Tuesday, February 4, 2014
One Word plan
The "one word" that I chose to focus on was "dedication" particularly with regard to my family. I'm pretty busy with school and school and also school that I wanted to make sure that I was making time to dedicate myself to enjoying the time I have available with my family. This was made possible a few weeks ago when my son got and ear infection, my daughter got pink eye, my wife got the flu, and everyone had fevers. Except me. For a period of a week I was a one-man crew that was blowing noses, making soups, administering medicines, and disinfecting everything. It was a wild ride and I'm very glad that everyone is better.
The Spirit of Leadership
Concepts: Spirituality, Leadership
Enduring Understanding: It takes more than knowledge to be a teacher leader.
What does it mean to have a teacher's heart? What is "teaching with heart? What is spiritual teaching?
Read the article posted below: "The Spirit of Leadership".
Create a blog post in which you answer the following questions about your response to this article and connect it to your work with The Spiritual Dimension of Leadership by Houston and Sokolow.
- What are your initial thoughts about the idea that spirituality is the missing piece in the puzzle?
- My initial thought was that the author would be referring to spirituality in a religious sense. Being a teacher in a non-parochial school, my initial reaction was to say to myself, "This article will have little bearing on my own experiences." However, it was soon clear that the author was referring to "spiritual" development in terms of personal growth and team building, two ideas that I can get behind.
- Most teachers would want to avoid the pitfall of moving from compassion to callousness. One way to do this is to remember why you became a teacher in the first place. Briefly describe why you entered the teaching profession and mention any mentor who inspired or guided you.
- The person that I would say had the strongest influence on moving me into the career that I am is my dad. My dad was an 8th grade science teacher for 37 years. I grew up knowing what the tasks of a teacher entailed. I helped grade. I helped to set up labs over the weekend. In addition, my high school calculus teacher was a great influence on me because he showed me that you can be both a serious profession and kind of crazy, as long as you can pull it off. I'm not sure if I'm pulling it off as well as he did, but I'm sure trying.
- The article concludes with the notion that the 21st Century is "the best time in history to be an educator". Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Why?
- With regard to the opportunities that are available for students, I would say that today is a fantastic time to be a teacher. Access to technology has made learning occur in ways that it never did before. Students can learn outside of the classroom. They can accomplish tasks in class in different ways than they were ever able to before. On other side of the coin, the increase in technology has also lead to an increase in things that can cause distractions, both in and out of school. Checking text messages in class is detrimental to learning. Rampant cyber-bullying can be detrimental to personal growth.
- In what ways does your own notion of "spirituality" (not necessarily religious in nature) inform and affect your actions as a teacher in your own classroom and as a teacher leader among your peers? On which of the 8 SDL principles do you rely most heavily?
- Of the 8 principles that were discussed, I would say that I rely most heavily on the idea of gratitude. Being appreciate of those that have helped us to succeed is extremely important to me. Recently, my faith in humanity was restored when I had to unexpectedly sub for another math teacher's class when the substitute didn't show up. I wasn't too excited to lose my prep period, but the sub wasn't there and somebody had to teach those kids, so, I begrudgingly took the class to my room. Luckily, it was a lesson with which I was extremely familiar with and the teacher had some items ready for the sub to use. What took my by surprise was that at the end of the lesson, when the class was leaving for lunch, I had several students thank me for teaching them that day. As a high school teacher I don't regularly get students saying, "Thanks for teaching me some math today," but that's exactly what happened. I was tremendous.
January Research Journal
Now that I have had a chance to take a closer look at my data, I've noticed a couple of items that stand out pretty clearly:
- Students, in general, liked the way that the standards-based grading system worked. They liked being able to reassess any of the learning targets they wanted to in order to show proficiency.
- Students, in general, didn't like that they were not able to see what their grade was at any particular time as they could in their other classes. This wasn't feasible for me to do because their total grade was an amalgamation of several different factors that wasn't easy to calculate on a regular basis. Next time I will look at having a set date where students would be able to get a snapshot of what their current grade is.
- Students final grades are, in general, higher in this class than they would be in a traditional math class. I'm torn as to whether this is "good" or "bad". If all grades are better, than students are clearly succeeding more, which is good, but is the letter grade that I have assigned to a particular score appropriate? I'm still not totally sure.
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