Wednesday, April 10, 2019

16 Things to think about when working with kids

Would you talk to kids the way you do, if they were 6'5" and 250 pounds?
We use these topics as a closing mixer with all of the staff development workshops we run. It's always a hit! Hope you enjoy!

Kids are learning just like we are – They learn best from the people who care about them!

We don’t EVER need to solve arguments for kids who are arguing respectfully.  Sometimes we help best by not helping. Keep an eye out and make sure they continue to argue respectfully. If the conversation ratchets up, then look step in. Otherwise let them go for their own good and maybe even yours as well!

Try to let them own their solutions. So often us adults jump in to try to help a kid. Do we have good intentions? Most likely, but a lot of times we help in the name of keeping things moving…keeping things peaceful…or keeping things easy. When we step in, we interrupt the learning process for kids. We hand them a solution instead of allowing them to work through it and to figure out a solution on their own. Allowing them to figure things out on their own can be messy and time consuming. (Our world seems so fast paced and sometimes time just won’t allow for them to come up with their own solutions.) Whenever possible, bite your tongue, curl your toes, watch from the stands, see what happens and you may be surprised how effortlessly they come up with solutions that make everyone feel empowered. (you too)

Would you talk to kids the way you do if;
o   ...their parents were standing there?
o   …your supervisor was standing there?
o   …if they were 6’5” and 250 pounds?

If YES, then keep doing what you're doing!
If NO, then changes need to be made! Kids need to be respected!

Find a way to care about that kid who is driving you crazy. Talk with them. Figure out their story. What did they do this weekend? Talk to their parents, their current and former teachers, their guidance counselor. What are their hobbies…What do they dislike…Favorite foods? I feel like getting to know a little more about their back story often helps to take a more empathetic approach when dealing with that child.

Be mindful of what you talk about with other adults when kids are around. Kids are smart! They are watching and they are listening!

Look in the mirror and ask yourself, am I being what I’m asking my students to be? 
  
You want to try to win over all kids but winning over certain kids will make your job easier. They are the influencers, the leaders. They are the kids that the other kids would follow to the end of the Earth and back! If you can figure out a way to get them to buy into what you are doing and the fact that you care, you may get others to do the same.

Make time to listen to a kid who needs to talk. I believe that kids have a built-in sensor that tells them the EXACT inopportune time to want to talk to you during a lesson. You have the kids who talk from the minute they get up until the minute they go to bed (Ha! I live with one of them). There are also the slow talkers…ooooooncccce I was walking down the streeeeeet. Here is what I do in these moments and hopefully this helps. If I am in the middle of something, I hit the pause button. I look them straight on the eyes and tell them I would LOVE to hear what you have to say as soon as I am finished with…Once you get everyone going, YOU HAVE TO REMEMBER TO GET BACK TO THAT KID AND LISTEN TO THEM…You might be the only one who does that day!

These kids are going to be the people who shape our future. “I see no hope for the future of our people if we are dependent on the frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words. When I was a boy, we were taught to be discrete and respectful of elders, but the present youth are exceedingly wise and impatient of restraint.” If you’re thinking this quote “hits the nail on the head” about today’s youth, consider this; It was credited to Hesiod, a Greek poet over 3000 years ago. I talk a little more about this in this video below. 


Kids won‘t remember what you taught them, they will remember how you made them feel.

Try not to “draw a line in the sand” with the kids especially in front of their peers. I have touched on this in other blogs LINK The best way that I have EVER found to win an argument with a child is to not argue with them. Don’t engage! Catch them when things have de-escalated. Tell them “I can tell you want to argue but I am not going to do that today”. If all else fails and they still want to argue, tell them “I handle all my arguments at 3:30 so if you would like to come back then and argue then be my guest”. I got that idea from a book I read years ago, “Teaching with Love and Logic” by Jim Fay and David Funk. This book gave me a whole new approach to dealing with my students.

P.S Not once has any student taken me up on the offer to come argue with me after school. (I will keep you posted on this!)

Be fair with kids – Remember they are people too!

Try to remove the emotion out of dealing with kids. It’s usually not personal, even though it may feel like it. They are just being kids and challenging the boundaries. Just like we did when we were kids. (Some of us worse than others!)

Give kids choices whenever possible. It empowers them and lets them know that you care what they think. HOWEVER, make sure that you like all the choices you give because I believe that kids also have a built-in sensor in their brain for moments like this. If they detect the slightest apprehension you have about a particular choice you may be giving out, there is a 101% chance that they will choose that one that you don’t like! 😉

Feeling brave? Let them initiate the choices and take ownership as to how they want to explore different subjects or topics!

