Reaching for the Reins: Stories of At-Risk Students Empowered by Serving Others Through Equine Therapy
By Tara Carlsen
()
About this ebook
Tara Carlsen wanted to help at-risk students learn without relying on stale, clinical teaching methods. Instead of trying to find solutions in the classroom, the mathematics teacher transplanted failing students from an alternative high school to a horse ranch. There, she encouraged them to reach for the reins, and she witnessed dramatic results.
Students who could not relate to their peers or teachers could relate to horsesand suddenly their futures looked a whole lot brighter. Carlsen and her students proceeded to take an inspiring journey, learning the basics of horsemanship through equine-assisted learninga therapeutic approach to interpersonal development using horse-related activities.
After learning the basics, the students taught peers with special needs what theyd learned, drawing upon their own struggles and triumphs to help them achieve success. Punctuated with humor, heartbreak, and hard-won triumph, Reaching for the Reins chronicles the struggles and successes of these students over five years.
Tara Carlsen
Tara Carlsen has a bachelor’s degree in secondary education and a master’s in education leadership. She teaches mathematics at an alternative public high school in southwest Michigan, where she lives with her husband and horse. This is her first book.
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Reaching for the Reins - Tara Carlsen
REACHING
FOR THE
REINS
Stories of At-Risk Students Empowered by Serving
Others through Equine Therapy
Tara Carlsen
iUniverse LLC
Bloomington
Reaching for the Reins
Stories of At-Risk Students Empowered by
Serving Others through Equine Therapy
Copyright © 2013 Tara Carlsen.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
iUniverse books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:
iUniverse
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.iuniverse.com
1-800-Authors (1-800-288-4677)
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
ISBN: 978-1-4917-0727-2 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4917-0728-9 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4917-0729-6 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2013916111
iUniverse rev. date: 10/18/2013
For my students, with gratitude, for your honesty over the past six years. Your raw emotions and growth have warmed my heart. I admire your courage and willingness to be vulnerable in sharing your inspiring stories with others.
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Reaching for the Reins
Chapter 2: How Wisdom Saved Derek
Chapter 3: Strength That Lies Deep
Chapter 4: Shining Bright
Chapter 5: Love Will Never Fail
Chapter 6: Remember Your Courage
Chapter 7: A Safe Place
Chapter 8: Darkness to Light
Chapter 9: Moments along the Way
Chapter 10: Mending Fences
Chapter 11: The Hero
Chapter 12: Mariah Nate Fund
Chapter 13: A Chicken Horse
Chapter 14: Never Forget This Place
Chapter 15: Spreading Joy
Chapter 16: Sit Tall in the Saddle
Chapter 17: Climbing Life’s Ladders
Chapter 18: Growing Together
Chapter 19: The Gathering Place
Chapter 20: Through Sarah’s Eyes
Chapter 21: Wisdom’s Struggle with Anger
Chapter 22: To … Fly
Chapter 23: More Than Playing with Ponies
Epilogue
About the Author
Foreword
I remember the day Tara Carlsen came to me with an idea. She was a young, idealistic teacher. This idea has blossomed into something extraordinary—a life-changing, service-learning program that has had an amazing impact on the lives of students with unique abilities and challenges.
I’ve known Tara for eight years. She is an excellent teacher and motivator of students. What I know now is that she is also an innovator—someone with passion to help our students become the best people they can be through service learning.
The book you are about to read will inspire you, motivate you, and move you to perhaps do something to be the one person that positively impacts someone’s life. The students you will read about are real; I know them well. The stories are real, and the emotions that they evoke will stay with you. So be prepared to read about the importance of how our actions can help another person grow and what we can learn about ourselves through working with horses. This important book will prove that when we help others, we truly help ourselves.
Rich Klemm, director of nontraditional education
for Niles Community Schools
Preface
About two years ago, I started to take stock of what my students and I were accomplishing through the Reaching for the Reins program. I had just finished my master’s degree in educational leadership at Ferris State University, and I was astounded that the educational world was not yet taking full advantage of what service learning had to offer students. As I looked back at the tremendous growth I had seen from my students, I knew it was time to share their success. After teaching in alternative education for eight years and running four extensive semester and yearlong service-learning programs, I can attest that students’ personal growth through the process catapults them to a widened horizon of possibilities and goals as they graduate and move into life beyond high school. My goal in sharing these stories is to inspire you to implement service in your life, school, church, and community.
Acknowledgments
A special thanks to our volunteers, whose selfless dedication over the last six years has made the program the success it has been. To Cal and Sue for opening up their hearts and home to us; Aimee for her artistic eye; Jewel for all the little things; Gina for always making time for us; Kara and Dawn for having a big heart; Nanci for singing us a theme; Pat for recognizing our potential from the beginning; Joan and Ronda for their willingness to listen and make us laugh; Jennie, Hannah, and Autumn for sharing their horses; Wally and Christy for sharing their stories; and Cindy for her unique insight of horses. To all the others whom I have overlooked, thank you for your support.
