Wednesday, August 1, 2012

It's August - Hold Onto Your Hats!!!

I am learning all the time. The tombstone will be my diploma. ~Eartha Kitt
Despite it still being "summer vacation", August 1st brings the busyness for me. There are so many wonderful opportunities this month for my own personal and professional growth. My Google Calendar is full (often double-booked) but I am excited about each opportunity to learn and implement this new knowledge into my life.

1. Author Laurie Halse Anderson has her 5th annual "Write 15 Minutes A Day Challenge!" As an English teacher, this thought invigorates me. I do not take enough time and effort in my busy schedule to write - either for professional or personal purposes. This challenge will encourage me to write and hopefully will give me the writing energy needed to keep going into the school year. Check out her blog for more details. http://madwomanintheforest.com/wfmad-day-1-welcome-to-the-write-fifteen-minutes-a-day-challenge/

2. It is CONNECTED EDUCATORS MONTH!!! "The U.S. Department of Education’s Connected Educators initiative is launching Connected Educator Month in August 2012. Throughout August, there will be coordinated opportunities to participate in events and activities in dozens of online locations to develop skills and enhance one’s personal learning network." Included are a number of webinars, renowned keynote speakers and panelists, book clubs, and other opportunities for teachers to connect. I will be attending a number of their offerings and tweeting about them using hashtag #ce12. Check it out at http://connectededucators.org/cem/.

3. On August 3, I will attend a webinar from the Powerful Learning Practice on Project Based Learning. I am toying with implementing some project based learning into my AP English Literature class, but want to learn more. I am very excited about this webinar. Check it out at http://plpnetwork.com/2012/07/26/free-webinar-project-based-learning-2/.

4. I am considering using Edmodo in my classroom and want to learn about this resource more. So, I will attend Edmodocon on August 8. During this day teachers will share and inspire by telling how they have successfully used Edmodo in the classroom. Again this is a free day of learning. Learn more at http://www.edmodocon.com/.

5. For the third year, I will be attending WillowCreek's Global Leadership Summit on August 9-10. I attend at my church, Bethel - the Church at Franklin Mills (www.fmchurch.net). This summit brings together various leaders from both the Christian and secular communities. This year's featured faculty includes Condeleezza Rice, Jim Collins, Geoffrey Canada, John Ortberg, and Patrick Lencioni. More information available at http://www.willowcreek.com/events/leadership/. I will also be tweeting about my learning there and you can follow the summit by following @wcagls.

6. I will be attending various free webinars through SimpleK12. Some of the topics I will be learning about include: How Admins can Model, Motivate, and Manage with Mobile Devices; Google Apps for Streamlining Tasks: An Administrator's Guide; Innovative Professional Development. These webinars are short and provide wonderful resources for me to implement and/or share. Check out their resources at www.simplek12.com. Follow them on twitter at #sk12.

So, as you see, my August is filled with personal and professional development opportunities. I am beyond excited!!! I challenge you to check into these or other learning opportunities to further develop your own personal and professional lives.

Happy Learning!!!




Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Attempting to Break the Stereotype

You've heard the jokes and been privy to the stereotypes. If you want an "easy" job, become a teacher so you get to have a million vacations and summers off.

I do not fit into the stereotype. Rather I'm counting down to the beginning of the school year.

Granted, with the first day of school comes a limited freedom for me and exceptional more work. I enjoy my summers with my two children. I use much of my summer to educate myself attending various webinars and reading a plethora of articles.  I take pleasure in being able to sleep later than the sunrise and indulge in a television show here or there.

However, my teacher-heart lives for the 180 days I get to interact with teachers and students in the hallways and classrooms. The end-of-summer advertised school supply specials make me feel invigorated. Something about starting with a clean slate for both the teacher and student exhilarates me.

