Meg Sander Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/meg-sander/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Wed, 03 Jul 2019 19:40:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Practitioners from five states and 11 Virginia school districts attend 黑料正能量鈥檚 fourth annual Restorative Justice in Education Conference聽 /now/news/2019/practitioners-from-five-states-and-11-virginia-school-districts-attend-emus-fourth-annual-restorative-justice-in-education-conference/ Wed, 03 Jul 2019 17:44:50 +0000 /now/news/?p=42528 The American public school system has many structural issues, from an emphasis on standardized assessments to inequitable disciplinary procedures and overcrowding, but Kathy Evans, an education professor at 黑料正能量, thinks the real problems are rooted much more deeply.聽

Professor Kathy Evans’ keynote addressed how restorative justice can combat聽 the educational system’s emphasis on individualism and hierarchies.

And they are ones that every educator can contribute towards solving.

鈥淥ur real problems are about our shared humanity, about our sense of belonging, about our connections to one another and to the world we inhabit,鈥 she said in a keynote address at 黑料正能量鈥檚 fourth annual Restorative Justice in Education (RJE) Conference.聽

But a shared ethos of restorative justice has the potential to create change in our educational system, she added.

鈥淩JE begins and ends with the values of dignity, respect and mutual concern for one another and upholds an underlying conviction that all people, and all means all, y鈥檃ll, children and youth, parents and caregivers, educators, administrators, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, and custodial staff,鈥 Evans said. 鈥淎ll people are worthy, relational, and interconnected.鈥

Conference gathers new and experienced RJE practitioners

For the more than 100 conference participants, many of whom invested two days of their summer vacation and drove hundreds of miles, Evans鈥 message is one that resonates deeply.

鈥淭his opportunity really emphasizes learning about and sharing positive principles and practices in our work towards creating just and equitable learning environments,鈥 said graduate teacher education program director Meg Sander. 鈥淚n that kind of environment, everyone in the community can nurture and develop healthy relationships and transform conflict. We can all effect change.鈥

The annual summer event, hosted by 黑料正能量鈥檚 programs, has always drawn participants from several states, growing in diversity as RJE practices are expanding across the country. The June 25-26 event included participants from North Carolina, Massachusetts, Delaware, New York and Virginia, representing 11 districts.聽

In addition to administrators, teachers, counselors and behavioral specialists working in the schools, other attendees included therapists and counselors, community service board employees, and representatives from the Office on Youth, as well as the University of Delaware.

The conference included skill- and knowledge-building sessions on tracks for novice and more experienced practitioners as well as reflective sessions in which participants could think about how learnings about RJE can be implemented or considered within current practices and cultures.

Presenters included:聽

  • Diana Degner MA ’17 (confict transformation), circles practitioner;
  • Emily Imgram GC 鈥19, an ELL teacher with Harrisonburg City Schools;聽
  • Laura Feichtinger-McGrath GC 鈥18, an EL coordinator with Harrisonburg City Schools;
  • Connie Honsinger, trauma informed specialist, Chesterfield County Public Schools.
  • April Howard GC 鈥18, executive director of psychological and student services for Harrisonburg City Schools;
  • Jennifer Morris 鈥91,聽principal, Shelburne Middle School, Staunton, Virginia;
  • Sal Romero, coordinator of family and community engagement, Harrisonburg City Schools, and past member of the Virginia Board of Education; and
  • Kendal Swartzentruber 鈥07, MA 鈥12 (education), an education coordinator at the Virginia Department of Education.

Evans: RJE can address critical, systemic issues

Among the larger themes of the event was the potentiality of RJE — how its principles and practices can empower the individual to effect ripples of systemic change.

Evans focused her keynote on how restorative justice practices can address three criticisms of the American educational system related by RJ practitioner Jasmyn Story at the recent NACRJ conference: toxic individualism, an over-reliance on hierarchies, and a de-tethering of ourselves.

From left: Panelists Tashika Moore, Barbie Fischer, Vickie Shoap and Donna Chewning shared perspectives at 黑料正能量’s RJE Conference.

Without budgeting money or hiring new personnel, these problems can be addressed anew by individuals who practice the principles of restorative justice within their own context, Evans said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have to burn it all down and start over. Each of us in our own way can do this work to combat these problems.鈥

Panelists emphasize networking, collaboration

Four RJ professionals were invited for a panel session on the second morning that highlighted the 鈥渕ulti-tiered systems of support that can help us engage kids,鈥 said Evans in her introduction.聽

鈥淲e can do all kinds of beautiful things in the classroom,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut what do we do with those behaviors that are defined as severe in this current climate? How do we handle things through a restorative lens that keeps them from being referred to the courts, and if they are referred to the courts, how can we help get them the support they need?鈥

Panelists brought perspectives and experiences working within different organizational structures in the criminal justice, advocacy, social services, and educational environments.

