Monthly Archives: January 2014

Keep Calm. It’s only a test.

keep-calm-its-only-a-testEvery educator has to deal with them, but very few find joy or affection for them…your state’s high stakes test.  Yesterday our state’s test scores (The NECAP) were released to schools.  While some schools may celebrate the growth their students made, many others will bemoan the losses their scores reflect.  Numbers will be crunched.  Data will be manipulated.  Backs will be patted.  Fingers will be pointed.  And for awhile numbers grab our attention while the children they represent are hidden behind a score.

Now I am not an anti-assessment person by any means.  We need a way to senecap-logoe if what we are teaching is being learned.  We need to see what children already know to build upon that knowledge.  We need to monitor progress to make adjustments to instruction.  We need to be accountable for offering up our very best.  Assessments provide us valuable information to inform what we do as educators.  Assessments can provide students feedback on their progress.

Sadly, assessments also-far too often- are used as a way to address complex issues in very simplistic terms.  Educating a child is a very intricate journey, that starts at birth.  Every aspect of a child’s life affects his or her education, sometimes positively, sometimes negatively.  Early brain development is influenced by environmental and genetic factors.  Experiences with books, numbers, nature, culture, art, community, relationships, etc. are as varied as the number of children who walk through our doors.  Adequate ‘doses’ of food, language, love and nurturing are often lacking.  Everything…EVERY THING that a child experiences influences how they learn, what they learn and how much they learn.

We welcome these children into our schools each day.  We know the playing field didn’t start out level before they came to us.  We know some are eager, some are anxious, some are hungry, some are hurting.  We take them where they are and we nurture them, we love them, we teach them.  We invest our lives in their lives. Every teacher I have known offers the best that they have.  Their best is varied, it’s true.  Most teachers are lifelong learners themselves, willing to grow and learn and adjust.

So it with sadness that a measure of a child’s learning gets reduced to a number on a high stakes test, with the only accountable factor being the school, the teacher.  That number doesn’t reflect the ‘ah-ha’ of the child who discovered a book they fell in love with, the speech the shy child gave with pride, the artist that emerged from the withdrawn child, the truant child who finally mastered his multiplication tables, the child who wrote a passionate story about his father getting arrested, the child who wrote a song about what it is like to be hungry.  If we measure learning as an increased number, we are missing the humanity in teaching, we are disregarding the celebrations of what is important to that child, at the moment in his/her life.

Politicians point to scores to decry public education and push for charter schools.  Governors create ‘Report Cards‘ to embarrass schools with struggling students. Governor Wannabees think the report cards don’t go far enough!! The push for teacher evaluations to be tied to these assessments will hinder teachers willingness to take on the challenges of our most needy students.  The unintended consequences of high stakes test  (that have nothing to do with student learning) are often absent from policy making discussions.  It is convenient to blame schools and not address more complicated issues such as poverty, hunger, homelessness, etc. as integral cogs in the learning wheel.  It’s easy to say “we can’t just throw money at the problem” as an excuse not to fund schools adequately.

Let us use assessments to guide our instruction, to align our curricula, to adjust our approaches to students, but stop beating up schools and teachers over the circles a child filled in (or didn’t fill in) on one test, on one day over a limited area of study.  Advocate for policies that nurture our ‘children’ from the cradle to the grave.  Fund education at a level that meets the needs of every child!  Start treating education as an investment and not welfare-schools should never need to beg their communities for the money to educate their own children.

So, yes teachers, the scores came out today. Keep calm! They don’t define you!

What’s on my book radar?

So besides NECAP scores being announced yesterday the ALA Youth Media Awards were also announced.  (Much better announcement by far!)

I was excited to have read so many of the honor and winning books.  I was also reminded by Colby Sharp (Nerdy Book Club) to use these awards as a way to celebrate children’s books and authors and focus less on the winners and losers.  (Hmmm…a theme in  my post this week!)