In the ten years I've been an educator, I have encountered a number in the profession who view the summer vacation as a time to recharge, reflect, and renew just like me. The 2 months off are a great time to improve in the craft of teaching. Unfortunately, I have met plenty of other types of teachers who live from one vacation/break to the next simply enduring the teaching days in between. In my opinion, this attitude will impact the classrooms involved in spreading a general negativity.

Is there anything I can do as an educational leader to help encourage the drive and desire to grow and change and then enjoy the days of teaching? What steps can be taken to make school fun for both teachers and students? How can we change the stereotype the world has about the education profession? What can we do to ensure that the students become life-long learners?

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

If You Don't Feed the Teachers, They Eat the Students!

For the past four summers, I have read the same book. It is my go-to book for self-evaluation and reassessment as a school administrator. If You Don't Feed the Teachers, They Eat the Students! by Neila A. Connors, Ph.D. allows me to accomplish both of these tasks. The premise of the book is that administrators need to be active in their encouragement and nurturing of teachers or the entire school and student body will suffer.

If You Don't Feed the Teachers They Eat the Students: Guide to Success for Administrators and Teachers (Kids' Stuff)
By way of a "book review" I will say that Connors is a creative writer, always connecting her concepts back to a restaurant environment. The advice is very practical yet poignant. There are times I feel that Connors tries too hard to force the restaurant theme by creating acronyms for everything. The fact that there is a glossary for the acronyms is evidence that there may be too many. However, since I've read the book now four times, I obviously value the messages therein.

During this summer's reading, I came to several realizations. 
1. I am only responsible for myself. I cannot change the overall vision or mission of the school where I work. I cannot change every aspect of how things are done. However, I can change my outlook, attitude, and the way I personally do my job.
2. I need to hold true to what I personally value as I interact with the teachers in our school rather than allowing my frustrations and busyness to interfere.

While reevaluating my role and job, I set eight goals for the 2012-2013 school year. Many of these are frequent goals for several years, but I need to put forth more energy into accomplishing them and remaining consistent.
1. Spend more time in the classrooms and hallways... less time in my office.
2. Find creative ways to encourage the teachers and staff for a job well done.
3. Plan at least two fun faculty outings during the school year.
4. Take time to care for myself - physically, spiritually, emotionally, mentally.
5. Find 2-3 manageable meaningful tasks to complete each day.
6. Communicate more often and more clearly with faculty and staff.
7. Create (and abide by) a personal organization plan.
8. Schedule on the first day of every month a time to reflect on my goals and accomplishments from the previous month. Then adjust! 

Fellow administrators - I highly encourage you to read this book. What are some of your goals for the upcoming school year?


Saturday, July 7, 2012

Test Scores

Well, the scores are in. All five of my AP English Literature students passed the exam with a 3 or higher. I am very proud of them and quite relieved.

I admit I've had butterflies in my stomach leading up to the release of scores. Which got me thinking...

I am blessed that my job does not depend upon my students' scores. But what if, like so many educators in schools around this nation, it did?

I attempted to prepare my students for the exam as much as humanly possible. I admit it was difficult at times due to several factors: scheduling, the constant fight against senioritis, and an overall relaxed academic environment. I pushed, and they pushed back. When test day came, I knew what scores each student was most capable of receiving, but I couldn't enter the exam room with them. They were on their own.

When there are so many factors, why is it that the value of teachers is solely judged by test scores? I long for a change in the system that puts the needs of students first and judges the teacher by various criterion...which includes test scores but also encompasses so much more. Any human being would want to be judged on more than just one aspect of a job, position, interaction, etc. Teachers deserve an opportunity to prove themselves in various ways.

Monday, June 25, 2012

The Transition...

I have now been in education for 10 years. I feel like I live the movie Groundhog Day over and over each June for all 10 of those years. The transition is horrible.

Let me explain....

For 10 months, the educator works 40-60 hours per week lesson planning, grading, teaching, serving in lunch duty and recess, and so much more. This does not even begin to capture the emotional hours educators put in from Sept-June. You know what I mean... the issues that wake you up at 3am and continue with no clear-cut solutions. 

