I was at a meeting of new staff and interns and as we wrapped up the meeting our principal asked us to go over the Common Principles of the Coalition of Essential Schools. No one was familiar enough to come up with more than one and she was clearly disappointed. I have been studying the principles since then. The seventh principle stresses the value of “unanxious anticipation” which is described as an attitude of “I won’t threaten you, but I expect much of you.” This principle resonated with my interpretation of the “Right is Right” technique in Teach Like a Champion. “Right is Right” says to “Set and defend a high standard of correctness in your classroom.” Teach Like a Champion goes on to say:
In holding out for right, you set the expectation that the questions you ask and their answers truly matter. You show that you believe your students are capable of getting answers as right as students anywhere else. You show the difference between the facile and the scholarly. This faith in the quality of a right answer sends a powerful message to your students that will guide them long after they have left your classroom.
In other words you are fulfilling the seventh Common Principle and saying “ I expect much of you.”