The Hummingbird Stories

The Hummingbird Stories
The Hummingbird Stories

Children deserve great childhoods. This is a story of those who believe the same. Two principals — Donnell Cannon and Jenny O'Meara interview school designers, community organizers, learning engineers, and education activists to learn what we should be thinking about when it comes to reimagining the future and the steps we can take today to create better schools, better childhoods, and better people tomorrow.

  1. 02.11.2022

    Ep. 7 | 'No Excuses' -- School design possibilities abound when you exist in a culture without barriers

    We are Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara, two passionate educators. Welcome to Season 2 of The Hummingbird Stories! This season, we’re asking the question: What does an extraordinary education look like for every student? We’re hosting conversations with the most innovative, equity-minded leaders in education from all across the country — and that includes young people. In this episode, we look at a school that was designed in the absence of many of the obstacles prevalent in the K-12 public school space. We talk with Long-View Micro School co-founders Kevin Moore and Lisa Zapalac, as well as Cathy Lewis, a math specialist working with The Number Lab at the school. They show us the possibilities that abound when you design school in a culture without barriers. We don’t just want to hear from guests on our show. We want to hear from you, too. In every episode on this season of The Hummingbird Stories, we’ll pose a question and ask you to weigh in through our Telbee. This week’s question asks you to think about the four assumptions Moore and Zapalac made in designing the school. Following Long-View's example, what four assumptions would your ideal school have? Visit sayhi.chat/hummingbird to chime in.We know a lot of “Hummingbirds” who are no longer waiting for change in a system on fire, but rather choosing to do something. We hope they’ll inspire you to take real action, no matter how small, toward redesigning schools. An extraordinary education for all young people is possible. But it’s going to take all of us to make it happen.

    35 мин.
  2. 21.10.2022

    Ep. 7: "JUST START!" – How do we redesign school within rigid systems?

    We are Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara, two passionate educators. Welcome to Season 2 of The Hummingbird Stories! This season, we’re asking the question: What does an extraordinary education look like for every student? We’re hosting conversations with the most innovative, equity-minded leaders in education from all across the country — and that includes young people. In this episode, we confront the paralysis that can set in when it feels like there's so much to do. Our guests remind us, though -- to just start! This episode features interviews with Miguel Gonzales, directors of schools at Embark Education, Aylon Samouha, directors at Transcend Education, and Kimberly Smith, executive director at the League of Innovative Schools. We don’t just want to hear from guests on our show. We want to hear from you, too. In every episode on this season of The Hummingbird Stories, we’ll pose a question and ask you to weigh in through our Telbee. This week’s question asks you to think about the emphasis Aylon and Kimberly placed on the importance of listening to community. What’s one first step you can do a better job of listening to your community tomorrow? Visit sayhi.chat/hummingbird to chime in. We know a lot of “Hummingbirds” who are no longer waiting for change in a system on fire, but rather choosing to do something. We hope they’ll inspire you to take real action, no matter how small, toward redesigning schools. An extraordinary education for all young people is possible. But it’s going to take all of us to make it happen.

    44 мин.
  3. 12.10.2022

    Ep. 6: 'Built Different' -- What does deep learning look like in action?

    We are Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara, two passionate educators. Welcome to Season 2 of The Hummingbird Stories! This season, we’re asking the question: What does an extraordinary education look like for every student? We’re hosting conversations with the most innovative, equity-minded leaders in education from all across the country — and that includes young people. In our sixth episode, we’re exploring learning differences. We all learn differently, yet school is largely designed with the assumption that there can be a standardized way of teaching. That's the model Joann Blumenfeld is trying to disrupt. She's a former North Carolina public school teacher who runs two programs at N.C. State's Science House, where she works with students with learning differences and offers them hands-on STEM experience. Her programs are aimed at increasing post-secondary attainment for students with learning differences and promoting interest in the STEM fields. She was recognized by Time Magazine this Summer as a 2022 Innovative Teacher of the Year. This episode features an interview with Blumenfeld by EdNC.org's Rupen Fofaria. Rupen joins us in the studio to unpack issues confronting students with learning differences. We don’t just want to hear from guests on our show. We want to hear from you, too. In every episode on this season of The Hummingbird Stories, we’ll pose a question and ask you to weigh in through our Telbee. This week’s question asks you to think about a time that you knew you could do something, but you couldn’t do it the way you were being asked to do it. What did that look like? What did that feel like? If you could go back, how would you redesign that experience for yourself? Visit sayhi.chat/hummingbird to chime in. We know a lot of “Hummingbirds” who are no longer waiting for change in a system on fire, but rather choosing to do something. We hope they’ll inspire you to take real action, no matter how small, toward redesigning schools. An extraordinary education for all young people is possible. But it’s going to take all of us to make it happen.

    45 мин.
  4. 28.09.2022

    Ep. 5: 'Make It Matter' -- How do we add real-world relevance to school?

