Saturday, August 29, 2015

TCRWP: Summer Reading Institute Highlights


In the beginning of August, I attended Teachers College Summer Reading Institute. The best part of the institute was making connections with other educators. I even was able to reconnect with educators from my hometown of Montgomery who helped shape me as an educator. Shout out to Mr. Richards (Principal at Montgomery Lower Middle School), Mr. Delgado (Principal at Montgomery Upper Middle School), and Mrs.Wachtel (one of my former 6th-grade teachers!)

Below are some highlights from the week:

Monday



Tuesday 
Kylene Beers presented a keynote called “Shifts Happen: Thinking about Literacy Demands.” She brought up the idea that old schema dies hard and we need to embrace shifts. Throughout time, literacy in this country has always been about separating people. Those who are literate hold the power and the privilege. 
She shared that we need to help students understand the complex messages in texts. One way to do this is for students to get close to texts by asking dialogical questions that we don’t know the answers to. Students view these questions as authentic instead of monologic questions which tend to be inauthentic. As educators, we need to change from talk to check for understanding to talk to create understanding (awesome sneak peak chart from Reading Nonfiction.) The final concluding point she left us with was that the volume of reading can outweigh an ineffective teacher. We know that research tells us that an ineffective teacher can set a student back two years! As educators, if we can ensure that our students are being provided with authentic reading opportunities we know that they will have the opportunity to continue to grow.


Wednesday
The keynote on Wednesday was presented by Mary Ehrenworth, which focused on “Remembering Grant: Innovating ‘Teaching for Transfer.’” Grant Wiggins was and is a truly amazing educator that has left an impact on education. His article “What is transfer?” talks about providing specific cueing system for students to assist in skill transfer from one part of the curriculum to another. We “can provide students with training in a dozen reading strategies… provide help verbal cues, etc, and yet, when asked to read on their own, they may neither activate the strategies by themselves nor make meaning of unfamiliar materials.” (Wiggins) He continues to explain “students will typically not cue themselves to use all their prior learning or recognize how the “new” situation reflects prior learning unless they have been given lots of training and practice in thus cueing themselves.” (Wiggins) Mary took this information and explained how to teach transfer of a skill set from one reading experience to another. Here are some of her suggestions
    • Layer strategies in ways that make sense- develop bigger skill sets and work on when to apply them
    • Create opportunities for kids to apply and adapt these skills in new experiences, that are not exactly the same (shift in text, in genre, in context)
    • Use charts, touchstone texts, common language as cueing systems.
    • Invite kids to practice and study how they can apply strategies across situations


Thursday
One of the breakout sessions I attended was with Cornelius Minor, the TCRWP’s technology guru. Cornelius urged attendees to devote ten minutes per week to learn two new things as well as by the end of month use once for self and twice with students. This will help you to take the time to master and explore new tools effectively. Cornelius explained the difference between Literacy 1.0 and Literacy 2.0 tools. Literacy 2.0 tools encourage collaboration, are multimodal, provide feedback, and help to create knowledge. He shared the following teacher tools
The tools he shared for students were


In Ellin Keene’s keynote, she spoke about “Your Instructional Fingerprint: Revisiting our Most Powerful Reading Tactics in a Content Driven World.” I love that she clearly stated that the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) does not prescribe instruction and does not mean teaching commonly. This is such a powerful point that many educators need to hear because of all the misconceptions that surround the CCSS.
We know from research our key instructional moves are thinking aloud, modeling, demonstrating, conferring, engaging students, and creating an authentic environment. While we know by heart that our beliefs, rituals, and presence as a teacher will shape our instructional fingerprint. Eliln left us by challenging us to
    • Think deeply about instruction
    • Engage in meaningful discourse about instruction with colleagues
    • Visit each other and watch for the key moves, thinking aloud, modeling, demonstrating, conferring, etc
    • Find our fingerprints as teachers

Friday
The highlight of Friday for me was collaborating with Basia Kiehler, Becky Doyle, and Erica Steinitz in my small group session for School Leaders. We were given scenarios to discuss as administrators conducting walkthroughs in the classroom by providing a compliment and teaching point to help move instruction forward. This time to collaborate and learn from each other was one of the most valuable part of the institute. We even came up with a sample form to use for walkthroughs 


My small group friends at TCRWP. 
TCRWP Take Aways- Some highlights I shared at my administrative retreat
Notes from TCRWP

Friday, August 7, 2015

A Modern Educator

For the past 10 years, I have had the pleasure to work and volunteer with Special Olympics. I’ve met people with intellectual disabilities who have been told they wouldn’t or they couldn’t. Loretta Claiborne, Special Olympics’ athlete and Arthur Ashe award winner, was born partially blind and unable to walk or talk till she was four. She did not let her disability define her, but she overcame these boundaries to run 26 marathons! She didn’t let anyone put her in a box or label her, but broke down barriers to accomplish greatness.


Loretta Claiborne and I at the 2015 Special Olympics World Games.

I too have experienced being put into a box and refuse to stand for it. I HATE when I’m labeled a “techie.” I am a special educator. I am a reading specialist. I am a google educator. I am a connected educator. I am not just a techie. I am a modern educator.


“It’s  easy to be pigeon-holed into ‘the tech girl/guy’ but it goes so far beyond that,” shared Steve Figurelli.


I am often one of those educators who is pigeon-holed as a techie because I’ve been using computers since the first grade. I still had to make an active choice to learn and expand my knowledge base. Modern educators are those who understand how to integrate technology into curriculum and pedagogy. They get out of their comfort zones and model the learning process for their students and colleagues. Jay Billy, an elementary school principal in Lawrenceville, expands upon this by stating, “A modern educator is focused on student growth and learning and takes risks to get them there. They understand there is no formula and each student must be engaged in a different way. A modern educator knows the value of social media and utilizes a PLN to grow and learn.” In essence, a modern educator knows how to utilize technology as a tool to engage learners and themselves.