The BEST way to get RESPECT will always be to give it! “These kids have no respect for authority”...“They have no fear”...“They don’t listen”! I have heard these many times and have even said these myself. Over the years I have worked with a handful of adults who lacked a genuine respect for kids. They expected respect but failed to give it. They usually seem to be the same people most baffled when kids are disrespectful to them. I love the quote, “Respect is something you earn, not something you demand”! Try to think about how you address your students. Do you talk with them or at them? Do you speak to them or down to them? If you want them to listen to you, have you ever tried listening to them? Do you know their wants and concerns or do they just know yours?

Hope you enjoyed my latest blog. If you have anything to add or any comments please SHARE them. Shout out to my favorite artist and brother Eric Housel for his awesome illustration. As always, MAKE TODAY GREAT AND KEEP MOVING! 



Friday, March 1, 2019

What I need to remind myself more often as a teacher.


They say the older you get, the more you forget. I’m certain that I’m one of those people that have forgotten way more than I know about being a teacher. Here’s a list of things I wish I would remember more often.



·        How I felt the moment I met my oldest son for the first time. I was convinced that I was put on this Earth to be his dad. I believed that everything else I had EVER done was just practice to get me ready to be the father I needed to be! My hope with all my students is, that there’s at least one person out there that feels the same way about each one of them as I feel about my own sons. It might not always be the case and I need to remind myself of that more often.

·         I’m always at my best when I’m less concerned about my lesson and more concerned about who it’s for.

·        That kid who occasionally (or more than occasionally - 😉) drives me crazy in the younger grades is going to walk out of our school in about four or five years and never come back. On their last day of school, I’ll be standing there with tears in my eyes, waving and feeling forever grateful that I got the opportunity to be their teacher!

·        When I am jumping out of my skin excited about a lesson that I’m teaching I never seem to have much trouble with classroom management. I need to find more ways to be jumping out of my skin about what I’m teaching.

·       Today is a new day. It’s a new beginning for me, my students, and my classes. A new opportunity to improve on how we did last week, month, and year. I need to remind myself and my students of this more often. In order to break a negative cycle with our students something has got to change...maybe it’s me!

·        I need to remember all the impromptu reunions. I’m lucky enough to live in the same town that I teach in and I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had former students come rushing up to me for a hug, handshake, or talk. On the days where I feel like I can do nothing right, I must remember those moments.

·        I must remember to ignore people who scoff at teachers and say that we have an easy job. I would gladly lend my sneakers to anyone, anytime to come into my classroom and show me how easy it is!  

·        I have the two most important jobs in the world. I am a teacher and parent. Every day I have the opportunity to make a positive difference in the lives of children and I am unmeasurably blessed because of it!

·        If I had to do it all over again, I’d be a teacher. I was born to do this!

·        I must remember not to be surprised by what my students are able to accomplish. I have seen kids transcend unspeakable situations and overcome unbelievable odds too many times to be surprised, but yet I feel surprised often. (I do LOVE those surprises though!)
 
·        If given the opportunity kids always come up with better solutions to their arguments than we do. They have better ideas for fun too!

·        Need to remember why I became a teacher. I became a teacher to make a difference in this world and what better way to make a difference then by teaching and caring for a child?

·        I need to remember to be as enthusiastic as that bright-eyed kid who walked into Forest Avenue School in Glen Ridge, NJ 23 years ago.

·        What we teach is important, but our content pales in comparison to who we are teaching for. Math, art, music, science, physical education… is just a part of the puzzle for a child. Our primary job as teachers is not to put information in, but to bring potential out of our students for all to see. 

·        Be as excited for my last lesson of the day as I am for my first. While I’m at it, I need to remember to be as excited for Monday as I am for Friday!

·        Some kids are going through unimaginable circumstances that we have no idea about. It’s easy to get annoyed when talking and behavior gets in the way of a lesson. Everyone has a story. It always helps me when I take the time to try to understand where people are coming from.  

·        Need to show and tell my students how much I care about them. I need to do this more often. I want to let them know how badly I want them to do well in this world. My hope is that I am in a constant state showing them I care, but I definitely need to say it more often!

·        The miraculous odds of me being my student’s teacher at all - Sorry to get all philosophical, but…there are almost incalculable odds of any person being born on this planet. Think of all the things that had to happen just for you to be here! Take those odds of one person being born and multiply that number by a class of 20 students and one teacher. Then think for a moment of all the things that could have prevented us along the way from being in that room together. It is truly a miracle and I need to remember that more often.
 
·        Smile more. Enjoy this time. My thought is that I most likely have many more teaching years behind me than I do in front of me. I LOVE that Trace Atkins song, “You’re gonna miss this” – I don’t want to look back on this and wish that I had more fun in the time that I had!

