Category Archives: Technology

Writing Workshop: Assessment and Hope

Students should write more than teachers can ever grade. I heard this first from Kelly Gallagher, author of the book Readicide, a book, among others, that helped me frame my curriculum around Workshop. If I remember correctly, he said that his students write four times more than he grades. Really?

I pondered this for a long while, and I still struggle, but I think I have some of it figured out. I thought for a long time that my students would not write unless I graded what they wrote. Every assignment:  “Is this for a grade?” Every answer: “Yes, everything is for a grade.” The refrain got old.

Then I tried something new: I began writing with my students on the first day of school, and I had some kind of writing activity every single day. I don’t remember where I read it, but when I was researching the work of the reading writing workshop gurus a couple of years ago, I know I read:  if you struggle with time and have to choose between reading or writing, choose writing.

It’s the complete opposite of what I thought:  My students are struggling readers. How do I give up reading when I know they need it? I thought about it more and realized: If I teach writing well, students will be reading. And they will be reading a lot.

So let me explain how this works for me. Remember, I teach AP English Language and Composition (that’s the top 11th graders) and English I (that’s on-level freshmen)–two extremes.

Writing Every Day

There are many ways to get students to write every day. Of course, some ways will get them to take their writing more seriously than others. I find that when I give them an audience, students will put a lot more effort into what comes out their pens. Audience matters!

Topic Journals. Following the advice of Penny Kittle, author of Write Beside Them, I created “topic journals” that students write in once a week the first semester. I bought composition notebooks and printed labels, using various fonts, of the topics: love, conflict, man vs. man, man vs. self, man vs. nature, war, death, gender, hope, redemption, family, romance, hate, promise, temptation, evil, compromise, self-reliance, education, friendship, guilt, doubt, expectation, admiration, ambition, courage, power, patience, fate, temperance, desire, etc. I created 36 notebooks; one for each student in my largest class.

I introduced the topic journals to my AP students first. I set up the scenario:  “I will be teaching 9th grade. I need your help. Do you remember what it was like to be new to high school? nervous, anxious, a little bit obnoxious? I created these notebooks so you could write and give advice to my younger, less advanced students.”

The first task was to turn to the first page in the journal and define the topic. Many looked up the terms in the dictionary or online. They wrote a quickwrite explaining what the topic meant. Then on the next page they wrote about anything they liked as long as their writing fit the topic. I had them sign their posts with their initials and the class period. I told them that they could choose their form (a letter, a narrative, an advice column) as long as they remembered that their audience was 9th graders, and whatever they wrote had to be school appropriate. “If you write about bombs or offing yourself or anyone else, you’re off to see the counselor or the police.” These are good kids, most of them in National Honor Society. They took my charge to help my younger students seriously. This exercise often worked as a lead into our critical reading or class discussion that day, and sometimes students chose a piece they’d started in a topic journal to continue exploring for a process piece.

You can imagine how I introduced the journals to my freshmen. I began by saying, “You know I teach AP English, right? That’s the college-level English class. Well, those students would like to offer you advice about high school, life, and whatever else you might have to deal with the next few years. They are going to write to you in these topic journals. Your job when you see these notebooks on the tables is to choose the one that “calls” to you. First, you will read the messages the older students wrote for you, and then you will respond. Remember to use your best writing.” I then set the timer and had students read and write for 10-15 minutes, depending on the lesson I planned that day. Sometimes I had students share out what they wrote; most often we tucked the notebooks away for another week.

Students constantly fought over a couple of the topics:  love, death, and evil were their favorites. I am certain that is telling (and it did help me when selecting titles for book talks.)

While students wrote in topic journals, I read what students had previously written in the notebooks kids did not select. I’d write a quick line or two in response to something in that notebook. I always used a bright orange or green pen, so students could tell I’d had my eyes in that journal. They knew I was reading them, but they never knew when or what entry. This helped hold them accountable for not only the content of what they were writing but also the mechanics of how they were writing it.

Assessment? Formative. Students have to think quickly and write about a topic on a timed test for the AP exam (11th grade) and STAAR (9th grade).

