Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Ah-Mazing Ah-portunity!

The Component 3 Intensive was so successful that we are designing the Component 4 Intensive!  It's tentatively planned for February 21st at Bridgeport High School 3:30-5:30.  We have a special surprise for you so think seriously about attending if you will be submitting Component 4 in May!  :-)

A candidate from last year said to me yesterday:  "I was making lesson plans this weekend and thought, 'Now how am I going to prove they learned this material?'"  (She had discovered her strengths were in planning and implementing instruction but her weakness was in assessment--candidacy has changed her teaching life forever!)

#ExcitedforYou
#RespectforYourWork

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Component 3 Tips #2

Here are the "Cliffs Notes" from our Component 3 Intensive last night, in case you missed it:

1) Looking at the Overview in your Component 3 Instructions, there are three skills you are demonstrating-- planning and instruction, student engagement; safe and challenging learning environment.

2) When you look at "What Do I Need to Do" look at each of the yellow bullet points and address them completely.  For example,  if you are supposed to be fostering reading, writing, listening, speaking, and visual literacy-- you need to address ALL of those and EACH of those as much as possible in your two videos.  My personal advice is address each point three times-- "Clear, Consistent, and Convincing Evidence!"  Dissect that information and make sure your lesson thoroughly addresses all the bullet points.

3) The focus is on student engagement with the content, rather than with the teacher.  Try to design lessons for higher level thinking that use student learning conversations as a primary focus.  What strategies do you use to encourage classroom discourse?

4) How well do you know your students as learners AND outside the classroom.  Does it show in your video?

5) As you analyze your video, be sure to address ALL the students rather than just the ones in the foreground.  What are the students behind them doing, and why?

6) If you had to count the number of times YOU initiated interaction with students vs. the number of times THEY initiated interaction with you or with another student, would this video be heavily student centered?  If so, GREAT!

7) Look at your level 4 rubric and don't let any word escape you.  If it's in there, it's important.

8) Ask for help.  There are many people who will read for you and help you look at your videos with your rubric in mind.  This is when a cohort becomes powerful--the collaboration between you and other teachers pushes all of your thinking and understanding to higher levels!

Here's a link to an older post with more resources.  And another one.

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

What Did I Do Wrong?

This post is by an Anonymous Guest Blogger

At first I thought, "What Did I Do Wrong?"  Now, since I've been re-reading my instructions and the rubric, I can see much more clearly where my entry fell short last May.  I look at the feedback I got and I see that it really was a level 2 entry that I sent in.  I'm encouraged by others who didn't make it their first try.  And I wonder, does the 80% pass rate with a cohort mean first time pass rate, or overall?

I notice my new videos and new writing, and, well, pretty much this whole year have had a deeper level of understanding.  I'm teaching a lesson and I'm trying new things.  Like differentiation.  I thought that was how I was using new strategies, but now I'm thinking it's how I'm choosing the right strategies for each of my kids.  This year I'm doing the same lesson with my kids, but I met with Joetta and she and I brainstormed what student engagement looks like and talked about how to make the lesson more student-centered.  I'm excited about the changes I've made and I feel like I'm more mature somehow, as a teacher.  I just feel better about everything.  I will also say that there's just a lot more understanding about what I'm doing, now, with the whole process, too.

By this time next year I think I will be an NBCT, and I'll be volunteering to help others just like they've helped me.  I will have words of wisdom to share.  I like how one of my mentors said, "Welcome to the Re-do Club."  I'm going to be an NBCT who has earned the right to use those letters after her name, just like all the other NBCTs out there.


