Wednesday, December 28, 2016

What administrators want teachers to know and do


Effective teachers demonstrate a deep understanding of the curriculum. They plan, teach, and assess to promote mastery for all students. Effective teachers provide high-quality instruction to increase student achievement for all students by providing researched-based instruction filled with technology integration. Effective teachers provide a respectful, positive, safe, and student-centered environment. They collaborate with their colleagues to analyze data and plan for effective and equitable instruction. Effective teachers continually reflect and evaluate the effects of his/her choices and actions. Effective teachers build positive and professional relationships with students, parents, and community members. 

A mother comes home and finds her son and husband in the front yard. Her son is sitting on the ground beside his shiny new bicycle. Mom asks, "What have you two been up to today?" The father looks up, grins, and says, "I taught Isaiah how to ride his bike." "Well, Isaiah," the mother asks, "why aren't you riding?" "Well, I taught him," Dad replies, "but he didn't learn it."  When teachers are unclear on the specific proficiences involved and don't know how well their students are learning, they run the risk of being a little like th father in the story, saying, "I taught it, but they just didnn't get it."

Below is a Ted Talk video given by Linda Cliatt-Wayman’s who describes her first day as principal at a failing high school in North Philadelphia.  She was determined to lay down the law but soon realized the job was more complex than she thought. With palpable passion, she shares the three principles that helped her turn around three schools labeled “low-performing and persistently dangerous.” Her fearless determination to lead — and to love the students, no matter what — is a model for leaders in all fields.







Type into address bar   http://bit.ly/Ta0415

Public school education is broken. It is an investment gone bad and its shareholders are left with negative poor credit.  It is a series of faulty practices with no thought to how the outcome of policy will affect the lives of the participants.  The microcosmic thinking has filtered its way into our educational systems where children are not trained to be individual thinkers but regarded as off-limits because of the position of their parents in the community.  Not every child has that stigma but it leads to inconsistency in the classroom, ultimately affecting classroom management and impeding curriculum enhancement.  Teachers in training are often told to play the dance of finding who the parents are rather than to hold the curriculum as the guide to academic success.  

Often we want our students to build new models of reality, or at minimum to question some of their existing ones. We are expecting our students to engage in what might be regarded as an unnatural act. While their natural tendency is to understand the new in terms of the old, we are asking them to build completely new models of reality, or question old ones. Most students don’t do that very well, or very easily.

Teachers  are all dealing with students who are attempting to reconcile new sensory information with their existing mental models. Intellectuals are most likely to learn deeply when they are trying to solve problems or answer questions that they have come to regard as important, intriguing, or beautiful. This is their description of what we call the Natural Critical Learning Environment.
Moreover, students are most likely to question and perhaps shift their paradigms if, in the course of pursuing those questions or problems, they find themselves in a situation where their existing paradigms produce incorrect or unsatisfactory explanations. They face what some have called an “expectation failure”—their mental model has predicted an outcome, but that expected result doesn’t match with their current sensory input and how they interpret it.

When faced with new information that is in conflict with their current mental model, students typically invoke one of two processes. They can choose to take a surface approach to this event by dismissing this new information as a special case and simply wrapping it around their current paradigm, or those same students can take a deep approach by grappling with how this new information will irrevocably change their mental model, ultimately creating a new and deeper conceptual understanding. If they have an opportunity to grapple with the dissonance they encounter—to try, fail, receive feedback, and try again—before anyone makes a judgment of their efforts, they are more likely to learn deeply.

People are most likely to learn deeply when they are trying to answer their own questions or solve their own problems. However, in a formal educational environment, learners typically are not in charge of the questions. Teachers usually frame the curriculum and at least implicitly shape the questions. Perhaps rightly so, but that reality produces an enormous chasm between an ideal natural critical learning environment and conditions existing in most universities. To bridge that gap, to reach the students educationally, the best teachers—and this may be their most profound ability—find ways to link their own disciplinary concerns and interests with those of the students.

