Tag: Professional Development

  • Math Is Square, But Can It Become Parallel To A Star?

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    Math class is traditionally a boring subject for students and many of the teachers are under equipped to meet the technological needs of 21st century learners.

    A Simple Equation: Appropriate Tech + Well Trained Tutors/Teachers = Engaged & Excited Students which leads to more qualified people for a growing tech industry.
    Right? …
    Well, mostly. You see, professional development training Math teachers is just one method has has been found effective to raise the standards for Math education excellence. Other research has shown that private tutoring can get students back on track and really engaged in Mathematics.
    Why Private Tutoring?
    Math causes so many students to freeze up and become “squares” because it is traditionally taught in really dry ways. What student loves solving problems over and over again? However tutors can bring another level of comfort and personalization to the student allowing them to open up and really understand the material. Tutors can create personalized lessons (like pictured above) where students engage in real world mathematics. In the small class above teachers had students find patterned cloths, then calculate the angles, lengths and hypotenuse of triangles. They also had them identify shapes.
    I encourage all of you to look into tutoring as a way to raise the standards in Mathematics education as well as encourage students to find the fun in such a vital subject.
    Chris Burley – writing as a guest blogger from Krause Center for Innovation
     
  • “EdCamps” – A PD Opportunity unlike any other!

    My Town Tutors is a website that connects parents with teachers who tutor. If you are a teacher who tutors, for a limited time, you can register for FREE by using promo code: usteachers. Teachers set the hourly rate and keep 100% of the fees! One of our teachers made $5,000 last year tutoring.
    It is FREE for parents to search for a teacher in their area. Please help us find ONE MORE teacher who tutors!

    Quick:  When I say “Professional Development”, what comes to mind?  Are you conjuring up images of a big meeting room, with a lot of blank stares and a presenter that is droning on, actually reading every line of their slides…?!  All the while, you’re thinking “I could have used this time so much better..!”

    Now, imagine if that same “PD” experience was with a group of energized, passionate educators, and the presenter was showing you something relevant to your teaching – something you could actually *use* in your classroom tomorrow?!

    If the latter vision sounds too good to be true – it isn’t – it can be found at an EdCamp!

    An EdCamp is a relatively new style of professional development where the presenters are often ordinary classroom teachers.  There isn’t one presenter explaining one topic, there are several sessions going on in different conference rooms at the same time, each session on a topic chosen by the presenter.  Thus, no agenda, or conference schedule, is defined ahead of time.   In fact, an EdCamp is often referred to as an “unconference”..!

    An EdCamp venue provides meeting spaces with lots of break out rooms, and a blank wall where participants post what topics they want to present (or discuss) at a given time and in a given break out room.  You, the eager educator, look at this on-the-fly agenda on the morning of the EdCamp, decide what you want to learn, then go to that break out room and become part of the discussion – if you wish.

    The best part of it all is that you judge how worthwhile the presentation/discussion is when you get there.  If it turns out to be something you didn’t expect – or if the presentation isn’t providing you with the information you need – you get up and leave!  The EdCamp folks call this “voting with your feet.”  It’s not rude and it’s not frowned upon – it’s a way to say “Hey, my time is valuable and I can do better elsewhere.”

    I attended my first EdCamp in May – it was called EdCampBoston.  I have to admit, I was extremely hesitant.  After all, I was giving up an entire Saturday to go someplace where I had no idea what was going to be discussed..!  It all sounded too crazy and unstructured for me.  However, so many people I conversed with in the Twitter universe talked this up and had positive things to say, that I felt I had to give it a try.

    So, I registered online for one of the 250 available (free!) slots and got my confirmation.  As it turns out, that was a smart thing to do, as all the slots ‘sold out’ in a matter of hours.  At 8am on a Saturday in May, I dutifully arrived, with my laptop in hand and a wary smile on my face.  I immediately struck up a conversation with Rik, a High School Math Facilitator from Wilmington.  I was quickly impressed with his energy and excitement.  He had great things to say about previous EdCamps he attended, so he put me at ease.

    Over the next 30 minutes, while participants signed in (and got coffee – thank you, sponsors!), I had more conversations with other passionate educators.  By 8:45, I was actually pumped up and looking forward to watching the schedule take shape.

    Everyone gathered around the ‘big wall’, as available times and room names were arranged in a giant grid.  Anyone who wanted to lead a discussion/presentation grabbed a piece of paper, wrote a brief blurb about their topic and taped it to the wall, thus claiming one of the rooms for their own!

    This is what it looked like in progress:

    (http://t.co/J4gtiaeCRp)

    When the board was filled and all the topics were finalized, the organizers of EdCampBoston copied the agenda board into a GoogleDoc that we could access throughout the day from our devices.  This is a link to the complete agenda: http://goo.gl/yQtrb .

    For me, the hardest part of EdCamp was deciding what sessions to attend, as there were SO many I wanted to be a part of.  In the end, I had time for four:

    • Blogging in the HS classroom

    • Using Socrative to check for Understanding

    • Using SCHOOLOGY to collaboratively create a US History course.

    • Edcamp in the Classroom

    I’ll cover these sessions in depth in future posts, but I hope I’ve said enough to have you consider attending a future EdCamp – you won’t regret it

    John Padula has been teaching Middle School Social Studies for seven years – all in the Boston Public Schools.  He is an avid reader of Young Adult fiction and works hard to maintain a solid classroom library for his students.  Last year, I was honored to be a Fund For Teachers Fellow and traveled to South Africa in the summer to learn more about education and Apartheid.

