Match's Curriculum Team

Match's curriculum team at work. Anne Lyneis is standing. 

Match's curriculum team at work. Anne Lyneis is standing. 

Anne Lyneis never travels anywhere without an armful of picture books, which she patiently stacks and restacks beneath whatever chair she happens to be sitting in. She is a curriculum director at Match, responsible for English Language Arts at the elementary level. 

Anne is one of six master teachers at Match who comprise our Curriculum Team. All happen to be women: three are dedicated to math; three to ELA. All are ferocious about good teaching.

The job of the curriculum team is threefold: to write unit plans, lesson plans and assessments for grades pre-k thru 12, to transfer knowledge to our instructional leaders at each school (who in turn work closely with classroom teachers) and to package up our material in a way that can be shared on Match Fishtank, a website that makes all of Match’s curriculum available to anyone with an internet connection, free of charge.

It sounds simple enough in theory – why wouldn’t every school operate in this way, with one centralized team of curriculum creators – but its execution is a carefully choreographed set of people, systems and stuff that isn’t all that common in most schools.

Lyneis meets with Jen Mullen, an assistant principal at Match Community Day.

Lyneis meets with Jen Mullen, an assistant principal at Match Community Day.

Match is betting big on two things when it comes to our public charter school in Boston. First, we are betting that enrolling students earlier in their academic careers (as early as pre-kindergarten) and hanging onto them all the way through high school will yield greater results for our students on the metrics we care about most:  graduation, college enrollment and college completion. And second, we’re betting that a unified curriculum that builds from one year to the next will be good for students and teachers – increasing rigor and retention for all. 

The curriculum team is new – about two and a half years old – but there are at least three things good outcomes we’ve seen thus far from this new way of operating:

1)   A K12 curriculum, all aligned to Common Core standards that moves sequentially from one grade to the next, ensures that we – as a school – are all pulling in the same direction. It means our students are introduced to concepts and texts at the same time in their schooling, making it possible for us to operate with greater certainty about what students have and have not been exposed to.  That certainty makes a big difference in the decisions we make about how to best engage and challenge our students to reach their academic potential.

2)    Match’s curriculum team is easing the cognitive load on teachers. Teachers, of course, still have to teach: they have to engage with the material and determine the best way to help their students master the concepts and content, but all the time they would have previously spent mapping out units and lessons, selecting texts and writing tests, in now time they can dedicate to their instructional practice. For a teacher in his or her first or second year in the classroom, this is no small thing. And even for a veteran teacher, the opportunity to step back from that work, can leave more room for creativity in the classroom and make a demanding job more sustainable.

3)   As we’d hoped, teachers are improving their instruction. This is due, in part, to the greater percentage of time they can dedicate to their practice. But it’s also due to the intensive coaching they receive weekly from the instructional leaders (the assistant principals at Match) whose primary responsibility to coach teachers. 

The time our instructional leaders spend with teachers – observing teachers, coaching teachers one-on-one, and running weekly meetings (organized by grade level) that zero in on everything from intellectual preparation to specific lesson plans – is the topic of our next story.

Boston Pulse Youth Poets on the American Dream

Ny’lasia Brown (L) and Sumeya Aden deliver their poems at "Speak Up! Art is Action" in October.

Ny’lasia Brown (L) and Sumeya Aden deliver their poems at "Speak Up! Art is Action" in October.

By Tony DelaRosa

What if students had the chance to interrogate the American Dream? Would they accept such an immense and overwhelming task? Would they be able to address power and privilege?

Ny’lasia Brown and Sumeya Aden, Match Charter Public School eighth graders, grapple with these questions almost every Monday after school during our Boston Pulse Youth Spoken Word Club meetings. Boston Pulse, like its predecessor and sister organization Indy Pulse (www.indypulse.org), works to empower youth voices in Boston.   

Last month, our students  were invited to perform for Boston City Councilor Andrea Campbell at “Speak Up! Art is Action” organized by Mass LEAP (Massachusetts Literary Education and Performance Collective) and hosted by the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate. Ny’lasia and Sumeya were two of 11 students to perform, and the only middle school-aged poets to take the microphone.

To prepare for the event, every student poet was asked to respond to the prompt: “What does the American Dream mean to you?” Through the Boston Pulse curriculum, we studied the works of famous and local slam poets including Paul Flores, Melissa Oliva-Lozada, Clint Smith, Denice Frohman who all write about identity, history, citizenship, and oppression.

Specific lines from thirteen-year old Ny’lasia’s poem, “The American Nightmare,” react with a sharp awareness of the perception of being Black in America today:

CAN’T wear a hoodie without being looked at the wrong way

they are looking at us the wrong way and now i have the potential

to be stopped and frisked at any given moment. CAN’T make mistakes

CAN’T take risks

CAN’T BREATHE…

These haunting lines from thirteen-year old Sumeya’s poem, “The Cowards vs. Those Who Struggle,” pay homage to those those who she doesn't believe are protected by the American Dream:

Aren’t we the land of the free, home of the brave?

