hope kit* (I have made two in the last nine years) is the following question from Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of Hope: Reliving Pedagogy of the Oppressed:

"What can we do now in order to be able to do tomorrow what we are unable to do today?"

* For more information on Hope Kits check out the  Nurturing Hopeful Souls resource available at www.ualberta.ca/hope under the 'Good Reads' Section.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Obama Peace Prize

I for one, am not surprised President Obama won the Nobel Peace prize. 

I say this because I remember how many refugee and immigrant students in a grade five class last spring named him as their hope symbol. When queried these students said it was because he gave them hope that people could work together to make a better world, that he would bring people together to make the world a more peaceful place. 

I believe his action has been to engage people in imagining what is possible. I have no doubt that his daily actions are already inspiring many to do what they can to build a more equitable, self-sustaining planet.  Further, the fact that the Nobel Peace Prize committee recognized that he is bringing hope to the world demonstrates that Obama is helping us to see another way to be with each other.