It Is What It Is
Guest(s): Lester Laminack and Kristen Lee
Date: 10/16/2024
Run time: 49:19
Season 3, Episode 6
Join host Carol Pelletier Radford and her inspiring guests as they share pivotal moments, successful classroom strategies, and tips to stay healthy. Each episode of Season 3 is based on the 10 lessons from Carol's book, Teaching With Light (Corwin, 2021).
In Episode 6, hear from Lester Laminack & Kristen Lee in "It Is What It Is" as they share their experiences, practical advice, and ways to stay inspired!
Lester is the author of over 25 books for teachers and children including Critical Comprehension (Corwin, 2023).
Kristen is the author of Worth the Risk (Sounds True, 2022) and has hosted Crackin' Up with Dr. Kris: Where Comedy Meets Therapy. She also wrote the Foreword to Teaching With Light.
Bonus Track: Carol’s It Is What It Is from Teaching With Light
Bonus YouTube: It Is What It Is hand mudra
Listen, review and subscribe on: Apple, Spotify, YouTube,
Episode Audio
[00:00:01.33] [MUSIC PLAYING]
[00:00:03.10] SPEAKER: Welcome to Corwin's Teacher to Teacher podcast with
host Carol Pelletier Radford. Carol is an experienced classroom teacher,
university educator, founder of mentoringinaction.com, and author of four
bestselling professional books for teachers. She believes the best form of
professional learning happens when teachers engage in authentic conversations
and share their wisdom.
[00:00:23.99] In every episode, Carol and her guests share stories about
pivotal moments in their careers, successful classroom strategies, and personal
actions they take to minimize stress and stay healthy. The Teacher to Teacher
podcast is a place to engage in authentic conversation and reflection with
experienced educators. We hope these conversations will energize you, keep you
inspired, and remind you why you chose to become a teacher.
[00:00:49.37] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Welcome to season 3 of the Teacher to
Teacher podcast. I am your host, Carol Pelletier Radford, and I'm so happy to
be part of this conversation with two very experienced educators today. And the
theme for season 3 is based on the book that I wrote titled, Teaching with
Light, Ten Lessons for Finding Wisdom, Balance, and Inspiration.
[00:01:17.68] Each of the 10 episodes for this season mirror the 10 lessons
that are in the book. And today's episode is titled, It Is What It Is, and it's
lesson 6.
[00:01:31.27] Now, what I want to say about this, so I wrote the book. I
have all the lessons. This was the most challenging chapter for me to write. In
fact, I think I wrote it last because I didn't want to be vulnerable about the
story that I was going to share of when I actually learned the lesson that it
is what it is. [LAUGHS]
[00:01:57.73] So for our listeners, I won't tell the whole story. But in the
notes, you can listen to me share my story.
[00:02:06.67] The mantra in the chapter is called, "I accept the things
I cannot change." And the story that I write about is, "I know I am
right." [LAUGHS] And how I shifted from knowing that I was right and it
wasn't my fault to understanding what it is what it is and how that
understanding of that lesson could actually move me forward as an educator to
just be more compassionate with myself and others.
[00:02:44.25] So I'm going to turn this over and welcome in my two guests,
Kristen and Lester, today and have them introduce themselves first. And then
we're going to dive into this it is what it is conversation. So, Kristen,
welcome. Who are you? What are you doing? What did you do? How do you relate to
teachers?
[00:03:05.69] KRISTEN LEE: So it's such a delight to be with both of you
today and just have this discussion that I think resonates with any of us that
have been in education. I started off, actually, as a preschool teacher. And
that was incredible work, very tiring, certainly, at the end of the day. And
then I went on and ended up getting training as a clinical social worker.
[00:03:27.66] And in that, I saw a lot of teachers come into my office
feeling underappreciated or exhausted and really demonstrating the signs of
burnout. And I'm actually the first in my family to have the chance to go to
college. And to that end, I found education to be so important in my own story
and in my own life and felt like teachers really need more support and more
esteem from society because that risk of burnout is, I think, quite tragic.
[00:04:03.65] And so I went on to really get into the research around it.
And then from there, dedicate my-- I teach now in Boston at a major university.
And I teach concepts of psychology and behavior science. And then I spend a lot
of time in schools helping leaders, teachers, and staff find those resources
that can be really restorative and redemptive in their lives that help them
with sustainability, knowing that teachers, especially, have a tremendous risk
of burnout.
[00:04:37.23] And so that's just something that I'm really relentlessly
committed to and excited to talk with you both today about is, how do we stay
and do well and how do we adopt this mindset of it is what it is, knowing that
what is sometimes can be really fraught and messy.
[00:04:54.29] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Just for the podcast, could you just
share the title of your dissertation? Because you did it, you actually used the
teachers in my program as part of your study. So share the title and what you
were trying to do.
[00:05:09.32] KRISTEN LEE: Well, I think the central question at that time--
I had worked in the communities of Fall River in New Bedford, Massachusetts.
And I was working intently with immigrant and refugee populations and looking
at the significance of under-resourcing. That is very common, obviously, in
urban school districts.