To the numerous grant companies and a very dear friend, without whose generous contributions to the program these events would not have occurred and these stories could not have been told. Thanks to the Gateway Foundation, the Schalon Foundation, TEAM (Teens Exhibiting Able Minds) Foundation Youth Advisory Committee, Phoenix Fund, Heart of Cook, Flamingo Fund, local businesses, and individuals (anonymous). Your philanthropy has helped change our little corner of this world, one child and horse at a time.
To my incredible husband, Brendan, who humored my vision and spent countless hours editing and reediting and re-reediting, and whose literary creativity infused this endeavor with a life of its own. Your tireless dedication was the deciding factor in this book’s creation.
Finally, I want to thank God for his endless and often subtle blessings. Reaching for the Reins is a true testament to answered prayer in my life. I have seen God’s hand in many moments at the farm and have felt his direction in planning and securing funding. There have been many times where I was unsure of what to do next, and my answer was to surrender it to him, and he has on every occasion guided me through the next step.
Chapter 1
Reaching for the Reins
I believe every great teacher starts as a student who had a great teacher. In my experience I encountered two of these great teachers. I met Mr. D in seventh grade. Up to that point, I had come to recognize that school didn’t come without a hard-won effort. Throughout my grade school years I struggled with academics. Mr. D showed me that I was capable of accomplishing anything to which I applied myself. He did not disguise that I would have to work harder than my peers, but he taught me that with motivation and hard work comes the joy of success. With this perspective, I applied myself with a tenacity that eventually led me to my second great teacher.
My introduction to Ms. K occurred toward the end of my bachelor’s degree in an education methods class at Western Michigan University. Her approach to defining the boundaries of education blurred the lines between standardization and abstraction. Ms. K possessed a rare view of education that allowed her to see her teaching from the perspective of those most affected by it—her students. During one of her classes, she told a story that forever changed the way I solve problems as an educator.
One evening while cooking dinner, her year-old daughter began fussing as she played on the kitchen floor. Instead of becoming frustrated with her, Ms. K got down on the floor and looked at the situation from her young daughter’s eyes. She noticed that from her daughter’s perspective, the only stimuli in the child’s world were the drab cabinet doors and Mommy’s feet scurrying about the room. Her solution was to remove a few of the cabinet doors and install a fish tank at floor height. As I transitioned from being a student to a teacher, I always told myself that I wanted to instill motivation in my students and use the fish tank philosophy for solving problems.
In August 2005, I married my high school sweetheart and started teaching mathematics at Cedar Lane Alternative High School less than a week later. My induction into the world of teaching was swift and clarifying. As I walked into class the first day, I was greeted by two of my students comparing ankle tether bracelets, each bragging about the distance they could travel without setting it off. This was my introduction both to education and alternative education. When I reflect back on this, I’m truly grateful for this context, as it provided a shock that I naturally associated with the term alternative.
The word means a million different things to a million different people. In the context of education, it might only mean five or six things to a million different people. It is with this understanding that I’ll explain what my eight years of teaching these remarkable students has taught me about who alternative students are and what they’re capable of when pulled back from the cracks they’ve been allowed to slip through.
Cedar Lane
Cedar Lane Alternative High School was established in 1990 as an alternative means for students who don’t fit into the traditional high school to obtain their high school diplomas. Perhaps the most notable difference between alternative education and a traditional education is that alternative education attracts a broader spectrum of students whose difficulty assimilating into a general education format challenges their ability to obtain an equitable education. It is this quality that gives them a unique commonality with each other, an alternative perspective on how they might most effectively interact in their education.
Our students come from exceptionally diverse backgrounds. Some of the circumstances surrounding their journeys to Cedar Lane involve the death of a parent or parents, living in foster care, parental abandonment and complications from living with family members, health issues, rape, poverty, trouble with the law, and pregnancy and parenthood. For many of these students merely getting by from day to day is a struggle. Although all schools are comprised of students who come from these circumstances, Cedar Lane serves approximately ninety of the surrounding districts’ hard-luck students who fall into at least one (and usually multiples) of these categories.
The vision of Cedar Lane is to help students earn their diploma and encourage them to integrate into their communities in a positive way. The school’s mission statement is to ensure that every student
• succeeds academically;
• gains knowledge and skills needed to be a responsible, productive citizen; and
• appreciates one’s self and others.