Blogs

At first I only set up a class blog, and I had students write in response to posts I put on the front page and in response to an article I put on an article of the week page (another Gallagher idea). It didn’t take me long to realize that students would write more and take more ownership of their craft if they created their own blogs. The first year I had students set up blogs I taught gifted and talented sophomores, and I was nervous. Nervous that something would happen:  they’d post inappropriate things, they’d do something to get themselves and me in trouble, they’d be accosted by trolls out to hurt children through internet contact. I chose Edublogs.org as the platform because I could be an administrator on the student blogs, and I had my kids use pseudonyms. This was overkill. Yes, I did have to change two things that year:  one student called his blog Mrs. Rasmussen. I told him my husband didn’t appreciate that much. Another kid used a picture of a bomb as his avatar. Not funny. All-in-all my students did great, and they wrote a lot more (and better) than they ever did for me on paper. I was a stickler for errors and created this cruel scoring guide that said something like: A=only one minor error, B=two minor error, C=three minor errors, F=four or more errors. Students that had never gotten a C in their lives were freaking out over F’s. “Sorry, kiddo, that’s a comma splice. That’s a run-on.” I had more opportunities to teach grammar mini-lessons than I ever had in my career. But see, these kids cared about their grades.

My 9th graders now–not so much. They care about a lot of things, but if I punish them for comma errors or the like, they shut down and stop writing. I learned to be much more careful. Now, I work on building relationships so they trust me to teach them how to fix the errors themselves. It takes a lot more time, but in the end, student writing improves, and students feel more confident in their abilities. I am still working on getting my 9th graders to be effective writers. So far, I have not accomplished that too well, as is evidence of their EOC scores this year.

This past year my AP English students posted on their blogs once a week. I told them that I would read as many of their posts as I could, but I would only grade about every three. I wouldn’t tell them which ones I’d be grading. I let students choose their topics, but since I had to teach them specific skills to master for the AP exam, I instilled parameters. They had to choose a news article that they found interesting, and then they had to formulate an argument that stemmed from that article. The deadline was 10 pm on Monday–every week. This assignment accomplished two of my objectives:  students will become familiar with the world around them, and students will create pieces that incorporate the skills that we learn in class. When I turned to social media to promote student blogs, I got even more ownership from my students.

Assessment? Formative or Summative. Students apply the skills they learned in class regarding grammar, structure, style, devices, etc. Scored using the AP Writing Rubric for the persuasive open-ended question.

Twitter in the Classroom

One of these days I will write a post about the many ways I used Twitter in class this year. For now, let me just tell you:  Twitter was the BEST thing I added to my arsenal of student engagement tools. Ever.

When I began asking students to tweet their blog url’s after they wrote on Mondays, I started leaving quick and easy feedback via Twitter. It was so easy! Kids would tweet their posts; I’d read them; re-tweet with a pithy comment. Within minutes of the first couple of tweet exchanges, students were posting and tweeting more. They were getting feedback from me, and they were giving feedback to one another. They began building a readership, and that’s what matters if students blog. Just because they are posting to the world wide web does not mean anyone is reading what they write. But, a readership, especially one that will leave comments, that’s a whole new story.

Assessment? Formative. Students share their writing and make comments about their peers’ writing. Critical thinking is involved because students only have 140 characters to express their views.

Student Choice. Sometimes.

In a perfect writing class, I am sure students get to choose what they write about every time. This does not work in an AP English class where I am trying to prepare students for that difficult exam. Once a week my students complete a timed writing where they respond to an AP prompt. The guidelines for AP clearly state that the essays are scored as drafts; minor errors are expected. My students must practice on-demand writing. There is no time for conferencing or for taking these essays through the writing process. Unless–we revisit. And sometimes we do. Students are allowed to re-assess per our district grading policy if they score below an 85. 85 is difficult for many of my students, so lots of them re-assess. To do so, students must come in and conference with me about their timed writing. I am usually able to pick out the trouble spots quite easily, and it’s through these brief conversations that I get the most improvement from student writing. Often, instead of conferencing with me, students will evaluate their essays with one another.