Thursday, January 18, 2018

A Positive, Challenging Learning Environment Provides Success for All Students



by Stacie Atliff
This  was first published on lifecoachforteachers.blogspot.com
In my first few years of teaching, it has become very clear to me that creating a positive and inviting environment is half the battle. While content and learning strategies tend to become the main goals, it is vital to realize these goals are more likely to be met when taught in a classroom where students feel safe. A place where students feel encouraged and independent too. After all, isn’t that also part of the learning process? 
            After taking my first initial high school job as a special educator, I quickly realized that the approaches that had worked with my middle school self-contained classes were not going to provide what was needed to encourage my high school students in a co-taught environment. Before, my reward system was a fairly successful tool that encouraged positive behavior. Now, I’m looking at students who are aware they are labeled “special ed” and aren’t as easy to encourage with stamps and small prizes. 
            Can positive rewards still encourage the students I currently teach? Absolutely. I continue to search for new tactics to implement, such as earning classroom roles or rewards chosen by students. But when is working for free time and other rewards not enough? When will we stop devaluing the feeling that comes from raw success?
            This shift in thinking hit me like a freight train a few months into the school year when one of my students came up to me after class. He couldn’t contain his excitement as he told me he earned a B on a chapter test. Of course I already knew his score, but I let him have the excitement of telling me – excitement rarely seen from this particular student. The best part, however, is that I had proof that he actually put forth effort and got on our classroom app to study. In that moment, his excitement was from pure success. He wasn’t getting a “reward.” Instead, he had been rewarded with one of the best test grades he’d likely received in a long time. I wanted to bottle up his feelings as proof for future hard work because, this time, he didn’t guess for a B. He worked hard for that grade and he knew he had earned it.
Like too many other students, I realized, he hasn’t tasted enough success that comes from hard work and effort. This student, like so many others, comes to class with baggage that would weigh anybody down and create a lack of self-confidence. In the eyes of these students, failure is glaring right back at them because they have seen so many things go wrong. Isn’t it our responsibility to help them see things a different way? Are we helping them if we do not do what we can to help them actually feel success and use it as a motivational tool? From respecting authority and rules to passing a challenging class, writing a research paper, or being a good friend at the right time, students can feel success in various forms, both big and small with a little help and support. 
Often times, these students are not praised or encouraged at home and may not know how good it can feel to do the right thing. Although they may not act like it, many of them are dying to form relationships and have somebody believe in them – even if they don’t know it yet. How can students aim for success when they have never achieved it from their own hard work? The solution seems simple, but the path to get there is far from that. Like most questions in the education world, there is not any one right answer but rather a list of strategies that will continue to grow and change. Regardless of the method, it seems that students are desperate at a chance to learn what success is for them and an opportunity to grow from this realization. 

In addition to the positive reward systems or tactics used in the classroom, I want to incorporate a system of determination and respect – for others and oneself. A determination that can be strengthened by helping students achieve success inside and outside of the classroom.  A new type of feeling – that hard work doesn’t have to impede the positive learning environment. Instead, classrooms can become a place where hard work is a positive in the eyes of the students because achieving success is a reward that is more than worthy. It may not help them all, but feeling success from their own hard work is something every student deserves to experience at least once on their journey. Who knows, they may even start to like it. 

Monday, January 15, 2018

Blind Reader Program Available to Candidates

Guest Post by Cari Levake

Harrison County NBCT Support Cohort is excited to announce the Blind Reader Program, designed to support candidates as they develop the written portion of their components. 

Our goal is to provide candidates with timely feedback from NBCT Readers. Candidates will be able to send their papers to a designated “Go Between”, who will forward it on to the Reader in order to keep both parties anonymous. The “Go Betweens” will be Elissa Whelchel and myself. We will keep track of the candidate’s number, the NBCT Reader, and the dates submitted as a means of accountability on all parts. 

Here is more about how the program works:


STEP 1: The candidate will submit a Blind Reader Cover Sheet (an electronic copy will be sent to you) along with their paper to their designated “Go Between.” 

STEP 2: The “Go Between” will send the paper to a NBCT Reader. The Reader may or may not be in your certification area depending upon the availability and demand. Please keep in mind, they are limited by the NB ethical codes of conduct as to what kind of input they can give. Their main role is to ask guiding questions to help you further develop your ideas and how they relate to the standards. 

STEP 3:  The Reader provides feedback within 2 weeks and returns the paper to the “Go Between” who in turn passes it back to the candidate.  

  We encourage you to not wait until the last minute! This can be done at any stage of the writing process. If further feedback is needed, we can also try to arrange for you to meet with your Reader to discuss your questions. 

As a newly certified NBCT teacher who benefited from the support of this cohort, I look forward to supporting you as you travel on this path of professional development.

Best Wishes!

Cari Levake, NBCT
EL Specialist
Harrison County Schools

Thursday, January 11, 2018

Component 3 Tips

When I think about establishing a positive, safe, supportive, and challenging learning environment, this post by We Are Teachers is a great resource!  A WVU prof said to some teachers at another school that if all they ever said was "good job" then students thought everything was a "good job."  He encouraged teachers to consider other ways of validating student ideas.

I think you will like this FREE POSTER, "25 Things to Say Instead of Good Job."


Tuesday, January 2, 2018

NBCT in the News



A good article about National Board certification can be found at EdWeek.



And here is a meme that has nothing to do with it.  ☺