[00:05:30.68] And this group that we were working with were all in the STEM
disciplines. And they really wanted to have the skills, the dispositions, the
competencies to really form relationships. We all know at the heart of
education is the relationship. And so the focus was looking at the perceptions
of urban school teachers on the stressors in the context that they were facing.
[00:05:58.13] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Lester, your story, your teaching
history. Let's welcome you into the conversation. What have you been doing all
these 30 years or plus? [LAUGHS]
[00:06:13.75] LESTER LAMINACK: This, actually, is the beginning of my
fourth. 47th year.
[00:06:18.89] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Wow, a legacy teacher. You are a
legacy. Yes.
[00:06:23.35] LESTER LAMINACK: I don't know about that, but I started my
career in 1977 working as an elementary teacher. I began in first grade. And
then I taught in elementary school in Title 1 reading. I worked with gifted
kids in the summer in a university program. I taught in the university for
24-25 years.
[00:06:50.23] And then I took early retirement and decided that I wanted to
work with schools and school districts and move out into other places than just
where I was and have a little more flexibility to focus on the things that
mattered to me. I've worked predominantly in the area of literacy education. I
write children's books and books for teachers.
[00:07:14.84] So sometimes, I'm in a school as an author talking with kids,
which gives me one view of school. And then other times, I'm in schools talking
with teachers about literacy issues, reading and writing literature pieces. So
I've kind of been messing with this for almost 50 years.
[00:07:35.13] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: I love it. I love that. And I've
worked in K-12 and also higher ed, so the three of us bring these different
perspectives. We have the clinical perspective. We've been in both contexts,
and I feel I can safely say all three of us are committed to education and
supporting teachers.
[00:07:55.27] So let's start with the children's books. You started with the
teacher books. What's your overall theme? What's the big ideas around your
teacher books? Or are they all different? I'm just curious. What's your message
in those books?
[00:08:10.20] LESTER LAMINACK: Well, there are several of them, so I don't
know if there's an overall theme that cuts through everything. A large focus of
what I've done focuses on the power of read-aloud.
[00:08:22.35] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Ah, Jim Trelease. I remember Jim
Trelease, the read-aloud.
[00:08:27.54] LESTER LAMINACK: [INAUDIBLE] then focusing a lot of that on
the art and the function of it, not just the research behind why we do it but
doing it well and also finding ways to make it match the expectations and
standards that we're doing so that read-alouds become an instructional act and
not just an entertainment piece, that if they're done with the right intentions
and paying attention to that.
[00:08:51.35] I've also done-- one of the books I did was helping teachers
use carefully curated collections of books to work against bullying and--
[00:09:03.78] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Oh, OK.
[00:09:05.11] LESTER LAMINACK: --building community inside the classroom and
trying to defuse the bullying situations. I've done some books on the teaching
of writing and some things on-- one book on looking at what we understand as
readers we can apply as writers if we just sort of flip that understanding,
like we look at the inverse properties in math. Are we looking at the
relationship between what we know as readers and how that influences what we're
able to do as writers?
[00:09:35.60] And then the most recent book that I have-- the most recent
two books that I've done have had a very similar focus on-- and both of them
are looking at having kids come to understand that with the more they read, the
broader they read something, the more they have insight and understanding about
a particular topic or a way of thinking that may lead them to the felt need to
take action, to do something, to right a wrong, to fix an injustice, to speak
up, to push back.
[00:10:15.86] And until we learn to be critical thinkers, it's very easy to
just fall into the trap of listening to the first report you hear and thinking,
oh, I've heard the truth now, instead of questioning and pushing back.
[00:10:33.34] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right. Right. Kristen, what do you
think about how Lester has introduced himself and his life's work, really,
through this modality of reading, writing, sharing? What are you hearing that
relates to you and the stress and the other aspect of schools that aren't as
enjoyable sometimes?
[00:10:56.71] KRISTEN LEE: Well, I'm just delighted and honored. I mean, I
don't want to make you blush, Lester, but I think it's just phenomenal your
investment and particularly this piece around critical thinking. Sometimes,
lately, I've been saying, sloppy thinking feels like it's a public health
issue.
[00:11:15.37] LESTER LAMINACK: I like that.
[00:11:16.42] KRISTEN LEE: And in the similar way, at the university, I'm
adamantly just emphatic about critical thinking skills and really asking these
questions around where the information is coming from and just all that's
behind that. And so I think your devotion to helping everyone that you can hear
and really bend their ear around thinking more expansively and deepening
literacy.
[00:11:45.98] It relates emphatically to our ability to cope in life because
if we're constantly falling prey to misinformation or disinformation or just
skimming the surface, we won't have a deeper understanding on any phenomena
that will have a deep impact on educational ecosystem.
[00:12:05.17] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right. And our own lives and all of
that, Kristen, and how we live and how we interact in schools and how the three
of us support teachers, like that listening. What are we going to write that is
useful? Either the children's books, the teacher books, the podcasts, where are
we contributing to this critical comprehension, thinking, reflection, whatever
it is, however we want to frame it? And what's in our control?
