Mr. Coleman's Websites

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Reflection on Reflections

From 2010-2012, I was selected to be a member of Shawnee Mission's Career Advancement Program (CAPS). The value of being a part of this two year administrative training program is pervasive and continual. Copied in below is a paper I wrote reflecting upon Seven Leadership Qualities we were reviewing.

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Tim Coleman
April 7, 2012
CAPS Reflection on Seven Leadership Qualities
As an educator and perpetual student, the perception that the continual evaluation of information and guidance is, even if well researched, a cascading flood that must be efficiently navigated is a mindset one may settle into unintentionally.  Filtering this miasma for the crucial bits and pieces to support my leadership skills, challenge calcified habits hindering my growth, or introduce revisions or wholly new information I use in the continual refinement of my leadership can be daunting.  Parallel to a classroom teacher relieved to find a succinct, informed, and easily accessible one-page informational sheet that serves as a white paper to a piece of technology or instructional materials, as an administrator I benefit immensely from articles such as “How Leaders Lose Their Luck.”  The seven qualities listed are comprehensive without being exhaustive or exclusive.  They effectively serve as grouping themes for my educational experiences and learning, points of essential wisdom that honestly and naturally encourage one to structure reflection, current efforts, and future leadership vision in these terms.

I naturally gravitate towards summarizing or guiding principles in my life and especially in my professional growth.  The delineation and specific articulation of what one does, who they are, and what they believe provides a framework from which one may self-examine their actions and beliefs in terms of integrity and purpose.  Additionally, sharing and displaying these guiding qualities to others, especially those involved in the work ostensibly governed by these qualities, provides a self-perpetuating leadership dynamic.  In a school setting, the staff, parents, and students support your leadership because they understand it, they can find it posted and referenced in principal communications and meetings.  This is the most powerful accountability: intrinsic, humbling, empowering of others, and providing several tracks of refinement and reinvestment in the leader and those needing leadership.  The authors emphasize this, these qualities prevent stagnation and a retreat of the leadership skills that earned the position initially, but which stymie in the efforts to maintain.

Using these seven qualities as a lens through which to view the many people who came to speak with us, the immediate impression is one of the qualities of professionals at work within the Shawnee Mission District.  I am not so naïve or pessimistic as to judge each of the speakers in some absolute accounting of how “good they are” in terms of the seven goals, as the goals are reflective guidelines in managing the approach to each day, the attitude and effort – affording perspective.   The situational aspect of the goals in relation to the profession is the most striking.  The day after Dr. Krawitz visited with us and shared his generosity and openness with his work to humble the students and connect with each using handwritten notes, he was thrust into the news for his perceived mishandling of a student criticizing a politician.  Again, the topic of his leadership discussion with us is not a perfect alignment for one of the qualities as if his story were part of a fiction book with all plotting nicely relevant and nicely timed.  Instead, I see a principal who strives each day to make authentic connections to kids who may be maligned and marginalized by others who see the stereotypes of teenagers or are not aware of the time needed to create relationships with hundreds of students at a time.  I e-mailed with Dr. Krawitz after the media spotlight came blistering upon him and his messages were all in concern for the girl, as some students (in misdirected respect for Dr. Krawitz) began targeting her in the halls and bullying her.  How many have the character and integrity to carry on in such ways when powerful parents and politicians are leveraging for culture/political war sound bites?

In writing the previous paragraph it strikes me that the seven qualities are, like many codified systems of belief, reverse-engineered from what the very best do, to then be abstracted and offered to those striving first, to emulate, and then to embody the attributes.  CAPS is surely viewed as many in the district as a selection process for principals-to-be in serving as an initial screening, a training for those placed into the program, and access to those who interview and hire.  However, the CAPS program was the ideal method to spend time with those in the district who have become experts in their specialization.  To know that, as a principal, Rusty Newman is available for quick phone calls when facing a situation that is ever-so-slightly-different or unique from the guidelines in the Student handbook.  That Ginny Lyon and her team will scrutinize candidates and send you a list that is the best available from which you begin your part of the interview process.