Now it is mid-June and life as you know it has come to a screeching halt. All of a sudden, you are on summer vacation. There is a to-do list a mile long. After all, the house hasn't been cleaned sufficiently in 10 months, moldy food is in the fridge, a ton of household projects have been waiting for summer to arrive, and the kids are home and bored so put on my entertainer hat. In addition, at the end of each unit I teach, I add it to my summer to-do list to refine it. Throughout administration meetings, I keep a list of "future admin projects" and plan on fleshing out details while on summer break.

However, instead of accomplishing anything, I find myself sitting on the couch doing a bunch of nothing.

If I was content on the couch that would be one thing. However, I feel guilty for not doing something! After all, I've been doing "something" constantly for 10 months. So for the first 1-2 weeks of summer break for the past 10 years, I feel like I'm in a period of melancholy as I adjust. It has taken me 10 years to put into words how I feel each June. I doubt I'm alone. If you are in my boat, take heart is knowing there are other educators who feel the same. There is hope too. The melancholy days end and the to-do list begins to be accomplished. I never get everything checked off the list, but I make a huge dent... eventually, once July hits. 


"All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another." ~Anatole France

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Paperless!

I know I'm not the swiftest with technology, but I'm a willing learner. I am just beginning to find out all that Google Docs can do and have proposed to my fellow administrators that we begin to go the route of "paperless". The constant copying, recopying for the students who lose forms, and shuffling of said papers wastes plenty of time and money. We will begin to utilize Google Docs for certain communication and forms. Right now I am thinking of converting coverage request forms for teachers, end of the year checklist for teachers, and perhaps some lateness or disciplinary forms over to Google Docs (specifically forms). Is your school going paperless? If so, what ways have you found this concept to work? What problems have you run into? I'd love to hear feedback of those who are further down the road.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Collaborating in the AP English Literature classroom

I've always had a dream of connecting my English classrooms with other classrooms around the country or world. When I began teaching in 2002, the thought of pen pals on the other side of the world was always on my mind, but I never had the time to pursue this project.

Now, 10 years later, I am in the classroom again teaching AP English Literature. My dream of connecting and collaborating with another similarly leveled class somewhere outside Philadelphia remains. With the internet, skype, twitter, facebook, etc., I imagine the resources are plentiful to make this dream a reality.

Despite knowing that the dream is within reach, I return to square one for some reflective grounding.

1. Why would I consider doing this project?
               I firmly believe our students are "connecting" more with others via social media. Our world is not nearly as small as it was when I was in high school in 1997. However, are our students able to effectively present an opinion or depth of thought while connecting and collaborating? So often, our superficial communication contains messaging lingo and abbreviations that do not prove that we are intelligent human beings in the least.

2. What would I desire to connect/collaborate about?
               One element I find lacking in the AP English Literature students is their depth of reading. Sometimes they only read what is required in their school classes. If they read for fun, they read YA (not that there is anything wrong with that!) I would love to have a virtual bookshelf where my students (7 are scheduled for my class this coming year) could post intelligently about a book they read - perhaps examining theme or a symbol specifically.  They could then recommend (or not) the book to other AP English students. I would love my students to be able to access other recommendations from students from other schools around the country and globe. Realizing that we are all enjoying literature and are able to examine it in depth is important to spur them on towards more learning and reading.

3. How would I do it?
              This is the element I still need to figure out. I know goodreads.com exists and is a wonderful place to keep your own reading lists and review a book once you have completed it. I will have to further examine if this would be a good resource or if there is something better out there.

BUT I NEED YOUR HELP!!! If you have taught at the upper high school honors/AP track level, would you see benefits in a program like this? Do you know of a resource  that could assist me in making my dream a reality? Would you like to join me? Feel free to e-mail me (momof2hawks@gmail.com) with any suggestions or questions.

Happy reading - and collaborating!!!