You can make a child sit at his or her desk, but only the child can decide to learn. Engaging a student’s intrinsic motivation is the goal of academicians everywhere. Providing students choices in the classroom is a proven way to deliver effective instruction, engage students, promote critical thinking, and utilize the multi-sensory power of technology to reach every student.

Choice is important because it is part of what human beings want to do. Providing choices during instruction makes it possible for students increase engagement, form critical thinking skills rather than memorization, and explore different modes of delivery and assessment through technology.

PODCASTS

10 Podcasting Projects Teachers Should Try in the Classroom

If orange is the new black, podcasting is the new oral report. And now that teachers have easy access to tools like Garage Band and iPods that make recording a breeze, podcasting is quickly becoming the latest creative mode of learning and presenting in schools. Here are 10 ideas to try in your classroom today.
  1. Current Events Newscasts: Practice nonfiction reading skills by having your students do weekly or monthly podcasts on an interesting current event.
  2. Reading Radio: Have your students make short radio broadcasts summarizing the books they are reading.
  3. Roving Reporters: Send your students out into the “field” (a.k.a. the school) to interview key players in important school events.
  4. Celebrate Culture: Have your students record podcasts about important cultural months like Black History Month or Hispanic Heritage Month and then present them to the school or parents to commemorate the events.
  5. Bring Your Teacher Home: Send a little bit of yourself home with your kids by podcasting important parts of your lessons.
  6. Podcasting Library: Have your students collaborate to create a library of podcasts from which future students can learn.
  7. MusicCasts: Have band or orchestra students create podcasts for each instrument, detailing specific notes, sounds and characteristics of each instrument.
  8. Awesome Audio Tours: Give your students the chance to be tour guides for new students at your school by having them podcast school tours that kids can listen to when they enter.
  9. Podcasting Pen Pals: Record interactive or encouraging podcasts and then send them to another classroom in another state or country.
  10. Reenactments: Have your students reenact important events in history using period language and vocabulary.
Use Audacity to create podcast  http://www.audacityteam.org/download/


What do I want to do with my life


July 28, 2019  I am at an impasse and I am lost. I do not want to know what to do with my life. I will be a teacher at a STEM school this year but I do not know how to make this my best year, yet. The goal is to plan something for my life that scares me but I do not want to just guess at something. Well...here goes....I want to be a superintendent (no...I am just saying that), Assistant Professor in Educational Leadership or Instructional Leadership. I want to work in K-12 central office helping teachers use technology during classroom instruction.
Tithe to the church

What do  I want to do with my life? I am almost 50 years old. I have switched to school administration but I know life has more than this. I used to work at Alabama State University but wanted a new direction that would give me a chance to advance.  I am learning but it is challenging.  It is difficult working with people who may want me to be...or so I think.  It could be how I handle incidents that distract from my areas of strength.

But what does this have to do with defining what I want to do with my life? I am looking for satisfaction in how I live. I want to be pleased with the decisions that I make and the places that I go. I think that I have matured beyond wanting to please others. Now I want to please myself.

So what do I do?  Do I write (something that I painstakingly want to do but have not begun)? Do I tutor on the side?  What do I write about if I were to write? I could write about my experiences as an assistant principal, the challenges that I thought I would have only to be replaced by personality differences, insecurities of co-workers, or reluctance to change that way things are done at the school.

I get sleepy even when I think about writing. Right now I am sleepy and I am only blogging but the mere thought of writing about the challenges that I encounter on the job makes me want to take a nap.  I have really slept myself in a position where I have to make a decision what I want for the rest of my life.


Fellowship program trains future STEM teachers for high-needs schools
A teaching fellowship program has created gains for students in high-needs schools in science, technology, engineering, and math.

Why are there so many jobs




CHALKABLE CUSTOMER SUCCESS STORY: SYLACAUGA CITY SCHOOLS AND PROFESSIONAL LEARNING

”The mission of the Sylacauga City Schools, in partnership with families and the community, is to prepare graduates who are ready for college, career, and community success.” - Sylacauga City Schools

To ensure this success, Sylacauga City Schools start at the early levels of elementary and middle schools. Specifically, in the last year, Sylacauga City identified a need for attention on the district’s math scores for ASPIRE testing. 