Each night after CAPS, I would drive the 20 minutes home with my head swimming: leadership goals to implement, district hierarchy to utilize, decades of specialized experience available with an e-mail or phone extension, scenarios to test the resolve and fairness of any educator.  And although I feel that my own personal and professional learning has provided me significant growth in all of the seven qualities, I can say that the one I see the most growth available is within the quality of generosity, especially as defined by this article.  Partly this is due to this quality being more acute in relation to the amount of responsibility and oversight one has as a principal.  As a classroom teacher, requests for favors and “value-exchange” relationships are of a limited use or prevalence.  However, during internships and shadowing my principal, the reality of a day-to-day manager of human resources entails establishing expectations and equity.  Of course, the teacher with a sick child wants coverage for his room for the last 10 minutes of the day so he can make the doctor’s appointment without calling in a sub.  Or the paraprofessional not clocking in on time because she is pumping breast milk in the conference room during her very-short break.  Such an anecdotal list could be populated effortlessly and accurately from real life examples.

The “spirit of generosity” allocated “appropriately” – being compassionate and professional within the guidelines of the BOE and negotiated agreements, professional judgment, consideration of the larger picture, aware of the nuances of the immediate situation, et cetera.  In creating a personal growth plan, I see a reputation of generosity is the foundation.  This quality must be demonstrated in my actions and my beliefs before I am ever faced with the decision to say “yes” or “no.”  To this end, I see my growth plan has components currently in progress, some coming in the next few weeks, and others at the close of the year.   

In regards to how these areas would improve achievement in schools, these seven qualities elevate a school from a functioning assemblage of people and materials that do the job to a community that serves as the fabric of childhood learning.  As I have written elsewhere in my professional reflections, a school environment is the very wellspring of human potential to acquire the most rudimentary skills of survival in the modern-day world while also gaining the capacity to approach the particulars of life as a dynamic and engaging participant.  In classrooms, children learn not only the curriculum but also how to feel about learning, their strengths and struggles, how to persevere and when to turn away from a wrong choice or direction.  These essential human skills are, unfortunately, relegated to just a few ambiguous sections on our report cards (i.e. work and study habits) but the wise educator or principal will know these are the prerequisite disposition skills.  By modeling humility, curiosity, optimism, vulnerability, authenticity, and generosity, we prepare the student for the instructional lessons of the day.  If their character is underdeveloped, we have failed in teaching, irrespective of assessment results or indicators of competency.  The greatest teachers show always how they remain students, even to those they teach.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Mario Kart - Real Life!


NEW CLASSROOM PET!

I am extremely smitten with a juvenile Bearded Dragon I was able to purchase for my classroom after the death of our FireBolt just before Spring Break.  As a child, I had dozens of reptiles and amphibians and even indulging them, loving them, and attributing personalities to them, I always saw them as "lacking" much of the mammal personality that makes dogs, gerbils, cats, human children, and bunny rabbits so pleasant to have and take care of.  But I was shocked when I received FireBolt, our first Bearded Dragon, from Mrs. Madden-Miller's nephew (who, entering the teenage years, was compassionate and knew that an increase in social activities meant less time with his pet, and made the choice to rehome it).  FireBolt had a personality, was receptive to dozens of children holding him and touching him, and was tolerant of even my four-year-old holding him, kissing him, and folding his tail along his body to place him in a wooden book to carry around the house.  I could instantly see how this species disposition endeared them to humans and why they have spread across the world from their native Australia.  Our new Bearded Dragon is 6-months-old and I cannot wait for the weekend to be over to show him to my students!



FireBolt

Friday, March 29, 2013

The Streak is Broken!

Not the streak of the pro basketball team, but the one-post-a-day-everyday that I had maintained since Wednesday, March 6th.  Why?  Exhaustion!  What does a modern-day teacher spend his or her time doing - well, for me, my time is dedicated to these life-activities:

Preview of your graph

Great website for creating Graphs:
http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/index.asp

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Why, Why, Why... Oh my...

An amazing book to help understand the conspiracy, the modern manifestations of bigotry, tribalism, and some nasty remnants of our intellectual heritage of needing to be right, to be in the in group, and to think you have it all.  Required reading when approaching the human condition with an eye towards correcting these wrongs in the children.


Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Reaching Reluctant Reader

UPDATE 3/30 - Link below fixed - Thank You for bringing to my attention

A source to help our reluctant readers: A Parents Guide to the Best Kids' Comics.  I grew up non-book-reader for many years, but loved the act of reading.  My reading was primarily comic books with the TV Guide, magazines and tabloid newspapers my parents subscribed to.  But few books.  Sad...  In Middle School teachers introduced me to several great novels and in high school more popular books sparked my reading fully.  Now I read approximately three hours every day - non-work related.  Hundreds of books. Pleasure...  I see similar children in classrooms but comic books tend so easily towards the pointlessly violent and sexual themes that it is embarrassing to even approach a superhero comic without front-loading/prefacing the stories and artwork with apologies  excuses, warnings, and contextualization.  The challenge is to find well-written and engaging stories for new readers.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Money, We Can't Buy Time With the Kids

The research shows that family, and especially children, are nurtured with "quality time" - with the emphasis more on the first word than the latter.  Interesting website to help minimize spending, maximize saving, and have more quality. 



Sunday, March 24, 2013

Spring Break Coming to an End

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:

  • Remembering how small we all are, and still willing to go it, and do the good work of guiding the children.




Saturday, March 23, 2013

Spring Break Discovery of Cool Stuff

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:

http://www.jocolibrary.org/templates/JCL_InfoPage.aspx?id=24413&epslanguage=EN


Located next to the Information Services desk, the MakerSpace is a place you can go to learn new skills and software, make cool stuff and customize your world. Use the space to play, tinker and experiment with media, design and electronics in an open and collaborative environment. There are no age limits here! A 10 year old can teach classes and a 70 year old can play with toys.

This is DIY learning at its best.

What can you make in the MakerSpace?

Newsletters
Websites
Videos for your website
Digital Scrapbooks
Silly pics of your friends
Pants
Phone case
Business Cards
Shower curtain rings
Chess set
Music recordings
Digital pictures from negatives
Chess pieces
External dimmer kit
Stuffed animals
Costumes
Booklets
Models
Circuit board kits

MAKER MONDAYS:
Every Monday 5-9 p.m.
It's open and free time for anyone to come in.
learn about the space
take a tour
learn how to use the equipment.

You can bring something in to fix, hack, sew, or take apart.

See how your stuff works
Find what parts you can retrieve that are useful
Discover how to make cools stuff with what’s inside.

Please note: this is not a lesson in destruction, but rather deconstruction. Careful disassembly requires concentration, tools, and patience as well as curiosity to see how things work and discover what makes things tick.


SOME DIS-ASSEMBLY REQUIRED:
Thursday, April 4 and Friday, May 10, 4-6 p.m.
Bring in your old electronics and some tools!


LEARN TO SOLDER:
Available on Maker Mondays and for events
Come in and we’ll teach you how to use a soldering iron to make an electronic board that you can wear. Complete with blinky LEDs and a replaceable battery. Anyone eight and older is welcome. Younger children are welcome with adult supervision.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Spring Break Breakdown of Routines

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:

  • As the days of Spring Break pass, the routines of our household can begin to slip and nearly completely destabilize (bedtime at 10:00!  Chips for lunch!  Does anyone remember the last time the boys were bathed?  They are sticky...)  This article reminded me of why I rightfully try to maintain the routines in the house.  From ahaparenting

Structure: Why Kids Need Routines

Why do kids need routines and structure?
Photo: SoulfulBecause routines give them a sense of security and help them develop self-discipline.
Humans are afraid of many things, but "the unknown" edges out everything except death and public speaking for most people.   
Children’s fear of the unknown includes everything from a suspicious new vegetable to a major change in their life. Unfortunately, children are confronted with change daily.
The very definition of growing up is that their own bodies change on them constantly. Babies and toddlers give up pacifiers, bottles, breasts, cribs, their standing as the baby of the house.  New teachers and classmates come and go every year.  They tackle and learn new skills and information at an astonishing pace, from reading and crossing the street to soccer and riding a bike.  Few children live in the same house during their entire childhood; most move several times, often to new cities and certainly to new neighborhoods and schools.  And few of these changes are within the child’s control.     

Children, like the rest of us, handle change best if it is expected and occurs in the context of a familiar routine.   A predictable routine allows children to feel safe, and to develop a sense of mastery in handling their lives.  As this sense of mastery is strengthened, they can tackle larger changes:  walking to school by themselves, paying for a purchase at the store, going to sleepaway camp. 
Unpredictable changes – Mom called away on an unexpected business trip, a best friend moving, or more drastic, parents divorcing or a grandparent dying – erode this sense of safety and mastery and leave the child feeling anxious and less able to cope with the vicissitudes of life.

