Thursday, November 1, 2012

Ready...get set...go!

When, in your life, are you told "You have 45 minutes, begin!"  Only in school.  In the world of work, time is your own, each of us have our strengths and weaknesses.  We work towards deadlines, but at a pace that works for us.  Think about your colleagues; the one who takes a little longer to process, the one who is filled with anxiety due to pressure, the one who cannot finish a project in one sitting.  Our students are no different.  We are each designed in a special way.  We each have gifts that lend themselves to benefit the community in one way or another.  Does a time limit squash the strengths because it lends itself to the weaknesses instead?
How do we accommodate for the differences when testing?  Do we say you all must finish in this amount of time?  Do we send home tests every once and a while?  Do we give computerized tests?  Do we differentiate?  The hardest part as an educator is typically classroom management  and that, unfortunately, doesn't always lend itself to extended testing periods. In what ways are you meeting the needs of your students to show learning?  In what ways do you test; projects, reports, verbal assessments?  What about those students who have technology, how is the school accommodating to allow the use of technology?  How is the teacher accommodating technology?  School is a way to educate youth and ready them for the world, whether it be more school or work.
Think about how the world operates; interview, survey, collaborate with the community to truly get a picture of what it is like.  Just as we used to say of our college professors, "You haven't been in the classroom in years, how can you tell me how to teach!"  The same applies for K-12 teachers.  We live in a world where everything revolves around our classroom.  How many times do you stop to think how does this apply in the real world?  How can students make the connection between what I am teaching and what they will need to use?
What about the question of how many other classes a student has?  Most schools have seven hours a day.  If every teacher gave homework on the same day, how do you think that student will feel?  Of course, rarely does this happen, but I will say on most days the four core classes assign homework.
There are many questions asked in this blog, the answers are up to each individual.  It is the responsibility of the teacher to become the best at what they do by reaching out, researching best practices, meeting the needs of students in any way possible, and knowing what works with their students.
The sole purpose of this writing was to discuss what benefit or hindrance time constraints have on testing and if they are needed.  However, the more processing that took place, the more questions that arose regarding how you work as a teacher to benefit the student.  The next time a test comes up, think about how an alternative assessment can take place.  A project showing understanding, check points, study groups, etc.  The list is only as confined as your thoughts!


Off the Clock: Giving Students More Time to Demonstrate Learning




Thursday, October 25, 2012

The Warm Fuzzies of Education

In the process of working on a mission statement today, I have read several articles on working with at-risk youth.  There are several interesting details I came across.

1. Despite research, schools tend to stick to the "old" way of teaching.
Why is that?  200 hundred years ago, heck 50 years ago, what students needed to be prepared for is not what our students need now.  Most of our kids are not going to be farmers or working in an assembly line, as that work is few and far between with Mexico and China.  Our youth needs to be prepared to sell what our American companies farm out to other countries.  Our youth needs to be prepared to work with other cultures, languages, traditions.  Our youth needs to be prepared to make little and to work hard to make more.

2. Worksheet education forced by standardized testing does not provide enough provocation or depth.
Of course not but it is easy...wait a minute, is that how we should teach?  Easy?  I will admit, I am guilty of it.  I am short on time and money, so what is easiest, plus it makes good notes?  Worksheets!!  Let's rethink this, kids have Siri, she can answer pretty much anything.  Kids have smart phones with internet access and unlimited data (for now), why do they need worksheets?  How can we teach a deeper level of understanding and thinking by giving worksheets?  What is the best way to answer the infamous question "When am I ever going to use this?"  Relate what they are doing to life, create scenarios that make sense to use while teaching the skills they must be tested on.  Force communication between youths, ask them to critically think about what they are doing.  This may sound time intensive, and initially it may be, but if you ask the right questions, assign the proper type of work, the students will reap the benefits and your room will be come that much brighter with all the light bulbs going off!

3. "Assume nothing.  Often if you have a troublesome kid, you have a story.  Trouble is usually a symptom, not a problem.  Trouble doesn't come from a vacuum, it comes from life."  Jocelyn Pinkerton
Wow!  She hit the nail on the head!  How many educators assume that when they hear that kid coming down the hall they automatically conclude the kid is trouble.  Get to the root of the problem.  Why does the student act out in class?  Why does he bully others in the hall?  Why doesn't she hand in her work on time?  Have you ever stopped to think, what is life like at home for this child?  Are the parents home?  Is there an older sibling picking on them?  Are they being accosted by an Aunt/Uncle/close friend?  Do they have to babysit their younger siblings?  What happens when the siblings are sick, who takes care of them?  Are there drugs involved?  The list goes on and on.