I show several student models of higher scoring essays and teach students how to read the AP Writing Rubric. Then, in round robin style, students assess their own essays and at least three of their peers. I remind students not to be “nice” to their friends and give a score that’s undeserved. This will not help anyone master the skills necessary for the AP exam. Rarely do students give themselves or their peers scores higher than I would.

My students also write process papers. For AP reading workshop students choose a book from my short list. After reading and discussing the books with their Book Clubs, students have to write an essay that argues some topic from the book. I model how to structure an essay. I model how to write an engaging introduction. I model how to imbed quotes and how to write direct and indirect citations. I model everything I want to see in this type of writing.

I allow several weeks in my agenda to take these papers through the writing process, and students do most of the work outside of class (not so with my 9th graders).

  • Day one students generate thesis statements, and we critique, re-write, and re-critique.
  • Day two students bring drafts that we read and evaluate in small groups. (I have to teach them that a draft is a finished piece that they are ready to get feedback on–not a quickwrite. So many students type up their rough draft and call in good. This makes me crazy! And I tell them that I will not read their first draft unless they come before or after school or during lunch. They must work on their craft before I will spend my time reading it.)
  • Day three students bring another draft that we read and evaluate again. Sometimes, depending on where my kids are in terms of producing a good piece, I will take these up and provide editing on the first page. Never more than the first page!
  • Day four students turn in their polished papers. I score them holistically on a rubric that aligns with the AP Writing one, or if it’s my 9th graders, I score them on the appropriate STAAR writing rubric.

My freshmen students need a much more hand holding, and we do a lot of writing on lined yellow paper. Most often, especially at the first of the year, they get to choose their own topics. However, I have to give them a lot more structure because on the new Texas state test. 9th graders have to write two essays (about 300 words each): a literary essay, which is an engaging story, and an expository essay, which explains their thinking about a given prompt. Students use the yellow paper to draft during class. I wander the room, answering questions and keeping kids on task. I also try to write an essay every time I ask students to do so. I use these essays as mentor texts in addition to mentor texts I find by professional authors.

Usually I begin class with some kind of mini-lesson if students are in the middle of drafting. I might show students a paragraph with a description that uses sensory imagery and instruct them to add some description in their own writing. Or, I might teach introductory clauses and have students revise a sentence to include one or two or three. This way I am able to get authentic instruction that my students need right there in the middle of their writing time. When I score these student papers, I specifically look for the skills I’ve explicitly taught. If I do it right, I will have read my students papers one or two times during their writing process, prior to them ever turning in their final draft.

Notice I said “if I do it right.” I rarely do it right. I am still learning to budget my time and get to every kid. I am still learning to get every kid to write. I am writing English I curriculum this summer, which I will use in the fall. I hope to get some of my challenges with my struggling students worked out as I focus more purposefully on the standards. I realized this year that while I am teaching writing as a process all the time, I am not necessarily targeting the standards that fit into the process. I am thinking about this a lot lately.

This is still my burning question:  how can I get kids who hate to read and write to participate in writing workshop so their writing improves and their voices are heard?

I am turning to the gurus as I research and think this summer. Jeff Anderson’s book 10 Things Every Writer Should Know has been an excellent start.

“Blog, blog, blog…that is all I ever hear.”

'student_ipad_school - 025' photo (c) 2012, Brad Flickinger - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

An Open Letter to Parents:

I have heard you have some questions about our student blogs and writing in my class. I hope this letter answers them.

Did you know that our classroom blog is each student’s portfolio of work, which includes all types of writing? It is a combination of digital journal and portfolio. So far this year, students have been given opportunities to write in many modes: expository, narrative, literary response, and personal reflection. In addition to the assigned writing tasks, I encourage students to write about topics that interest them. The growth I have seen in my student writers has been easy to measure, since so many of them have taken ownership of their blogs and write to their personal world-wide audiences.

This summer I attended a conference where Alan November, an international leader in educational technology, described the urgency teachers must take in changing practices that limit learning to one-year increments. Teachers must expand learning practices so students retain and build upon the knowledge they gain each year. This idea of expanding learning practices resonated within me because I have often found it frustrating that a student’s body of work is essentially not available to him for reflection, or continued study, after a given school year.

