Sunday, December 27, 2015

Wishes come true

One week into Christmas Break.  Family has come, presents unwrapped, leisurely days enjoyed with nothing more pressing than making more popcorn and watching movies.  And still I wake in the middle of the night, convinced I have forgotten something crucial--let someone down.  It's my principal's version of teacher dreams.  All that concern and responsibility is still floating around in the back of my brain--the volume turned down, but still there.

I recently received a Christmas card from a dear friend, also an administrator.  She wrote, "I pray this next year all your wishes will come true!"  That has me thinking.  What are my wishes?  And why is that such a difficult question?!

Personal wishes:  This is a little easier to define after a week of vacation.  BALANCE!  I must find some time to prioritize time for some exercise and self-care.  I bought a 50 pack of pool passes with the intention to go 1-2 times a week.  (Set the bar low--make it attainable!)  I must unplug and refocus daily, if only for 5-10 minutes.

One of my core values is helping others.  I believe in service and putting a hand to any work that needs doing.  The only problem is that my own stuff finds itself at the bottom of the pile each day, languishing in the land of good intentions.  A life of balance is hard!

Professional:  FOCUS!  I have imminent work to do:  lots of large-scale paperwork, things that cannot be accomplished in one day.  I need to set aside focused time to power through these projects.

Oh!  I just realized I can put something fun in the "wishes come true" category!  I have been working with our local Sunrise Rotary group to get a water bottle refilling station installed in our multi-purpose room at school.  I got a sneak preview--the maintenance department was installing it last week.  I can't wait to introduce this to the kids and start using it.

Well, Blog Fans, here's hoping all your wishes come true in 2016!

Saturday, December 12, 2015

New Learning, New Year

I can't believe 2015 is almost over.  I never anticipate the new year, in part because I'm full of December busyness right now.  I love December with Christmas trees and holiday performances and holiday songs and gift giving and secret Santas and . . .
Well, you get the picture.  So I'm always a bit in the moment of December and then January sneaks up on me.

But I've been challenged to write about new learning for 2016.  So I'll pull my brain out of the moment and think forward to 2016.

I really believe in being a life-long learner.  One of the joys of being an adult is that I get to choose what I learn.  No one is assigning me a class or giving me a grade.  I get to follow my own whims and go at my own pace.

One of my educational passions is teaching students social-emotional skills.  Any elementary teacher can tell you our kids are not coming pre-loaded with skills like impulse inhibition, emotional management skills, or empathy.  Yet these are skills that make great learners and great human beings!  I have taught, trained, and promoted the Second Step Curriculum from Committee for Children for years.  Recently I got an add reminding me that the new principal toolkit is on sale!  I love a good sale!  I am looking forward to receiving this kit and finding ways to encourage social-emotional growth in new ways at my school.


Another recent area of learning for me is finding ways to support struggling children in new ways.  There are so many general-education kids who need big, big help and it is hard to know what to do.  Punishment is not "fixing" them.  Part of the answer is the aforementioned social-emotional skills that they are lacking, but that's a long-haul prescription.  What do I do about NOW?  I guess if I figure it out, I'll really have something to blog about!  :)

Personal areas of learning include challenging my musical learning by continuing with our local orchestra.  Playing cello does not come naturally to me, although I love it.  If I were not in orchestra, I'd only pick it up occasionally.  Orchestra keeps my brain in gear and keeps me learning new things.  It pushes me out of my comfort zone (love those big, slow whole, half, quarter notes!) and into the land of learning.

Have you noticed that learning is hard?  It's uncomfortable.  It's stressful!  Making peace with the push to learn helps us keep learning.  And having compassion for those who are marked by the stress of learning is important.  Sometimes a grumpy, mean, spiteful person is just someone being stretched a bit too far.  (Of course, sometimes they're just a grumpy, mean, spiteful person, but I can still have compassion!)

Okay, friends and educators.  Here's to new learning in 2016.  Here's to riding the crests and troughs of the rough seas of learning.  We can do it!

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Improving Schools

What is something you are doing to change school for students or what is something you would like to do?

Our schools have so much that is good.  They are filled with heartwarming moments and educational leaps and innovation.  
And yet . . .
I sometimes doubt that we are up to the task of educating our 21st century children.  Some days I lose hope that our system serves our students well at all.
Frightening thoughts.
Because if this is not a way to meet our kids' needs then what is??

I'm not a visionary.  I have a hard time dreaming big.  I'm practical.  I like balanced budgets and agendas and concrete plans.  So it's helpful to work with people who do dream big.  Listed below are some of the classroom practices that help me to "catch the vision".