  • Tashika Moore, of Wilmington, Delaware, works with several organizations, including the NAACP and the Delaware Center for Justice, to advocate for children and youth. She hosts circles, conducts trainings, and works in policy development with legislators, building upon 12 years of experience in mental and behavioral health with adjudicated adolescent youth.
  • Barbie Fischer MA 鈥12 (conflict transformation) is executive director of Restorative Encounters, an association of RJ practitioners and advocacy organization. She also works with the Delaware Center for Justice as the victim restoration and community mediation program coordinator.聽聽
  • Vickie Shoap is a restorative justice specialist for Fairfax County Public Schools, the 11th largest school district in the country. Her team of seven serves 245 schools in a variety of capacities, from聽 鈥渂ringing RJ practices to classrooms, to teaching about how to live in community to restorative justice itself.鈥 Her background is in RJ diversion with the juvenile court system.
  • Donna Chewning MA 鈥05 (conflict transformation) facilitates restorative circles in middle schools in Roanoke, VA and mediates civil, juvenile, and domestic relations court cases in southwest Virginia.

Panelists urged conference participants to be aware of local and state legislation. Moore was an active advocate for Delaware鈥檚 SB 85, a bill that legislated monitoring and evaluation of schools with significant suspension disparities and also promotes restorative justice.聽

Fischer emphasized that Moore鈥檚 legislative advocacy empowered her. 鈥淪ocial capital, networking and community help me do my work,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e forget about this core tenet sometimes. Who do we know and who do they know and how can they help us accomplish our goals for the betterment of our community?鈥

Want to learn more?

The next RJE Conference will be June 23-24, 2020.

In addition to the MA in Education and MA in Restorative Justice in Education programs, 黑料正能量 offers a graduate certificate in restorative justice in education with flexible study options for professionals, including summer courses, weekend courses and single-day-a-week semester options.聽

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New MA in Education program director has special education, law, research and first responder experience /now/news/2017/new-ma-education-program-director-special-education-law-research-first-responder-experience/ /now/news/2017/new-ma-education-program-director-special-education-law-research-first-responder-experience/#comments Fri, 22 Sep 2017 11:31:17 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=34987 The newly appointed director of the at 黑料正能量 says some of the key insights that inform her philosophy of classroom teaching date from her earliest experiences responding to medical emergencies.

, a product of Harrisonburg鈥檚 public schools who started answering calls with the city鈥檚 all-volunteer rescue squad when she was still a teenager, says that, through those experiences and similar ones, she came to realize that 鈥渆vents that are critical in the moment can have long-lasting impacts.鈥

As director of the MA in Education program, Sander will help teachers earn master鈥檚 degrees 鈥 in most cases as they continue to work full-time in the classroom. She is responsible for about 75 students on 黑料正能量鈥檚 Harrisonburg campus and nearly 100 more at its site in . She will teach three classes this year.

A passion for teacher preparation

Each day, Sander says, students arrive at school fresh from life-events that in some cases are positive, and in others quite traumatic. On any given day, she says, a teacher likely won鈥檛 know with any certainty what sorts of experiences underlie a child鈥檚 readiness to learn.

Sander compares the challenges confronting the classroom teacher with those an emergency medical technician faces. A first responder must always be ready, she notes, to provide whatever it is that a person calling 911 may need.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the same for the teacher,鈥 Sander says. 鈥淣o matter what needs a child brings to the classroom, it鈥檚 a teacher鈥檚 obligation to be prepared to meet those needs before the child walks through the door.鈥

Sander鈥檚 own classroom-teaching experience came working with special education students in Virginia.

鈥淪erving those students is the reason teacher preparation is so important to me,鈥 she says. 鈥淗igh quality preparation is clearly of benefit to the teaching professionals themselves, and through them we serve the children.鈥

Legal training a unique qualification

Sander鈥檚 doctorate in education with a concentration in special education and disability leadership was conferred in 2008 by Virginia Commonwealth University. She is also a cum laude graduate of the University of Richmond鈥檚 School of Law, where she received the Orrell-Brown Award for Clinical Excellence from the school鈥檚 Children鈥檚 Disability Law Clinic.

From 2008 to 2015, Sander was an associate at several Richmond law firms, with a practice focused on education law. During this same period, she was an adjunct faculty member at both Virginia Commonwealth University and the University of Richmond.

Dr. , dean of graduate and professional programs, cites Sander鈥檚 experience as a lawyer as an aspect of her background that set her apart from other candidates for the job.