[00:12:40.34] So hence the episode topic. So we've got a nice grounding here
for it is what it is. [LAUGHS] And I had heard that phrase like-- a friend of
mine said it when I was in the middle of whatever, designing this program at
the university. And she just turned to me, and I was trying to push forward or
whatever. And she just said, hey, Carol, it is what it is.
[00:13:08.54] And I think it means different things to different people.
I'll share what it means. But Lester, what does that mean to you when you heard
you were going to-- that's your episode? [LAUGHS] What does that mean to you?
[00:13:22.40] LESTER LAMINACK: Well, I think it can mean several things. And
it depends, I believe, on the attitude and the tone behind it and the
contextual frame in which it is provided.
[00:13:33.47] So it could be used as a way to say, it is what it is, and
shut down the conversation as if to say, you have no more to say. I don't want
to hear this. I have given you my final word, so I am now exiting the
conversation. And I am right, and you are wrong. And that's the piece. So I
think that those words can be used like any language. It can be used depending
upon intention.
[00:14:03.83] It could also mean that I have looked at this from every
angle. I have looked at what's in my control. I've looked at what's out of my
control. I have examined this situation. And I essentially have now decided, I
can't do anything about this. It is what it is, so what I have to do is to
consider what are those things that I can do to move forward and get myself
where I was intending to go or re-examine my goals and make another choice
someplace else. So simply just looking at it either way.
[00:14:41.31] And I think when you hear those words, you can tell in a
heartbeat, you can see the facial expressions, the body language, the tone, the
context of the conversation and know immediately, is this being said to shut
you down, or is this being said to help you redirect and refocus?
[00:15:01.88] And sometimes, you say it to yourself, OK, it is what it is,
so what I've got to do is I've got to just make another plan. And sometimes,
someone else has listened to you overanalyse the task 14 different ways, and
they finally help you go, OK, Lester, let's look. It is what it is.
[00:15:18.97] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: [LAUGHS]
[00:15:20.18] LESTER LAMINACK: What are we going to do about it? So we don't
need to spend more time on the problem. We need to start thinking about the
solution.
[00:15:28.05] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: I love that. Kristen, what do you
think about that? And what's your-- do you want to tweak that? I just love
everything Lester just said.
[00:15:36.13] KRISTEN LEE: Yeah, I think it's just tremendous insight. And I
think that we can use it, right? There's tangible ways in which we can use the
perspective. And like you said, there's a lot of duality. There's many ways in
which it could be phrased or asserted. But I think, to your point, when we use
it in order to think about our locus of control, there's a lot of research that
suggests that people who focus on what's within their locus of control will
then devote their resources accordingly.
[00:16:07.18] So one thing that I get pretty enthralled by is this concept
of our own body budget as educators. And we know we have a finite amount of
energy and resources, time. So if we're constantly belaboring or ruminating
over what we can't control, obviously, that can be detrimental. So I really
love how you thought about that and looking at it more from a strengths-based
perspective. What is true? And what is possible?
[00:16:36.01] And so I've thought a lot about-- I think you've inspired me
so much, Carol, on your own in this book that is just such an anthology of your
life's work. And I think one thing that you embody that I think the audience, I
think, can gain so much from is your own humility and your vulnerability. And I
think as educators, we all know it's a very humbling proposition to teach. We
have to get a liking for humble pie, right?
[00:17:06.22] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right.
[00:17:07.69] KRISTEN LEE: I always think of it to a whack-a-mole game,
teaching and the work of education.
[00:17:12.28] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right.
[00:17:12.61] KRISTEN LEE: You feel like you master one thing, another thing
pops up. And that's just the natural chaos.
[00:17:17.74] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And I think that as the teachers are
listening to this, it is about the freedom that we have to choose that reaction
because when I reread the story and why I didn't want to write this particular
story is that it was embarrassing. I was like, oh my god. I can't believe I
just took this high ground that it wasn't fair the principal gave me an extra
duty everybody else had. It sounded so petty when I wrote it down.
[00:17:51.64] And I really had to think about, do you want to put this in a
book that everybody can read, that you actually was upset about it? It caused a
lot of stress for me that it wasn't fair, that I wanted to work with kids as
much as everybody else did. But I had to work an extra half hour in the
cafeteria, and he would not resolve it, the principal, for years!
[00:18:23.06] And so at the end, like Lester is saying-- and it's funny and
embarrassing all at the same time-- I had to ask myself in the scheme of
things, am I never going to talk to my colleagues again? But there are people
who do that! I have [INAUDIBLE] teachers' rooms where you don't talk to that
person because they didn't help you in a certain way.
[00:18:52.38] And I decided, what do I have to lose? Like Lester, I've been
in the profession for 50 years. That's the true story. We know it's the true
story, but we don't want to say it. So I had to choose consciously to let it
go.
[00:19:09.97] LESTER LAMINACK: Mm-hmm.
[00:19:10.43] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And that's the pivot that you're
talking about and that Lester was talking about, to consciously not be a
victim. It's like, why am I just ruminating over why the principal isn't being
fair and I'm the one that has to do more And we've heard it, right? Lester,
you're laughing, right?
