Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Strengths Finder Exercise
Teacher Salaries
Monday, April 24, 2017
Pull-In or Push-Out?
I was wondering what everyone thinks works best to help
support struggling students, a pull-in or push-out model? I began my teaching career in a special
education classroom, and I always pushed for my students to be included in
everything as much as possible. For this
reason, I really disliked when my students were taken out of class for any
reason. However, when some special needs
students are left in their classrooms they struggle to comprehend the
material. It seems like these students
would be better served by being pulled out to work on their specific skills
deficits. This strategy can lead to
backlash from parents who simply want their child to be included as much as
possible, regardless of any potential benefit to their child. They just don’t want their student to be seen
as different from their classmates. I
have seen pull-in models work very well, but I don’t think that they allow
quite the same amount of differentiation of material that push-out models can
do. It’s tough to have kids work on deficit
skills while still working on similar material as the rest of the class. I’d love to know if anyone has experience
with either of these models of instruction and can tell me which one they
prefer. Thanks!
Best Way to Support Teachers
One factor of leadership that I have struggled with this
year is how best to support teachers in my school. I see my leadership style as very
collaborative, and I try to solicit teacher input as much as possible when
planning for school programs and events.
However, some of my teachers prefer to receive direct instructions as
frequently as possible and want to be left out of the decision-making
process. I’m wondering what is the best
way to support both of these types of teachers.
Should I simply ask input from the teachers who I know want to
participate while avoiding those that just want to be told what to do? I feel like this would create dissension
among my staff because some would feel included and others would not. Either way, it seems to me that I would be
alienating half the staff. Right now, I
am leaning towards just continuing to use the leadership style I am comfortable
with by asking for input from teachers on decisions that are relevant to
them. This way my decisions are more
informed and based on the facts on the ground.
Good teachers are leaving
I recently had a conversation with a friend who teaches 6th grade. She is an amazing teacher with every teacher award one can have. She has been teaching for 10 years and loves her student; however, does not love the politics or administration that comes with teaching. Therefore, she has decided she does not want to teach any longer. So, we talked about other jobs like: changing schools, higher education, or working at an education publishing company. However, through our conversation she decided her need to get out of education was too great. As I reflected on our conversation, I am almost at the ten year mark myself. I too, feel like leaving education sometimes or doing something more lucrative; however, I enjoy teaching 90% of the time. I think we are at a critical point in education when good teachers are leaving education. Therefore, teachers are leaving and going into fields that make more and be happy. My honest advice for her was to leave and do something that makes you happy. I also explained to her that if she starts early and uses time wisely the transition to another career over the summer would be easy. Many of educators who leave teaching go into corporate training or instructional training of some sort. I think what we have to realize, as teachers, is that although it’s sad when teachers leave this field, many times we have to make decisions for personal growth. As a millennial, we are not the generation that stays in one job for twenty plus years. Therefore, the trend is to move around until finding a career that is suitable and makes one happy.
To Charter or not to Charter?
Our current political climate along with the U.S. Department of Education’s confirmation of Betsy Devos is at a crossroads that can lead to an adverse affect on our educational climate. Furthermore, achievement gaps among students from different ethnic groups, affluent, and low-income students is the greatest it has been. Therefore, it is critical the right decisions be made concerning the future of education within our borders. Are charter schools the answer? Is school choice the answer? Are school vouchers the answer, as proposed by Devos? Is deregulation of charter schools the answer? The debate of whether or not charter schools are helping students achieve will continue. However, according to statistics, there is no reliable data that shows charter schools are outperforming public schools. Therefore, we must examine the demographics in which charter schools service. Charter schools have been developed in places where the public schools system lack resources, endure overcrowding, exhibit a racial achievement gap, and confront policies that fail to deliver opportunities for minority students of color. However, the current administration wants to deregulate charter schools even more, as well as provide school vouchers for students of working class parents to take them to private schools. I think the deregulation of charters and the money spent on providing parents vouchers for their kids to attend private institution can be sided with better options. I think charter schools as well as private schools must adhere to the same accountability standards as public schools. Therefore, these schools would still use their freedom; however, standards such as teacher certification and IDEA would be mandated. Also, charter schools and private schools should be granted more resources to service students with disabilities. In conclusion, we must ask ourselves how to best fight for equitable education to close the achievement gap among our students.