·        Just be AWESOME in the moments when I’m in front of my students. All the paperwork that is due, meetings, flaming hoops to jump through, and hurdles to jump over are NOT going to get done when I’m with my students. That’s when I try to tell myself, “be AWESOME NOW and worry about all that other stuff later.” (and YES, that’s difficult to do sometimes)

·        Sometimes, it’s not THEM, it’s ME! Perhaps the baggage I’m bringing to school with me somedays has more to do with how my lessons will go than anything else.

·        I can still have a GREAT DAY regardless of how my lessons go. If everything around me is turning into a “Calgon Commercial”, (That’s a crazy hectic mess for those of you born after 1979) I can still remain clam, figure a way to get their attention, and use that as a teachable lesson for my students.

·        I have to focus more on what can go right. So often when I think of a new idea, I start to come up with all the worst-case scenarios. Our brains are wired to protect us from new experiences, negative or positive. While it’s important to take all angles into consideration, sometimes it’s more important to feel the fear and do it anyway!

·        I have to remember how poorly behaved I was as a student in school. Hopefully that will help me with the students who struggle to keep it together as I did.

·        I must not to make predictions for my student’s futures based on their present performance. I get to have students for 6 years straight. I have never met a student who has not improved over those 6 years – most show dramatic improvement. I have to remember what a poor student I was and how little I liked most of what was associated with school. I was an incredibly late bloomer and never realized a sliver of my potential until I got into college.

·        I have to remember that I can count on one hand, the teachers that I felt TRULY believed in me growing up – They were the teachers that inspired me to be more than just a “clown at the circus”! (No offense if you are a clown at a circus) Most of my teachers were good to me and I fully admit that I did not give them much to believe in. However, there were a couple teachers whose belief in me eclipsed all others. I need to strive to be that for my students. THANK YOU, THANK YOU, Mr. McNabb and Mr. Jackson, for seeing more in me than I ever dreamed possible!!!!!

What do you need to remember more often as a teacher, parent, spouse, friend…?????

Props once again to my AWESOMELY TALENTED brother Eric Housel, who does all the artwork for my blog!

I really hope you enjoyed my post. Make today GREAT and KEEP MOVING!!

Mark



Monday, February 18, 2019

How our world got a little bit smaller and a WHOLE LOT BRIGHTER!!


Marlton 4th of July Parade
Leading up to the summer of 2017 I wanted to do something BIG! I wanted our family to get out and see the world. Problem is we had very little summer savings. As I’m sure you can guess, no money equals no “world seeing”!


Then I saw a post on social media looking for a host family for a bunch of students from Spain in our area. I remember a lady that I used to work with who told me a story of how she took in some exchange students from China. She told of stories of how it positively changed the course of her whole family. My thinking was if we can’t afford to go see the world, then we can bring a little of the world to us in the form of a Spanish exchange student. I thought it was such an amazing idea. So, I got to work right away.

My first job was to sell this idea to my wife. I have lots of crazy ideas and to her credit she usually goes along with most of them. She did see the same post that I did but I believe she dismissed it is something that is interesting but perhaps not for us. (Perhaps…that left the door open, right?!)

She had lots of questions as you can imagine. What if they don’t get along with our kids? What if they don’t fit in with our family? What if they don’t like our food or don’t follow our rules? What if things don’t go well? Of course, our minds went crazy with all the worst-case scenarios. Then we started asking some positive questions too. What if things go great? What if they get along great with our kids? What if this experience changes our lives forever?

I think we got to do just about everything South Jersey had to offer!
So, I contacted the coordinator and asked some of our questions. She assured me that she would do the best she could to match us up with someone who was compatible with our family. She sent us some letters from some of the boys that were looking for host families. (we have 3 boys, 2 teenagers at the time and we figured bringing a girl into our family mix would not be a good idea – 😉). When we started to look through the letters, my wife and I became completely hooked on the idea.    

Next job was to convince our boys.  When we first brought the idea up to them, not one of our boys thought it was a good idea. Once we were armed with the letters from the prospective Spanish students it was much easier to convince our boys that this was a good idea.  

So how did it go? He stayed with us for four weeks. On his last day it was my job to bring him to the drop off spot so that they can take him to the airport. So, I did what any tough American man would do in my shoes…I had my wife take him because I was a crying, sniffling mess. It was so sad to say goodbye but that showed how much him being here meant to us all.

