MUWP: Social Action Research Team
 

Field Notes: July 23, 2002


I'm behind on my field notes. Last Wednesday we had our first real discussion about Social Action. I handed out copies of the principles and asked people to read them. Then I talked about how we hoped people would find a focus/problem/issue by the following Monday. I made the point that the morning writings were designed to help them narrow the field and that they might want to work from those writings to a final decision.

There were lots of questions and one of the things I really liked about this discussion was that I felt perfectly comfortable telling them that we didn't really know the best way to introduce them to social action, that we were simply experimenting. I remember saying something about knowing that people probably need introduced to social action in small doses and that, not being mind readers, we weren't actually sure of what size doses to be giving them. What really struck me was how people didn't seem to realize that they had problems and issues already in mind. They didn't see their concerns as valid material for inquiry. As I listened to people talk I tried to help frame the questions I thought I heard them saying, and I know that was enlightening (at least I think I know based on non-verbal expressions) for a couple of people. By stating the questions I thought I heard I was validating their problems/issues/concerns and showing them they did have real questions worth pursuing, I think. I left the writing project with plans for them to work on the changing your mind assignment on Thursday.

I was gone Thursday-Monday and arrived late on Tuesday morning (and out of sorts, not prepared and not rested). While I was at the doctor's office that morning with Christopher, I started doing a morning writing since I had missed that and I wrote about my difficulty with re-entry. When I arrived at writing project, finally, Doug was in the middle of his demonstration (an amusing one, at that, about stupid laws). In my notes I have written "Betty Gail?" because I noticed she wasn't there. Later I was to find out that she had "changed her mind" and decided not to finish for personal reasons. I simply couldn't seem to get into the swing of things, but at 11:00 we broke into our response groups. Doug, Beth, Diane, and I went outside the library and began talking.

We're all having trouble seeing what this project looks like, what shape it should take, what form it might be. Beth is noticing interesting things that people are thinking about and she spoke for a long time about Marlene. Clearly Beth's interest is sparked by Marlene, but I didn't sense that she was that convinced of the idea we had earlier (that I had actually and shared with them the night before writing project started) about selecting an individual to study. As I listened to Beth and as she talked about herself and her discoveries, I kept thinking about what she had said at Border's. She wondered how two teachers who had not "done" social action in their classrooms could actually figure out how other teachers could come to understand social action in their teaching practice.

Doug said he had ranted to Beth and shared some of that. Then he said, "I'm not much of a social action person." This sparked a lot of conversation because I disagreed with Doug's perception of himself. In fact, I believed that if he was ranting about something in the school system that meant he found something to be unfair or inequitable in some way and that is social action fodder! We talked for a long time and these words were written down in my notes: socialism, capitalism, ownership, motivation.

Diane talked about empathy and tolerance.


Later in the day, I asked each person to talk about the problem/issue/or question they were going to focus on.

Marlene: Wonders why only two students out of many entered a writing contest. Wonder why students hate writing/school/English.

Tonda: Interested in ways to encourage students to be open to others; fairness (I note the words "tolerance and respect")

Vickie: Interested in finding ways to find similarities among students (I note Thomas Merton--Union and Division.)

Jeanette: How do we get kids to not be mean to each other?

Bethana: How to help students take pride in who they are and the work they do.

Martha: Bad behavior in the classroom (I ask questions and write in my notes: How to reduce....[bad behavior in the classroom])

Toodie: How to be more authentic and how to increase student responsibility

Amy: How to genereate intellectual patience in students (I have in my notes: use writing to deal w/ issue...power [unclear what I meant by this])

Beth: Roller coaster emotions...confidence, competence/power...multi-genre approach

Doug: Schools not preparing students for the outside


We did a final writing and didn't have time to share but Beth, Amy and I eagerly were passing our work to each other and making notes to one another. Somehow this seemed important to me. In the wp blog last night I wrote about how much better, calmer I felt after leaving (compared to my foul mood in the morning).
 

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Field Notes: July 16, 2002


I took the class notes yesterday so I didn't really bother to write any field notes. I'm assuming that the daily journals will be some of the narratives that we use to study and tell the stories of how these teachers come to understand social action...if, in fact, they do.

The things that really stood out to me yesterday and today was how comfortable this group seemed. There wasn't a lot of puffing up as sometimes happens when people are nervous and uncomfortable but don't want anyone to know it. I think that's what I noticed was that these people were not uncomfortable sharing with us the fact that they were nervous and anxious about what they had agreed to do. Somehow that really stood out to me because in the past, first days of the SI are usually quite filled with tension for me. Perhaps my own hectic schedule prevented me from taking the time to experience that kind of tension, but I really don't think it was there. I'm pretty certain that everyone shared at least once yesterday; most shared almost every time they had an opportunity. Of course, I share way too much...telling myself that I do so in order to set a model. One thing that really stands out to me so far is that I don't see us as having any disruptive forces at all in the group. Yeah!

We are using the morning prompts I developed as a means of moving people into understanding the social action model, specifically the first step of identifying the WHAT. We haven't really discussed social action yet, although I did raise the point today as we looked at the handouts people were given for the demos that we have been presenting things in the WHAT, WHY, and HOW formats for a particular reason and that we would be talking more about that tomorrow and through the rest of the institute.

Amy did her demo yesterday and really set the stage for the enthusiasm we like to see in our demos. She also did a nice blend of modeling and metacognitive work which is something that is often problematic in the demos. Charles came and did his demo today. His was different than Amy's and was great because it showed two different ways of being and doing a demo that I hope gives people some sense that there simply isn't one right way to do a demo.

We moved so quickly into a routine. I noticed today how easily everything flowed. We didn't seem rushed, we were relaxed and once again, I really enjoyed that. I'm feeling freer to write and relax so I know everyone else must be experiencing that to some extent.

Doug, Beth, and I may have our first opportunity to conference tomorrow...briefly sharing our field notes and discussing future directions. I'll need them to be diligent about composing field notes while I'm gone so that we don't have any gaps....and I want to teach them how to post on this blog. I'm thinking we can each have our own category for posting and then we can possibly add other categories as needed (perhaps as we move into the analysis phase and start writing memos to ourselves and such stuff).


 

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