Going back over my blog posts was interesting, especially as this was my first foray into blogging and I was honestly not sure how I felt about posting my thoughts and opinions for others to critique or comment on. I will continue to blog and encourage teachers to use this tool with their students. Because of the public nature of the blog students would be more thoughtful in their responses because others would be reading them, I found I took more time when creating my posts then I might have if I was just sending papers to my professor.
Some highlights that occurred to me after reading the blogs again were that I feel fortunate to be in a private school that does not feel the pressure of common core or being measured by testing. Many issues that other have to overcome in curriculum are non issues at my school. Yes we have other problems that need to be overcome, such as, formally written curriculum and review possess, but the freedom with which we teach is a perfect platform for change.
We have the technology, resources, funding, global market, and expertise but we need the leadership to push for change. As the vision for our school unfolds and curriculum is examined, I feel prepared along with the Director of Studies, to step up and make suggestions and help guide our school to the next level.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Small Steps
The first four chapters of HH Jacobs book are filled with so many ideas and information choosing a few key point to focus on was difficult, however, I kept going back to a couple of ideas after I had time to digest the information. I am not a big theory person, I like the tried and true concrete solutions, Curriculum 21 gives a bit of both. Two key elements HH Jacobs discusses are taking small steps and form should always follow function. Big picture ideas are great and you need a vision, but in education we sometimes jump in head first with out testing the waters. It is appealing to take small steps, adjust and move on.
Assessment is an area she suggests taking such steps. This meaningful change will then lead to review of the content and replacement when needed. The final change will be the upgrade of skills and proficiencies, this sequence not only moves the curriculum process forward, but also allows for thoughtful change, not throwing the baby out with the bath water but focusing in on what works and doesn't work.
These small changes add up and it will become a necessity to look at the structure of the school and how it can change to work best with the changing curriculum. I have already recruited a few teachers to start trying new assessments this year, which will hopefully inspire other to attempt some replacements. We can also look at the structure of our school in a unique way because our students live on campus so evening or weekend classes are feasible and our technology department is knowledgeable and easy to work with. With new leadership I am hopeful that teachers will be encouraged to step out of the comfort zone and experiment with the curriculum in their classes.
Assessment is an area she suggests taking such steps. This meaningful change will then lead to review of the content and replacement when needed. The final change will be the upgrade of skills and proficiencies, this sequence not only moves the curriculum process forward, but also allows for thoughtful change, not throwing the baby out with the bath water but focusing in on what works and doesn't work.
These small changes add up and it will become a necessity to look at the structure of the school and how it can change to work best with the changing curriculum. I have already recruited a few teachers to start trying new assessments this year, which will hopefully inspire other to attempt some replacements. We can also look at the structure of our school in a unique way because our students live on campus so evening or weekend classes are feasible and our technology department is knowledgeable and easy to work with. With new leadership I am hopeful that teachers will be encouraged to step out of the comfort zone and experiment with the curriculum in their classes.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Curriculum Issue
I was newly named the Assistant Director of the Learning Center(LC) at our school, the center works with students on skills, not in isolation but in conjunction with the classes they are taking. Each student has a leaning plan, from which we make recommendations to the teachers and modifications according to their individual needs. The issue in the LC revolves around the lack of a standard formal curriculum and assessments to make sure tasks are being accomplished.
Every student at the LC is taught organizational, study, note taking and test taking skills; they learn to advocate for themselves and most importantly, learn their strengths and weakness as learners. Every two weeks bi-weekies are sent to advisers to discuss with the student to get a better understanding of how they are doing in class. A step that would help the LC is a formally written curriculum with assessment that could show mastery or progress; one that students along with faculty could use to gage the progress students make in a concrete form. This problem is one I will focus on in my curriculum development project.
Every student at the LC is taught organizational, study, note taking and test taking skills; they learn to advocate for themselves and most importantly, learn their strengths and weakness as learners. Every two weeks bi-weekies are sent to advisers to discuss with the student to get a better understanding of how they are doing in class. A step that would help the LC is a formally written curriculum with assessment that could show mastery or progress; one that students along with faculty could use to gage the progress students make in a concrete form. This problem is one I will focus on in my curriculum development project.
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Common Core
Although Common Core will never be mandated at our school, I believe it is important to be informed of what expectations are being placed on students across the country. If colleges use the common core to gage what knowledge students have, we need to be cognizant of what skills we are imparting on our students and make sure they are prepared for the next step, college. Reading the first two articles and not being overly informed on common core, I feel that the biggest issue that both sides can agree on is that there was not enough input from enough people and it was rushed.
The question then is, if there was a due over could both sides come to an agreement? Other countries, such as Canada and Finland, have made it work by not penalizing or rewarding schools for the tests but using them as a tool to improve education. It seems that everyone wants to blame bad test scores on either the teacher, economics or flawed testing. If we believed our teachers were highly trained and funding was equal and many people had input into the tests, not predominantly people involved in the administration of the test, common core might not invoke so much fear and resentment. With such a bad taste in many people’s mouths over common core, and the fact that it is still moving forward, I am not sure any meaning full changes could make people accept it
Friday, July 11, 2014
Global Education
With the world connecting in so many ways, understanding others points of view and references will be critical to building business relationships and a global community; introducing a language early is important as well as teaching about different cultures and religions. With technology, reaching out to other parts of the world has become common, building a more formal curriculum and having a system in place to connect different cultures would aid in a school becoming more global.
We are fortunate at Kents Hill to have students from over 35 countries attend our school; our students learn so much about other cultures through these friendships. Go Global and the International program are two formal organizations that bring students together. We celebrate the Chinese New Year with fireworks and special food and have an international dinner where all the international students cook foods from their culture and serve the other students. We have an exchange program with a school in England and South Africa and during our March break students in French and Spanish III visit schools in Spain and France. We also offer Chinese classes. My daughter’s best friend is from Sweden and she is always giving me facts about the country.