[00:19:29.86] LESTER LAMINACK: I am laughing.
[00:19:30.45] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And then I move on. And guess what
happened. Are you ready for-- I'm not going to tell the end of the story. I'm
not going to tell it, so people are going to have to listen. The story is in
the program notes, and you're going to hear what happened because it's just
karma the way things worked out.
[00:19:51.57] So Lester, what is my story and what Kristen said? How does
this relate to this? It is what it is. Does it relate to you?
[00:19:59.86] LESTER LAMINACK: [CHUCKLES] Yeah, of course. Absolutely. Yeah,
of course.
[00:20:02.53] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yeah, of course. [LAUGHS] It's funny.
[00:20:05.91] LESTER LAMINACK: As I was listening, we're all talking-- we're
all teachers, and we're talking to teachers. And you're giving the example of
something in a school, but that feeling you were having, this notion of it
isn't fair, I am being asked to do something no one else is being asked to do.
I think that's human.
[00:20:22.50] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:20:22.91] LESTER LAMINACK: It's everywhere in every profession.
[00:20:25.77] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:20:26.43] LESTER LAMINACK: Yeah, not just in the school with our
colleagues, but we also see things like that damaging longtime friendships with
people.
[00:20:34.78] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:20:35.58] LESTER LAMINACK: We just feel like, well, I'm not talking to
them anymore. Instead of having that opportunity to step back. And I'm reminded
of a saying that people share frequently, that "anger really doesn't harm
the person you're angry with. It harms you." And like you said, "I
finally only had to let it go." And probably at that moment, you felt
quite a bit of relief.
[00:20:59.58] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Oh my god! I was so happy when I
learned the lesson of what it is. And I'm glad I learned it early enough. But I
have to be honest, writing about it and putting it in a book for everybody to
read was very, Wow, what are they going to think about that?
[00:21:18.08] Like, geez, you couldn't figure that out? But what we have to
also, the three of us, as we have this conversation, if we're working in higher
education, we're authors, we're all writers, if we're not going to tell the
truth--
[00:21:33.67] LESTER LAMINACK: No kidding.
[00:21:34.28] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: That's what you were getting to
earlier. It's like, What is the truth?
[00:21:39.44] KRISTEN LEE: Uh-hum.
[00:21:39.73] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And I don't want to be afraid to tell
the truth about how I feel. So that's the most humiliating story in my book.
[LAUGHS] And hopefully, it will resonate about-- it's about accepting. It was
so many emotions. It's about accepting.
[00:21:59.25] And then the other thing, too, that Lester said about the
different ways to it is what it is, this one's so packed. This one is a deeper
one. It is the way we react when we say it.
[00:22:13.38] So you all have-- we look at people's facial language when
they say it to us, but how do I say it? If I say, "it is what it is,"
it could be that angry, and I never talk to that principal again. He's never
going to get the authentic me.
[00:22:32.48] I'm not going to be me with him because he just did something
unfair, and I'm a fair person. I was known as the teacher firm, but fair.
[LAUGHS] And I liked it. So our audience is listening and they're laughing
because we all define ourselves who we want-- we want to be perfect.
[00:22:55.24] So what? Tell us a story now. I want to hear what-- I want to
hear your humiliating stories. No, just kidding. [LAUGHS]
[00:23:02.52] KRISTEN LEE: Well, that's true. Come on.
[00:23:03.69] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: [LAUGHS] When you had to do "it
is what it is." How does this relate to you, Kristen, in real time, not
like philosophical, higher Ed babble?
[00:23:13.48] KRISTEN LEE: [LAUGHS]
[00:23:14.71] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Be real.
[00:23:15.35] KRISTEN LEE: It's a teacher tell-all. Well, I think
[INAUDIBLE]. I will say this, that your candor is refreshing, Carol. I think
that when we can be honest, we all have those moments where we just get stuck.
And it's just so much part of the human experience. And so I think the more
honest we can get with ourselves and each other, the better off we are because
then we confront what needs to be confronted.
[00:23:41.15] I'll say this. I think also that we teach what we need to
learn. So for me, as a person who's all about helping teachers stay well and
stave off burnout-- and as I was doing my research, I became my own case study
of burnout. And I think that was a big wake-up call that I was really
overwriting my body's, begging to take a breath, to take a beat, to take a hot
second to actually engage in self-care.
[00:24:16.01] And I think that there is that risk of the curse of knowledge.
We know what we're supposed to do. And then when the rubber meets the road, we
don't always follow through even or practice what we preach.
[00:24:29.15] So I think my reckoning was just realizing that I had to be
more careful about my own boundaries, my own toxic inner critic that was always
on my shoulder. I think so many of us have that experience in this work because
we take-- it's our vocation. We take it to heart. We want our students to do
well. We want them to flourish.
[00:24:58.38] So I think just recognizing our own challenges, just as you
did. So my big takeaway and my big lesson was learning that lesson of it's OK
to give myself permission to take a minute for myself. It's OK to set the
boundaries I need to maintain my own mental hygiene and well-being.
[00:25:20.39] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Well, because who wants to read a
book on burnout from somebody who's burned out?
