{"id":3571,"date":"2015-09-21T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-09-21T04:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/cw_post\/a-conversation-with-buddy-berry-in-eminence-kentucky\/"},"modified":"2020-02-05T12:56:00","modified_gmt":"2020-02-05T17:56:00","slug":"a-conversation-with-buddy-berry-in-eminence-kentucky","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/a-conversation-with-buddy-berry-in-eminence-kentucky\/","title":{"rendered":"A Conversation with Buddy Berry in Eminence Kentucky"},"content":{"rendered":"
I had a chance to visit Kentucky last month when I participated in a meeting of the Kentucky Valley Education Cooperative<\/a>\/University of Kentucky Next Generation Leaders Academy. Before I headed south to Hazard, I veered north to visit Eminence School District<\/a>, one of the ten innovation districts.<\/p>\n Eminence is a small, rural district of about 850 students located forty miles east of Louisville. Superintendent Buddy Berry is a fourth generation alumni of Eminence. Five years ago, Eminence was facing declining enrollment and funding. Since they have started down this path to personalization, the tide has turned and enrollment has nearly doubled.<\/p>\n Eminence is taking a different path toward competency education than other districts I have visited, so for us to have a meaningful conversation, Berry and I first had to spend a bit of time unpacking the language of personalization, standards-based, competency-based, mastery, and proficiency, as they can easily become buzz words that lose their distinct meaning. Once we got ourselves comfortable with the language each of us was using, we had a tremendous conversation. Here are a few of the highlights.<\/p>\n Starting with Students<\/strong>: Berry explained that to launch their effort, they wanted to create a culture where staff listened to students and students had a sense of agency that they could shape the world around them. They organized focus groups of fifteen students and interviewed every student in the district, asking them to share what they didn\u2019t like about school and what they wanted it to be. Based on the specific feedback they received\u2014such as limited choice, no opportunity to feel really challenged, and lack of technology\u2014the district made a number of changes: expanded electives, additional AP and honors courses, and laptops students could check out in the library.<\/p>\n Berry identified two important lessons learned through this process. First, student agency isn\u2019t just about listening to students. After students realized they were being given a voice, they brought out every complaint, expecting the adults in the system to fix it. Thus they jumped from empowerment to entitlement. Eminence took a step back and set the expectation that everyone<\/em> is part of the solution. Students could still bring forth problems, but they also had to bring ideas for how to solve them.<\/p>\n Since then, Eminence has created a layered approach to student agency that stretches from participation in governance to charting their own course. Students are members of site-based decision making with full voting privileges. The district uses student voice surveys, teachers work to develop interest-based courses centered on student interests as well as their own, and students have opportunities to design and even lead courses. Every student has a SPARC team of students, parents, and advisors to reflect on student work and ensure students are making progress. Starting in third grade, there are student-led conferences where students describe how they are progressing in terms of academics, as well as E3 levels, which are examplars of the different expectations at Eminence, such as philanthropy and college & career explorations.<\/p>\n The other lesson learned is that they found it was hard for students and educators to envision a different type of school or a different way to learn. One of the first tasks of leadership was to find a way to help people in the district think differently about their jobs and how school might be organized.<\/p>\n Surprise and Delight<\/strong>: Berry explained that he has been heavily influenced in creating a culture of innovation by the design thinking advanced by John Nash and the team at dLab<\/a> at the University of Kentucky. This has started by creating a \u201cyes, and…\u201d orientation rather than the \u201cyes, but…\u201d we know all too well in school reform. Berry also wants to systemically embed a primary design principle, Surprise and Delight<\/em>, into every nook and cranny of the district (unfortunately, the acronym is SAD). In watching the interaction between Berry and staff and staff and children, you can feel this culture of Surprise and Delight. During this conversation, I began to realize that for some schools, design thinking may be a way to reach that sense of empowerment that we have identified as one of the new values driving competency-based systems. This is a great way to create more intentionality and a belief that educators can shape and re-shape their environment and their classrooms.<\/p>\n