Philadelphia Union Game
Over the year we stayed in touch through facetime and instant messenger.  In the summer of 2018, his whole family came and stayed with us for two weeks. We did the whole South Jersey, North Jersey, Philly, and NYC tour. The whole trip felt a bit magical to me. I remember one night of their stay more than anything.  It felt surreal sitting around the kitchen table discussing politics, school, friends, electronics…  

Our two families meeting for the first time in Central Park.

What did we learn about them? We learned that they are nothing like us. In Spain they must deal with kids who don’t like doing their homework and use their devices too much. They have sassy teenagers who are quick to challenge adults and don’t always get along with their siblings. They also have political leaders who are completely out of touch with what it is like to be a citizen of their own country.  Hopefully you’ve picked up on up on my sarcasm.

We are separated by 3600 miles and one of the biggest oceans on our planet. When it comes to our daily struggles, our dreams, morals and goals for our family, we are very much the same. We may look different and speak a different language, but we are similar in many more ways than we are different! Most importantly, we laugh and love in the same way!

I am proud to say that I now have an American family and a Spanish family. And that is how our world has gotten a little bit smaller and a whole lot brighter.

Saying good bye to his little buddy!!
My wife is helping to bring 15 French students to the South Jersey area for 3 weeks this summer. If you would be interested in being a host family or know someone who might be, please contact her at compassusa.beccahousel@gmail.com


Sunday, January 13, 2019

Using middle ground to help your kids and students.




I have been hearing about “middle ground” all my life.  I have been finding lately that I have come up against a couple of situations that involve middle ground.  Please consider this; maybe you’re not 100% correct and if you’re not 100% correct then maybe that person that you completely disagree with is not 100% incorrect.  Maybe they are more like 97% incorrect 😉!  Admitting this may be bigger progress then we think.  Here are two ways I applied the principle of middle ground to my life lately and some points to remember when kids are disagreeing with each other.

**Please remember**

·         Kids who are arguing respectfully need to be allowed to do so.  Often us adults try to intervene when we are not needed.  (I find myself trying to remember to not interfere especially at home)
·         Let them figure it out whenever possible.  If no one is being hurt physically or emotionally, LET THEM GO!!!! 

Middle Ground – Parenting situation - I have three sons.  Occasionally they don’t all get along (by occasionally, I mean, they make my wife and I insane and give us grey hair at times – my eye twitches a little just thinking about it) 

Recently I had a situation that needed intervention.  One of my older sons hit my youngest son and then you probably know what happens next.  Screaming, crying, rolling… Instead of coming into the room and “cracking skulls” like my dad used to do and like I would wish I could do some days, I came in calm.  I surveyed the scene, asked some questions, and I listened.  On the surface, it appeared as though my youngest had been the victim of a horrible rhinoceros attack.  My guess was that rhino didn’t just run him over once, but repeatedly.  My other son was laissez-faire about the whole thing. In fact, he had completely absolved himself from any wrongdoing.  He was completely at peace with his brother rolling around on the floor and crying because he knows in his heart that he “barely touched him”.

ENTER the idea of middle ground HERE.  I can see no bleeding, no red marks, no visual signs of a repeated rhino attack or freight train accident in the toy room.  I also have a hunch that if my older son’s actions were as gentle and peaceful as he’s making them out to be there wouldn’t be such an issue at this point.  Provided that I didn’t have an Academy Award “actor to be” on my hands and that I believed that both parties were at least presenting some facsimile of the truth, my only conclusion was… It had to be something in the middle.  (Your knowledge of your kids/students will hopefully guide you at this point)

This was most likely a case of my youngest son’s feelings being hurt more than his body.  The fact that my oldest was showing zero remorse probably only made the situation worse.  So… I started with the oldest because he was the least agitated at that point. Without judgment, or sarcasm (which is tough for me), I led my son to admit that maybe he hit his brother a little bit harder than he initially perceived because he is a lot older.  Having heard the concession, my younger son seemed to be much more agreeable to admit that maybe it wasn’t quite as hard as he was portraying.  I got them to agree on something small and my job was done.  BOOM!  CUE THE MUSIC. CLASSIC MIDDLE GROUND SITUATION!  I left the room.  Very shortly after, everybody was playing, everyone was happy, and I was “Dad of the Day” for about 6 minutes until the next crisis arose!

Middle Ground - School situation - How many times do we tell our students and children things like “use your words” or “it’s not what you say but how you say it”? 
Here is a middle ground situation that came into play with my students.  Student #1 one comes over with hurt feelings because of how student #2 spoke to them.  Student #1 tells a tale of a rude, crude, obnoxious attempt of being told they were out of a game.  Student #2 points out how they were clearly trying to be helpful, caring, and looking out for the best interest of student #1.  In fact, it was reenacted in a low, calm, almost angelic voice.  