4. Large classes a young ages
The Federal Class Size Reduction Study (CSR) found that small classes could benefit students.  Who knew, right? The Tennessee STAR program (student-teacher achievement ratio) found students randomly assigned to 13-17 students in a class outperformed their peers.  This shouldn't surprise anyone.  Smaller groups foster better discussion and deeper understanding.  The purpose of smaller classes isn't that they cover more material, but that the material covered is about understanding, delving deeper, answering the question of "why" it works.  Giving the teacher and students a chance to communicate more effectively also offers other benefits such as: communication skills, higher order thinking skills, teamwork, etc.

As a society, we are growing and developing, but our educational system is remaining the same.  What kinds of jobs will be available for our youth?  The sky's the limit!  Technology will allow people to work from where ever they are, doing virtually anything!  Give your students the benefit of a quality education   Ultimately, as educators, we direct our youth where to go.  If they are failing, who is partially at fault?  If they are dropping out, who could have intervened?   If they are struggling and no one is there to help, what will happen?  It is time we change the educational system to best meet the needs of our students, before it is too late!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Cup Stacking, Really?

The link below takes you to an article regarding how cup stacking helps students perform better in academics.  How can this be??  Activity...it helps kids learn?  Honestly, this shouldn't surprise anyone.  Think of the times when you were sitting in a meeting and you were twirling or tapping a pencil, day dreaming, moving your leg, spinning your chair, etc.   You get the point.  We are created to be active.  We were not made to sit still, but to work hard all our lives.  This is one more point to keeping physical education every day for all students.  Even if kids "don't like to change" they still need to move.  Most children do not think of the long term consequences on their bodies by being stagnant, that is why as adults, we need to make those important decisions for them, whether they like it or not.
The other piece to this is what about games like Chess, Checkers, and Jenga?  The brain teasers that force you to move your hands in coordination with your brain?  All of these things have a place in school, whether it be before, during, or after. As educators, we need to find time to work kids out physically, mentally, and spiritually.  Challenge students, giving them the opportunities to be successful.
The saying goes that teachers make the worst students.  Think about this...what is the worst part of meetings?  Lecture?  Sitting still?  Other things on your mind?  How do you think our students feel?  They have just as much going on!  As multitasking increases, the brain will become more flighty and almost random, as there are so many pieces to the puzzle of life.  This is seen daily in the eyes, actions, and behaviours of our students and parents!  We need to look in the mirror and take inventory of ourselves as well.  As educators, the community, parents, and students look to us for the answers.  It is OK to admit you don't know, but be sure it is followed up with "I will work hard to figure it out!"
Life is not going to slow down, but the educational system has stopped.  What can be done to move forward with the resources we have and offer the highest quality education for all?  This school in Missouri has found one outlet to help students perform better.  What are your ideas?

Wentzville Students Stack up to the competition

Monday, October 22, 2012

State of Education Today

As I think back to my career as a student and my transformation to a teacher then administrator, I wonder what has happened to education. I spent many a day listening to my teachers, learning from them in a boring uneventful way, most of the time. I walked away with the knowledge of how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide as well as read, process,synthesis, etc. You get the picture, I was prepared for the future, what ever that may bring. The problems I faced verses the problems my sons' face are much different. Now they are up against the NCLB, Minnesota State Standards, and Common Core wall and teachers are focusing on how to make their teaching better by spending more time in meetings and less time with students...how this makes sense, I am not sure, but to the district, it does. Gone are the days of coming in early or staying late to give additional help. Now it is, I have a meeting and the district says I have to go. This is by no means restricted to only the district I live in, but is a virus spreading through out the state of Minnesota. Charter schools are popping up with themed programming, enticing the parents and teachers into their school.  The goal of a charter is to out-perform the local district.  The question is are they?  If not, what needs to happen to get the schools to begin to not just out-perform, but to share, collaborate, make it better across the state!!??  It is not about one being better than another, though competition naturally breeds that, but it is about the state of education today. How do we get the "entire" student population to care about learning instead of asking, "when am I ever going to use this?"  How do we teach relevant topics, skills, and citizenship in a way that will make sense to our children and involve the community as well.