January 2025 Newsletter

As we look back on 2024, we at the Center have so much to be grateful for and to feel a sense of accomplishment about. Much thanks to you, our incredible community!

Here are a handful of our endeavors from the past year…
  • We began facilitating two Teacher Educator Institutes – one with teacher educators in a novel Grow-Your-Own Pathway for special educators in Minneapolis Public Schools and one with teacher education program faculty hailing from 15 colleges and universities across Oregon.

  • Our very own Rachel Bacosa facilitated a 5-session Book Club with Programmatic ToSAs in Sunnyvale School District based upon our core text, Teaching with a Social, Emotional, and Cultural Lens (Markowitz & Bouffard, 2020).

  • We hosted our first-ever webinar focused on the anchor competency, responding constructively across differences. Educators attended from across the United States, Canada, and Europe.

  • We have undertaken 3 new research studies to understand the experiences of participants attending our Institutes and professional development offerings, as well as to explore the impact of these offerings on their social, emotional, and cultural competency development, mindsets, well-being, and teaching practices.

2024 was also a year of immense change for our team with the ushering in of a new Executive Director (Dr. Rebecca Baelen) and the addition of two new team members: Chelsea Rubin (Project Manager) and Joshua Lovett (Research Associate).

Presenting at the SEL Exchange with our CRTWC collaborators: Dr. Ernest Black (CalStateTEACH), Dr. Dawn White (Minneapolis Public Schools), and Dr. Deirdre Hon (University of Portland). 

As we look to 2025, we are committed to evolving our approach and expanding our reach! To propel our thinking, our team recently started reading The Four Pivots: Reimagining Justice, Reimagining Ourselves by Shawn Ginwright (2022).

In our December team meeting, we discussed our take-aways from Chapter 1, which focuses on the importance of self-reflection and “mirror work” for social change movements and social transformation. In this chapter, Ginwright delineates between lenses and mirrors. He writes, “A lens is an outwardly focused examination about how the world works … A lens helps illuminate complex answers to hidden social phenomena that aren’t easily explained” (p. 26). While a mirror tells us the honest truth about ourselves without judgment, it reflects back the “hardcore reality” that we often hide from (p. 25).

He goes on to state that “our lenses over time can also create obstruction spots, because lenses are awful at reflecting back the truth about ourselves” (p. 26). And, these obstruction spots can lead us to see the world through a singular or narrow perspective – one that we come to see as truth. To understand our obstruction spots and clean our lens, Ginwright proposes that we engage in self-reflection or “mirror work” – harkening back to our anchor competency of Foster Self-Reflection!

We must constantly practice using our mirrors, as these mirrors shape our understanding of ourselves and inform the lens through which we see the world. With that in mind, core to developing a new “lens” or way of seeing (as we suggest with the Anchor Competencies Framework) is engaging in self-reflection – exploring the context we bring and the assumptions and beliefs we hold. In so doing, we cultivate a greater awareness of what we bring to our work and can in turn hold space for others to do the same.

Research has found that engaging in self-reflection – regular journaling in response to self-reflective questions – leads to greater clarity in decision-making for those engaging in the reflection and these same people report greater levels of energy and more engagement in team problem solving. Therefore, engaging in this self-reflective work is important for developing the clarity, energy, and critical thinking necessary for our challenging work in education.

It is important to remember that mirror work is a process and it is not a quick fix. It also demands that we build in time within our schools and organizations, and that we remain committed to this difficult work. With this in mind, how much time do you spend each week journaling or engaging in self-reflection? How much time is built in for self-reflection within your school, university, or organizational setting? 

Self-Reflection Exercise Take a moment, grab a pen and paper. Free write for one minute about the following: “how are you feeling in this moment about your job and the work you are doing there?” Get it all out. After you are done, notice how you feel. Next, reflect and write your responses to the following two prompts: 1) What are three things that you like about yourself that make you good at your job? 2) What are three personal achievements that make you proud of the work that you do? Now, read that back to yourself. Notice how you are feeling. -From Ginwright, S. A. (2022) The Four Pivots: Reimagining Justice, Reimagining Ourselves. North Atlantic Books.

In the weeks ahead…

Try or check out some of the following resources to jumpstart your year.

1) Tell someone close to you the three most important lessons you learned about yourself last year and how you are building on those lessons (Ginwright, 2022, p. 5) 2) Try this new approach to setting a daily intention offered by Richie Davidson from Healthy Minds Innovations Inc. 3) Try this new meditation to inspire Awe in the new year from the Greater Good Science Center. 4) Check out this article from the Behavioral Scientist, which offers a new approach for thinking about productivity. 5) Check out this school model that is taking care for students to the next level.

A quote to ponder… 

Legendary activist Grace Lee Boggs shares how reflection is a key ingredient to social change work. She proposes that people who engage in social change work must, “not only struggle against existing institutions. They must make a philosophical/spiritual leap and become more “human” human beings. In order to change/transform the world, they must change/transform themselves.” – (Boggs & Kurashige, 2011).

We reached our 2024 Fundraising Goal!

Thank you all for your unwavering support. With your generous contributions, we surpassed our 2024 fundraising goal of $25,000 and raised $29,471 to fuel our efforts in 2025!

We remain committed to offering a wide range of transformative professional learning opportunities for educators —through institutes, retreats, webinars, and collaborative efforts to integrate our Framework across district and teacher education programming —to equip educators with tools to teach the whole child and help all children thrive.

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