For my students, their blogs are a collection of their work. For some, this blog will become a place where they can explore and express complex ideas about our society, even after they leave my classroom. Research shows that bloggers are more prolific writers than their teenage counterparts who do not blog. Additionally, blogging allows for an authentic voice in student writing.

When a student writes for the teacher, as grader and sole audience, the writing is often contrived and trite. However, when we give students the opportunity to find an audience outside the walls of the classroom, they find their voices and their writing dramatically improves. In addition, the feedback students receive on their writing is not just from me, the teacher. The feedback may come from anyone who reads their posts, which makes the opportunity for connections to the real-world exciting for student writers. Just last month, a student elatedly read a comment on her blog from a pastor who said that her post gave him a refreshing view of heroism–a thought he would love to share with his congregation.

I received another bit of positive feedback recently. An author contacted me saying he was interested in publishing for his readers a visual literacy piece one of my students created about that author’s book. My student had posted this original piece on his blog. Again, feedback from our beyond-the-classroom audience.

In my classroom we do not “do blogging;” blogging is the medium students use to publish their work.

Many people, some personal friends of mine, have received book publication contracts simply from the body of work they have posted to their blogs. Why would I not encourage blogs as a place for students to publish their authentic work?

Still not convinced? Consider this: Blogging can be a great equalizer in a Digital Classroom.

The author is not struggling to physically form letters, and the reader is not struggling to read cramped handwriting. When students type, they are no longer judged by their penmanship. In addition, technology supports the author’s spelling. Without these limitations, students are judged by the depth of their ideas and the connections they make to their world and our society. Isn’t that the kind of thinking and learning we want?

Parents, please, I encourage you to frequently read your student’s blog. Share the link to your son or daughter’s blog with grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends, and all the important people in your child’s life. Imagine the kind of writing we can develop in our student writers if we show them we care about what they have to say. And, believe me, my students have a lot of good things to say.

Help me expand the Learning Community and comment on your child’s blog posts. The opportunities for growth are endless!

Respectfully,

Mrs. Cato

Twitter Schmitter – Recap

Thank you so much to all of you who attended our session. We had a lovely time! If you have any questions please don’t ever hesitate to meet us up in the Twittersphere!

Twitter Schmitter – TCTELA 2012

 

Here is a link to our presentation: Prezi

Here is a link to our resources: LiveBinder

 

 

5 1/2 Blogs to Engage Online Readers: We <3 You

Ted McCain (Jukes, Kelly & McCain 2009) reminds us in his book, Teaching the Digital Generation, that our world advances technologically, and otherwise, faster than we can imagine or understand:

 “Conventional wisdom is that is takes great strength to hold on to something.  In my view, it takes the greatest strength to let go of something you have done the same way for a long time.” (p. 7)

We forever stand on a precipice – we can inch back, teach the traditional way, and feel safe, warm and snuggly in our classic canon of literature with written assignments and worksheets that fit our required curriculum.  Or, we can leap forth into the unknown, embracing all that technology has to offer us – even if we don’t understand most (or all) of it, even if the students seem to fly past us in their faster cars with better smartphones using keener predictive texting skills – and find a new home.  Digital literacy, plain and simple, is the way forward.  It will not revert, remain static, nor go away.  We must jump from the edge of what we know – for our students are already waiting in the wide open spaces for us to move ahead, and not only walk with them, but also to lead them into developing stronger 21st century skills that actually prepare them for jobs, work, and higher education fields that do not yet exist.  Reading online about real people and genuine issues in a variety of areas might be just the interface students need to shift their digital engagement from passive bystander to active contributor in the world around them.

Here are 5 1/2 blogs we hope will engage young adults as they enhance and expand their digital literacy skills and improve the quality of their lives.

1. Seth Godin’s BlogGodin is an entrepreneur that is attempting to change the way we think about writing by changing the way we think about, relate to, and connect with others. (His website is cool, too!)

2. Start Something that MattersBlake Mycoskie, the founder of TOMS shoes, keeps a blog about community action on local, regional, and global levels, encouraging people that one person can make a difference, even with just a simple pair of shoes.

