Dr. Michael Hynes, superintendent of the Patchogue-Medford school district in Long Island, New York, recently delivered his “state of the district” remarks. 

 

Dr. Hynes, who is a member of this blog’s honor roll for his visionary leadership, described the changes in the district’s demographics:

 

From 2002 to 2014, the district’s enrollment has dropped from 8,866 to 7,773. During that time, the district’s white population has dropped from 73 to 53 percent, and the Hispanic or Latino population has risen from 20 percent to 33 percent. Despite these figures, Dr. Hynes said the district has made no major changes in response to the shifting demographics.

 

Students with disabilities comprise 10 percent of the district’s population. LEP [Limited English Proficient] students comprise 11 percent. Nearly 50 percent of Patchogue-Medford students receive free or reduced meals.

 

And he detailed some of the changes he is making:

 

I used to think all kids need to go to college … I [now] believe we need to design opportunities for the kids who are going to college, or to serve in the military, or enter the workforce. And each one of them is just as important as the other….

 

Dr. Hynes is encouraging educators and parents to “not embrace this test-and-punish deficit model of ranking and sorting kids all the time. It’s about something else that’s much, much different. It’s about teaching for the benefit of all of our students, and the world.” He said the school district’s philosophical shift will address this different mode of thinking moving forward….

 

The district’s immediate educational shifts will include longer recesses. “For me this is non-negotiable.”

 

Also, more structured and unstructured play, especially K-2. “I don’t meant have kids come out and bust out the parcheesi sets … But, I know, that play — and you’ve heard this before — if done right, is the highest form of learning. And we have decimated it. It’s been eroded and evaporated. We’re bringing it back, significantly.”

 

The district has already been piloting yoga and meditation sessions for students. “It’s very hard to learn anything if you are not present and in the moment. I know that if kids are either socially, or emotionally, off-kilter, it’s going to impact the way they go about their business in school. Yoga centers them, allows them to be more present, and they are able to learn much more quickly.”

 

“We need to bring project-based learning back … It’s a lot of work but it’s so worth it.”

 

Hynes said everyone who come into contact with students, from teachers and parents to bus drivers and cafeteria workers, need to be better aware of children’s developmental stages. “They need to know, from a developmental standpoint, where these kids are, so we all have a better understanding of what it means to be a kid. I really believe the byproduct is that you will see a higher performance level from our children.”