[00:25:25.90] KRISTEN LEE: [LAUGHS]
[00:25:26.05] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: How many people--
[00:25:26.89] KRISTEN LEE: [INAUDIBLE] on fire. Raccoon eyes.
[00:25:30.75] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: But we know that we've all been
burned out. And we're doing it and yet--
[00:25:37.24] KRISTEN LEE: Raise your hand if you're unsure.
[00:25:39.13] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: I know.
[00:25:40.68] KRISTEN LEE: [LAUGHS]
[00:25:41.93] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: It's just the way-- it is what it is
[LAUGHS] because that's our [INAUDIBLE]. So Lester, an example or how does this
resonate and show up in your real life, where you have to make the decision?
Because it's not just the saying of it is. It's actually what do you do when
you're in that place to move out of it, I guess. I don't know.
[00:26:06.37] LESTER LAMINACK: And I know some of these can be-- and it
seems like we're the ones we're mentioning so far are major life changes,
things that happen someplace, so there was a big shift. But I think we also
experienced that in just daily, ordinary events. And how we respond to them
contributes to our overall mental health.
[00:26:29.77] And if you get a habit, if you fall into a pattern of letting
all the small things become major things, then I think it can shut you down.
You could easily get in a place where you just fall into depression. So I'll
give you an example of one that doesn't fall into the teaching category, but
it's just what happens to ordinary people in ordinary daily life.
[00:26:57.42] So Steve and I are on a road trip, and we had been around the
country and a little car called a Mini Cooper. And so we were traveling back
and making our way home to North Carolina from Seattle. So we are cutting
across, and our plan got changed because there were fires in the Northwest, so
it rerouted us, which, first of all, changed where we wanted to go to where we
had to go.
[00:27:23.72] That one we could deal with, like, oh, well, nice scenery in
another part of the state. But we had planned for days to get home, and Steve
had to-- we wanted to get home on Thursday because Steve had to go back to work
on Friday. And on the following Monday, I was flying off to do a week of work
in Maine.
[00:27:44.18] So we're driving along, we're calculating how many hours a day
we have to drive and where are our stops will be. And we make a stop in North
Platte, Nebraska, to get a sandwich or something. Just get us something to eat.
[00:27:59.32] We pull in, and the subway that was right there on the
interstate was closed because the manager owner had been involved in a
motorcycle accident, and they weren't opening. So it's like, well, let's get in
the car, and we'll go up the road to someplace else. We'll be get in the car,
and the tire pressure light is on.
[00:28:19.68] So we get out, and the tire is flat. And we have a little punk
thing in the back of the car that's battery operated. We thought we'd just fill
it up and get to a place and see what it is. Well, you couldn't fill it up
because it wasn't the tire.
[00:28:33.26] It was the valve stem where you put the air in. It had a big
split in it, which you can't repair. So we dutifully called AAA to save
ourselves. And they're offering lovely advice that will all take place tomorrow
morning.
[00:28:51.42] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Uh oh. [LAUGHS]
[00:28:52.73] LESTER LAMINACK: [INAUDIBLE]. And it's like, no, no, no, no.
We have 3 and 1/2 more hours for today in order to make it by when we want to
make it. And so at first, your first reaction is, hurry up. The whole
[INAUDIBLE] falling apart. [INAUDIBLE] you can't do this. We we're in the
middle of nowhere, and we're so far from where we need to be. And this little
subway is not even open. What are we going to do?
[00:29:20.54] Well, after you have that kind of stress moment, and you get
to the place where you have called everybody to call, you've looked at all the
resources, you've done a Google search for a tire shop. Everything is closed.
You can literally do nothing until tomorrow.
[00:29:39.20] You look across the street, and there is a little motel. It's
not a place I'd normally stay, but it was there. It did have a place to sleep.
We could take care of this tomorrow. And it just throws us off by six or seven
hours because you have to wait till the next morning.
[00:29:56.06] In the long run, it all worked out. We just drove longer one
day than we had intended. But at the moment, it was a big issue, although now
it's just a little small one. And I think a lot of our situations, because
teaching is a constant-- it's like being an air traffic controller. You're
trying to watch everything all the time and avoid any collision somewhere.
[00:30:23.73] And when one domino falls, you know another one is going to,
and you're scrambling, trying to save everything. And I think in those places,
when we're able to step back and say, this is no major catastrophe, it messed
up my plan, no one is harmed, this situation can be a lesson for us all if we
step back from it. But it is so hard in the moment not to react with that
tense.
[00:30:56.44] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right. And the reaction and then to
move forward if you were in a school with other people blaming someone else and
going into the other emotions when it is out of your control. So you said
something interesting that I like. Kristen [INAUDIBLE] to you. You Said,
something about habits.
[00:31:16.48] It's like we get our habits from the little things we repeat,
and then we use them if it's a habit with the big life decision because now we
have a habit. Kristen, do you want to respond to that?
[00:31:31.53] KRISTEN LEE: Well, again, I think-- I'm thinking as we're
having this conversation together, there might be a lot of new teachers
listening, and really eager for strategic thinking and being careful about how
catastrophic thinking or just reactive thinking can be really detrimental. So
together we have 110 years, if my math is right of working [INAUDIBLE].
