No Saggin’ Allowed…Or Is It?

I have the opportunity to observe and work with students (and families) with college planning services. As a part of this work, my duties have me in the local schools to provide these services. While at the schools, I observe the ‘saggin’ phenomenon up close and personal as many of you probably are. As you well know, ‘saggin’ (where individuals where their pants/trousers below the waistline intentionally). This is a, mostly, male mannerism though not exclusive to males.

To see an individual or group of students walking through the halls and during lunch brings the documentary ‘March of the Penguins’ to mind as these students waddle to and fro. The images are somewhat comical because these students make feeble efforts to pull up “the sag” only to have the effects of gravity working against them. In a supposedly controlled environment as a school, “no saggin’ is allowed, or is it?”

Has this generational fashion (if you want to call it that) statement become so prevalent that school administrators/leaders have turned a blind eye and apathetically coalesced to complete acceptance?  It is intentional that school administrators/leaders are singled out here. This is a leadership issue and not a student behavior issue. What students wear and do OUTSIDE of the school building is not within your control but what occurs within those halls and wall should be.

Lead from the front. Set your expectations (through collaborating with faculty and staff), do not waiver from these expectations and clearly communicate them to parents/guardians and the students. Regardless of the origins of saggin’ or its popularity, school is not the appropriate venue for expression. What messages are being sent by allowing this to continuously occur?

I understand there are many issues/concerns confronting schools and administrators today; and the saggin’ issue is just one of them to make a point. That point is that schools should be an environment where students not only learn course content but should also prepare (or begin the process) students for post secondary life, whether that is college or career. School leaders are responsible for establishing an environment as such driving student learning. Here’s how to accomplish this.

Lead your school as a successful CEO leads his/her company, only your bottom-line will be seeing to it that young people are ready for the next stage of their lives. You are the Chief EDUCATION Officer of your building with a heavy responsibility. Will all of your students be ready? Most likely not but that should not be a result of them walking through your hallways. As CEO and with your leadership remember…set your collective expectations, consistently enforce, monitor and revisit them periodically, then you can post your proverbial sign…

NO SAGGIN’ ALLOWED!!!

and mean it.

Engagement Fosters Learning

student engagementA few days ago I commented on a discussion in one of my Linkedin Groups. The discussion centered around why students aren’t engaged and enthusiastic in learning.My response was simple.

In my opinion, students are not engaged because they are not being engaged and they are not enthusiastic because they don’t see the relevance in what is being “taught” to them. So in short…no engagement and no relevancy. So how do you know if your students are not being engaged? When you are doing more of the talking than they are. Sure, as the classroom leader, you must establish ground rules and expectations for the class, but beyond that you should be more of a moderator/facilitator.

Think of it this way. If you’re doing all (or most) of the talking, what reasons do your students have to become engaged? Here are a few tips to help you to engage your students. Continue reading

F.O.C.U.S. On Your Future (A Resource for Students)

F.O.C.U.S. On Your FutureFor over 20 years I have worked with students from middle school to high school to college age (traditional and non-traditional). I am a firm believer that every student has the potential to achieve and be successful. One reason I believe that is I have seen what works and what does not work. Of course, as educators, we won’t help every student that we work with because some of the responsibility rests with the student themselves.

What I have found that works is covered in my book, F.O.C.U.S.© On Your Future: 5 Simple Principles to Reach Your Goals. Designed for students, this book covers five principles that I have found to help students to reach his or her goals. These principles have also helped me along the way as well. The five principles are:

Free Your Mind

Orient Yourself to Excellence

Create a New Mindset

Use Your Resources

Success is the Goal

If you want a resource for your students, it is available in paperback and for Kindle. To preview and/or to order, click here. For orders of 25 or more, send an email to focus@hermallencoaching.com with ‘Multiple Books’ in the subject line.

Though these principles are simple, do not confuse that with being easy. Work is required for your students to receive the desired result of reaching their goals.

Don’t hesitate, ORDER YOUR COPIES TODAY!