Study: Far fewer new teachers are leaving the profession than previously thought
New teachers are far less likely to leave the profession than previously thought, according to federal data released Thursday. Ten percent of teachers who began their careers in 2007-2008 left teaching after their first year, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. But attrition then leveled off, and five years into their careers, 83 percent were still teaching.
Minority Teacher Recruitment, Employment, and Retention: 1987 to 2013
The main source of this shortage, conventional wisdom holds, lies in problems with the teacher supply pipeline. Too few minority students enter and complete college, and those who do have an increasing number of career and employment options aside from teaching.

America has a teacher shortage, and a new study says it’s getting worse
The United States is facing its first major teacher shortage since the 1990s, one that could develop into a crisis for school in many parts of the country, according to a new study by the Learning Policy Institute. The impact of the teacher shortage on students, according to the study’s authors, will be schools having to cancel courses, increase class sizes and teacher-pupil ratios, or hire underprepared teachers.

Effective formative assessments
Formative assessments help educators guide instruction. They allow us to track understanding, differentiate lessons and determine when students are ready to move forward. Formative assessments help us make the best use of instructional time. Since they do inform instruction, we should incorporate them on a regular -- even daily -- basis. 


March 28-April 1, 2016 Spring Break

http://media.ipadio.com/11985210_20160306020423.mp3


I am assisting high school students prepare for the ACT from this website  http://bit.ly/mchsactprep   which has resources free to students.

Use Audacity to create podcasts  http://www.audacityteam.org/download/
 or 
Use ipadio to create a podcast  http://www.ipadio.com/default.aspx?

Next Generation Science Standards Classroom Assessments, Homework

The best educational resources on the web, all in one place. OpenEd's assessments, videos, games, and homework are accurately aligned to standards and sorted by their proven efficacy. Each question in an OpenEd assessment has an instructional resource attached to it that is hand-picked to target that exact learning objective. Students take quizzes, then play videos/games to address knowledge gaps whenever they miss a question!




Tuesday, July 19, 2016

School Calendar Events


MCHS School Calendar, MCBOE Calendar




Mon Mar 7, 2016

All day   LWhite - Classworks (2 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks

All day   Rogers - Classworks (3 - 7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks

All day   Williams - ACT (1,2, 4,5); Classworks (6,7) Chromebooks

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


3 p m   MCHS Golf vs TR Miller, Excel, JUBlacksher

W h e r e : Monroeville Golf Club Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
6 p m   P o e t r y N i g h t

Where : Courthouse Cafe Calendar: MCHS School Calendar


Tue Mar 8, 2016

4 p m   JV/V Baseball vs JU Blacksher

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Wed Mar 9, 2016

All day   Dean - ACT (1, 5 - 7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


All day   Dr . White - ACT (1,2, 4 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


7 : 5 0 a m   Activity Period Group 3

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Description: JETS, FCS, Today's Mom, Upward Bound

All day   Monroe County Fine Arts presents "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown"

W h e r e : ASCC- Tickets: Adults $10.00 Students $5.00 Calendar: MCHS School

Thu Mar 10, 2016

All day   Monroe County Fine Arts presents "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown"

Where : ASCC- Tickets: Adults $10.00 Students $5.00 Calendar: MCHS School Calendar

Fri Mar 11, 2016

All day   Monroe County Fine Arts presents "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown"

Where : ASCC- Tickets: Adults $10.00 Students $5.00 Calendar: MCHS School Calendar


All day   Casey - Classworks (3,5); ACT (1,2,6,7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
All day   Powell - Classworks (1, 3 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


Sat Mar 12, 2016

All day   Baseball @ Georgiana Tournament

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar


Mon Mar 14, 2016

All day   LWhite - Classworks (2 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