Non-traditional desks/chairs
Several of the teachers I work with have experimented with non traditional seating and desks.  They have a variety of table heights (for standing or seated work) and a variety of chairs (exercise balls, wiggle chairs, bean bags, stools).  The amazing thing is that these classrooms are very calm and centered.  I worried that kids would all want the same cool chair, but the teachers have arranged systems to manage this.  In one upper elementary classroom, the desks and chairs are traditional, but the teacher allows the kids to complete independent work on the floors with clipboards if they want to.  And it works!

Media
Our little tech-savvy learners are fearless with new technology.  They are ready to be engaged, entertained, and challenged by learning in a media rich environment.  Mobile technology is often adaptive to each learner's needs, allowing a level of true curriculum differentiation that was nearly impossible to provide in the past.  The trick is finding learning experiences for the students that challenge them beyond the level of an electronic worksheet.  Tasks with multiple solutions, opportunities to explore and present new ideas, challenges to utilize learning in a novel way (rather than just demonstrate memorization) all take learning to a new level.

Communication and cooperation
Remember when a silent class really showed your administrator what a good teacher you were?  Not anymore!  Kids need opportunities to talk, defend, digest, explain, and collaborate.  On-task talking makes learning more relevant and significant to the students.  It moves the kids from passive learners (just sit quietly and look engaged) to active participants.  One measure of engaged learning is "opportunities to respond".  This includes table talk, partner talk, response boards, and a variety of other active learning strategies.  In addition to participating in their learning, student conversations move English language development (and acquisition of academic language) to the core of how we learn everyday.

Focus on the positive
We can no longer assume that kids "know how to be good."  PBIS trainer, Dale Myers, says, "If you want it, teach it."  If we want a high standard of social behavior at school we have to teach it.  And not just once.  We have to teach it to mastery.  This is true of the social/emotional behaviors our children need to be successful learners (and good human beings) too.  We teach the Second Step curriculum in our classrooms for all our children.  Even the most well-adjusted student can learn a lot from this program.  And while we're being positive, have you noticed how many kids are doing things just the way we asked them to? Sometimes it's easy to overlook this when that one naughty kid is once again up to his/her shenanigans.  Celebrating positive behavior puts attention on the kids who are making right choices instead of the rascals who are being pests (again!).

I'm sure I could think of more ways schools are changing to meet the needs of our kids.  But I just noticed it's late.  And tomorrow is only Thursday.  So I think I'll stop trying to save the world for tonight and try again in the morning.

Laughing nephews

Monday, November 30, 2015

Morning Message

For years I have been giving a morning message over the school PA system.  My mentor began the tradition with a desire to begin the day with a positive moment.  Last year I began doing the Morning Message in video format.  Despite tech glitches, this has been great fun.  One of the big advantages is that a teacher can play the message when he/she is ready, not when I happen to bounce on the PA system.
We use materials from Project Wisdom.

Here is a sample:  
http://youtu.be/fjBnJg1UlHw


Make it a great day, or not.  The choice is yours!

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Advice for students who want to become teachers:

Teaching is all about relationships.  Building trust and respect with your students is the foundation for learning.  Sounds easy, right?  Not so easy!  Here's how I think it works for me:

1.  Be real.  Not scary real.  We are talking about children here.  Just be genuine.
2.  Don't believe the "Don't smile until January" advice.  I am a smiley person, so I smile.  (See advice #1.)
3.  Hug or handshake?  I try to say every student's name at least once a day.  I stand at the door at the end of the day and offer "hug or handshake?"  Some rascals will try to dodge me, but it's just for show.  Very few kids refuse.
4.  Names are powerful.  I learn their names quickly and try like crazy to pronounce them the way they prefer.  No one is allowed to tease someone about their name.
4.  It's okay to not know it all.  "I don't know.  Let's look it up," is a brilliant answer.
5.  Learn to make peace with "good enough".  There will always be too many meetings and too many student pull-outs and too much student assessment and waaayyyy too many papers to grade.  Don't let it pull you to pieces.  It's the relationships that count.
6.  Have a life.  Find a non-school thing that you love to do and enjoy!!  Zumba, surfing, book club, music, walking, talking and good coffee.  Just remember to find the joy in each day.

Teaching is crazy-great.  It's life with a big purpose, especially when you love helping others.  When things get bad, go do that non-school thing you love, get a good night's sleep, and keep on trying.  The kids are worth it.

Hello, World.  Welcome to my blog!

Apparently I get a little wild when given consecutive days of vacation (Thank you, Thanksgiving!).  
Stay tuned for scintillating educational insights from the elementary world.  :)