    Prior to teaching,  he spent over 20 years in a variety of positions in the software engineering industry.  Despite my high-tech background, I was *still* blown away by a PD course called Teaching History With Technology (from EdTechTeacher) and have been working ever since to infuse more technology in my classes.

  • Twitter: The Golden Ticket

    I once had an administrator tell me, as I was, and still am working my way up the ranks in college and my career that it is lonely at the top. I had great respect for her and smiled while thinking, how can you be lonely? You are amazing!
    I am far from the top, but feel the stagnancy of loneliness as I try to grow and learn.  I have searched, begged, and tried to recruit mentors over the last seven years. I have found that people are comfortable with where they are in their busy lives and often my interest and passion for extension does not align with their direction of growth. I tend to be an innovator who likes to rearrange the way the box looks. This may be good, bad, or indifferent, but it is who I am.
    In the beginning, I filled this void by reading everything I could get my hands on in regards to leadership, writing, and education. Books became my mentor. It was a one way conversation, but I felt guided and nurtured by the experiences within the pages.  I recently listened to the book Crush It by Gary Vaynerchuk.
    He introduced me to the idea of taking my passion, which is educational technology, and creating a blog.  He suggested joining twitter and other social networking sites to promote my passion. I started my blog which is slowly taking shape, but I have been entranced by the opportunity that twitter has opened for me.
    What a wealth of information and people to learn from and with. In some ways twitter is like my books, one sided, but in other ways it is dimensional  and I can communicate with others on twitter, but better yet, I am introduced to blogs that speak to my area of interest and I can communicate with others that share my passion.
    I was a little put off by twitter in the beginning. I followed great minds in my area of interest and they did not follow me back. I so wanted input on what I was doing with my blog and professional growth. I now know that I should have built my twitter with a few tweets and a profile before I started following others.
    The truth is I am ok with basking in the glow of their experience. It is the one sided part of twitter. What is amazing is that through them, I have been introduced to other tweeters and their blogs. This is the 3-demensional side of twitter.
    I would still like a physical person as a mentor, but I think I have found the perfect compromise. I like having my blog because it gives me an opportunity to mentor others, but I find satisfaction and gratitude for others within the twitter community. I have found my mentor(s).
    Twitter has filled a void that has been vacant for a long time. What I am learning is that as I blog, I need to not only share technical information, but I need to make my voice a part of my sharing. I am following some great teachers who lead by example! Professionals need tutors too…. I believe that I have received the adventure of a lifetime; my golden ticket, in the most unlikely of places.
    Shannon Gray has been a teacher for 18 years. As a military wife, circumstances have influenced her career; this has made her well rounded and she sees education from many perspectives. Shannon is a Nationally Board Certified Teacher who currently holds a masters in Special Education and Administration and is working on her doctorate in Educational Technology from Walden University. You can visit her blog on integrating technology into the classroom at www.edugrationtech.com, or follow her on Twitter @edugrationtech.
    My Town Tutors is a website that connects parents with teachers who tutor. If you are a teacher who tutors, for a limited time, you can register for using promo code: usteachers. Teachers set the hourly and keep 100% of the fees! One of our teachers made $5,000 last year tutoring.
    It is FREE for parents to search for a teacher in their area. Please help us find ONE MORE teacher who tutors!

  • EdCamp Rhode Island is a Great Resource for Teachers!

    EdCampRI is a Free Professional Development Unconference for Educators by Educators.
    The EdCamp movement is a great opportunity for teachers to connect and share ideas. It will be on November 3rd, 2012 at Rhode Island College. You can register on-line.
    Follow EdCampRI on twitter @EdCampRI for the latest news and  updates!
    My Town Tutors is a website that connects parents with teachers who tutor. If you are a teacher who tutors, for a limited time, you can register for using promo code: usteachers. Teachers set the hourly and keep 100% of the fees! One of our teachers made $5,000 last year tutoring.
    It is FREE for parents to search for a teacher in their area. Please help us find ONE MORE teacher who tutors!

  • Jenmarc Has Great Education Programs for Massachusetts Teachers

    In retirement, I devote my time to helping my fellow educators acquire quality professional development and enroll in Initial and Professional Licensure programs, as well as, Masters Programs. Jenmarc, in partnership with Endicott College, offer these programs which are both highly respected.  So if you’re Thinking of enrolling in a Master’s Program, renewing your Professional License, moving on your Initial License, check out Jenmarc.  If you’re Thinking about teaching a regular subject (English, Mathematics, Social Studies, Art, Music, etc.) in a Massachusetts public middle or high school and need an Initial License, then again, Jenmarc can make it happen.
    Graduate Credits and Degrees are earned through Endicott College. Online and Onsite Professional Development and Content-Area courses are offered in addition to a wide variety of Master Degree/Licensure Programs: Athletic Administration, Early Childhood/Elementary Education with Initial & Professional License, Secondary Education (5-12) with Initial License available in 21 Subject Areas, Reading & Literacy with Initial License available, and in Special Education (Moderate or Severe Disabilities) with Initial License available.  Look into Jenmarc’s Certificate Programs in Coaching & Sports Psychology. NO TIME to THINK – TIME to ACT.   CALL: 508-586-3574 or visit www.jonljenmarc.com.

    Gary Gilardi is the Director of Program Marketing for Jon L. Jenmarc, Inc., Consultants in Education. He also works as a Professional Development Consultant for the Massachusetts Teachers Association. He was a music teacher for 21 years and later retired as a Guidance Counselor.
    My Town Tutors is a website that connects parents with teachers who tutor. We currently list over 260 teachers from Massachusetts. We are always looking for qualified teachers from all 50 states who tutor to join our national directory of teachers who tutor.
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