Kat Clark Profile picture
Dec 3 13 tweets 9 min read
(1/11) “When I took over, I noticed that there were behavioral issues for kids who didn't want to do projects like beadworking. And so I started changing my way of thinking about how I structured the whole classroom...”
(2/11) “At the high school, I created a class on #indigenous representation in film. I would show the film, we'd have a short discussion, and then I would have them do a movie review. But then I started thinking about having the kids connect to our ancestors...”
(3/11) “When you start talking about representation, it reverberates out. Not just a historical perspective of indigenous people, but Indigenous Futurisms too. It’s like Black Panther: What would happen to indigenous cultures if they were left uncolonized?”
(4/11) “For me, it’s about creating a safe space for our kids. First and foremost, before any other kind of education happens. Are they hungry? Are they tired? So I created a space where they felt comfortable.”
(5/11) “I think of one kid in particular. I had the hardest time with him. And this is me at the beginning of my career, in the traditional #Menominee crafts class. This is why I changed all the classes and created more diverse options for our kids – because of this one kid.”
(6/11) “It was passing time one day. And one girl – I could tell that something had happened to her, either in the hallway or in class. She was really upset. She came into my room, slammed her books on one of my tables, closed her eyes, and breathed....”
(7/11) “Everybody seems to know it's ‘hard’ to be a teacher. I don't think everybody understands how hard it really is. It takes a toll on you, learning about the traumas that our kids go through.”
(8/11) “To keep teachers in schools, I think we need to create a community within each school. A teacher community. It's really hard to want to be somewhere if you don't love what you're doing and love the people you're around...”
(9/11) “I was on a Zoom call recently, and this teacher from UW Green Bay mentioned that one of her students was one of my students, and that she told her that she doesn't know what she would have done if she didn't have my class...”
(10/11) “We’ve now started this immersion program where we're trying to reconnect to a traditional way of teaching. What does Menominee education look like? What are the approaches that we can take to get to a truer form of Menominee education...”
(11/11) “We can't go through life complaining about the things that we see are wrong. We need to have solutions. We need to be able to think creatively.

Maybe the education system does not work for you. But there is something that does. So how do you find that solution?”
You can learn more about Ben's new school, Kaehkēnawapahtāēq, by listening to this interview with Ben and a colleague on Wisconsin Public Radio: wpr.org/kaehkenawapata… @WPR

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More from @heykatclark

Nov 15
(1/13) “I was the kid who was under the table with a fireman's helmet on, covering his ears because he didn't understand what people were saying. I would get frustrated all the time because I didn't understand multiple syllable words...” ImageImageImage
(2/13) “I was debating between aerospace engineering and education. My parents actually kind of pushed me away from teaching music, because they were both music teachers and that's something they had lived experience with.” ImageImage
(3/13) “There’s a moment every day that reinforces my commitment to #teaching. Sometimes it has nothing to do with music. Sometimes it's a heart-to-heart conversation in the office about how a kid’s feeling, English class, and how they’re doing – helping them in their lives...” ImageImage
Read 13 tweets
Oct 14
(1/9) “I'm not sure what I would do if I weren't teaching. Sometimes I think maybe architecture, because it's math and I like design. But I have a memory from second grade, when they talked about jobs, saying ‘I want to be a teacher'...” ImageImage
(2/9) “One thing that keeps me going is when students come back and somehow let me know that what I did was impactful for them. Simple things. I've gotten thank you notes in my mailbox the following fall, and sometimes those are really motivating...” ImageImage
(3/9) “Everything is different about #middleschool. Everything is different about middle schoolers. I love the students in this building. And it seems to be a love/hate kind of thing, where people either think we're nuts for doing this and would never do it, or you love it...” ImageImage
Read 10 tweets
Oct 4
(1/6) “My mom taught for 30 years. And after I went to grad school she said, ‘Why don't you get some experience in the city schools?’ I did it, and I haven't left. You get really attached to the work and the students, especially once you see them...” ImageImage
(2/6) “I hope people can better understand the commitment that teachers have in each of those areas that they're called on: from social work, to social-emotional learning and mental health care, to everything outside of that textbook...” ImageImage
(3/6) “We had a student who’d never done theater before. She was very quiet. She kept to herself a lot. And we are at the point where we assume every child that comes in has experienced some level of trauma. She had hers, without going into detail. But for the most part...” ImageImage
Read 7 tweets

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