There were some red flags here.  (lots actually)
1.  They were playing a game of knockout.  It’s loud - people get out - that’s what you signed up for - it’s in the name of the game.
2.  I knew student #1 for a long time and the child is very caring and emotional and can get their feelings hurt rather easily at times.
3.   I knew student #2 for a long time as well.  That child is confident and strong in their beliefs and never shies away from letting others know their opinion.  I had never known this student to use a calm, angelic voice in the middle of a game like that. (EVER!)

With a tiny bit of intervention, they came to a quick agreement that, in the heat of the game it wasn’t quite as “obnoxious” or “angelic” as either one of them were hinting at.  Classic middle ground!!  Step away.  Let them talk.  Pretty soon everyone is friends again.  Playing.  Smiling. Laughing.

In a lot of situations I think there is a line somewhere between kids struggling with getting feedback from their peers and the old Chinese proverb that says, “never use a hatchet to remove a fly from a friend’s forehead”.  In sport/game situations, I always try to remind my kids/students to focus on what people are saying and not how they are saying it.  I try to get them to ask themselves questions like, is this person angry at me or are they just trying to win?  That’s tough advice because things get crazy in the heat of the game and so much of our communication is nonverbal.


Making middle ground work for you.

These were two situations where the impasse/the divide/the communication gap between two students or siblings was deemed too big for them to overcome at the moment.  As I mentioned above, I try not to step in whenever possible.  In these two situations, I stepped in for the mere goal of getting them to at least agree on something.  Giving them a starting point seemed to work in both situations because after the middle ground was found a productive problem-solving conversation took place.  

Once you get them to agree on one small point, then slip away.  They will be left to do all the work.  The work that they do will be far more beneficial than any help we can give!  I usually try to move away and watch or listen casually to make sure things go well.  Follow up later and ask how their conversation went.  If you are impressed with how they solved the situation, make sure you tell them.  

An approach like this takes time, practice, patience, and guidance on our part.  Sometimes it may be  easier to just start yelling, solve it for them, or seperate them.  (And yes - Sometimes they need a break from each other just as much as we need it)  It's not always easy to take an approach like this because of time restraints and frustration levels from the constant issues that arise.  However, when you get them talking in a positive productive way, positive things are going to happen.  

Were these two situations easy to solve?  In and of themselves, both issues were relatively easy to solve.  

Will all situations be so easy to solve?  ðŸ¤£ Wouldn’t that be nice?

Have I come up with a new theory on middle ground?  Absolutely not!

Would this world be a better place if we all tried a little harder to find a little more middle ground? I’m certain it would.

Thanks so much for taking the time to read my blog.  I really hope you enjoyed it and find it to be helpful.  Please share any thoughts on middle ground that you have found to be helpful with your children or students.  I would love to hear about them.  Make today great and keep moving!




Friday, December 14, 2018

Were we as tough as we thought?


Picture created by my AMAZINGLY talented brother Eric Housel
“We have tried so hard to give our kids what we didn’t have, that we failed to give them what we did. “

- Unknown Author (at least to me)

Have you ever wondered if your walk to school was really two miles uphill both ways or if that's even geographically possible?  And were you really walking through 3 feet of snow while carrying your sister on your back with holes in your shoes?   

Us adults like to tell stories, just like our parents did.  Our brains like to draw connections between the past and the present to try to make sense of it all.  So, we tell stories of how tough we used to be and how tough we “had it”.  It always seems to circle back to how weak the current generation is.  

Maybe some of the stories that we hold true about our childhood are just that, stories!  It was obviously a different time. We were outside exploring our world constantly.  I remember getting up early, leaving the house, and not coming home all day.  We rode our bikes or walked everywhere.  We played games in the neighborhood like manhunt, soccer, football, and street hockey.  When we were bored, we invented games.  We used our imaginations.  We had no cell phones, no computers, no tracking devices.  My parents thought they had a general idea where we were most of the time, and that was good enough.   

Why did we do all that?  Because were tough?  I am going to attempt to shed some light on the fact that maybe (just maybe) we were not as tough as we thought.  If that's even remotely true, then maybe this generation is not as weak as they seem.  