I have already requested books from my local library that I had somehow missed last year that the American Library Association certainly hadn’t.  Can’t wait!

For Picture Books: Randolph Caldecott Medal Honor Book

For Middle Level Readers: John Newbery Medal  Honor Book

For Young Adult: Winner of Michael L. Printz Award (for excellence in literature written for young adults)

 Alex Award  (2 of 10 best adult books that appeal to teen audiences)

HAPPY READING!

nErDcampNNE

IMG_5117This past weekend I attended the most amazing professional development!  Created BY teachers, FOR teachers, WITH teachers this “Unconference” in Biddeford, Maine was tailor made for everyone! Dubbed nErDcamp Northern New England (nErDcampNNE) was inspired by nErDcamp Battle Creek which was created by Colby Sharp

So what was nErDcamp?  From their blog  I found, “nErDcamp is an “unconference” modeled after edcamp but the focus is on literacy. An “unconference” means that participants decide which topics will be explored. During the first half hour we will fill a session board with different topics generated from participants. Participants decide which sessions they wish to attend. You are encouraged to move to another session if you are attending one that isn’t working for you. Some sessions may be led by participants who want to share a strategy, tool or idea that has worked for them (ex: Using Evernote in the classroom). Other sessions may be more like round table discussions in which participants discuss and share ideas on a topic (ex: How to engage reluctant readers).”

I HAD to try this!

The evening before the conference the organizers held a Nerdy Evening with the Authors and Illustrators at a local library.  Children’s book and YA authors from Maine and beyond came to greet children, families, teachers and fans.  Talk about an opportunity to network!  Some authors discussed skyping with our classrooms and connecting via Twitter as ways to reach their young audiences.  They all took time to talk and sign books.

I had the good fortune to meet:

Ed Briant, Kate Egan, Cynthia Lord, Lynn Plourde, Megan Frazer Blakemore, Cathryn Falwell, Lynda Mullaly Hunt, J.E. Thompson, Gail Donovan, Kevin Hawkes, Sashi Kaufman and Lisa Jahn-Clough all in one place!

IMG_5115Having a blast with Lynda Mullaly Hunt, Lynn Plourde and Cynthia Lord.

The next day, I joined educators from around the state (and beyond) to create our own conference.  Susan Dee (incredible Biddeford educator) facilitated the auditorium audience as we chose topics and created a Google Doc for sessions.  People volunteered to facilitate sessions and others to take notes to capture the essence and resources in the discussions.   We all headed off to our assigned rooms and immersed ourselves in rich discussions, abundant resources and tons of tips!  I found myself checking out notes being created in other sessions I wanted to attend, wishing I could clone myself to be in more than one at a time!

IMG_5128Susan Dee, kicking off the event and facilitating the session development

We learned how to motivate ‘striving’ readers and writers, incorporate technology more easily into our classrooms, build our booklist of ‘must haves’, connect with authors, organize better book clubs…and more!

IMG_5145Authors Julie Falatko, Megan Frazer Blakemore and Lynn Plourde facilitated a session on ‘Making Writing Visible’

We took charge of our own learning!  Creating our own professional development with a “tribe” of open minded and supportive educators was so empowering!  We made connections with others that will go far beyond the one day event and it was FREE!!!!

IMG_5164Teachers browsing the incredible amount of freebies the committee organized for attendees.

So if your district, region or state is interested in creating their own edcamp they could post questions or comments on twitter #nErDcampNNE, follow their nErDcampNNE Blog, check out Colby Sharp’s nErDcamp in Michigan or follow Susan and the other nErDcamp team on twitter.

IMG_5168The amazing nErDcampNNE committee:  (front) Cathy Potter, Susan Dee, Mary Lou Shuster, (back)Jennifer Felt, Kate Sullivan, Chris Pirkl, Gigi McAllister, Justin Stygles

What’s on my Book Radar?

