Friday Four + 1 for 9/30

 

 

Critical Thinking, Collaboration and Engagement

Here are this week’s Friday Four (+1) interesting articles/blog posts/web resources I ran across that you might find interesting.

  1. Nice blog post from a colleague who attended a Professional Development conference by The Critical Thinking Consortium.
  2. The case for collaboration and connected networks on the Connected Principals Blog. I have been wanting to create a PLN for folks at LC….now may be the time to get it going….who wants in? Let me know.
  3. Ten Steps to Better Student Engagement. Piece on the Edutopia website that provides practical tips for teachers of all disciplines.
  4. Scripted Creation Isn’t Creation, It’s Assembly. Blog post by 21st Century Educator for anybody who uses student projects in their classes.
  5. Getting Specific about Critical Thinking. Nice piece on the Education Week website that explores what it means to teach “critical thinking” in the classroom.

 

 

The Friday Four

In a recent conversation with my Head of School, Sheila Culbert (@loomissheila), we came up with what I think is a good idea. Hopefully, you will agree! As the director of the Kravis Center for Excellence in Teaching, I am responsible for a significant portion of the ongoing professional development at my school and am always looking for ways to get interesting blog posts or articles about education out to our faculty. Not all of them are avid Twitter users (not yet at least!) so they do not see many of the resources that I tweet out on a fairly regular basis.

What if I composed a brief weekly missive every Friday that included four of the most interesting items that I ran across during the past week? Sounded like a good idea to me. In addition to e-mailing my weekly “Friday Four” to my colleagues, I plan on posting them here on my blog in case there are others out there who might be interested. So here is my first installment of the “Friday Four”.

  1. Recent blog post by Grant Wiggins about what constitutes effective feedback. Some of you may know Grant from his work with Jay McTighe on Understanding by Design.
  2. NYT piece by Paul Tough “What if the Secret to Success Is Failure?” Very interesting piece on the topic of “character” and predictors of long-term student success.
  3. Blog post at Connected Principles on homework. A favorite topic of discussion these days!
  4. Review of one of my favorite reads from this past summer. Daniel Willingham’s book “Why Don’t Students Like School: A Cognitive Scientist Answers Questions About How the Mind Works and What It Means for the Classroom”

I hope you will take a few moments to check out these items and pass them along to any of your colleagues.

My take on the issues

There has been a great deal written lately about technology in the classrooms, teacher accountability and school reform. Actually, it is pretty challenging to keep up with all of the reports, articles, books and blog posts not to mention the discussion occurring each and every day on Twitter. I have done my best to read as much as I possibly can and, more importantly, to reflect on the ideas and how they impact me as both a teacher and as a resource for the faculty at my school. Before I share my thoughts, here is a partial list of the things I have read recently that have influenced me:

I have been trying to see and make the connections between all of these sources of information and come up with some conclusions. Here are a few that I have come to thus far.

  • Teachers need a better understanding of the most recent research into learning and the brain. Cognitive science has really just begun to understand how the brain works and its impacts on teaching and learning. I have attended several Learning and the Brain conferences in the past year and found them to be quite enlightening. The confluence of cognitive science, research and teaching is hugely important and has not been exploited by enough teachers.
  • Technology by itself is definitely NOT the solution. Teaching 21st century skills and using the most current technologies in the classroom are not a matter of simply putting the technology in the teachers’ hands. SIGNIFICANT teacher training and support are critical if new technologies are going to have a positive impact on the students and their learning. Teachers need to get together and collaborate about ways to incorporate new technologies into the curriculum. This takes time and support from the administrators in a school.
  • Good teachers and good teaching are the most important factors when it comes to student learning. Good teachers are not born, they are made through constant professional development and training in a system that values life long learning and models it each and every day. Schools need to create a culture where the craft of teaching is constantly being evaluated and improved upon.
  • A quality teacher evaluation and professional development program needs to be central to the mission of the school. Self-reflection, peer evaluation and support, ongoing training and mentoring are cornerstones of a quality program. For the program to be effective, it must not focus solely on new teachers. Veteran teachers need as much support and professional development as those new to the profession.
  • The one area where I am still uncertain is how to actually measure “success.” I am not convinced that standardized test scores are the solution. Coming up with dependable assessment tools is no easy task to be certain. I am still looking for the answer to this piece and would welcome any suggestions or thoughts you may have on the topic.

I guess that is enough for my Labor day mind dump. Thoughts?

How can I help?

In a few short days, I will be working with the new faculty at my school, Loomis Chaffee, as part of the new faculty orientation program. I have been doing a great deal of thinking about what would be the best use of their time and what I should focus on and “do” with them as they join our community. Most of my new colleagues have had some teaching experience so they are not completely new to the profession, but a few of them are brand new on the scene and have never been in a classroom other than as a student. As I thought back to new faculty orientation before my first teaching job, I realized that I did not get much guidance at all and was pretty much left on my own to figure out what to teach and how to teach it. Pretty scary actually! I am committed to making sure my new colleagues do not have an experience like I did 25 years ago.