3. Postcards from Elysian Fields – This blog by T.R. Sullivan for the MLB highlights the trials and triumphs of the Texas Rangers baseball team, blending great writing and imagery with current sports news.  Sullivan keeps sports in a hallowed place in our hearts with each entry.

4. The Beauty Brains – 4 scientists called Right Brain, Left Brain, Sarah Bellum, and The Other Lobes, write this knowledgeable blog on the misrepresentations in popular culture on cosmetic products for both genders.  Its clever style and interactive format provides excellent chemistry connections to the science of beauty.

5. Holes in My BrainAudrey, a recent high school graduate, writes this insightful and edgy blog about young adult literature “goodreads” and her views on the life of a [now waning] teenager.  This is a well-crafted and stylish blog that would inspire students to create their own.

5 ½. 100 Blogs for Those Who Want to Change the World – A comprehensive list of world-changer blogs in every major interest area of change, advocacy, global citizenship and aid.

As Zach Braff’s character exclaims in the film Garden State, “Good luck exploring the infinite abyss!”

Don’t worry.  We’re out there, too.  Let us know what you find on your journey.

iOS5 Update

How to Update a Class Set of iPads and Keep Your Sanity!

I have been fortunate enough to receive a class set of iPads this year. They have been GREAT! However, when iOS5 came out I had to make a plan on how I would systematically update all 30 of them.  Below you will find a list of steps that I took to update all of my iPads. It actually went quite well and I really did not encounter any difficulties while completing this process.

Just so you know – all 30 of my iPads are running with the same iTunes account. I have one centralized MacBook that I use to keep all of my devices up to date. Although I do have a multiple port USB hub, I only plugged in one iPad for the update into the computer at a time. Finally some of you may find that you do want to jump into all of the features iCloud and other services have to offer. Again, this is just what I did.

Updating iPads to iOS 5

  1. Update the iTunes on your sync station to the most current version.
  2. Update all mobile apps.
  3. Download any additional apps you want to have on the iPads.
  4. Connect the first iPad to the computer.  You can only update one at a time.
  5. You will be prompted to do a software version 5.0 update – click Update
  6. You’ll get a dialog box suggesting that you transfer purchases that were purchased on the device and not from the computer.  This is your choice.  If all apps are on the computer you can skip this step.
  7. The next dialog box warns about deleting several other things as it upgrades.  You may want to make sure that you have backed up any photos, videos, or Pages files you want to keep before upgrading.
  8. If you have a lot of apps, the updating process can take up to 30 minutes.

IMPORTANT:  Make sure the computer has finished the updates before you disconnect the iPad! Once it starts syncing apps, the device no longer has the Syncing message on the iPad but it is still working so don’t disconnect until it is finished.

Once updated, there are several settings you have to set before you’ll be able to use the iPad at all:

  1. First screen, tap Continue
  2. Enable Location Services – tap Next
  3. Choose a Network – It is important that you select a network properly. If you choose the wrong network or if it’s slow to connect, you’ll get a Continue Without WiFi error message. Keep trying until it connects to the network and goes to the next screen.
  4. Apple ID – sign in with the iTunes account for that iPad
  5. Terms and Conditions – Agree
  6. The next screen asks about using iCloud.  Tap Do Not Use iCloud.  There are many implications to using iCloud in a shared, multi-iPad situation.  My district will be using some iCloud features in other settings but we do not want the iPads backing up to iCloud at this time.
  7. Diagnostics – Do Not Send.  Tap Next
  8. Tap Start Using iPad

General Settings Changes (Ways to save your battery and your sanity!)

–       NOTIFICATIONS

  • Turn off all notifications.  There are a few that are on by default.  You’ll have to turn them off one at a time. There may actually be a few you want on. You will have to consider this carefully.

–       LOCATION SERVICES

  • Turn on Location Services for Find My iPad and iMovie (if installed.)
  • Tap System Services – Turn off all of them.  This will help with battery drain.

–       iCLOUD

  • Turn off everything except Bookmarks and Find My iPad.  For my district, as we learn more about iCloud and how it affects the other iPads on the same account, we may turn some of these back on.

