Flip Flippen visits two Capturing Kids’ Hearts National Showcase Schools in Alaska
Flip Flippen recently made a trek to Alaska to congratulate students, teachers, administrators, and support staff. Joined by Superintendent Gene Stone and Vern Hazard from the Flippen Group, these ‘Founder’s Visits’ took him to two Alaskan schools that received the Capturing Kids’ Hearts National Showcase Schools™ award for 2015-2016. The Mat-Su Borough School District (MSBSD) was proud to claim two of the eleven awarded schools nationwide, Sherrod Elementary School and Wasilla High School.
Since 1990, campuses nationwide have experienced remarkable outcomes with Capturing Kids’ HeartsⓇ tools and processes by creating the socio-emotional safety conducive to learning. Now, through the Showcase Schools awards, Flippen Group is recognizing and celebrating schools that go the extra mile each day, building an environment where students are relationally connected and eager to learn. Flippen Group believes these unsung education heroes, producing exemplary outcomes in schools and paving the way for other schools to follow, need and deserve recognition for a job well done.
Flippen Group, a national professional development provider founded by Flip Flippen in 1990, believes what the research demonstrates – that students are most likely to succeed when they are emotionally safe and able to reconnect with their natural curiosity. Flippen processes provide educators the skills they need to change the trajectory of students’ lives. Openness replaces defensiveness. Judging and feelings of being judged are replaced with acceptance and real connectedness to school.
Sherrod Elementary is located in Palmer, Alaska. Principal Dan Michael expressed the impact of the Capturing Kids’ Hearts® training on their campus: “Capturing Kids’ Hearts has completely changed the culture at Sherrod Elementary. We have always had outstanding teachers at this school. Capturing Kids’ Hearts has taken all of us to the next level in so many ways, all of which are good for kids. The community of Palmer, Alaska is a better place thanks to all that we learned from Capturing Kids’ Hearts.”
After shaking hands and greeting the hundreds of arriving elementary children that morning – a cornerstone of the Capturing Kids’ Hearts process of connecting with kids – Flip toured the school and visited with teachers about their impact on the kids. Making a stop in a few of the classrooms, he was able to talk one-on-one with students and hear them share how important the teachers were to them.
Flip’s second visit was to Wasilla High School, located in Wasilla, Alaska. Wasilla High has 1,100 students, 40% of which qualify for free or reduced lunch. Within the last ten years, local media referred to the school as a “dropout factory” – in 2013, the graduation rate was just 76.14%. The following year, Wasilla sent their entire staff to Capturing Kids’ Hearts and MSBSD Superintendent Gene Stone now reports a 93% graduation rate for the 2015-2016 school year. Stone refers to the importance of a “moral imperative” to offer each student the best education possible. Buy-in and commitment to the Capturing Kids’ Hearts process from teachers, all support staff, and administrators are credited with the school’s dramatic improvements.
This process has improved teacher-student relationships so much that it has offered hope to students who might otherwise feel alone and defeated, and has drastically reduced discipline issues. In a statement from last year’s principal, Amy Spargo, “In a recent survey of the student body, 85% of students named an adult in the building whom they trusted and would go to if something was bothering them, up from 59% in 2014. In addition, our discipline rate is half what it was in 2013.”
While at Wasilla High, Flip visited with administrators, teachers, and students. Prior to addressing a large gathering of 200 student leaders and various school staff in the auditorium, he joined administrators as they stood at the door to shake hands with the entering students. As he spoke to the group, Flip encouraged these students to have courage and integrity. “Integrity without courage is just personal goodness. With courage, personal goodness becomes leadership. There are things worth fighting for.”
As a parting challenge, he asked the crowd, “When I showcase the schools next fall, I want Wasilla High School to be among the leaders. Can you do it? Will you do it? The kids in the rest of the country have never seen anything like Alaska, so I want you to show them what you can do.”
For more information on the Capturing Kids’ Hearts process or to learn more about the Capturing Kids’ Hearts National Showcase School awards, contact us at 1-800-316-4311 or info@flippengroup.com.