Where are all the resources???
I loved QCC standards!!! They were succinct and there were
tons of materials available for students to practice and remediate. Those were
also the days of 100% of students meeting expectations on the CRCT. Remember
the CRCT? How I miss those days! I am all for rigor and the critical thinking
that comes along with Common Core and Milestone exams, but for crying out loud,
where are the resources?!? Most textbooks say they are Common Core aligned, but
actually are not if you take the time to compare the standards against what is
presented in the text. Also, what does the Milestone exam and EOC look like? It
seems that no one really knows anymore. In the past, Coach books would publish a post
test that I believed aligned perfectly with the CRCT exam. I used it as a Mock test a month before the CRCT and knew that if
students passed the post test, they were fine, and if student failed the post
test, they needed remediation. Coach also had books that supported
remediation like Ladders for Success. Nowadays, there is just one Coach book
for the EOC. The questions in it look nothing like the EOC, and there are no remediation
texts. Scores are much lower, in part because no one knows what to expect on
the test and there aren’t enough resources available to have students practice
and remediate. Before, textbook companies provided the resources and teachers
taught. But now teachers are expected to create the resources, teach and get
results. Results that teachers, and leaders are held responsible for.
Personally, I think it is a simple fix; provide teachers and schools with resources!!!
Expired test items should be released like they used to be. This is how AP, IB,
the SAT, ACT and GRE work. When you are preparing for any of the above tests, you
purchase the respective book filled with practice tests and sample questions
to familiarize yourself with the test, so why not for the EOCs and the
Milestones?
Sunday, April 23, 2017
Gratitude Sandwich
Despite repeated warnings, conversations and emails, many teachers
were not submitting lesson plans, entering grades or reporting to duty. It was time
to communicate to the staff page 23 of the staff handbook:
In the event it becomes necessary to
discipline an employee, the following steps of discipline may occur at the discretion of the School:
1. Verbal warning.
2. Written warning.
3. Final warning and/or probation.
4. Termination.
This was going to be a somber staff meeting.
I sat there listening to remainder of the leadership team devise a plan for
delivery of this morbid message on a Friday afternoon of the longest, roughest
week ever, and thought that we should at least sandwich the delivery. “Let’s do
something positive in the beginning” I pitched to the team. My counterpart, the
dean of instruction for literacy pitched a warm-up activity she had designed
incorporating data she had gathered around student articulation of data goals
by subject. She would have teachers form a human bar graph predicting the
percentage of their students that were able to articulate goals from their data
conference. She had purchased a gift card and planned to award it to the
department with the highest percentage, but the data was abysmal with the highest
percentage being 53%. It didn’t appear to be much of a celebration considering
that the staff was going to be slammed with a discipline plan. I felt like I
was watching an accident that I had been witness to a thousand times, about to
occur, only this time I had the power to prevent it. “I still think that we
need to do something more positive as a warm up” I said. My principal was open
to other ideas, but needed something finalized as we were running out of time. Since
I was adamant about the warm up being more positive, she assigned me that responsibility
and continued on with the agenda. I decided to align with the character development
theme of gratitude and created an exercise where staff members partnered up and
wrote three things they were grateful for about each other on an index card. The
energy lightened in the room as each dyad shared their gratitude list. People
began to smile, laugh, blush, and one person even cried tears of joy. People
felt appreciated, including my principal. When it was time to review page 23, both
the delivery and reception went smoothly. I then initiated staff shout-outs to
end the meeting on a positive note.
Charter Schools
As a parent, I searched, visited and researched schools for middle school for my daughter. I wanted somewhere that would nurture and prepare her for the next levels, high school then college. Although she was out off elementary school, I wanted a school that would be an extension of the values and habits that I taught her at home. I had public, private and charter schools on my list. Out of the four school, I chose a charter school. I was able to "check off" more required items off my list with the charter school. Some of the things that drew me were the structure of the school, the requirements of structure for the students, the innovative ways of teaching the standards, the family feel due to the student population size, and everyone seemed genuinely happy. The atmosphere was always welcoming when I visited.