–       iMESSAGE

  • Turn OFF!  Because the iPads are all on the same Apple ID account any number that is typed on one iPad to send a message will then appear on all the iPads. It is a cool feature so kids want to try it out. The problem is they have now typed in their mom’s phone number and other students will then see mom’s number on their iPad and will “test out the cool new toy” by sending a message to a number they don’t even know.

–       FACETIME

  • Turn OFF  – Same issue as iMessage.  Tap on the Apple ID then tap Sign Out.  This will force the iPad to have the password if a student turns it back on.

–       SAFARI

  • Just for housekeeping you may want to clear history and cookies/data
  • Turn on Bookmarks Bar. Since iCloud syncing of bookmarks is turned on you can now set up frequently used bookmarks on any one of the iPads (or the syncing station Safari) and all iPads will sync and get them.

–       PHOTOS

  • Leave all settings as is.  Do not turn on Photo Stream. This enables any and all pictures the students take to appear on all of the devices. Not only would this quickly fill up space on the iPads, it would eat up bandwidth as the files are transferred to each iPad and to the cloud.  At this time, any photos in the Photo Stream cannot be deleted. They simply purge after 30 days.

–       STORE

  • Turn on Automatic Downloads for Apps.

–       Check Other Apps

  • You’ll want to check the other apps you have downloaded and verify that their settings are what you want. For example, it appears that the BBC News app updates the app’s ticker every five minutes. You would want to change that setting to “only on startup.”

Future Updates

Once the iPads are upgraded to iOS 5 they will not have to be connected to the sync station to receive system updates.  They are now done through Settings then tap General then tap System Update.  We had hoped that all iTunes syncing could be done through wifi but the limit of 5 devices per iTunes account still applies.  When tested in our offices we were only able to wirelessly sync 5 devices.  Even if we ejected those 5 from the iTunes list, the next 5 still wouldn’t connect.  The account knows we had already met our limit.  However, if you turned on automatic downloads for apps the iPads should still stay synced.  Occasionally you’ll want to connect one, transfer all the purchased apps, update the apps then sync up all the iPads just to get them all up to date but this doesn’t have to be done often.

Digital Literacy and Why It Matters – TAIR Presentation

Digital Games Prezi

Tools Used in the Prezi

Twitter Schmitter – TAIR Presentation

Twitter LiveBinder from Web2.0 Classroom
CybraryMan’s Twitter Resources Page
Educational Twitter Chats Calendar
 

Get Organized with Web 2.0 Ease


Back to school is just around the corner. Before you know it you will be back in your room straightening the desks, making copies and sharpening pencils, but before you jump right back in to the chaos and commotion that school can bring take just a moment to organize yourself. A few web tools will do this for you. Use these tools on Mac or PC and find high functioning apps for many of the mobile devices as well.

Evernote

You know it’s important to take notes and document what goes on in your classroom.  Are you good at this task? I’m not.  I know people use journals or even take notes directly on a calendar, but for me that’s all a big fail–until I started using Evernote.  With Evernote I can take notes, add images, post audio and pdf documents that can then be tagged, or categorized.

A few things I do with Evernote:

  1. Keep notes about parent and student phone calls.
  2. Record notes about behavior and interventions.
  3. Keep up with to-do lists and other things I don’t want to forget.
  4. Take notes from conferences.
  5. Document professional development, committee meetings, and other events I participate in related to school.

Dropbox

Between my personal and school computers it seems that the file or assignment I am working on is never where I need it. With Dropbox I easily add a file to a folder on my desktop that in turn saves on the Internet that I can then access any Dropbox folder on any of the computers I am using.  How cool is that? And get this– I  can also share files with students, which makes turning in assignments online super easy.

Diigo

Ever save a website under ‘favorites’ on your computer only to realize you saved it at school instead of at home or visa versa?  Have you ever lost all of your saved favorites because of computer reimaging? Diigo is a social bookmarking site that lets you save your favorite websites externally,  so you can get to them from anywhere. In addition to merely bookmarking sites,  you can add tags, or categories, as well as notes on why you like it or how you’d use it.  The tags make the websites easier to search later and the notes help you remember why you saved it in the first place.  Other features include the ability to share your favorites with friends, colleagues, and students as well as view others favorites. This one’s a time saver!