I have been inspired by a number of blog posts from members of my PLN (Steven Anderson, Grant Wiggins, Lyn Hilt) recently having to do with the fundamental questions of

  • Why do I teach?
  • How can I improve as a teacher?
  • How can I best help my colleagues to become better teachers?

I have shared a few of Grant’s most recent posts with the new faculty prior to our orientation training and I am thinking about showing them the following video clip that I first saw in a post from Lyn Hilt:

 

I did send the new faculty a brief google form to fill out asking them what they were most excited and anxious about prior to the start of school and asked them to give me suggestions for topics they wanted me to address when we met. As those thoughts come in, I may tweek what I do, but so far my plan includes the following:

  • Establishing a PLN. I want to get them all hooked in with Twitter at the very least and will add them to a circle in Google+ so that they will always have a network of support available to them. I also plan on giving them a quick overview of some of the other PLN resources out there that I use. These include but are not limited to: Project PLN, The Flipped Classroom, Educator’s PLN, Classroom 2.0.
  • Lesson planning. In the past I have had the new faculty experience a lesson as students in my classroom. I ran a 45 minute class and they got to be the students. After the 45 minutes, we dissected the lesson as teachers. I shared with them the planning I had done prior to the lesson and what I would do going forward given what I learned as the teacher. In the past, this activity has generated wonderful discussion about a whole range of topics including assessment, homework, pacing and differentiated instruction to name a few. Being able to switch out of teacher mode for 45 minutes has been a relief for them as well given all that they have had to endure during the past few days.

I have limited time so I do not want to try and cram too much into the time I do have with them. If I am successful in getting them to establish and utilize their PLN, I will have plenty of help!

Thoughts? Suggestions?

New teacher PD

In a couple of weeks, I will be working with the new teachers at my school during their orientation. Most of them are novice teachers or have been only teaching for a year or two. I have about 3.5 hours total time with them broken up into two different sessions. I have some ideas for what I would like to do with them based on what I did last year that was well received and some new ideas to try as well. Here are some of my thoughts…

  • Establishing a personal learning network (PLN). I would like to encourage all of the new faculty to see/use Twitter as a wonderful opportunity for professional development (PD). The Educator’s PLN and Classroom 2.0 will also be on my list of suggested resources.
  • Formative assessment (FA) techniques. I am a big fan and user of “clickers” (Student Response Systems) in my classroom and want new teachers to think about a variety of ways that they can assess where their students are as they come to master new concepts. One of my favorite descriptions of FA is: “Assessment FOR learning not OF learning.” I do not remember where I picked this up, but I like it. Of course, one key piece in FA is what the teacher DOES with the information he/she learns. Knowing that the students are struggling with an abstract concept and knowing what to do next are not one and the same.
  • Backwards Design approach to lesson planning. I have run a typical lesson with the new faculty as the students and then deconstructed the lesson from the perspective of the teacher, explaining how I planned the lesson, activities and assessments along the way. This has been well received in the past by the new faculty and generated a great deal of discussion about lesson planning. On a side note, Grant Wiggins, one of the “inventors” of backwards design happens to be a fellow alum of Loomis Chaffee and former faculty member. I was lucky enough to moderate a panel with him and a few other fellow educators at Reunion weekend this past June.

What do you think are the most important topics to include during orientation for new teachers? Please share your ideas and thoughts. Thanks!

Drinking from the fire hose

I have always tried to expand my teaching repertoire by reading as many articles and resources as I could find and talking with colleagues at my school and at conferences. I have enjoyed presenting at numerous NABT and NSTA conferences for the past 20 years on a variety of topics.  In the past few years, I have joined a few list serves related to science teaching, followed a number of blogs regularly and continued to try and stay “current.” This past year I began a new phase of my career as the first Director of the Henry R. Kravis Center for Excellence in Teaching (KCET) at the Loomis Chaffee School. Essentially, I am responsible for a lion’s share of the on-campus professional development at the school. (more background on the 1st year of the KCET in future post) As a result of my new responsibilities, I stepped up my personal PD by becoming an active user of Twitter as part of my PLN. The explosion in my own professional development that has occurred has exceeded my expectations by orders of magnitude.  I have found myself taking part in many online chats such as #edchat #flipclass #apbio #scichat and following some incredibly interesting people and discovering some wonderful resources that will definitely help me and my colleagues at LC. My only worry is that it feels a little like drinking from a fire hose at this point. There is so much stuff coming at me that I can find myself overwhelmed at times. Good thing it is still the summer when I can spend an entire morning checking out people’s blogs and following links from Twitter. All things considered…not a bad problem to have I guess!