All day   Rogers - Classworks (3 - 7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


All day   Williams - ACT (1,2, 4,5); Classworks (6,7) Chromebooks

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks


3 p m   MCHS Golf vs TR Miller, Excel, JU Blacksher

Where : T.R. Miller High School, 1835 Douglas Ave, Brewton, AL 36426, United States
Calendar: MCHS School Calendar


4 p m   JV/V Baseball @ Escambia County

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Tue Mar 15, 2016

6 p m   Softball @ Northview High

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Wed Mar 16, 2016

All day   Dr . White - ACT (1,2, 4 - 7) 106 Lab

All day   Knowles - ACT (5 - 6) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

7 : 5 0 a m   Activity Period Group 1

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Description: BETA, NHS, Robotics
2 : 4 5 p m   Sped Meeting

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Thu Mar 17, 2016

All day   ASVAB

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: bpritchett@monroe.k12.al.us

All day   Report Cards

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar
Created by: Devlynne Barnes

5 p m   Baseball Double Header vs Clarke County

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
6 p m   Board Meeting - MIS

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar Created by: Devlynne Barnes
6 p m   Softball vs Northview High

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Fri Mar 18, 2016

All day   Casey - Classworks (3,5); ACT (1,2,6,7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
All day   Powell - Classworks (1, 3 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

3 : 3 0 p m   MCHS Track @ TR Miller

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
4 : 3 0 p m   Baseball @ Clarke County

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Sat Mar 19, 2016

All day   MCHS Prom

Mon Mar 21, 2016

All day   LWhite - Classworks (2 - 7) 106 Lab

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

All day   Rogers - Classworks (3 - 7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

All day   Williams - ACT (1,2, 4,5); Classworks (6,7) Chromebooks

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
3 p m   MCHS Golf vs Jackson, Excel, JU Blacksher

W h e r e : Jackson High School, 321 Stanley Dr, Jackson, AL 36545, United States Calendar: MCHS School Calendar
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

4 : 3 0 p m   Softball vs Thomasville

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
5 p m   Baseball Double Header vs Georgiana

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
6 p m   P T O M e e t i n g

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Tue Mar 22, 2016

6 : 3 0 p m   JV/V Baseball vs Hillcrest

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Wed Mar 23, 2016

All day   Dean - ACT (1, 5 - 7) Library

Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

All day   Dr . White - ACT (1,2, 4 - 7) 106 Lab
Calendar: Computer Lab / Library / ChromeBooks
Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us

7 : 5 0 a m   Activity Period Group 2

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Description: Key Club, Student Council, Spanish Club

6 p m   Countdown to College

Where : MCHS Gym
Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: bpritchett@monroe.k12.al.us

Thu Mar 24, 2016

7 : 3 0 a m   Advisory Period

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
3 : 3 0 p m   MCHS Track @ TR Miller

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
5 p m   Baseball Double Header vs Excel

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
Fri Mar 25, 2016

All day   Good Friday - No school

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar
Created by: Devlynne Barnes

Mon Mar 28, 2016

All day   Spring Break

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar
Created by: Devlynne Barnes

Tue Mar 29, 2016

All day   Spring Break

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar
Created by: Devlynne Barnes

Wed Mar 30, 2016

All day   Spring Break
Calendar: MCBOE Calendar
Created by: Devlynne Barnes

Thu Mar 31, 2016

All day   ASCC Alabama Writer's Symposium

Calendar: MCHS School Calendar Created by: choward@monroe.k12.al.us
All day   Spring Break

Calendar: MCBOE Calendar

Created by: Devlynne Barnes

March 7-11, 2016    ACT Study session

March 14-18, 2016 Group Observation

March 21-25, 2016 Test prep

March 28-April 1, 2016 Spring Break


http://media.ipadio.com/11985210_20160306020423.mp3

I am assisting high school students prepare for the ACT from this website  http://bit.ly/mchsactprep   which has resources free to students.
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