I realize that most schools do not have this diversity and even though our students are exposed to many cultures we could do a lot more to promote global studies. We are looking at having a concentration in global studies; however, the reality is all of our students would benefit from this curriculum, so it should be a school wide initiative. We could also do a better job in the classroom, making our curriculum more global in all subject areas, with all the connections we have with other countries it would make sense to use those relationships to set up more exchanges and video opportunities.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Charter vs. Public Education
The earth has a fever.... As soon as Guggenheims name came into the article I knew that the film she was critiquing would be full of his agenda and partial truths. As much as we would like to think a documentary is truth seeking, in Guggenheims case, it is him pushing what he believes to be the fix for public education, neglecting to look at the whole picture.
Diane Ravitch tears apart many aspects of the film from questioning why he only focused on successful charter schools and failing public schools when the reality is both exist in equal measure. Also the fact that he focusses on Canada's schools in NYC, which receive a lot of donation and attracts top scholars who are motivated is suspect. I agree with Ravitch that his movie is mostly bunk and not thorough, however, she contradicts herself as to the reason for failure in our schools. Maybe both Ratvich and Guggenheim touch on some truths, but fail to give a definitive answer.
Guggenhein asserts that schools are failing because out teachers are not good enough and Unions are keeping tenured teacher who are under performers. Ravitch agrees that we need a better system to fire bad teachers but suggests that classroom teachers are only 10-20% predictor of the achievement outcome. She then goes on to point out Finland's success and attributes it to excellent teachers who are supported, contradicting that the teacher role in the student’s success. John Hattie's visible learning makes a strong case for the teacher’s large role in education; I strongly recommend reading more about visible learning. Ravitch then goes on to say that poverty is not mentioned in the film enough as an indicator of success or failure, siting that Finland poverty is at 5% compared to the US at 20%. China comes in at 13% extreme poverty http://borgenproject.o and Sinarg/10-facts-about-poverty-in-china/living living on less than $1.25 a day, Korea is around 15%and Singapore has climbed to 28% from 16%. http://thehearttruths.com/2013/10/28/poverty-in-singapore-grew-from-16-in-2002-to-28-in-2013/ My point being that poverty might not be the biggest problem in our education system, maybe we need to start looking more closely at the dynamics of the family unit, on top of the afore mentioned issues.
Resourses
In reading over the resourses, one that held great interest to me was the teacher training videos by Richard Stannard. As I have been learning more about curriculum and ways to make changes in my school, giving new assessments has been a target. This resourse not only gives ideas on how to change up some assessments or ways to communicate with your students it also explains how to do it. From blogger to prezi, screen casts to youtube a brief summary is given and then a link to follow. Teachers everywhere are extremely busy, so having a site that pulls many ideas and resourses together is a gift.
Teachers are reluctant to use some technology because it may be out of their comfort zone, by using a site like this, they are given ideas that have been tried and found to be useful. Stannard is a teacher who uses a lot of the technology he puts up on his page. As new applications and technology are coming to us at amazing speed, this site can be seen as a filter or a starting point for teachers who are less tech savy. I plan on forwardng this to a few teacher that I know would like to try something new, but have been overwhelmed with information and fear using something that may not work well.
Teachers are reluctant to use some technology because it may be out of their comfort zone, by using a site like this, they are given ideas that have been tried and found to be useful. Stannard is a teacher who uses a lot of the technology he puts up on his page. As new applications and technology are coming to us at amazing speed, this site can be seen as a filter or a starting point for teachers who are less tech savy. I plan on forwardng this to a few teacher that I know would like to try something new, but have been overwhelmed with information and fear using something that may not work well.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
The 16 Habits of Mind
When we started our vision planning for our school, we were asked to take 10 minutes and write down what we want our ideal graduate to look like. When we started sharing, what amazed me was not only the amount of overlapping but the focus was not on specific acedemic skills but rather the behaviors students would need to be successful. Of course we wanted them ready for college but we wanted them to be inovative, risk takers, problem solvers, creative, the same skillful behaviors mentioned in chapter 13. The 16 Habits of Mind were exactly the types of skills, plus more, that we wanted our students to leave us with.
If these habits are employed and continually worked on they can be used throughout life, to help one be successful, not only in school but in all situations. The author goes on to talk about metacognition, being aware, and the staircase we use to build these habits. The way HH Jacobs laid it out was helpful, however, I believe these habits can also be taught or modeled in a less formal way. Students at our school have to play two sports, many have never played sports before, they are taking a risk. When a teacher doesnt know the answer and admits it, modeling that they don't know everthing, however, they will do research to figure it out, shows humility.
Implementing a more formal curriculum to help students practice these skills is a must,however, this should be extended outside of class because our students stay on campus. This gives us great opportunity to model these habits in real life situations, not only helping the students see the imporance of these habits but allowing them to execute them with guidance.
If these habits are employed and continually worked on they can be used throughout life, to help one be successful, not only in school but in all situations. The author goes on to talk about metacognition, being aware, and the staircase we use to build these habits. The way HH Jacobs laid it out was helpful, however, I believe these habits can also be taught or modeled in a less formal way. Students at our school have to play two sports, many have never played sports before, they are taking a risk. When a teacher doesnt know the answer and admits it, modeling that they don't know everthing, however, they will do research to figure it out, shows humility.
Implementing a more formal curriculum to help students practice these skills is a must,however, this should be extended outside of class because our students stay on campus. This gives us great opportunity to model these habits in real life situations, not only helping the students see the imporance of these habits but allowing them to execute them with guidance.