Reasons that we might not have been as tough as we thought

  • There was no central air for us; If we had it, perhaps we would have not been so eager to get out into the world.
For me, growing up in the 80’s, the only place more unbearable than being outside in the heat of the summer was being inside our family home.  If your house was like mine and most that I knew, you had no central air conditioning.  In fact, most people I knew had one space air-conditioner that did one room of their house.  (Usually a parent's bedroom) Our space air conditioner was in our 100 square-foot den.  The more time you spent in the cool air of that room the harder it became to leave it.  Conversely the more time I spent with all four of us cramped in one room, the more insane I would become and the more I would need to get outside.  I remember vividly wanting to beat a new Atari game so bad that I sat in my room playing it with sweat pouring down my face until I couldn’t stand it anymore, gave up and went outside.   
  • Our video game technology was better outside of the house.
Our generation invented playing video games.  I remember when Pong came out.  I couldn’t BELIEVE that I could hold a controller in my hand that would allow me to control something on my TV screen.  It was absolutely mind blowing!  As the technology grew from Pong to Atari to Intellivison to ColecoVision to Nintendo, my playtime with devices grew as well.  Early in the video game craze, the best games were ALWAYS at the arcades, pizza places, and burger joints.  Our games at home paled in comparison.  We would beg, borrow, and steal as many quarters as we could and head off on our bikes in search of our favorite video games.  (Do you remember lining the machine with quarters?) Were we addicted to video games like this generation?  I know I was at times and it seemed a lot of my friends were as well.  Eventually the quarters would run out, as would our interest in the games.  Then it would be time to find something new to do which usually was a sport or active game of some sort.
  • Even watching TV is easier today than when we were kids.
Remember how we used to watch TV?  We had a big channel changing box attached by a wire to the back of the TV.  There were 13 choices in each of 3 rows of channels which gave us a maximum of 39 channels.  If we wanted to change the channel we had to get up and walk over to the TV.  Some kids could stretch the wire of the box to where they were sitting.  We weren’t allowed to do that in my house because of some unfounded parental threat that we would somehow break the box or the TV.  (kind of like, “you’re gonna shoot your eye out!”)  Today we have 900 or more channels.  Most of us probably only watch ten of them but we do have 890 others just in case.  When we want to change the channel, we not only can use our remote, but now we can even use our phones or our voices.  Does the fact that we had to get up to change the channel make us inherently tougher?  Probably not!
  • The safety of our world was not broadcast on every TV, computer, device, and social media outlet. 
When we were kids, we didn’t even lock our doors!  We had the freedom to get out and explore our world and figure out who we were.  We were equipped with some basic safety tips such as don't; talk to strangers, take anything from strangers, accept rides from strangers, and when in doubt, RUN!  The biggest safety tip in my house was you better be home by the time the street lights came on or you better somehow avoid my Dad on your way into the house!    

Did we do all our exploring because we were tough or because we could?  

Looking back and connecting the dots, it was never clearer for me how much the news and information about our world had changed than watching OJ's White Bronco speed down the Los Angeles Freeways.  24-hour news stations helped to scare a lot of parents into keeping their kids as close as possible.  Then you add the internet, smart devices, social media and the constant bombardment of negative images of our world and it's no wonder these kids are no longer free to explore. 

My thinking is that the safety of our world hasn't changed as much as we think.  This world is a crazy place where crazy things happen, have always happened, and will always happen.  Crazy things were happening every day in the 80's.  One of the biggest differences in my opinion was something terrible could have happened in Minnesota and we might have never heard about it in New Jersey.  In today's world, not only will we hear about it almost instantly, but we get to see live footage of the incident at the scene and if we are lucky, we may even get to see the getaway car being chased by police.  

And what are we left with?  A generation of kids that are “free” to explore their world from behind a 6-foot vinyl fence in their backyard, but only if their parents are watching.     
  • We were a product of our generation and circumstances.
“I recognize that I have no way of knowing that had I lived another person’s life I might talk and act exactly the same way”.  
- Hal Elrod, Author of Miracle Morning

My best friend is the 9th of 9 kids in his family.  He was the kind of kid that was lugging around cinder blocks and firewood from the time he was old enough to walk.  Before school he would have to milk cows and chase chickens.  I remember him telling me a story about the time he asked, “what’s for lunch” and his mom replied, “there’s a tomato in the garden, get out there and make it yourself!”  We were born 3 weeks apart and lived 5 miles away.  Did I have to grow up being cinder block carrying-tomato in the garden-milk the cows before school-tough?  Not even close.  He used to joke with me about how easy I had it growing up and he was right in most ways.  He was a product of his circumstances, as much as he was a product of his generation.      

I was just a kid from Toms River, NJ trying to figure it all out.  I was no more a product of my circumstances and generation than our kids are of theirs.  Did we have things easier than our parent’s generation?  In my opinion, MOST DEFINITELY!  Did we have it better than our parent’s generation?  I truly believe that we did.  

So what about this generation? 

I wonder if this generation will look back on their lives and think that they “had it” better than us.  Sadly, I doubt it.  My 17-year-old son has said on many occasions that he wished he grew up in my era before all the technology that he has.   

