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2nd Annual K12Online Conference LAN Party

December 12, 2009 Conferences, Leadership, Learning, Professional Development Comments Off

I am happy to announce

The 2nd annual Jacksonville, Florida
K12Online Conference LAN Party.

LAN stands for Local Area Network.

K12Online-LAN-party

Download the flyer as a pdf to forward to colleagues and/or  print out to hang in your teacher lounge.

Last year I organized with my colleague Paige McGee two session that you can read about here and here.

This year, Andrea Hernandez, will join me to organize a very unique get together of local educators. We are inviting seasoned teacher veterans as well as pre-service teachers and administrators to watch some of the amazing presentations available through K12Online Conference 2009.

We will have some munchies and drinks available as we network, share and learn with and from each other. We will also connect with educators around the world live via Skype to bring in new perspectives and make global connections.

If you are an educator (or future educator) in the  Jacksonville Area, please plan to join us for this (free) exciting event. Please  RSVP by filling in the form below.

When:
January 7th, 2010

Time:
7:00-9:00 pm

Where:
Martin J. Gottlieb Day School
3662 Crown Point Rd
Jacksonville, FL 32257

Interested? Supported? Let’s Move on to Taking the Reins

Please keep spoon feeding me.

Please keep spoon feeding me.

Almost two years ago, I wrote a post titled Collaboration Projects-Doomed to Fail? I wondered:

How much can you spoon feed other teachers? Do you write their lesson plans for them? Do you keep nagging and begging for participation? How do you find collaboration partners who are equally invested in a project? How do you motivate your teachers at your school to be those invested collaboration partners for others?

At that time, my job title was “Technology Integration Facilitator”and I was struggling to get teachers even interested in and to be open to collaborative, global and technology integrated projects. Two years later, I am the “21st Century Leaning Specialist” at a school where most teachers have welcomed support, co-teaching and projects with an open mind.

I don’t feel handicapped that I do not have my own class, but empowered that I am able to be part of the  learning of many individuals and I get to work with ALL  students and teachers. We are communicating, collaborating, and connecting through blogging, podcasting, wiki-ing, video conferencing, back-channeling, goggle-ing, AND creating…

I am already so thrilled that there are teachers who are open minded, interested and willing to open their classroom doors that I want to:

  • make it as easy as possibly for them
  • allow them to completely concentrate on the objectives and goals of their subject area
  • keep as much “technology related problems” away from them
  • protect them from Murphy’s law

I don’t want them to have to do the (often tedious) work of:

  • finding and coordinating with possible collaboration partners across the world
  • filming, recording and editing the footage into final audio or video products
  • setting up blogs, wikis, voicethreads and google apps
  • writing, editing and cleaning up blog posts or wiki entries

One part of me FEELS that it does not matter who does the prep work, the leg work or deals with the problems, as long as students are

  • learning
  • being engaged
  • being exposed to 21st century skills: communicating collaborating, connecting and creating
  • connected to a global audience
  • becoming literate (basic, media, information, intercultural, network, ethical, digital citizenship)

Chris Dawson asks in his post: Are we spoon-feeding our users too much?

If we simply spoon-feed them the technology and isolate them from the bits they find challenging, then they will never have an incentive to learn or grow independent in their use of technology, both in and out of the classroom.

And the other part of me KNOWS what Chris says above is true and that its important to “teach teachers to fish” and not simply give them the fish to eat.

fish-plate

Where is the fine line of making it as easy as possible in order to let teachers see that the benefits will outweigh (make it worth) the time invested, hassles and learning curve? It is important, in the beginning, to ease into the transition from “the old ways” towards 21st century teaching…but when does the time come to cut the umbilical cord?

Putting all the eggs in my basket...

Putting all the eggs in my basket...

Am I enabling teachers to rely on me or someone like me too much? My colleague, Andrea, wrote about her worries regarding sustainability in a post “Seeds, Serendipity, Sustainability“.
Her words helped me remember the learning and the integration has to come from within.

My concern is that, while Silvia is truly an incredible teacher and we are extraordinarily lucky to have this time with her, I worry that we are putting all our eggs in her basket. Silvia is an agent of change, a support, someone to lead the way — but the teachers MUST begin to develop their own PLNs, we must learn to be better at collaborating, sharing, supporting and teaching each other. That is the only way for these changes to be sustainable.
Teachers integrating 21st Century skills, projects and technology

Teachers integrating 21st Century teaching, learning, skills, projects and technology

Is it a natural process all teachers have to go through in order to begin integrating and then sustaining 21st century teaching, learning, skills, projects and technology?

