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Writing the Playbook

A Practitioner’s Guide to Creating a Boy-Friendly School

Kelley E. King

$84.95   $72.25

Paperback

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English
Corwin Press Inc
27 February 2013
"You've seen it in your school: boys struggling to master basic literacy skills, sitting outside the principal's office, collecting labels like ""hyperactive,"" getting failing grades. Checked out, kicked out, or dropped out, they're benched when they should be scoring goals on the academic playing field.

As a school leader, Kelley King has walked the talk: she successfully led her own staff to close the gender gap in reading and writing in just one year. In her step-by-step, research-based leadership plan for jump-starting boys' achievement, she shares:

Critical insight into the brain-based differences between boys and girls

First-hand leadership and classroom experiences

Ready-to-use activities and resources for leading a successful gap-closing initiative

With tips, anecdotes, and more, Writing the Playbook provides educators in all roles with a blueprint for creating schools where boys (and girls!) thrive."
By:  
Imprint:   Corwin Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   1
Dimensions:   Height: 228mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   350g
ISBN:   9781452242989
ISBN 10:   1452242984
Pages:   216
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Unspecified
"Foreword by Michael Gurian Preface Acknowledgments About the Author 1. Making the Call: Is There Really a Boy Crisis? Final Buzzer 2. Getting Your Head in the Game: ""Need-to-Knows"" about the Male Brain Laying the Groundwork Why Do These Sex Differences Exist? Our Beginnings Does That Mean That Our Abilities Aare Fixed? The Male Brain 101 Is There Such a Thing as an ""Extreme Male Brain""? The Male Adolescent Brain It′s Nature AND Nuture The Final Buzzer 3. Chalk Talk: A Game Plan for Moving Your Team down the Field School Climate and Culture - What′s the Difference? Activities for Your Professional Learning Communities Got Data? Getting Teacher Buy-In SMART Goals Developing an Action Plan School Improvement and Teacher Growth Developing a Yearlong Professional Development Plan The Final Buzzer 4. Leveling the Playing Field: School Policies and Procedures That Don′t Squeeze Boys out Expectations and the Stereotype Threat Discipline Time, Place, and Manner Grades and Homework Banning Aggression Themes The Final Buzzer 5. Touching Base: Relationship-Building to Guide Boys on Their Journey The Social-Emotional Lives of Boys Forging Positive Relationships With Boys Male Mentoring and Role Models The Final Buzzer 6. The Ground Game: Setting up Classrooms That Help Boys Succeed Physical Arrangement of the Classroom Classroom Procedures The Final Buzzer 7. Hitting It out of the Park: Game-Winning Instructional Strategies for Boys (and Girls!) Lecture Strategies Movement Strategies Student Interests Strategies Real-World Learning Strategies Student Choice Strategies Visual-Spatial Strategies Technology Strategies Competition Strategies Single-Gender Grouping Strategies Music Strategies Test Preparation Strategies Test Administration Strategies The Final Buzzer Afterword Sticky Teaching Graphic References Index"

Kelley King is a twenty-five year veteran educator, international speaker, author, and mother. Kelley is currently the Associate Director and a Master Trainer at the Gurian Institute. She travels widely to deliver keynotes, teacher workshops, and consultations to educators and parents. She also develops and facilitates cutting-edge training curricula for online teacher education. Previously, Kelley has worked in various roles within elementary, middle, and high school levels, including positions in regular education, special education, and gifted and talented programs. Kelley has served schools with diverse racial, linguistic, and socioeconomic student populations as well as schools ranging from rural, one-room schoolhouses to large suburban schools. As a school administrator, Kelley led her staff to close the gender gap in reading and writing within one year, gaining national media attention. Her work has been featured on The Today Show, National Public Radio, National Health Journal, Newsweek magazine, and Educational Leadership. She has co-authored (with Michael Gurian and Kathy Stevens) two previous books in the education field: Strategies for Teaching Boys and Girls: Elementary Level and Strategies for Teaching Boys and Girls: Secondary Level. Kelley′s EdWeek Chat: Strategies for Addressing School Gender Gaps Watch Kelley′s Today Show Segment

Reviews for Writing the Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Creating a Boy-Friendly School

