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Welcome to Unboxed Issue 23

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PUBLISHED November 25, 2022

PUBLISHED November 25, 2022

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When I was in eighth grade, my social studies teacher asked me if I wanted to help some teachers learn how to use โ€œhypercardโ€, the computer program weโ€™d been using in his class to craft presentations (this was 1994, so the concept of โ€œdeath by powerpointโ€ was still a long way off). He took a group of us down to the district office in a convertible that heโ€™d restored himself.

It felt simultaneously topsy-turvy and utterly natural to be in the role of teaching teachers. As you can imagine, it did a lot for my self-confidence to be in this role. We also genuinely did have useful expertise to share. Once I went to high school, nothing like this ever happened to me again, and as I look back, itโ€™s striking that nobody ever asked me to talk to teachers about my true area of expertise: that is, being a student at school.

I returned to this afternoon in eighth grade while editing this issue, because our authors have a lot to say about what happens when you listen to what students have to say about their learning, and, going further, when you โ€œofficiallyโ€ bring them into the process of school improvement.

In the first article, Shreena Bhakta and Eliana Meza Ehlert set the tone with a guide to codesigning with students, which is especially useful because both of them are students. Carmen Coleman tells the story of a large school district in Kentucky that made student storytelling about their learning into an official part of the school calendar. Andres Perez tells a story about high school students helping other teenagers who are struggling with mental health.

We also have two stories about โ€œC3 Mobility,โ€ a project that paired high school seniors with college students so that the college students could help the high schoolers navigate the application process, a story about the tricky balance between โ€œdivergenceโ€ (letting people do what they want) and โ€œconvergenceโ€ (making sure everyoneโ€™s doing the same thing so you can compare it) in school improvement, and a piece by Amanda Meyer with specific, usable guidance for subverting the influence of white-dominant culture in school improvement.

Thanks for joining us!

Alec Patton
Editor-in-chief

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