While helping children feel safe and ready to take on new challenges and developmental tasks would be reason enough to offer them structure, it has another important developmental role as well.  Structure and routines teach kids how to constructively control themselves and their environments. 
Kids who come from chaotic homes where belongings aren’t put away never learn that life can run more smoothly if things are organized a little.  In homes where there is no set time or space to do homework, kids never learn how to sit themselves down to accomplish an unpleasant task.  Kids who don’t develop basic self-care routines, from grooming to food, may find it hard to take care of themselves as young adults.  Structure allows us to internalize constructive habits.

Won’t too much structure dull our sense of spontaneity and creativity?
  Sure, if it's imposed without sensitivity.  There are times when rules are made to be broken, like staying up late to see an eclipse, or leaving the dinner dishes in the sink to play charades.  But even the most creative artists start by mastering the conventions of the past, and find the pinnacle of their expression in working within the confines of specific rules.
There's no reason structure has to be oppressive.  Think of it as your friend, offering the little routines and traditions that make life both easier and cozier.  Not only will your kids will soak up the security, they'll internalize the ability to structure their own lives.
Does this mean infants should be put on routines as early as possible?
NO! Infants tell us what they need.  We feed them when they're hungry, change them when they're wet.  Over time, they learn the first step of a routine:  We sleep at night.  But forcing an infant to accommodate to our routine is not responsive parenting.  As your infant moves into babyhood, she will establish her own routine, settling into a schedule of sorts.  Most babies settle into a fairly predictable pattern.  We can help them with this by structuring our day around their needs, so, for instance, we make sure conditions are appropriate for her nap at the time she usually sleeps.  Gradually, over time, we can respond to her natural schedule of eating and sleeping by developing a routine that works for her and for the whole family.

Six Benefits of Using Routines with Your Kids

1. Routines eliminate power struggles because you aren't bossing them around.  This activity (brushing teeth, napping, turning off the TV to come to dinner) is just what we do at this time of day.  The parent stops being the bad guy, and nagging is greatly reduced.
2. Routines help kids cooperate by reducing stress and anxiety for everyone.  We all know what comes next, we get fair warning for transitions, and no one feels pushed around.
3.  Routines help kids learn to take charge of their own activities. Over time, kids learn to brush their teeth, pack their backpacks, etc., without constant reminders.  Kids love being in charge of themselves. This feeling increases their sense of mastery and competence.  Kids who feel more independent and in charge of themselves have less need to rebel and be oppositional.
4. Kids learn the concept of "looking forward" to things they enjoy, which is an important part of making a happy accommodation with the demands of a schedule.  He may want to go to the playground now, but he can learn that we always go to the playground in the afternoon, and he can look forward to it then.
5. Regular routines help kids get on a schedule, so that they fall asleep more easily at night.
6. Schedules help parents maintain consistency in expectations. If everything is a fight, parents end up settling: more TV, skip brushing teeth for tonight, etc.  With a routine, parents are more likely to stick to healthy expectations for everyone in the family, because that's just the way we do things in our household.  The result: a family with healthy habits, where everything runs more smoothly!

For more inspiration on how to structure a routine that works for your family:

Building an evening routine for kids of different ages

Starting a routine

Routines & Structure that Toddlers Can Understand

Getting Your Child Out the Door in the Morning

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Spring Break Goal Setting

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:

  • Anticipating the return soon to the classroom, I review some research and push myself to hold to these standards.  In this Aspen Institute white paper, teacher evaluation expert Rachel Curtis describes the performance management system used by Achievement First charter schools. Of particular interest are Achievement First’s Essentials of Effective Instruction, which are used by administrators and coaches when they observe classrooms and plan professional development and support. Note that there are a number of references to techniques from Doug Lemov’s book, Teach Like a Champion (Jossey-Bass, 2010). 
Great aims: Rigorous, bite-sized, measurable, standards-based aims are written on the board and reviewed with students. The aims clearly drive the activities, not vice-versa.
“WALT…” – We Are Learning To…
            Preamble to a lesson learning objective spotted in a New York City classroom
(as contrasted to the more common SWBAT – Students Will Be Able To…)
Exit ticket/assessment of student mastery of the aims:
-    There is a systematic way at the end of class to assess every student’s mastery of the aim(s) and to diagnose areas of student misunderstanding. Most of the time, assessment is through an exit ticket.
-    At least 85% of students master the aim.
The most effective and efficient strategies to reach the aim:
-    Content knowledge/right strategy – The teacher demonstrates strong knowledge of the relevant standards and concepts and uses the most effective and efficient strategy to guide students to mastery.
-    Pacing and urgency – The teacher moves students briskly from one part of the agenda to the next; there is a palpable sense of urgency and purpose in the room. Time is held sacred; the teacher spends the appropriate amount of time on each activity and maximizes each minute spent. The teacher sets clear guidelines for how long activities should take and uses timers, time reminders, and countdowns effectively. The class is set up to maximize efficiency, and the teacher is fully prepared to maximize each moment.
Modeling/guided practice (I/WE or WE):
-    Mini-lesson – The lesson includes a clear “think aloud”, explicit modeling, heavily guided practice or other form of clear mini-lesson; examples and step-by-step processes are thoughtfully planned and tightly delivered.
-    The teacher may sometimes start a lesson with a YOU activity: short discovery activity, activation of prior knowledge, or some other strategy to lay a conceptual foundation.
-    Guided practice/declining scaffolding and guidance – The teacher then leads students through guided practice with declining scaffolding/guidance so that students eventually provide both the answers and the thought process.
-    Visual anchor – The mini-lesson is captured (on a whiteboard, butcher paper, overhead, and/or scaffolded notes) so that students can reference it during independent practice.
-    Check for understanding – The teacher regularly checks for understanding during guided practice so that students transition to independent practice when they are ready. A small number of students may need more guided support during independent practice, and this should not hold up the entire class.
Sustained, successful independent practice (YOU, at least 15-20 minutes):
-    Many successful “at bats” – Students have ample, successful opportunities for active learning so that they get to practice the aim independently. The YOU activity should be at the same difficulty level as the WE activity so that complexity doesn’t increase while support decreases. The teacher moves around the classroom constantly during independent practice to assess mastery and provide individual help.
-    Read, baby, read! In reading classes, teachers make sure that “nose in text” time is very high and that independent work time has at least a 7:2 ratio of reading to activity/ writing/discussing.
Classroom culture:
-    High expectations, clear routines – The teacher sets (with clear What To Do statements) and reinforces clear expectations and routines for high standards of behavior. With a Strong Voice, the teacher sweats the small stuff, including no call-outs, no laughing at other students’ mistakes, and insists students Do It Again if not great.
-    Joy factor – The class is a fun, joyful place where kids are enthusiastic and excited about learning.
-    Positive-corrective ratio – The teacher uses Positive Framing to correct behavior and narrate class activity; there is a high ratio of positive to corrective comments. The classroom feels like a place where students want to be. Students are nice and respectful to each other, and the teacher is nice and respectful to the students.
-    Students own it – Students are given the responsibility, tools, and strategies to fix problems they have or created. The teacher resists the temptation to be the sole problem-solver; students who make mistakes must own and fix them.
-    Teachable character moments – The teacher uses key moments in class to explicitly talk about, celebrate, and reinforce character skills; these moments flow naturally from the lesson and are quick and high-impact; the teacher strategically picks examples, texts, and activities that, when appropriate, reinforce the key messages (e.g., going to college).
Student engagement:
-    100 percent – The teacher insists on 100% of students on task with hands consistently in the air; students are either asking or answering questions.
-    Engagement strategies – The teacher uses high-engagement strategies (e.g., cold-calling, rapid-fire call-and-response, mini-whiteboards, frequent choral responses, and/or “everyone writes”) to ensure that all students are accountable for engagement. The teacher makes it impossible for students to be desk potatoes and simply copy from the board. The teacher limits use of round-robin reading or questioning strategies that engage only one student at a time.
Academic rigor:
-    Teacher-talk-to-student-work – There is a high ratio of student work to teacher talk with students doing most of the “heavy lifting” of doing the work and explaining their thinking.
-    Planned, rigorous questioning – The teacher plans his/her key questions in advance with a range of questioning, both lower-level knowledge (recall and basic comprehension), and higher-level (application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation). The teacher regularly uses the Stretch It technique: Why? What does that relate to? How would you apply it?
-    Top-quality oral responses – The teacher knows that Right Is Right and refuses to accept low-quality student responses. That means insisting on correct grammar, complete sentences, use of appropriate vocabulary and sufficient detail/rationale and not settling for so-so. The teacher is a No Opt Out champion – no student is allowed to opt out because the teacher cycles back to students who didn’t answer.
-    Top-quality student work – The teacher sets clear expectations and has an accountability mechanism for ensuring all students complete top-quality work. Examples of this kind of work are posted for reference and to celebrate great student work.
Cumulative review – As a part of the lesson and homework routine, students get fast, fun opportunities to systematically and successfully review and practice skills that they have already mastered. Standards included in cumulative review are truly review, and the teacher has a clear method of using data to inform which standards to review.
Differentiation – The teacher works to ensure that the needs of every student are met. Especially during independent practice, the teacher can work with some students to provide extra support or enrichment and/or can otherwise vary the volume, rate, or complexity of work that students are asked to complete. In classes that are grouped homogeneously by skill level, pronounced differentiation may be less necessary.