鈥淚t shows she is an agent for change, and is effective in important settings outside of the classroom,鈥 Cockley says.

Cockley adds that Sander鈥檚 24-year involvement with the Harrisonburg Rescue Squad 鈥渋ndicates how much she understands and values the commitment to a team,鈥 also noting that Sander鈥檚 rescue squad experiences have 鈥渟ensitized her to the realities of how many students live.鈥

Additional growth projected for restorative justice specialization

Sander assumed her new duties on July 1, succeeding Sarah Armstrong, who died unexpectedly in August 2016. Armstrong had emphasized the role of restorative justice in the MA in Education program鈥檚 overall offering, and was instrumental in the launch of a in the discipline.

Sander says that, like her predecessor, she regards restorative justice as an important component of the MA in Education curriculum, and is working to develop an additional course on the topic, which she herself may teach.

Dr. , associate professor of special education, says she is particularly hopeful that Sander鈥檚 background working with special-needs students will promote a greater understanding within teacher education of the intersections between restorative justice and special education.

鈥淪he鈥檚 enthusiastic about supporting new initiatives and seeking creative ways to promote 黑料正能量 programs with area schools and districts,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淚 look forward to working with Meg as we continue not only to build the restorative justice in education program, but also to develop other creative ways of connecting with local educators.鈥

Sander herself says that, in all aspects of her life and work, she seeks to be of service to others.

That鈥檚 true, she says, when she鈥檚 in the back of an ambulance helping a patient, just as it was true when she stood before a classroom of special education students. She now carries that service ethic into her new job leading the MA in Education program at 黑料正能量.

Sander resides in Harrisonburg with her husband, a flight paramedic, and their five-year-old son.

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黑料正能量 welcomes twelve faculty members for 2017-18 academic year /now/news/2017/emu-welcomes-ten-faculty-members-2017-18-academic-year/ Fri, 01 Sep 2017 14:43:09 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=34686 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量) welcomes twelve new faculty for the 2017-18 academic year. The new faculty, announced by , provost, , interim dean of the School of Graduate and Professional Studies, and , vice president and undergraduate academic dean are:

Sonia Balasch, PhD, assistant professor of Spanish
Balasch earned an MA in Spanish (Hispanic linguistics) and a PhD from the University of New Mexico. Originally from Venezuela, she brings five years of faculty experience teaching Spanish and has most recently been a visiting assistant professor of Spanish at George Mason University.

David Berry, PhD, assistant professor of music
Berry earned a BM from the Eastman School of Music and an MM and DMA from The Julliard School. He brings experience as a solo pianist and chamber musician in a variety of innovative and nationally-recognized touring chamber ensembles.

Ryan Good, PhD, assistant professor of applied social sciences and assistant director of Washington Community Scholars’ Center
Good earned a BA from Goshen College and master鈥檚 degrees from Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary and Temple University. Good completed his PhD in planning and public policy from Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. He has taught at Rutgers and Eastern universities.

Michael Horst, MA, instructor
Michael Horst has worked at 黑料正能量 for many years, and begins this year with a new title. He earned a BS in Psychology and MA in Counseling from 黑料正能量 and is currently a PhD candidate in Counselor Education and Supervision at James Madison University.

Ji Eun Kim, PhD, assistant professor of political studies
Kim earned a BA from the Catholic University of Korea, an MA from Seoul National University and a PhD in political science and peace studies from the University of Notre Dame. Her research interests focus on political violence and conflict, transitional justice, post-conflict reconciliation and human rights.

Joohyn Lee, PhD, assistant professor of recreation leadership
Lee earned a BA from the Catholic University of Korea, an MA from Radford University and a PhD in leisure studies from Pennsylvania State University. She has teaching experience in the leisure, recreation and sport industry field at both Florida State University and the University of Florida.

Irma Mahone, PhD, assistant professor of RN-BS Nursing
Mahone earned a BS in nursing from 黑料正能量 and an MS in psychiatric nursing and PhD in nursing from University of Virginia. Mahone鈥檚 extensive experience includes case management, individual and group therapy, and emergency intervention along with her psychiatric nursing experience. Mahone was most recently a research assistant professor at the University of Virginia.

Meg Sander, PhD, assistant professor of education and director of MA in Education
Sander earned a BA from Virginia Tech, an MEd from JMU, a JD from the University of Richmond School of Law and a PhD in education from Virginia Commonwealth University. Sander brings teaching experience in special education, law and ethics, and educational foundations. Most recently, she was a research associate at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Education.