[00:31:59.64] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: [LAUGHS] Very wise people. Yes, OK.
[00:32:02.86] KRISTEN LEE: Yeah, but I think what I'm also thinking about
is, in my early career, so many of these skills, the habits, the behaviors, the
mindsets, we have to give, I think, again, take that lens of self-compassion,
that these are skills that can be developed.
[00:32:21.00] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Right. And that-- but it's that skill
set, I think, that you two are-- you're both talking about, and knowing in the
moment how to make that decision, Lester, about the motel. That isn't the
choice we would have made.
[00:32:35.22] It's knowing how to pivot because that's the choice right now.
So do you want to not take the choice? Well, there wasn't any choice. But you
have the freedom to do it. But I think what-- I'd like to move into the
practice.
[00:32:51.94] We've talked a lot about our ideas and emotions and reactions.
You've each written books, Lester, from one of your books, the one that you
have written with Corwin, what's a takeaway that-- a teaser from there that--
why would that book be helpful for teachers, to help them?
[00:33:14.61] LESTER LAMINACK: Playing off of what Kristen just said, the
idea of perspective. The book critical comprehension is focused on the idea
that comprehension is more than giving the right answer to someone else's
question, and that it is more than just walking away and being able to restate
what the text said.
[00:33:37.00] So it is the idea that we are pushing against what we read and
asking, is there more? Is there another voice that isn't being told? Is this
story being slanted by someone? So one of the chapters is developing an
understanding of what perspective is and developing an understanding of how we
recognize perspective when we read, and then being able to say if we understand
that all writing is done through a biased lens.
[00:34:09.73] There is no one without bias, no matter whatever. You like
pink and unconsciously when you write, you put more pink things in your
writing, or you tell more pink things in your story. Whatever your lens is that
you're looking through becomes a filter for your work, and you may not
recognize it. You can't see what your brain already knows is on the page.
[00:34:35.31] So someone else reading that will see it. What we're trying to
help kids recognize is that they look at a text and ask, Who are the-- what are
the voices are we not hearing?
[00:34:48.90] What story could be told here that isn't represented? And at
this point in history where we have so many kids who are coming into play,
where they have spent their entire life with a tablet in their hand, and all
you've got to do is ask a question, and you get an immediate answer that may or
may not be vetted by anyone. You're going to present a particular perspective.
[00:35:20.50] And if a kid learns any answer you get, any text you read,
there is always a counter-narrative to that, there is always another
perspective to it, and you truly don't understand something until you have read
several of those-- so I was thinking Kristen's line about sloppy thinking is a
public health issue should be a bumper sticker.
[00:35:42.34] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yay.
[00:35:42.93] [LAUGHTER]
[00:35:46.02] Thank you for that. And as I'm listening to you, it's so
important to just recognize that we don't know the other perspective, but there
is one. So that's what I'm hearing you say, is that this isn't the only part of
the story. Just like we're talking about "it is what it is." We all
come to it with a different emotional reaction, feeling righteousness, whatever
judgments, perspectives.
[00:36:19.57] So thank you for that. I think that's an important book. We'll
make sure that book is in the notes for all our listeners.
[00:36:26.21] Kristen, you've written several books, and Kristen also wrote
the foreword for Teaching With Light. So when you get that book, you can read
that for yourself, her perspective on the importance of teacher self-- I don't
even want to say self-care anymore because people are like, oh my god, don't
say self-care. But teacher well-being and worthiness maybe is a better way to
say it.
[00:36:52.67] So which practical book strategy? You want to talk about your
latest book and give us a teaser from that, Kristen?
[00:37:02.08] KRISTEN LEE: I think that the key thing is-- and Lester, I
just love how you exemplify this level of thinking and then helping support
that in the learners and the ecosystems that you serve. I think just we have to
be willing to, I think, embrace the complexity and the duality of life and the
many lenses in which we look at things.
[00:37:29.37] So much of my research and my writing, I do focus a lot on
what is the locus of control. And I have a relentless belief that we do have to
focus again on our strengths, our assets, our resources, what else is true,
what else is possible. And I think just that speaks to our shared humanity.
Again, there are more questions than answers and that we could get curious
about that and excited.
[00:38:01.62] And I think that one of the themes that's emerging in our
conversations is adopting a non-judgmental stance to ourselves and to one
another. You just highlighted bias, Lester.
[00:38:13.89] And it's so easy, again, to be judgmental or reactive. And
when we get in that kind of space, it's very unproductive. So I think that
ability to step back, look at things, ideate possibilities can be really
helpful.
[00:38:30.57] I'll also say this, that when I'm on the ground working with
teachers-- I actually spend the morning with teachers in urban district.
They're starting-- they had their senior leadership meeting today.
[00:38:44.25] I feel like so many educators feel like what they're doing
isn't enough. There's a lot of stress, a lot of imposter syndrome, a lot of
things happening behind the scenes in their lives, and they're really giving an
earnest effort. And so I'll share a quote that I love to share with teachers
that I serve, which is from Georgia O'Keeffe. I've been absolutely terrified
every moment of my life, but I've never let it stop me from doing a single
thing I've wanted to do.