    We are Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara, two passionate educators. Welcome to Season 2 of The Hummingbird Stories! This season, we’re asking the question: What does an extraordinary education look like for every student? We’re hosting conversations with the most innovative, equity-minded leaders in education from all across the country — and that includes young people. In our fifth episode, we’ll explore what it looks like to elevate relevance in the student experience. What does it look like for young people to access real world learning during the school day? What happens when they are in the driver’s seat of their learning such that what they learn is relevant to them? We don’t just want to hear from folks with innovative schools. We want to hear from you, too. In every episode on this season of The Hummingbird Stories, we’ll pose a question and ask you to weigh in through our Telbee. This week’s question asks you to think about your own community. Given your community’s strengths (like local organizations, businesses, cultures) and/or needs (maybe you wish your community had a bike shop, like Jenny does!): what learning experiences or school would you build, with an unlimited budget? Visit sayhi.chat/hummingbird to chime in. As teachers and school leaders ourselves, we always knew relevance was critical to learning. What we didn’t always know was how to bring it to life in our classrooms or across our schools. As principals, we tried training from the Buck Institute to implement Project Based Learning (PBL). The training was fantastic and useful, but we didn’t have the structures in place for strong implementation. We also had a staff with varied levels of readiness. As a result, some teachers leaned in heavily and developed PBL units regularly, and we did our darndest to get them ongoing coaching and support. For some teachers, they did the one project unit minimum, because that’s what they could give at the time. We were glad to customize based on teacher needs and readiness, but it was really challenging to authentically make a schoolwide shift to change how we planned and executed learning experiences. Ultimately, we have come to believe that to create authentic real world and relevant learning experiences with students and teachers, we must reimagine many other parts of school. But what are those other elements that need to shift? We believe we might start to answer this question by looking and listening to leaders who design innovative school models exuding relevance. On this episode, we hear from two of those Hummingbirds, Miguel Gonzalez of Embark Education and Dr. Tyler Thigpen of The Forest School.  We’ll also hear from Quinn and Luke, two students at Embark, the school. We are huge fans of the work of Miguel and Tyler are doing. At Embark, students learn to create their own schedules each week with the guidance of an educator. Included in their choices of how they spend their time is an Integrated Shop Project. Embark has two North Denver businesses embedded in their school: Pinwheel Coffee and Framework Cycles. Students choose to spend time in either shop to learn and practice skills through projects. At The Forest School, learners in grades 9-12 design their own high school experience. They even get to build the courses they themselves take. How we wish we had an experience like that as young people! We know a lot of “Hummingbirds” who are no longer waiting for change in a system on fire, but rather choosing to do something. We hope they’ll inspire you to take real action, no matter how small, toward redesigning schools. An extraordinary education for all young people is possible. But it’s going to take all of us to make it happen.

    44 мин.
  5. 21.09.2022

    Ep. 4: 'Adults in the Room' -- How do we reimagine the role of the educator?

    We are Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara, two passionate educators. This season on The Hummingbird Stories, we're asking the question: What does an extraordinary education look like for every student? We’re hosting conversations with the most innovative, equity-minded leaders in education from all across the country -- and that includes students. Teachers and other adults at school have a huge impact on young people and, in this fourth episode, that's what we're talking about -- the adults in the room. In this episode, we'll hear from Miguel Gonzales, Tyler Thigpen, and three students -- QuaNasia, Quinn, and Luke. We also hear from Sonn Sam, who had this to say about what he looks for when he's interviewing candidates for teaching positions. "When we enter the space of education, I build relationships with young people. But we have other educators that feel -- 'I teach content.' I've had educators say to my face, 'I'm a biology teacher, you guys are way too warm and fuzzy for me, man. I don't do that.' And I just said ... thank you very much. I appreciate your time. We moving on. Because, to me, none of this matters if you don't have a relationship with young people. None of it." In every episode on this season of The Hummingbird Stories, we’ll pose a question and ask you to weigh in through our Telbee. This week’s question asks that you think about the role of the adults in the school building. We're thinking about teachers, TAs, principals, and more. If you could redesign the role of an educator, what would it look like? Visit sayhi.chat/hummingbird to chime in. The Hummingbird Stories is the brainchild of educators Donnell Cannon and Jenny O’Meara. Robert Kinlaw produced Season 2 of the podcast, and Rupen Fofaria supported Season 2 as a creative producer. In addition to Embark students Quinn and Luke and former Edgecombe County Public Schools student QuaNasia, in this episode you heard from: Sonn Sam, national director of partnerships at Big Picture Learning Miguel Gonzales, directors of schools at Embark Education Tyler Thigpen, co-founder of The Forest School The hummingbird artwork on the cover is by then-eighth grade student Joselyn Hernandez, now a high school junior.

    45 мин.
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Children deserve great childhoods. This is a story of those who believe the same. Two principals — Donnell Cannon and Jenny O'Meara interview school designers, community organizers, learning engineers, and education activists to learn what we should be thinking about when it comes to reimagining the future and the steps we can take today to create better schools, better childhoods, and better people tomorrow.

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