Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 158
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4758-5835-8 • Hardback • November 2020 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4758-5836-5 • Paperback • October 2020 • $25.00 • (£18.95)
978-1-4758-5837-2 • eBook • October 2020 • $23.50 • (£17.95)
Kerry Decker Rutishauser has earned her M.Ed.D in Eeducational Lleadership from Teachers College, Columbia University, and she is currently working as a high school principal in New York City. Kerry has been a teacher, school principal, and a leadership coach across pre-kindergarten through twelfth grades for the past eighteen years working internationally and nationally in some of the world’s wealthiest and poorest schools, all with a high percentage of multilingual, special needs, and diverse learners.
Chapter 1: Historical Context
Chapter 2: The Principles of Freedom
Chapter 3: Build
Chapter 4: Think
Chapter 5: Speak
Chapter 6: Act: Supporting Intentionality
Chapter 7: Fight for the Principles of Freedom: Rule #23, Keepers of the Culture ®, Promise Cards ®, and KOC Class
Chapter 8: Pushback--and Growth
I cannot over-emphasize the importance of a book such as this. Educators struggle with how to develop agency, ownership, curiosity, and persistence in learners. This book offers practical ideas and examples of how to do this. Empowering Students tells a compelling true story about finding success in an incredibly challenging school setting. Kerry Decker provides reason for hope, built on a foundation of reality and experience. School leaders, regardless of the communities in which they serve, will find ideas and answers to consider, adopt, and build on to transform the experience of students and nurture learning success in their schools.
— Jim Rickabaugh, author and senior advisor, Institute of Personalized Learning
What a pleasure read this is! This is a dramatic story of a genuine turnaround, a school that was failing its students -- and that's the emphasis Kerry Decker makes -- which became a place where they could learn what they needed to know to be successful. Kids no one expected to do well. Good story. Good job.
— Curtis Johnson, Minneapolis-based writer and consultant; managing associate, Education Evolving (www.educationevolving.org) and the executive director, Citiscope (www.citiscope.org)
Wow. An inspiring story about a woman with an idea she's determined to put into practice. Decker tells the story convincingly, including wonderful real life dialogue with kids. Like most practitioners I'm not an easy person to believe in school ‘miracles', but it’s a tale worth reading at least twice.
— Deborah Meier, MacArthur Award-winning founder of the Central Park East Schools in New York and the Mission Hill School in Boston