[00:39:16.77] And I feel like that speaks to the teaching experience, the
teaching and learning experience. It's so scary. It's intense. There's so much
we're trying-- when we think about sloppy thinking, and we think about kids
being born with iPads in their hand, and just all the brouhaha and the
polarization, and just all the existential threats, it's a lot to contend with.
And we understand how important education is and the role of an educator. And
it can be absolutely terrifying.
[00:39:48.49] And then, yeah, we're still in it. We still have our sleeves
rolled up. And we're not letting it stop us.
[00:39:55.61] And I think a lot of times as teachers, we have to step back
and actually celebrate that and recognize how sacred our work is and the value
that we bring because I think we do-- society can devalue us really quickly.
And I think we have to just honor that in our own identities. And that's a big
piece of what I write about, and I teach--
[00:40:19.30] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And that book is, for our listeners,
Worth the Risk. And I think what you're saying it's worth the risk to be
terrified and--
[00:40:29.32] KRISTEN LEE: We have to speak our truths. And I think you've
done that [INAUDIBLE] in all your work.
[00:40:34.39] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: I have a few more questions for you
as we wind down this conversation, which has been very reflective for me to
think back on my stories and share with both of you. So how do you stay
motivated, inspired in your work, Lester, to keep doing what you're doing since
you began? What's your way that you support yourself?
[00:41:02.86] LESTER LAMINACK: To stay motivated and inspired, I spend time
with kids.
[00:41:07.27] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: OK, and what else do you do for you?
[00:41:10.76] LESTER LAMINACK: Oh, for me?
[00:41:11.69] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yeah, for you. I hear you traveling.
Your story was about traveling. So are you a big traveler?
[00:41:19.36] LESTER LAMINACK: I travel a lot for work, working with
teachers around the schools around the country. So when I'm not working, I
prefer to just be home and be here. I live in the mountains of North Carolina.
And I like little drives on the back road.
[00:41:37.04] I do a lot of photography, which is--
[00:41:39.22] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Ooh.
[00:41:39.70] LESTER LAMINACK: Yeah.
[00:41:40.66] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Fun.
[00:41:41.97] LESTER LAMINACK: Because it causes you to think. Most of my
life, the work I do, I'm working with words.
[00:41:48.34] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:41:49.18] LESTER LAMINACK: It makes me think about something with light
and composition and shadows and reflections, which makes you think a different
way.
[00:41:58.59] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes, I love art. I'm doing abstract
art now. I don't even want any-- and I'm a writer as well.
[00:42:05.37] It's like getting away from the words, and taking photos. It
just feels peaceful. Thanks for sharing that. Kristen, what do you do to get
away from the words? We're all word people.
[00:42:18.52] [LAUGHTER]
[00:42:19.76] KRISTEN LEE: We're nerds.
[00:42:21.12] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: We're nerds. We're the word nerds.
Yes.
[00:42:24.26] KRISTEN LEE: Well, I love performance art. And I started with
comedy a few years ago because I am--
[00:42:32.00] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:42:32.48] KRISTEN LEE: --working with-- there is a very serious side of
this mental health crisis that's affecting everyone and education across the
world. We're seeing this global situation. And they're calling it the age of
anxiety. And so I take that very seriously, the work supporting folks.
[00:42:53.14] So I love humor. I love playfulness. And I started my own
comedy show, and it raises money for mental health access and awareness for
BIPOC populations and then for the National Alliance on Mental Illness. So I
love to just be playful and silly.
[00:43:15.12] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: What was the name? Because I went to
one of your shows, and it was hilarious. And it was--
[00:43:19.62] KRISTEN LEE: There was much fun. It's called "Cracking up
with Dr. Chris, where therapy comedy."
[00:43:24.01] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes.
[00:43:24.96] KRISTEN LEE: We tackle a lot of the big themes, but in a
very-- just a way that's a lot of fun. And so I think humor is very powerful.
[00:43:33.55] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yes. How have you both changed your
thinking over time? So we're talking, we're reflecting, we're looking back on
stories. What did you use to think, Lester, and what do you think now?
[00:43:49.35] LESTER LAMINACK: Just about life in general, you're talking?
[00:43:51.60] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yeah, sure. Or you're the field. Or
what did you use to think And, what do you think now?
[00:44:00.05] LESTER LAMINACK: I used to think I had to do all the things.
[00:44:03.44] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: OK.
[00:44:03.94] LESTER LAMINACK: There was something new going on, I had to be
on top of it. If I had to be involved with it, I had to be good at everything.
[00:44:13.26] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: And what do you think now?
[00:44:14.85] LESTER LAMINACK: Now I think the thing you have to do is find
out who you are and be your truest self.
[00:44:22.94] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Love it.
[00:44:23.52] LESTER LAMINACK: That took a long time to get to a place where
I'm not trying to be what everybody in the world is looking for.
[00:44:33.08] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yeah, oh, it's a relief to feel that.