Now, as a teacher, I know there was some work that went into this wonderful atmosphere. Teachers had longer hours. They were also available by phone for students who needed help while doing homework. The days started early and ended late, one year the hours were 7:35-5:00 for the students. The teachers were dedicated and appeared very knowledgeable of their subjects and research-based learning strategies. I was very pleased with my decision of my daughter attending a charter school.
Fast-forwarding, I have not thought about actually working at a charter school. I had nothing against them, I am after all, a charter school parent. I just never thought about working at on until recently. Last school year our school district voted and was awarded to become a full-fledged charter system to be fully implemented in the 2017-2018 school year. Teachers received their contracts and when comparing mine to previous years, there was only one difference in the wording, probationary period. The research on exactly what that means is still ongoing. One misconception that I had of charter schools was that teachers did not receive year-to-year contracts and therefore could be let go at anytime. I found that not to be from conversations that I have as with some charter school teachers. I am very curious to know what out new charter school system holds in store for the students and teachers.
Now, as a teacher, I know there was some work that went into this wonderful atmosphere. Teachers had longer hours. They were also available by phone for students who needed help while doing homework. The days started early and ended late, one year the hours were 7:35-5:00 for the students. The teachers were dedicated and appeared very knowledgeable of their subjects and research-based learning strategies. I was very pleased with my decision of my daughter attending a charter school.
Fast-forwarding, I have not thought about actually working at a charter school. I had nothing against them, I am after all, a charter school parent. I just never thought about working at on until recently. Last school year our school district voted and was awarded to become a full-fledged charter system to be fully implemented in the 2017-2018 school year. Teachers received their contracts and when comparing mine to previous years, there was only one difference in the wording, probationary period. The research on exactly what that means is still ongoing. One misconception that I had of charter schools was that teachers did not receive year-to-year contracts and therefore could be let go at anytime. I found that not to be from conversations that I have as with some charter school teachers. I am very curious to know what out new charter school system holds in store for the students and teachers.
Effective Leadership Styles
This is an area that I find very interesting, especially leadership styles of women, My educational leadership class honed in on that topic this semester and provided a base for me to pull information from. Our textbook discussed managerial grids, behavior matrices and textbook leadership styles. That information gave me insight and an explanation of the leaders that I have had. It also helped me see, on paper, that leader that I will be.
Out of the 16 years that I have been in education, I have had ten leaders and six were females. What I noticed was that there were two leadership attitudes, mean or nice. That was my perception before I learned there were actually textbook styles of leadership.
The textbook styles focus on two areas, concern for people and concern for results. Looking back, the ones that had a high concern for results and a low concern for people were the ones I considered mean. Stern could be a better term to use, but I feel that they were just mean spirited. A few of the "mean" leaders seemed concerned about their personal outcomes in the situations. The "nice" ones seemed concerned about the students first and then the staff. Some saw staff and students equal, as there was a high concern for people and high concern for results.
Another element that I noticed was that all four male leaders had a high concern (or appeared to) for people. They were all considered "nice", but they all had a female leaders under them that had a lower concern for people than they appear to have. Some would say that if they results are high and the concern for people is low, there should be no problems. This was not always the case. I am thrilled that while making the transition into leadership, I have experienced a leaders that has a high concern for people and results. I will continue to be a sponge and soak in all that I can while I can.
Out of the 16 years that I have been in education, I have had ten leaders and six were females. What I noticed was that there were two leadership attitudes, mean or nice. That was my perception before I learned there were actually textbook styles of leadership.
The textbook styles focus on two areas, concern for people and concern for results. Looking back, the ones that had a high concern for results and a low concern for people were the ones I considered mean. Stern could be a better term to use, but I feel that they were just mean spirited. A few of the "mean" leaders seemed concerned about their personal outcomes in the situations. The "nice" ones seemed concerned about the students first and then the staff. Some saw staff and students equal, as there was a high concern for people and high concern for results.
Another element that I noticed was that all four male leaders had a high concern (or appeared to) for people. They were all considered "nice", but they all had a female leaders under them that had a lower concern for people than they appear to have. Some would say that if they results are high and the concern for people is low, there should be no problems. This was not always the case. I am thrilled that while making the transition into leadership, I have experienced a leaders that has a high concern for people and results. I will continue to be a sponge and soak in all that I can while I can.
