Wednesday, December 12, 2007

DOING What Parker Palmer Suggests

After I bought a GEO Tracker some years ago, I started seeing Trackers everywhere. They had always been there. I just hadn't seen them until a Tracker became part of my world. I've since learned that this phenomenon is not unique to me. It happens to almost everyone.


While writing and now that I have finished my research paper for Dr. Julie Hite's class titled Principals As Spiritual Leaders Improve the Academic Achievement of Diverse Learners I am experiencing something similar as to what I experienced with the Tracker. My eyes and ears catch things like articles, books, speeches, comments, etc. that might have gone unnoticed in the past. For instance, yesterday I ran across an article by Jeffrey L. Lewis & Eunhee Kim entitled A desire to learn: African American children's positive attitudes toward learning within school cultures of low expectations. Then this morning I accessed from Education Week a commentary by M. Christine DeVita entitled Getting serious about leadership. Not only was this an enlightening commentary, but also in this commentary was a link to the study released this year on preparing school leaders by Linda Darling-Hammond and a team of researchers from Stanford University. Obviously all this has led me to meet some incredible people.


Just like people who own Trackers feel a connection to each other, people who are committed to the principles of spiritual leadership feel a connection. It would be my hope that these people could follow the counsel of Parker Palmer that was posted on my "blog" yesterday and that is: Join with others in a community of support to buoy each other up by honoring the best within each other.

As we do so we will be better able to follow the other recommendation from Parker Palmer which was: Join in the politics around education protesting injustice and proposing paths toward justice because educating the young is far too important to leave their fate in the hands of politicians.