Wednesday, September 16, 2015

A new year, a new job, & a fresh perspective

By now, most teachers in my county have found out - I've left the classroom, and started a brand new job as the high school math curriculum facilitator for Gaston County Schools. As such, and being that this blog is personal, not professional, I feel the need to insert a disclaimer here: the ideas here are mine, and don't represent GCS's views, opinions, goals, etc. 




It was a big leap of faith for me to even apply, but I'm so glad I did. The past three and a half weeks, I've learned more about myself, my own teaching style, and the profession as a whole than I ever would have locked up in my own little classroom. 

It's really made me think about how often teachers get an opportunity to watch each other. Those of us familiar with the MTBoS tend to feel more connected, because we read and watch what each others do with their students. I've learned though, that so many teachers DON'T spend time online connecting with peers. We're the rarity. MOST teachers instead learn of new ideas from their school based peers. 

When I was in the classroom, I was constantly sharing ideas I had found. In fact, it was a completely normal thing for me to burst into a coworker's room during our common planning period, and to say something like, "Check out this amazing (fill in activity/idea/resource here)" on a near daily basis. I'm an idea gatherer. 

I want other teachers to be able to experience that rush of inspiration that happens when you can see a new way to connect students with content. That's the feeling that keeps good teachers from feeling burned out (or at least, it does most of the time). 

So I'll end with a few questions I'm pondering today:

  • How can we, as teachers, show each other our classrooms in more tangible ways? How can we give each other a better picture of how a lesson went, how our students interacted with the material, or how our energy/style gave the lesson a certain flair that increased engagement and retention?
  • As I've done hundreds of walkthroughs over the past (almost) month, I've noticed the significant impact that a teacher's questioning style has during a lesson (especially during direct instruction). How can we share this very subtle art with each other in order to improve?
  • How can we, as the online-engaged, blog-reading, globally-connected teachers encourage others to reach out, and engage? 

1 comment:

  1. This blog is of great interest to me. I feel like it doesn’t teach us in the ordinary way, but instead suggests a whole new system that e all will try using in the classroom. I see that you have embarked upon a journey with this great book, I hope to read it to someday soon and will have a lot to write in my blog too. It is not easy to be involved in the writing an essay online every time you write a blog, but you are doing an incredibly great job.

    ReplyDelete