Graphic compliments of Elissa Malespina


I was once told by a former supervisor that I covered up my lack of content knowledge with technology. To that I say, if I didn’t know curriculum and pedagogy I wouldn’t be able to integrate technology effectively. As educators, we need to open our eyes to the changes in our students and field. To be successful in the classroom we need to embrace technology as a tool to push our students further and break down the walls of our classroom. Technology isn’t just a toy anymore. From the administrators down to our classroom teachers to our administrative assistants, technology needs to be embraced as a tool to transform into modern educators.


I’m going to follow the lead of my friends at Special Olympics, and refuse to succumb to a label. I am NOT a techie, I am a modern educator.


Saturday, August 1, 2015

Let Passion Guide the Way



As an educator, I interact with students on a daily basis. Youth have the potential to do amazing things when they are supported and nurtured. This past week I had the pleasure of watching 120 youth leaders share their passions and hopes of making a more inclusive world. I volunteered my services at the #SOGenUin Global Youth Leadership Conference hosted by Special Olympics in conjunction with the World Games in Los Angeles, California. These youth have not only inspired greatness in themselves but the world around them as Generation Unified.


I had the ability to meet global youth leaders between the ages of 12 and 24 that have already begun to change their communities. Some of these youth leaders are individuals with disabilities and will not let it stand in their way as a barrier to help others. Kanchan and Jenish Amatya raised almost $30,000 for individuals with disabilities to receive job training in Nepal. Josh Kaplan, a 16-year-old from Phoenix, Arizona, created an inclusive soccer program for kids in his community. There was also Rithik Hukkis who sought to spread his love of cricket by starting a program to coach youth in India. Everywhere I turned there were young people making a difference by following their passions.


How can we help elevate our students to become social activists? We need to find ways to help our students follow their passions.  I think about the traditional school setting that I work in. The rigors of the Common Core State Standards and the pressures to close the achievement gap. The problem is not the Common Core, the problem is the traditional approaches to educational experiences. Students should be learning the Common Core skills and applying it to their passions.


When I taught seventh grade I had my students research a nonprofit organization of their choosing. They had to apply their reading and writing skills that we had honed throughout the school year. Students were researching nonprofits across the spectrum from skateboarding to ASPCA to ones that personally affected their families. I saw students who were not engaged all year smiling and excited to create. I received phone calls from parents sharing that their child was excited about school. Students were out with their Go Pro cameras gathering video on their skateboard to create a PSA. As their teacher, I was proud but also left with the feeling that I had failed them in some way. I followed the curriculum, so was it my failure that it was almost the fourth marking period before these students were engaged? Or was it the culture of the school?


One of my colleagues I have the pleasure of working with, Wendy Morales, has been utilizing Genius Hour in her classroom. Students pick topics and create projects to explore their passions. At the conference, we also had the support of the Future Project, which has Dream Directors embedded in High Schools full-time to help students make their dreams reality.


We need to replicate these experiences for all students to explore their interests. I interacted with 120 youth leaders. Think about the untapped possibilities all over the world if educators helped to nurture our students to be socially competent.

For the upcoming school year, I challenge myself and other educators to start finding ways to get outside the box and help elevate our rising youth.


Want to learn more about our experience during the Summit? Here are blog posts I wrote that can be found on the official Special Olympics Word Press site.

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Waiting for our guests, I mean learners...

Growing up with my mother I learned the careful art of party planning. Everything down to the napkins would be perfectly in place and coordinated true to the theme. Those minutes waiting for our guests to arrive once appetizers were laid out were excruciating! I always wanted to dig into the beautiful platters of baked brie and crudités.

This weekend, leading up to edcampldr North New Jersey I have that same feeling. For months, our planning team has been preparing every detail down to the color of our polo shirts. Two different aspects separate this edcamp from our typical planning for edcampnj the large numbers of leaders who are unfamiliar with the edcamp movement and the global connection.

My mom, the consummate party planner. 
 As gracious hosts, we have been trying to figure out the best way to ingratiate these leaders into the spirit of edcamp. We have been sending blasts with helpful edcamp101 videos as well as planning an introduction during session creation to encourage newbies to lead a conversation. I remember my first edcampnj experience. It was like visiting Disney World for the first time. You arrive overwhelmed and leave feeling the Disney Magic. I left my first edcamp feeling restored, rejuvenated, and hopeful. I was now connected to a group of educators that would push me to grow professionally. My hope is that each leader leaves with that edcamp Magic and creates it for their staff. In order to do this, we need to leave titles at the door and be open to a non traditional approach to professional development. Quite often as leaders we love to control and plan. Those are not the essence of edcamp. It is about the organic experience of having conversations with colleagues and learning from each other.

Since edcampldr is happening globally we have the opportunity to collaborate with other sites. We have two scheduled hangouts during our first two sessions. During Session 1 we will be connecting and collaborating with Boston and South Jersey sites with the topic “How to Overcome Leadership Challenges." During Session 2 we will be connecting with South Jersey to discuss: “Connecting North & South - Does it Matter Pork Roll, Taylor Ham, Sprinkles, Jimmies, Sub or Hoagie We are all New Jersey." This offers a unique opportunity for collaboration.

I hope for all the edcamp newbies out there you come with an open mind ready to grow, learn, and connect. Until then I'll be patiently waiting for the guests to arrive and the party to begin.