This is a highly practical and highly relevant book. Two thumbs up! -- Eric Jensen, Author of Teaching with the Brain in Mind 20121105 Finally, some practical advice from an experienced educator on how to make boys into successful students. King's credentials-mother of both a son and daughter as well as a principal who successfully addressed gender gaps at her school-are unbeatable. -- Richard Whitmire, Author of Why Boys Fail: Saving Our Sons from an Educational System That's Leaving Them Behind 20121105 Kelley King is both impassioned and level-headed, and she starts a conversation that we desperately need to have in our country. -- Michael Kimmel, Author of Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men 20121105 This book isn't just theory-it provides the answers for why things work and how to lead a change process collaboratively. Principals, superintendents, and teacher leaders should pick up a copy of this book if they are interested in engaging their communities in leading change, getting results for all students, and making teaching fun. -- Jonathan Wolfer, Principal 20121022 This book contains profoundly creative and engaging approaches to looking at equity in new ways as part of staff training and attaining school improvement goals. -- Virginia E. Kelsen, Principal 20121022 This book is well written, timely, and filled with practical examples and suggestions for school leaders to create a school environment conducive to educating both male and female students. It is a great book for use by a professional learning community and should be required reading in all educational leadership courses. -- Judy Brunner, Clinical Faculty, Missouri State University 20121022 Writing the Playbook provides an in-depth look at the gender differences found in schools. It provides a plethora of strategies aimed at leveling the playing fields between the sexes. -- Tanna Nicely, Assistant Principal 20121022 This is a must-read for school leaders and teachers. Based on both research and the 'wisdom of practice,' it offers a wealth of teaching strategies to boost the achievement and happiness of boys in school. A new contribution is how to use the Web to find 'boy-friendly' activities. If you can only read one book about how to reach boys, this is it. -- Judith Kleinfeld, Director of the Boys Project 20121105 Writing the Playbook is an incredible resource that students love, teachers appreciate, and administrators are learning from. It provides the solutions that school systems globally are desperately searching for regarding the behavior and academic performance of boys. It is written in a way that is engaging, empowering, and inspiring to those in all levels of education. If you've ever desired a positive educational atmosphere, this book provides the blueprint! -- Chris Cannon, Author of Winning Back Our Boys 20121105 Boys and girls can differ vastly in how they most effectively learn. As educational leaders, it is critical that we create school environments that clearly reflect and demonstrate this understanding. This insightful book will inform, guide, and transform the way you lead in schools. This is a great resource that will definitely produce results! -- Don Haddad, Superintendent of Schools 20121105 As I read this book, I am thrilled Kelley King is speaking out on behalf of our boys! While they sit motionless in the traditional classrooms and feel abandoned by education, she makes the case for justified changes. We owe it to them to acknowledge the differences and to design an educational experience that honors them. No longer can we, as citizens of this country, allow those so-called experts to claim that boys and girls are the same, and ask our schools to ignore the obvious differences. Enough! Bring on the strategies for our boys that will allow teachers to inspire them to greatness! -- Kim Bevill, Director of Gray Matters 20121105 This book should be required reading for every teaching credential candidate and educator. Its neurobiological approach to learning and behavior is not rocket science; it's long overdue common sense. Bravo! -- Joe Manthey, Education Consultant 20121105 As a lifelong feminist and the grandmother of three boys just starting school, I am passionately interested in boys being taken 'as they are' and taught in ways that will help them develop. For a long time we worried about girls, who are presently thriving in school and beyond. It's boys' turn now! Yes, men still 'rule' out in the world, but in school many boys are falling behind. For a strong America, we need both genders to thrive and to lead. King's book will help us get to that America. -- Dottie Lamm, Columnist, Denver Post 20121105 This is a must-read for school leaders. King, an expert on bridging the gender gap in schools, asks them to try to see things through 'the boy lens,' which is absolutely necessary today when so many boys aren't coming close to reaching their full educational potential. She offers practical advice for making schools 'boy-friendly,' which works just fine for girls too. I applaud her passion, dedication, and expertise. Here's a book that can truly make a positive difference for our society and its future. -- Mark Sherman, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, SUNY, New Paltz 20121105 In my heart, I believe that our husbands, sons, and brothers can write and read as well as their female relatives. They all have the ideas and the brilliance. Kelley's book is a guide to support all educators in making those ideas become reality. If we collaborate as educators and as parents, we can make sure that both boys and girls are challenged and supported in schools so that their dreams all become reality. -- Cynthia Stevenson, Superintendent 20121105 There is widespread consensus that our young males are not achieving to their full potential. We know the problems. It is time we tackle them, and it is time we foster leadership among those in positions of authority who can make change happen. Kelley's book is an important step in this direction-by calling on school leaders to become engaged and by giving them the tools to make change happen. -- Dennis Barbour, Co-Founder and CEO, Boys Initiative 20121105


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