Chasing Bailey

The question of a school’s “success” is the thread underlying this entire podcast – and the specific target we aim at today by listening to the voice and experience of four representative Bailey students.

Show Notes

 
The question of a school’s “success” is the thread underlying this entire podcast – and the specific target we aim at today by listening to the voice and experience of four representative Bailey students.   In the face of all we could put in the basket of “learning loss,” the educators at Bailey reconstructed their interactions and their expectations to experience success for themselves and their students …. Yes, success (or at least substantial improvement) in test scores, but success understood far more broadly and deeply to incorporate mental health, social and emotional capacity, academic achievement, and growth in intelligence.   
 
Listen to four Bailey students speak for themselves about why they were there, what they remember, and how they have made their way – with stories still very much being told.   Success for these young adults is not so much about achievement understood in test-based terms as about who these young people are and why we might feel good about who the Bailey students have become and are still becoming.  You will meet Damisha, Brandon, Maia, and Zee, all in their early 20s.   As you’ll see, their stories differ but what they share is that Bailey, a middle school, was a place where they experienced both love and limits.  It felt to them like a place where they could grow and develop.   
 
 
00:00  A meditation on “success” in school  Barbara Stengel
04:50   Introduction,  Barbara Stengel
06:03   Damisha Hanserd, transfer from KIPP and East, who stayed through 8th grade
                        The power of Black teachers
                        Getting in trouble and academic achievement
                        Education at Bailey better than East
                        Juggling college, the pandemic, and responsibility as a mom
                        Bailey shaped me
17:31   Brandon Tok, transfer from Rutherford County, who spent his 8th grade year
                        From the “best” high school, leaving college for a family business
                        Diversity among students at Bailey
                        Influential, even “life-saving,” teachers
                        Parental presence matters
                        Bailey’s social impact
31:00   Maia Black, arrived in 6th grade and left after 7th
                        “Trouble” moved her to Bailey
                        Athletics as a form of self-discipline
                        Student diversity at Bailey
                        Teachers wanting to understand
                        Admin working together for student success
                        All that Bailey had to offer                 
47:25   Zionna Jennings, at Bailey before the Sawyer/Jasper era
                        When people believed in me
                        On my own and overwhelmed
                        Love and limits – and a new family
                        Mental health in disadvantaged communities
                        Bailey as a school community for “student teachers”
                        (Not) Reaching for the stars
64:20   Wrap-up and lead in to Bailey’s being closed  Barbara Stengel, Christian Sawyer
 
In this seventh episode, there are references to a variety of social, educational and historical news and commentary. You can find sources to find out more about these at our website:  www.chasingbaileypod.com.

Chasing Bailey is hosted and narrated by Dr. Barbara Stengel, Vanderbilt University.
 
This episode was edited and co-produced by Brenna Fallon.   The executive producer is Dr. Lowery Woodall, Millersville University of Pennsylvania.
 
Our theme music is Midnight Blues by lemonmusicstudio.  Occasional music for this episode includes Soul Food by Chris Haugen and Good Friends by Caffeine Creek Band.
 
New episodes will drop on the last day of the month.  You can find us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon, and Stitcher, and nearly anywhere else you find your podcasts.
 
If you appreciate what you hear, please subscribe to Chasing Bailey, leave us a review, share with your friends by word of mouth, and post on social media.   Follow us on
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More information will be available at www.chasingbaileypod.com/home. We look forward to your comments and questions at Chasingbaileypod@gmail.com.
 

What is Chasing Bailey?

Chasing Bailey is a podcast about a group of teachers, leaders, and others who dedicated themselves to changing the fortunes of a failing middle school in Nashville TN from 2012 to 2016.
They succeeded, but their achievement was bittersweet.
In 2016, the district closed that school.
Still, those who were there knew they had stumbled onto something special, some important educational truths that might help all of us find our way out of the morass that COVID 19 has left us in.