Or are we the cowards who hide behind money,

power, privilege, fame, and the government?

The ones who stopped listening

The ones who stopped caring

While people have suffered and are suffering,

waiting for your attention.

You can watch them deliver their full poems here.

Amanda Torres, executive director of Mass LEAP, hosted a Q&A for student performers, where they had an opportunity to not only to talk about “why they write,” but also to share their opinions about current events, including the presidential election, the Black Lives Matter movement and more. You could see the pride students felt as the adults in the audience listened carefully and weighed their perspectives.   

Torres said during the ceremony: “Art is linked to social action, and young people have the power to shape the world we exist in…” As their former English teacher and spoken word coach, it has been my pleasure to learn from Ny’lasia, Sumeya and their classmates, as they shape the work I do everyday.  

Tony DelaRosa is a 2012 TFA Alum, Indy Pulse and Boston Pulse co-founder, and 7th Grade English and Composition Teacher at Match Charter Public Middle School. 

 

New Video: Sposato Graduate School of Education

Our graduate school, the Charles Sposato Graduate School of Education, prepares unusually effective rookie teachers. Here's Sposato's story, through the eyes of its leaders, students, alumni and partners.

Reimagining the Classroom at Match Next

Garrett Schilling works with one of his students.

Garrett Schilling works with one of his students.

Garrett Schilling is a tutor at Match Next this year. He has hipster beard and a brown leather notebook with refillable paper he carries from class to class. Garrett grew up all over the United States, but calls Oklahoma home. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Science from Southwestern Oklahoma State University and after several stints as an outdoor educator, decided he wanted to become a teacher. He applied to the Match Teacher Residency – the first year of Match’s Sposato Graduate School of Education – and asked to be placed at Match Next, because he knew it would require even more one-on-one interaction with students than Match Corps tutors do. 

Match Next is Match Education’s latest K12 innovation: it’s our effort to reimagine how to organize the human resources in a school. Instead of the traditional classroom, with one teacher in a room of 25 students, we’re building a new model. In one grade, three master teachers oversee 30 tutors (all AmeriCorps members), who work with 100 students. In a typical class period, students are organized into groups of three or four, overseen by one tutor. 

To see Match Next in action is to see a totally different kind of classroom, one with a lot more adults than a normal classroom has. Students and tutors sit at desks configured into pods. Every kid has a Chromebook and all of the class materials – lessons, assessments, classwork, homework, etc. – are housed in the cloud, on Google Classroom. Master teachers check in on students individually and spend a few minutes with each pod of kids to see spot-check their progress and check for understanding.  

This year, Garrett has worked one-on-one with 10 fifth graders in English and social studies. He spends hours with his kids each day working through the day’s lessons and independent work. He talks and texts regularly with their parents. As a result of spending so much time in close proximity, Garrett and his kids know all sorts of things about each other: favorite bands, interests, food, weekend plans, siblings, struggles at home.

Garrett spends a lot of time on his right knee during the day, kneeling down next to his students as they get to work. “About 60 percent of my job is poking and prodding and course correction,” he says. The group of four boys he’s working with today have diverse needs – one student is a plodder; another works fast (Garrett describes him as a “grumpy old man in a 10-year old body”); the third boy is capable, but has a hard time staying on task; and the fourth boy, who is new to Match this year, is catching up academically and adjusting to the high expectations of his new school. 

He has a few constant refrains (he must say these things hundreds of times a week): “What are you having a hard time with?” “What is this trying to teach us?” “You can do it, try again.” “I’m not telling you – look it up.” “Ok, that’s pretty good!”  

The big lesson students are working on today is identifying and interpreting poetic devices in songs. Each student was supposed to bring in a song from home to analyze – those who forgot to pick a song are given a copy of “Happy” by Pharrell. As class gets underway, Garrett reminds his students to pull out their poetry glossaries to use as a reference tool. He pushes them to think through the use of things like repetition, metaphor and simile to influence the mood, tone, theme and point of view of the song. 

Garrett has learned a lot about teaching and about how to connect with kids this year. But one of his biggest lessons has to do with how he presents himself. At the beginning of the year, Garrett’s eyebrows were permanently furrowed, his mouth fixed in a perpetual grimace. It was a look of concentration, and he was concentrating a lot! Sposato faculty identified this tendency and gave him feedback. “I think I was scaring the kids,” he says.  Now he smiles more and tries to ensure his “resting face” is a friendly one. It seems to be making a difference in his daily interactions with his students. 

The hardest part of the work for Garrett has been learning to not give kids the answers. His teacher persona is athletic coach – firm, but fair, and caring. “I’ve learned that it’s a long game to get kids to do the work themselves,” Garrett explains. “At the beginning of the year I was doing too much scaffolding - too much work for my students - but now they’re developing enough stamina to do their own work.”  

Next year, as a second year graduate student at Sposato, Garrett will be teaching middle school science at UP-Boston in South Boston. Meanwhile, the work at Match Next will continue. Over the next couple of years, we’ll integrate some of the best practices we’ve learned about technology in the classroom and individualized learning at Next across all our grade levels.