Peter Pappas »
26 March 2009 »
In Leadership, PD, Teachers »
I recently posted "A Guide to Designing Effective Professional Development: Essential Questions for the Successful Staff Developer." I thought I'd follow up with an example of how those recommendations were followed in a recent professional development project.
This example comes from my recent work with the Edison School of Engineering & Manufacturing, a Rochester (NY) City School District high school. We began the project by using one of the weekly early releases to do some agenda setting. I was introduced to the faculty and I spent about 40 minutes giving an outline of the types of PD subjects I could offer. I use a TurningPoint audience response system that gathered data to help us target our future PD.
We then utilized two more early release sessions to provide the requested training. I think it is critical to model the learning strategies in the session. That's especially true with PD is offered at the end of the school day. Feedback from teachers noted that they felt as if they were part of a learning environment that gave them a feeling for how the strategies would be perceived by the students.
Professional development need to move from the abstract setting of a training session into a real world classroom. So we next turned to Focus Classroom Walk-Throughs to develop a shared understanding of what the strategies look like when you are working with your students. I came back to the school on three additional days to conduct the walkthroughs.
Teachers were divided into teams of about six teachers and each team was led on a half-day walkthrough experience. Each session began with an orientation regarding goals and protocols. Our group of six was split into two smaller groups and visited classroom in teams of 2-3. We spent about 20 minutes per visit and regrouped all six teachers after visiting a few classes.
All school faculty were aware of our walks and could elect to host a visit or opt out. We were not evaluating, nor passing judgement. Our goal was to hone our skills at identifying what we saw in the classroom. For example, could we look at classroom activity and agree on what level of Bloom we would assign to it?
After the classroom visits, I led each group in a debriefing with a focus on developing a shared understanding of what the strategies look like in the classroom. A “March Madness” analogy would be a group of observers discussing the defensive strategies they see being used in a basketball game. They share a common vocabulary and they are in full agreement about how to label what they observe.
Armed with a shared understanding of what how we would define our instructional strategies, we then turned to agenda setting for future PD. I led each walkthrough group in brainstorming session on how they would recommend we focus their future PD. I compiled input from all six brainstorming session into a report to the school based planning team. They then met to design their 09-10 professional development program.
Here's a Wordle of the top 50 comments from our brainstorm sessions.
Tags: ARS, Bloom, Data, Defining, Rochester, TurningPoint, Walkthrough, Wordle
Peter Pappas »
22 March 2009 »
In How To, Leadership, PD, Teachers »
All considerations for professional development (PD) should flow from the premise that staff development should model what you want to see in the classroom. We strive to offer our students engaging, relevant, and rigorous instruction that supports students who will, over time, take responsibility for their learning. PD should apply those same goals to training [...]
Tags: Reform
Peter Pappas »
17 March 2009 »
In Strategies »
I'm an educator who loves innovative technology and music. In my last post, I showed "How to Stay Home and Use Twitter Tools to Network a Major Conference." That turned out to be a great way to meet many of the attendees and Twitter followers at the ASCD Education conference in Orlando. Well I didn't get [...]
Tags: Amusements, Music, Twitter
Peter Pappas »
14 March 2009 »
In How To, PD, Presentations, Web 2.0 »
I couldn't attend this year's ASCD conference currently going on in Orlando. That's a shame, since conferences are such a great place to meet new people and share ideas. So I thought I use Twitter to see if I can virtually meet folks and share thinking. First here's my elevator speech introduction – conference [...]
Tags: ARS, Data, Engagement, Innovation, Rochester, Twitter, Visual Literacy
Peter Pappas »
11 March 2009 »
In Ed Policy, Leadership, Web 2.0 »
President Obama used a talk to the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce as a forum for a major address on administration education policy. Among his "four pillars of reform," he called for an expansion of charter school as "laboratories of innovation." For text transcript of Obama's speech click here. I decided to use Many Eyes to [...]
Tags: Comparing, Data, Obama, Reform, Science
Peter Pappas »
08 March 2009 »
In Commentary, Ed Tech, Strategies, Students »
Here’s a great new video, from the Suffern NY Middle School Tech Club students. Let's help these kids make sure their message is heard! Follow link to No Future Left Behind Ning page for full credits and discussion.
Tags: Engagement, Innovation, Motivation, PBL
Peter Pappas »
05 March 2009 »
In Commentary, Ed Tech, Web 2.0 »
Museums share at least one thing in common with schools. They have traditionally functioned as repositories of information. Visit a museum and you can view the information (art) that a curator has selected, organized, and presented. Often its significance and meaning will be explained to you in a wall label. In the traditional school, curriculum [...]
Tags: Creativity, Curriculum, Information landscape, Museums, NYT
Peter Pappas »
04 March 2009 »
In Commentary, History / DBQ's »
I enjoy looking at historic maps and other visual displays of information. I was browsing online images from the National Gallery of Art's current exhibit "Pride of Place: Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age" and was startled to see “A Bird’s-Eye View of Amsterdam” painted (around 1652), by Jan Micker. Click image to enlarge. [...]
Tags: Amusements, Google, Maps, US History
Peter Pappas »
01 March 2009 »
In Ed Tech, History / DBQ's, How To, Strategies »
Google has posted ten million photographs from the LIFE photo archive on their online gallery of images. It's a great source of material for teachers and students who support a document-based approach to teaching history. While I wish that Google had done more to curate the collection with robust search tools and more specific categories, I [...]
Tags: Apple, Critical thinking, Essential questions, Google, US History, Visual Literacy
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