Monday, September 20, 2010

What's Best for Kids..,


     We've recently had our first principal's meeting with our new superintendent, Dr. Dale Ellis. We heard a lot of great things about outlining our future efforts in reaching and teaching kids. As he talked about making a difference and the importance of good decision making, he spent a great deal of time speaking on 'what's best for kids is often not the easiest thing for teachers.' This really captured some of great conversations I've recently had with veteran and new teachers.


     Bell to Bell Convenience [not so much] - Our efforts to design quality lessons for student learning won't always be done between the opening and closing bells. Planning a quality unit, lesson or assessment won't look the same every time and it can't be a systematic or formulaic process. It will and should be different each and every time we sit down because we should be expecting different outcomes. Inspired planning isn't on a schedule.


    Working out of your zone! - If we are truly designing learning for our students, we should see a significant shift of work from our end to the students' end. 'Parking lot planning' is desperate and last minute - when we aren't prepared we resort to it. It looks like generic work sheets and reflects the lowest of expectations, for our students and ourselves. We won't prepare students for their world if we aren't moving away from the safe and easy plans. It takes inspiration to start the race and determination to stay in it.


     We owe it to students to do more for their learning. Here are two things that will make a big difference.


     Big Picture Planning - We are a Learning Focused school district. There are several planning options from  designed to accelerate and/or support learning on all levels. Student Learning Maps are used outline the key learning concepts, organize them and provide a clear picture of what we want students to know at the end of the unit. Essential questions and Vocabulary are critical to this process. Identifying them won't happen in the parking lot.


    PLN / PLC - Another killer to student learning and achievement has been solo planning. Don't get me wrong, individually we can come up with some good, creative activities for students. But imagine how much more impactful our learning efforts can be if increase value added support from our colleagues.  Seeking out input from others could make the difference from having a teacher-centered lesson to a student centered one; a fact-finding reading assignment to an activity that requires analysis and evaluation.


     We signed up to become teachers to make a difference and be a difference for students.  We owe it to them to be the best educators we can, that will mean moving out of our comfort zone and gathering as much support as we can from each other.

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Thanks for the posts