I truly feel sorry for this generation and the cards that they have been dealt.  They have traded in a bike and a ball for a device and an Xbox.

  • Their houses are bigger.
  • Their air conditioning is better. 
  • Their video games blow away any games that we could have ever imagined at the time.
  • Their devices can pull up any image or information they choose at any time.  These devices can play music, turn on lights, and answer any question they can think of just by talking to them.  (Captain Kirk was the only person I knew of that could do that!)
  • And OF COURSE, they don't even have to stand up and walk over to the TV to change the channel.


Imagine it’s 1983 – you wake up at 12:35pm - It’s 95 degrees out – It’s 68 degrees in your house – Your iPhone is sitting next to your bed – your TV remote and video game controller are sitting there too – You have access to 900+ channels and the best video games known to man - Every friend that you have ever known is one snap, facetime chat, or text away – You can see what your friends did and who they were with last night without even speaking to them.  Are you going to be in a big rush to find your friends, stay out all day and come home when the street lights come on?  I don’t think I would be.  In fact, I’m certain I wouldn’t.       

I think “our toughness” that we allude to so often had a lot more to do with the cards we were dealt than how tough we were.  I think it had a lot more to do with having no other choices and not knowing any other way.  Did we have to be tougher because of some of our circumstances, I guess.  Did we live that way because our intent was to be tough?  I don’t think so. 

We have questioned their teachers and yelled at their coaches and set up their play dates.  We tell them that they’re always safe at first base, no one ever loses, and everyone gets a trophy no matter what.  We get out in front of any kind of possible failure we can perceive and remove it before it happens.  We have shielded them from taking responsibility for their actions.  We have micromanaged every second of their day and then we wonder why they can’t solve problems on their own.  We’ve bailed them out every chance we get, and we wonder why it’s so easy for them to quit.  And then…AND THEN…we wonder why they are not as tough as we would like them to be.

Everyone I speak with seems to be accusing this generation of kids for not being tough enough, yet not as many seem to be questioning the toughness of our generation of parents.  If we don’t think this generation is tough enough it’s because we haven’t pushed them to be!  We have given them everything they will ever need to stay at home and live a secluded, sedentary lifestyle.  We have enabled this generation to become exactly what they are and then we have THE NERVE to call them weak.  

I have two wonders, a HUGE HOPE, and one final thought;

I wonder if there was ever a generation in American history that was brought up so differently than that of their parent's generation. 

I wonder if there were adults in every generation that wondered the same thing as me.

My HUGE HOPE is that at some point we look back on this time, and we will wonder how we got it so wrong, and we will have a society that is ready and willing to fix it.

My final thought is, if we are looking to place blame on why our kids are not tough enough, then the first place we need to look is in the mirror!

Thanks so much for taking the time to read this.  I would LOVE to hear your comments.  If you are interested in receiving our blog in your email PLEASE SUBSCRIBE!

Make today GREAT and KEEP MOVING!  

If you are interested in examining more on this topic, please check out Simon Sinek’s talk on “Millennials in the Workplace”.  I think he is brilliant, and he is my absolute FAVORITE motivational speaker!  His connection between smoking, drinking, gambling, and social media is both scary and fascinating.  His insights go along with a lot of the points that I tried to make in my blog. 



Monday, October 1, 2018

Time to stop letting kids pick their own teams! Some ideas for picking teams.



Pssst...1950 called and said it is time to stop allowing kids to pick teams in adult organized situations

Can you imagine being eight years old and having two of your peers pick everyone in your class before you?  Now imagine you’re the last one left and the two captains have the "you can just have him on your team" discussion or better yet they argue about not wanting you on their team!  So not only does neither team want you, but they really don’t even want you to play.  Besides renting a flashing billboard that says "we don’t want you here", is there anything you can think of that could push a child’s self-esteem lower than that in front of their peers?


There’s a lot of people that will complain that we’re trying to change too many things and we’re losing who we are.  I can't disagree with that on A LOT of levels, but picking teams is NOT one of those things that we need to hold onto.  As camp counselors, teachers or anyone who works with kids, we are responsible for planning for the physical, social, emotional, and cognitive well-being of the people in our charge.  We are looking out for EVERYONE'S well being, not just the athletic, popular ones.  This has been going on so long that some people probably haven't even analyzed the effect it could have on a child's self esteem.  

