Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Spark!


It's almost midnight, jazz is playing in the background and I'm sitting at my computer because of my 15 minutes of reading before bed has my mind spinning.

I was fortunate to grow up in a home where both parents read. My dad read two newspapers a day and my mother always had a book next to her recliner. She loved westerns and harlequin romance novels. I have never been a fast reader and when I was young I struggled with required reading in school. I could not keep pace with other students and didn't enjoy the material. However, at home, I could not get enough comic books to read. Which lead to reading sci-fi and fantasy novels. I was in college before a professor said he thought I had a mild case of dyslexia and had me tested.

Today I read a lot. A college professor advised a class I once took that is we wanted to be lifelong learns we should always read 15 minutes minimum a day. I took his words to heart. I read way more than 15 minutes most days. I almost always have 2 or 3 books going at the same time. Usually some piece of fiction, something related to education and at times history, political, biography or business book. Most days at lunch you will find me read from my Kindle app on my phone.

So why up late tonight and writing this entry?

I started "Sparks In The Dark" by Todd Nesloney and Travis Crowder tonight.



On page 12 they say the following:
 
  The current trend is to require students to follow the same reading pace, complete worksheets for arbitrary grades, and respond to questions that do not inspire creative and critical thinking. Completing a worksheet or graphic organizer just to fulfill an assignment does not equate to learning. It only equates to compliance.

They go on to say change is needed. Also, change isn't meant to be easy. If it were, everyone would love and seek out change.

Interlude:

I spent the first 25 years of my career as an educator teaching music. Always encouraging students to read what they were interested in to grow to love reading. Two years ago I made the change to a District Tech TOSA.

Final Act:

As a TOSA I have been working with our Deputy Superintendent on redesigning classrooms to make spaces that are more conducive to collaborative inviting learning spaces. In this process, it has been painful at times talking to teachers about minimizing the stuff in their rooms.

We had conversations over 'you really need 10 filing cabinets?' 'What is in them?' - yep, you guessed it copies of packets of worksheets. I will pause here and say I understand doing worksheets at times but this is a bit extreme.

Another conversation was over how many bookshelves of books are needed in a classroom. When twenty-five percent of some rooms are taken up with bookshelves. In one of the rooms on a second visit, the teacher said I heard you and have weeded my books and taken some bookshelves out. I wanted to make sure the teacher knew I understand the need for having a variety of books in easy reach of students is important. I'm jazzed that this sites library is getting a major overhaul this summer and will also be an inviting place for students in the fall.

This blog has my list of what I have read recently and logged on Goodreads because I do believe it is important for folks to see that as an educator I do read. I might be slower than my colleagues and get a bit frustrated when I'm tired because that is when I have the most trouble with my dyslexia and have to stop reading even when I'm really into a book and sleep.

THANK YOU! Dave Burgess Consulting, Inc. for publishing books that inspire me to be a better educator for students!

It is now time to sleep.......



Saturday, June 18, 2016

Summer Reading Part 1

I learned to love reading from my Mom. She was a voracious reader. My mother encouraged me at an early age to read. She was okay with the period in my life that the only thing I would read were Comic Books. Then I grew to love SciFi and almost everything I read during that period was SciFi related. My mother did not like Comic Books or SciFi but she encouraged me to keep reading.

In college, I had a professor that I highly admired and respected that encouraged our class that we should read 15 minutes a day something other than our textbooks for school. He said that reading every day would help us grow as knowledgeable adults.


Well, I took that advice to heart and read every day. Sometimes it is a book, at others, it's a blog or magazine article.

This is part 1 of my summer 2016 reading journey.

1. The Innovator's Mindset: Empower Learning, Unleash Talent, and Lead Culture of Creativity. By George Couros
    A must read for any teacher or administrator that wants to empower learners to wonder and explore.
This would be a great book for an educational professional study group.

I found this book to be so powerful I purchased a copy for my Superintendent.

2. The Pixar Touch By David Price

   I picked this book up when I was at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. I have enjoyed Pixar movie for years. This book was a fascinating story of the history of Pixar from its early days with Lucasfilm to Disney. The compelling story of animation genius John Lasseter and businessman Steve Jobs.






3. Kids Deserve It! By Todd Nesloney and Adam Welcome

Heard about this book from Jon Corippo on twitter.

Still reading this one but it has already lead me to tweet out about the book.

Truth #KidsDeserveIt pic.twitter.com/7RDw3xIHt5



 4. The Zen Teacher by Dan Tricarico

This is another book from Dave Burgess Press. I have not read anything published by Dave Burgess that has not been excellent, which is why I'm currently reading this book.

Hoping this book will have some helpful tips I can use to slow down, focus and de-stress.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Knock At The Door

CUE STEAMPunk

Only moments after the bell rang for 7th and 8th grade lunch to begin there was a knock at the door. Upon opening the door there stood several students wanting to know could they spend their lunch time programming the Sphero robot's that they had been working with earlier in the day during class. The teacher that was in the room at the time said she did not know how to work them and the students said 'We can teach you'. 

How great is it when students are so engaged in learning that they come back during lunch because they can not get enough. Several have even talked their parents into purchasing Sphero's!They can just can not get enough. 

So what is CUE STEAMPunk and how did this start? When reading the Summer 2015 issue of OnCue Journal this add caught my attention

I emailed Jon Corippo and he set me up with some Sphero 2.0's with start-up curriculum for a few weeks. Because I'm know a TOSA for Instructional Technology I worked with a couple middle school classes to get the STEAMPunk labs rolling. 

Students started with the basic drive feature and then quickly moved on to using the Tickle app to challenge each other with more and more difficult patterns to program. They mapped out tracks with electrical tape on the floor and challenged each other to see who could move through it the fastest, slowest, stay inside the lines with most accuracy, change colors on turns, etc. Area of shape was calculated. Programming, math, artistic side with light show, what's next...

Students that would not always work together were helping each other. This is not just about programming or technology, it is teaching social skills and critical thinking all wrapped in one. 

What is CUE STEAMPunk it is education at it best! 








Who is next? Don't wait open up your email and contact Jon now. Because if you don't I'll take them back so they don't collect dust!!! You hear me Jon!!! No dust collecting if no one else wants them they will always have a home in room 11!