The Cedar Lane staff has worked extraordinarily hard over the years to not only meet state and national education requirements in unique ways that best serve the diverse student population but to also instill in the students a greater sense of community involvement and self-worth. Over the past eight years, the staff and students have revamped existing community outreach initiatives as well as having developed new ones. The Reaching for the Reins program was started in the 2007−08 school year to promote community service, and in the same year Cedar Lane spearheaded a Niles Gives Big donation drive that raised $70,000 in goods, services, and cash for a local family in need. These innovations turned the tables on what most people came to expect from an alternative high school. Instead of focusing on student inequalities, the school decided to embrace their challenges and, despite all odds, reach out to the community in big ways. Cedar Lane’s and Niles Adult Education’s accomplishments were recognized at the Michigan Association of Community and Adult Education award ceremony in 2008, where the school received the Program of the Year award for the state of Michigan. Yet even more rewarding than the award itself, the staff were able to announce that a record number of 2008 graduates were attending post-high-school training programs and college, more than at any previous time in the school’s history.
With such success, one might think Cedar Lane is a state-of-the-art facility with the latest curriculum aids and cutting-edge technology. This could not be further from the truth. The Cedar Lane campus is comprised of a small brick building that served as the community elementry school in the 1960s. This building is called the main building and houses two classrooms, the facility’s restrooms, and a computer lab/lunchroom, which is made up of hand-me-down computers from around the district. The rest of the campus is made up of four portable trailers, three of which are classrooms and the fourth of which is the office. Recently, grant monies were secured to update classroom technology to include Apple classroom projectors, and the district provided the school with four new student computers that are set up for students to create graphic arts projects.
Materital things and techology, though, are not what make an effective classroom. What makes Cedar Lane a success is people—not just the dedicated staff who work together to ensure the best is offered each day to each student, but also the students themselves. Many of their backgrounds are inconceivable and most have been told or led to believe that they will not graduate and will never amount to anything in life. It is the courage and persistence of these students, each of whom decided to start over at Cedar Lane and use the opportunity to work hard to meet their goals, which make the school successful.
My Journey
When I started my teaching career, I did not understand my students as I do now. Like most people, I was excited to get a job right out of college and was eager and willing to learn. Over the course of my college education, I was indoctrinated with the knowledge that my first year of teaching would be crazy, but none of those warnings could have prepared me for the experience. There is an extremely high emotional and physical toll as you slog through your first real-world experience creating course outlines, developing lesson plans, conducting parent-teacher conferences, dealing with classroom management, and a whole array of other unanticipated firsts—all this while futilely trying as a new teacher to implement the multitude of strategies you spent five years of college learning about, only to discover their implementation in the real world is at times impossible, and is a far cry from the effective methods your textbooks boasted they would be.
It was not until my second year that I was finally able to figure it out
and get beyond mere survival. For a teacher, this accomplishment brings a sense of ecstasy. This is, however, short-lived, as the real truth of the matter invariably dawns on you: you will never figure everything out, and it will never be smooth sailing. Teaching, despite its many eventual successes, is saddled with an equal number of failures and is frequently characterized by the struggle of coming to terms with many new and unique challenges on a daily basis. Yet, in my opinion, the expectation of new adventures lingering around the corner is precisely what keeps teaching meaningful and challenging and inspires the pursuit. I say pursuit because that is exactly how it feels to me—like I am chasing new concepts of how to engage my students to learn more and become active participants.
After two years I eventually settled into my role and began to gain an understanding of which methods were most effective in teaching math to a group of disengaged and rambunctious teens. It was only then that I realized math was only a small part of what my students needed. My obligation to them did not merely start and end each day in the classroom but extended well beyond that into a very real, very adult world they would soon be thrust into, ready or not. In them I recognized a need to learn responsibility, to have a place in a community, and to learn to work as a team, along with an array of other things I did not feel my math classroom could offer them. To this end, we started doing projects to tie the math they were learning back to real-world applications. But despite this, I knew they needed something more substantial, more outside the box. This is where I sat down on the kitchen floor and tried to come up with my own fish tank strategy for reaching these kids.
How Horses Came into Play
The evolution of Reaching for the Reins can very easily be traced back to a childhood fondness for horses. For about fifteen consecutive years, my family vacationed a week every summer at Camp Au Sable, a Christian family camp in Grayling, Michigan. My friend Sarah’s family lived about four hours north of where I grew up in southwestern Michigan, and because we infrequently saw each other during the regular course of a year, our families vacationed together each summer. It was at camp where the two of us fell irrecoverably in love with horses. Most of the pictures of the two of us involved horses, cowboy boots, and cowboy hats, and our letters to each other throughout the year always included our hopes of new horse adventures. When I was in sixth grade, my family moved from the city into the country and bought two horses, one a fifteen-hand black-and-white appaloosa gelding named Shadow and the other a thirteen-hand buckskin pony named Nacho, who became my buddy. I fondly recall finding peace with Nacho throughout my own tumultuous teenage years, whether hanging out in the shed or