  1. Being interested in and open minded towards a new approach?
  2. Being supported by a colleague or technology/21st century coach, facilitator, integrationist?
  3. Being able and willing to take the reins on their own?
Learning how to ride on the longe

Being supported and guided

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostinfog/ / CC BY-SA 2.0

How do we keep moving from one stage to the other? How long do we “allow” teachers to stay in one stage? How do we make sure we don’t enable teachers and get stuck? How do we increase the chances of sustainability? How do we prepare teachers so they are able to take the reins and enjoy the ride?

Taking the Reins

Taking the Reins

Relationships in School- Collaboration & Collegiality

July 24, 2009 Leadership Comments Off

We speak so often about opening the walls of our classroom to the world. With collaborative 21st century tools, such as Skype and wikis, we try to encourage teachers to reach beyond their customary horizon out to others in the world.

Global awareness and collaboration is my passion, BUT what about internal (within your own school building) awareness and collaboration? What about making sure that the relationships  and culture within your own school is productive, cooperative,  in sync and conducive to student learning?

How can a faculty, that works together in a brick and mortar building, become aware of each other’s:

  • teaching content
  • teaching style
  • learning style
  • teaching practice
  • projects
  • connections
  • resources
  • successes

What kind of characteristics can be found in a school, where the culture sparkles with collegiality, collaboration and sharing?

I wrote in a  post last year , Sharing in Education- Is it Changing?,  about an experience I had with a colleague:

I remember being told in my first year of teaching by a colleague, that I should be a little bit more careful when offering to share lesson plans, successes or project ideas. She told me that would make me look like a “bragger” and would make others look bad, which they would not be appreciating. I was completely blown away by seeing my genuine interest in sharing taken that way.

Was that the kind of a relationship I had to look forward to as a member of a teaching faculty? How was I going to learn and grow, if sharing was not valued, no even being frowned upon?

Chris Sessums pondered in a post Collaboration and Collegiality in Teacher Professional Development Settings

Collaboration and collegiality take teacher development beyond individual reflection, or reliance on external experts, to a point where educators can learn from one another, sharing and building expertise together.

Chris furthermore asks the question:

How do the patterns of relationships among teachers affect collaboration and collegiality?

I stumbled upon an article by Roland Barth in the Educational Leadership titled Improving Relationships within the Schoolhouse (pdf).

Barth discusses various forms of relationships among adults within a schoolhouse that seem to shed some light on Sessums’ question.

Parallel Play
Teachers teach in the same building, even next door to each other, but do not share with each other. They stay within their own classroom as to avoid any conflict or discussion about their practices.

Adversarial Relationships
There are blatant adversarial relationships, where teachers or administrators openly attack other teachers’ teaching practice,  style, character or projects.  There are also more subtle adversarial ways. The latter being in form of withholding. Barth  brings up the issue of competition among teachers for “scarce resources and recognition”.

The guiding principle of competition are: “The better you look, the worse I look” and “The worse you look, the better I look.”

Congenial Relationships

This relationship has to do with day to day interaction between the adults in a school. Saying Hello in the hallway, making friendly conversation in the faculty lounge, etc. These relationships seems to be superficial.

Collegial Relationships
Teachers actively work together. They are aware of each other, share their own expertise and seek each other’s advice and help

Collegiality is about getting them [teachers] to play together, about growing a professional learning community
[...]
Indicators of collegiality among teachers and administrators:

  • Educators talking with one another about practice
  • Educators sharing their craft knowledge
  • Educators observing one another while they are engaged in practice
  • Educators rooting for one another’s success

In order to create a culture of collegiality, Barth suggests that leaders have to make “relationships among adults a discussable”. He cites Judith Warren Little who lists the following ways for administrators to foster collegiality in their school:

  • State expectations explicitly
  • Model collegiality
  • Reward those who behave as colleagues
  • Protect those who engage in these collegial behaviors

What do you and your administration do to foster a sense of collegiality in YOUR school? Do you think it makes a difference in student and professional learning?

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