9780325050843Christopher Lehman and Kate Roberts have put together a superb book that provides us lessons beyond literacy learning in the classroom that will give readers a greater appreciation for the literate the world around us.  Close reading is a real buzz word these days, I would recommend this book for teachers trying to encourage deeper thinking within the “4 corners of the page” and beyond. I think you’ll definitely fall in love with it!

I’ve also got to dive into all the books I had signed at the Nerdy Evening With the Authors!IMG_5252

Autographed books by Kevin Hawkes, Cynthia Lord, Lynn Plourde, Lynda Mullaly Hunt, Gail Donovan and Lisa Jahn-Clough

Happy Reading, all you nerds!

Be a Shoulder.

I was struck this week by yet another article by and about a teacher who was giving up teaching. She described her frustration with students, parents, administrators, curriculum and reformers.  I could not deny her experience.  I have never walked in her shoes. I only wondered, Where are the articles entitled, “I love to teach and I WON’T quit”? and
Why are there so many articles with the angle of teacher bashing or teacher whining?

If anyone ever entered this profession with the idea that it was easy, I think that myth was dispelled quite quickly within their first year in a classroom.  Diane Ravitch reports that about 40% of teachers leave within the first five years of starting their job. Teaching is hard.  Teaching is demanding.  Teaching is frustrating.  Teaching is addicting.  Teaching is enlightening.  Teaching is exhilarating.  Teaching is rewarding.    I won’t begin to go into all the joys and heartaches that come with the territory.  It truly is a paradox.

So when I read these articles about teachers who have given up I don’t so much worry about them as much as the teacher who is hanging in there and might be on the verge of giving up. The ex-teacher has chosen a solution to his or her woes. I worry about the teacher who feels isolated, stressed and exhausted. I worry about teachers who don’t believe they can be creative or have fun anymore.  I worry about their students.

But worry isn’t enough.  Action is needed. A shoulder is needed.

BE A SHOULDER!

Be a shoulder to cry on when the stress of the day becomes too much.  We all have those days when a good cry cleanses the soul. There is  research out there to support the health benefits of crying.  Help a colleague relieve some stress with a metaphorical or literal shoulder to cry on.

Be a shoulder to lean on when you see a colleague that could use some support.  Offer encouragement, ideas, alternative perspectives, or a good ear.  Knowing you are not alone, that your experiences and reactions are normal, that there are others who are there for you can make an incredible difference in morale, in climate and in the emotional health of a school.

Be a shoulder to stand on.  Be the change you want to see in your world.  Be a role model to others for collaboration, creativity and collegiality.  Be an example to others on how to not only offer support, but ASK for support.  Show them that good teachers don’t just grin and bear it – they problem solve, they share, they cooperate.  Be a mentor to someone and share your experience and positive attitude.

It’s the start of a new year.  Look around your school community.  Does it need more shoulders?  Well, square your shoulders and be that shoulder! The next thing you know you’ll be standing shoulder to shoulder with other “shoulders”.  You might knock some chips off some shoulders,  you might experience less cold shoulders, you might need to look less over your shoulder,  you might lift a weight off some shoulders, and you’ll stand head and shoulders above those who merely complain.  Let’s put our shoulders to the wheel and we can create the climate we desire, the climate we deserve!

What’s on My Book Radar?

mediumlogoI am trying to keep up with the students in Augusta reading titles on the Maine Student Book Award project.  There are 40 books including nonfiction, poetry, graphic novels and chapter books. We are involved in contests to see who can read the most or all and vote for our favorite by April 1st.

Taking a break from the list I had to indulge in Kate DiCamillo’s latest and I wasn’t disappointed.  Her fearless use of delicious vocabulary and her whimsical tale of some well-crafted characters make this a new favorite.Flora___Ulysses

I was also excited to get my hands on Neil Gaimond’s new story, which was quite a departure the other stories I’ve read from him.  A totally ridiculous plot line should pull in the most reluctant of readers.

FortunatelytheMilk_Hardback_1365440330

HAVE A GREAT WEEK and STAY WARM wherever you are!