Kristopher Schmidt, PhD, assistant professor of biology
Schmidt earned a BS from Trinity Western University, an MS from the University of British Columbia and a PhD from Simon Fraser University. Schmidt brings teaching experience mostly recently from Goshen College in biology and also as director of the premedical sciences program.

Ann Smith, PhD, associate professor of nursing
Smith earned a BS in nursing from the University of Virginia and a PhD in community college leadership from Old Dominion University. In addition to experience working as a nurse, Ann brings extensive college teaching and administrative experience, including service as the director of nursing programs at Piedmont Virginia Community College.

Andrew Suderman, MT, instructor of theology
Suderman, who came to 黑料正能量 for the spring 2017 semester, earned a BA in philosophy from Canadian Mennonite University and an MT in theological studies from Conrad Grebel University. Suderman anticipates completing a PhD in systematic theology from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa this year. He brings international and cross-cultural experience from living in Costa Rica, Bolivia, Columbia, and South Africa.

Ryan Thompson, PhD, assistant professor of psychology
Thompson earned a BA from Berry College and both an MA and PsyD from George Fox University. He has teaching experience as an assistant clinical professor and as a clinical psychologist.

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Bland Literacy Scholarship aids veteran teacher to her goal to become a reading specialist /now/news/2017/bland-literacy-scholarship-aids-veteran-teacher-goal-become-reading-specialist/ /now/news/2017/bland-literacy-scholarship-aids-veteran-teacher-goal-become-reading-specialist/#comments Tue, 11 Jul 2017 13:57:10 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=34027 After 28 years in the classroom, Angela Baylor is readying herself for new challenges as a reading specialist. A graduate student in the program at 黑料正能量, she now has some financial help to make her dream come true: She is the 2017 recipient of the .

Baylor taught third grade for 23 years, and then first grade for five, at W.H. Keister Elementary School in Harrisonburg. Along the way she supported her husband鈥檚 professional growth and parented three children who are now teenagers. With the help of the scholarship, Baylor鈥檚 own goals of earning a master鈥檚 degree and reading specialist endorsement 鈥 and working as a reading specialist at Keister 鈥 are about to become reality.

In her new role, Baylor will collaborate with other teachers at various grade levels to help struggling readers. Baylor says her nearly three decades in various classrooms help her see the bigger picture of reading development.

From left: Linda Heatwole Bland at the awarding of her endowed scholarship to Keister teacher Angela Baylor, with Keister Elementary School Principal Julie Zook and Dr. Meg Sanders, director of the MA in Education program. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淲hen children are learning to read, they need different pieces of what we call a reader鈥檚 diet. My years in the first- and third-grade classrooms equip me to better understand what children need as they move through the emergent, beginning, transitional and intermediate reading stages,鈥 she said.

Those decades also deepened her appreciation for her ongoing studies. 鈥淚 bring a ton of experience to my coursework, so it all makes sense,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 feel like it鈥檚 very real.鈥

Administrators at Keister, including Principal Julie Zook and Assistant Principal Mark Miller, supported Baylor鈥檚 scholarship application.

Baylor is 鈥渉ighly respected,鈥 鈥渋nnovative,鈥 and shows 鈥渋ncredible leadership,鈥 Zook wrote. Miller added that Baylor is a 鈥渓ifelong learner.鈥

Those qualities contribute to motivation for a teacher-student who as part of her coursework completed a 60-hour literacy practicum and in the coming year will undertake action research.

鈥淭he drive for ongoing professional learning and growth is essential for any teacher,鈥 said Meg Sander, director of 黑料正能量鈥檚 MA in Education program, 鈥渂ut the experience brought by veteran teachers who rise to new challenges 鈥 as Angie is doing 鈥 can make them especially effective.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 a good thing to stretch yourself, no matter what your age,鈥 Baylor said.

The Linda Heatwole Bland Literacy Scholarship is awarded annually to a local educator enrolled in graduate studies at 黑料正能量. A retired , Bland says she learned to value literacy education and the benefits of professional connection while earning a degree in elementary education at 黑料正能量.

“I was especially thrilled when I learned that Angie Baylor was the recipient of the literacy scholarship,” Bland said, “because she was a teacher with whom I worked in Harrisonburg City Schools. She was an exemplary classroom teacher and will be a wonderful reading specialist and role model for other teachers in her school.”

After graduating in 1964, Bland taught in Ohio and West Virginia before returning to Virginia. She worked in Augusta, Shenandoah and Rockingham county schools, and joined Harrisonburg City Schools as a read颅ing supervisor in 1986. She eventually led the division in establishing the English as a Second Language program and piloting the city鈥檚 dual-immersion programs until her retirement in 2002.

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