When people find out I'm a PE teacher, I am always faced with EXTREMELY strong feelings.  When it comes to people recalling their childhood memories of physical education, they loved it, they hated it, but very rarely will they be indifferent about the situation. Why?  Because they were exposed for all to see and not always in a fair way.  I grew up in a time when physical education is where the strong got stronger, and the weak were pushed to the side.  Do you remember being out first, picked last, and 25 people watching you attempt to climb a rope.  (Was there really nothing else they could think of having us do, then have 25 people watch one classmate climb a rope?)  Your success and failure were on display for all to see.   

When I was a physical education major at William Paterson University, I was fortunate enough to have Dr. Virginia Overdorf who challenged us in a way that has never left me.  She asked us how many people in our class were picked last in phys ed or on the playground on a consistent basis.  We were asked to stand up if this were true.  We were in a room of PE Majors; most of us were former high school or current college athletes so as you could imagine none one of us stood up.  We were the ones picked first or second or we were the captain who picked the teams.  She challenged us to look out for all of our kids regardless of their experience, skill, or interest level. 


Here are some ideas for picking teams - In school I only get to see my kids for 45 minutes a week, so I move very quickly when it comes to picking teams.

  • Pre-plan the teams - write them down, and quickly read them off. 
  • Use a randomizer like Team Shake or Class Dojo (You can even program some of these apps to have desired outcomes such as keeping apart certain "friends" who become "unfriendly" when they are together. 😉😉)  More info on Team Shake
  • Number off - 1's go here, 2's go there and you have two teams pretty quickly.  
  • Number off 1-4 - I have found that kids love variety in a game.  If you have them number off by 4's, you can have the 1's and 2's play the 3's and 4's for the first round and then have the 1's and 3's be on a team for the next round.  
  • Birthday months - With birthday months it's very possible to create uneven teams.  If you are concerned with uneven teams, call out birthday months and just have them stand.  Then quickly separate the standing people into teams that are as even as possible.
  • Partner pick and divide - One of my personal favorites (a way of messing with the kids a little bit) is to have everyone find a partner and line up directly across from their partner so they are in two lines facing one another.  One line becomes one team in the other line because the other team so all partners have been broken up. Reasoning behind this is the kids normally hang out with students of the same interest levels and this is usually a really good way of breaking the kids up by skill level. 
  • Cards - give everyone a card - Have them do a Survivor Style reveal.  You flip your card and it tells you which team your on.  You could do this with any kind of objects that you have lots of.  Just need to make sure that you have an equal amount of objects and students.
  • Pinnies - Have them grab a pinnie out a bag without looking.  Whatever color pinnie they get, that's what team they are on.
  • Here is a link from PE Central for some other ideas to pick teams.  
PE Central Team Picking Ideas 


The WHOLE SCHOOL RULE  

In my opinion, picking teams falls under the whole school rule.  I would rather have every kid in the whole school mad at me for not allowing them to pick teams, then to have one student be put in the position of not feeling wanted or welcome in our class!  Honestly, the kids just want to play, so the picking of the teams rarely becomes a big issue in my class.

The Caveat 

You have to love caveats!  It gives us all the chance to disclaim anything we just claimed!  So here is a caveat to allowing kids to pick teams.  


Us adults, in our infinite wisdom, have tried to micromanage every single minute of every single day for our children.  In some instances, we have tried to mull every single possible thing that can ever go wrong for them and fix it before it happens.  We need to understand that we are taking away valuable learning opportunities from our kids in doing so. 

If they pick teams at recess, and they are being respectful, let them be.  If you give them free time, then let it be free.  If they choose to pick teams, no matter how difficult that might be for you, it might be best to step away and let them figure it out for themselves.  It's an opportunity for them to grow.  The kid who is going to be picked last in this situation signed up for it.  They knew what they were getting into.  They knew how the teams would be picked and they chose to play anyway.  

A lot of times at recess, they have about 20 minutes to organize, mobilize, negotiate, figure captains, pick teams, decide rules and still have enough time to play.  It's actually extraordinary that kids are able to do that in such a short time especially in this age of video games, "smart" devices, and over organized sports.  Could you imagine what it would be like if you got a committee of 40 adults together and asked them to come up with a plan and implement it in 20 minutes?

If we step in, we send a message to the kids that what they were doing wasn’t good enough.

I sincerely hope this helps!  If you have any questions or comments please feel free to leave them below.  Make today GREAT and KEEP MOVING! 
_________________________________________

Mark Housel has taught countless 1000's of kids in 10 schools, 5 districts, and 3 different counties in NJ.  Housel has been a Health and PE Teacher for over 20 years in NJ.  He has a Bachelors in Exercise Science and a Masters in Education.  He is owner and CEO of Housel Fun & Fitness.  www.houselfitness.com  He is a also a workshop presenter and runs staff training for camps and schools.