Kristen.
[00:44:36.48] LESTER LAMINACK: [INAUDIBLE], yeah.
[00:44:37.20] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: What did you used to think? And now,
what do you think?
[00:44:41.73] KRISTEN LEE: I think about imposter syndrome. So I used to
think, to that point, you have to be perfect, or you can't let anyone see you
sweat unless it's to show off your hot yoga class or you feel like that
pressure that you have to always be buttoned up. And I think that's why, like
the Georgia quote so much. It's acknowledging we can be terrified, we can feel
like a hot mess, but we're also doing fairly well and it's human. So I think
just I've learned to be more generous with myself, to acknowledge the foibles
and the shortcomings and the quirks and the challenges, and not feel
embarrassed, like you talked about in your story, but just to be like--
[00:45:22.03] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Be human.
[00:45:22.50] KRISTEN LEE: [INAUDIBLE]
[00:45:22.85] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: You're going to be human.
[00:45:23.92] [LAUGHTER]
[00:45:24.34] KRISTEN LEE: It's OK to not be OK, but you don't have to stay
stuck.
[00:45:27.52] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Yay. So we're going to end with some
good news. So you each have a chance to share something that you're
celebrating, something positive, something that's just going on. And this was
inspired by John Krasinski. During COVID, he had his SGN show, and it was
always some good news. So who has some good news? Lester, Kristen, what do you
want to end this, "It is what it is" podcast with? What are you
celebrating, Lester?
[00:45:59.50] LESTER LAMINACK: I have a new picture book coming out in
January called A Cat Like That. And the art is done by a fabulous artist named
Nicole Wong. So I'm really excited about that. And then I'm working on some
things, some new picture book projects and a new teacher book project.
[00:46:18.38] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: I can't wait to dive into your
children's books. I have two grandchildren that will love i. And I'm very
excited. So that's worth celebrating. Bravo. Kristen, what do you want-- what
are you celebrating? What's some good news in your world?
[00:46:32.18] KRISTEN LEE: Well, I would just say this. I shared that-- I
had the chance to be with an incredible group of educators this morning. I
think that it's easy to be really disheartened by the level of angst and the
level of mental health acuity. But I think what's incredible, and I'm very
heartened by, is how many leaders and how many people are really trying to
really integrate more social emotional learning approaches. Just I think that
appetite and that collective will has really increased significantly.
[00:47:05.76] And I think a lot of teachers are really interested in how
they can sustain their well-being. And I think there's a tremendous appetite
and need for that. And that kind of just inspires me continually to see the-- I
always say teachers are angels on Earth. It's just incredible.
[00:47:24.99] And sometimes, I think they undervalue themselves or feel
underappreciated. But I think we're really recognizing-- I think even through
the pandemic, I think, we really saw the incredible feats that teachers have to
perform and leaders and staff. And I'm really heartened by that and motivated
to continue to help people look at their habits, look at their mindsets, look
at their beliefs, and put things into action that can really keep them going in
this really vital work. So that energizes me. I am really excited.
[00:47:57.85] CAROL PELLETIER RADFORD: Oh my god, Thank you for this
fabulous, rich conversation on the most challenging topic of the season. So I
appreciate. So to our listeners, thank you for tuning in to this Teacher to
Teacher podcast.
[00:48:11.61] Please share it. Remember to stay inspired, stay healthy. And
don't forget to share your good news with everyone around you.
[00:48:20.97] Thank you, Kristen. Thank you, Lester. And everybody, tune in.
Lesson 7 is titled "Be the Wave." So good bye for now. Thank you
both.
[00:48:32.91] [UPBEAT MUSIC]
[00:48:33.74] MALE ANNOUNCER: Thanks, everyone, for joining today's Teacher
to Teacher conversation. We hope this time together energized you, inspired
you, and reminded you why you chose to become a teacher. You can purchase any
of Carol's books and any books mentioned in the podcast online at
www.corwin.com.
[00:48:50.09] Please leave a review and share this podcast with your
colleagues. Thank you for listening to the Corwin Teacher to Teacher podcast, a
place to share teacher wisdom and engage in authentic conversations with
experienced educators.
[00:49:04.06] FEMALE ANNOUNCER: Come explorer Corwin's free new teacher
toolkit and resources. We've curated these resources based on extensive
research from teachers, coaches, and principals alike. Whether you are brand
new or a veteran teacher, find ready-to-go teaching tools at corwin.com today.
Lester Laminack
Kristen Lee
Carol Pelletier Radford
Carol received her Education Doctorate from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education, where she focused her studies on mentoring and teacher leadership. She is also a certified yoga teacher who practices meditation and shares mindfulness strategies with educators through her online courses and website. Her podcast Teaching With Light features the stories of teachers and inspirational leaders. Her next passion project is the creation of a Teacher Legacy Network, where retired teachers can share their wisdom with the next generation of teachers.
You can learn more about Carol, find free resources, videos, meditations, courses, and all of her books at mentoringinaction.com/.
Twitter: @MentorinAction
Facebook: @MentoringinAction4Teachers
Instagram: @cpradford
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