Twitter

Connecting with one another and sharing ideas is an important part of being a teacher.  Often times what we teach can seem so specialized that it becomes difficult to collaborate with others in your building.  Twitter is an excellent way to meet up with other teachers looking for the same things you are.  Whether you want to talk about YA books, technology use in the classroom, or even classroom management, I can guarantee you can find your place on Twitter.  One of the most beneficial things on Twitter are the chats that people host for all different topics at all different times.

GoodReads

I read a lot, and I like to keep track of what I’ve read. Goodreads, a social networking site for bibliophiles, is one great way I to keep up with my books.  Keep a record of what your reading, write reviews, share your recommendations,  and even participate in a book club. Goodreads provides a cyber-venue for all of this.  I especially like how I can create shelves and sort my books by genre. I send my students to this virtual library, and they get ideas about what to read.  Goodreads is a good tool!

My Top 5 Gurus – Who Are Yours?

Thank you, Melville Publishing for picture....
These people, places, and collections of great knowledge have made me a better teacher.  They are my gurus, my distant teachers, and my life-savers when the screws are put to me in the classroom, and for the 987th time, when the students have “turned the tables” on me, as my new favorite artist Adele sings.  Thank you, gurus, for moving me.  Thank you for holding the mirror up.  Thank you for forcing me to look into the teacher I thought I was after 11 years and igniting a flame that has burned up the dross in my classroom on a daily basis.  What remains after such an intellectual bonfire amidst the students and myself are the ashes from which knowledge, compassion, inspiration, communication, and fellowship arise.  It truly is a “beautiful collision” (thank you, David Crowder).

#1. The Buck Institute for Education – This organization acts as my collective teacher, from its web resources to its handbooks in print to its well-trained educators, whose blogs and conference opportunities have inspired me to let project based learning completely change my life.  I love teaching because of what BIE has taught me.  Check out their website and their blogs for new educators in PBL.  Fantastic research and downloadable resources! (PBL Do-It-Yourself is a life-saver!)

#2.  Aimee Buckner – Her tried and true suggestions for using reader’s/writer’s notebooks in Notebook Know-How and Notebook Connections have given me many ideas that actually work.  I wanted to know how someone specifically used the notebooks in an authentic and real way, and she even included actual copies of posts from her kids!  It’s fantastic!

#3. Cooperative Catalyst – This is an amazing consortium of bloggers, writers, teachers, and others who write about education, trends, needs for change, pedagogy, social issues, etc.  I have found all sorts of new gurus here!  Posts are by various authors – thus, the “cooperative.”  It is said of this blog that the more voices that join, the deeper the discussion goes.  Many of the authors here can also be followed on Twitter.

#4. Don Tapscott – His books Growing Up Digital and Grown Up Digital have exceeded my expectations of what I thought I might learn about technology.  Not only did I learn about the digital natives I teach, or the “hand-held” generation who have never known life with a record player, 8-track, or rotary phone….  But through his work I learned about myself.  My modeling of appropriate use of technology and my role as a respectful contributor in the digital marketplace is equally important to what they can teach me about new tech and devices.  Follow him on Twitter, where the nuggets of wisdom just keep coming…. (@dtapscott)

#5. TED – Two words: pure awesomeness.  TED is so awesome it might actually make you go blind.  Watch videos, learn what’s out there, [if you have cash – ha!] go to a conference and get goodies (then tell me what they were!), or just download the talks.  This conglomeration of cutting edge technology, insightful and charismatic speakers, and world-changing ideas has really given me great classroom engagement pieces.  The videos are mind-blowing at times, sobering at others.  If you haven’t tuned in to TED, run, don’t walk, and start with this amazing video, with technology now a few years old: “The Sixth Sense.”  Follow TED on Twitter: @tedtalks, @TEDnews, @ted_com.

Now, to you: who are your gurus and distant teachers?  And who will you then teach “everything you know”?