A lesson in confronting the brutal facts...
I am usually excited on Fridays, but this past Friday I wasn’t
excited, I was anxious and exhausted. I had planned to write a little bit every
evening after work so that I wouldn’t be overwhelmed writing my final papers,
but that plan was short-lived. Besides preparing and teaching my 3 classes
daily, hosting tutorial after school, managing freshman discipline-which was at
an all-time high, conducting classroom observations, leading one-on-ones,
attending my own one-on-one with my principal, I had to prepare to present my
portion of this week’s PD. There just wasn’t enough time to complete it all! Friday
arrived and my schedule was packed as usual. I arrived to work early and
completed sub plans for all of my classes even though I was only going to be
out for one class. Around 7:45 AM I went and sat in the PD room. Mistake #1. My
principal had explicitly informed us that we were to meet in the front office
at 7:50. But I wanted to continue reading the last 7 pages of the student
handbook that was pre-work for our meeting and the PD room provided the privacy
that I needed. I told myself I would still make it to the front office by 7:50
AM. Within those short 5 minutes though, each member, one by one, joined me in
the PD room as I hurriedly made edits for the handbook. The only person missing
was my principal. It was now 7:50, but instead of getting up and heading to the
front office, I remained in my seat. Mistake #2. Why? Because the rest of the
team was there! Surely if it was time to go one of them would know, right?
Wrong! There was no valid reason for remaining in the PD room with the remainder
of the team. Our directions were to meet in the front office at 7:50 so why did
we unofficially decide to alter the meet up location to the PD room? Around
8:03 I thought it odd that we were still all in the PD room. I peered nervously
down the hallway and into the front office. There was still no sign of my
principal, so I walked the 50 feet to front office and inquired about her
whereabouts. “She left for a meeting and won’t be back until 10:30” said her
secretary. My principal had left without us! Mistake #3. I rushed back to the
PD room, collected my things and informed the one member of the team still there
that our principal had already left. I then called the remaining two members
who had left the PD room to run errands, informing them of the same. I couldn’t
get there fast enough! When I arrived at the coffee shop, my principal was
sitting working alone at a table. She seemed calm enough, but I was frazzled. I
was late, I still had 7 pages of the student handbook to read, and I had no
power cord for my laptop which was at 30%. The rest of the team arrived shortly
thereafter but now it was a whopping 38 minutes after our scheduled start time.
My principal, indicated this, as she commenced the warm up activity, but still
appeared mostly unbothered. As she launched into the first item on the agenda
though, the assistant principal received a text that there was no coverage for a
teacher that was out supervising a field lesson. He had overlooked coverage and
was trying to rectify the situation. The dean of students was distracted by an
email from a direct report, the dean of instruction for literacy couldn’t get
her internet to work and thus could not access any of the documents for the
meeting, and I couldn’t find the folder on the drive and my computer was slowly
dying! Things were spiraling out of control and in that moment that I felt my
principal’s energy change. She became visibly frustrated. She asked everyone to
close their laptops and addressed the issue head on. We arrived late, we were
unprepared, and we were distracted. She held us accountable, yet provided opportunity
for us to speak, to vent, to share how overwhelmed we all were and then she
adjusted the meeting’s agenda to accommodate the needs of the team and what
needed to be addressed. Until then, my principal could have been Jim Collins’
personal spokesperson for his book Good to Great. She often spoke of Admiral
Stockdale’ s ability to survive the harshest of conditions, and frequently recited
the mantra “confronting the brutal facts.” But on Friday this all had new
meaning, when she actually modeled the difficult task of confronting the
brutal facts. She walked the walk, she didn’t just talk the talk. She could
have easily ignored our shortcomings and continued on with the meeting, or even
reprimand us and continue, but what she did was exactly what Jim Collins says
good companies do to move from good to great, she did not stick her head in the
sand, she addressed the issue, listened, and planned a new course of action
tailored to the needs of her team, all the while maintaining a high bar. I
respect her even more now for this, and plan to do the same when I too am a
school leader.
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