“Achievement First: Developing a Teacher Performance Management System That Recognizes Excellence” by Rachel Curtis, March 2011, The Aspen Institute Education and Society Program

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Spring Break Work on Coleman's Camp Website

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:
  • Hours creating and revising Coleman's Camp website - (link here http://colemanscamp.blogspot.com/). I needed to split off the weekly journal entries, vision, and other information from the Shutterfly account for a variety of reasons.  I have had several parents express interest in Coleman's Camp but all information and photos were access restricted to parents whose children attend the Thursday or Saturday sessions.  Now I have a website that can advertise and celebrate Coleman's Camp and also have privacy for students' photos and work.  

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Spring Break Reflection on Crucial Education and Parenting Resources


Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:
  • Pleased to find this amazing PBS documentary is now on-line.  I first watched years ago and was so enthralled with the quality of presentation and the horror of the program's topic that I bought the VHS version on-line (apparently using a dial-up connection, given the reality of ordering a VHS).  I have shared my copy for years with parents of kids in my class and especially those parents with teenage children.


http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/cool/view/

They are the merchants of cool: creators and sellers of popular culture who have made teenagers the hottest consumer demographic in America. But are they simply reflecting teen desires or have they begun to manufacture those desires in a bid to secure this lucrative market? And have they gone too far in their attempts to reach the hearts--and wallets--of America's youth?

FRONTLINE correspondent Douglas Rushkoff examines the tactics, techniques, and cultural ramifications of these marketing moguls in "The Merchants of Cool." Produced by Barak Goodman and Rachel Dretzin, the program talks with top marketers, media executives and cultural/media critics, and explores the symbiotic relationship between the media and today's teens, as each looks to the other for their identity.
Teenagers are the hottest consumer demographic in America. At 33 million strong, they comprise the largest generation of teens America has ever seen--larger, even, than the much-ballyhooed Baby Boom generation. Last year, America's teens spent $100 billion, while influencing their parents' spending to the tune of another $50 billion.

But marketing to teens isn't as easy as it sounds. Marketers have to find a way to seem real: true to the lives and attitudes of teenagers; in short, to become cool themselves. To that end, they search out the next cool thing and have adopted an almost anthropological approach to studying teens and analyzing their every move as if they were animals in the wild.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Spring Break Reflection on Student Virtues

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:


  • From the Marshall Memo, Five Virtues That Schools Should Model and Teach:

            In this Chronicle of Higher Education article, Swarthmore College professors Barry Schwartz and Kenneth Sharpe say colleges and K-12 schools need to go beyond teaching knowledge, academic skills, and critical and analytical thinking and instill certain intellectual virtues. Here is their list, which they say is exemplified in KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) schools and Harvard Medical School’s third-year program in a Cambridge, Massachusetts hospital:
            • The love of truth – “When a significant minority of Americans reject evolution and global warming out of hand, the desire to find the truth rather than ‘truthiness’ cannot be taken for granted,” say Schwartz and Sharpe.
            • Honesty – “Students need to be honest because it enables them to face the limits of what they themselves know, encourages them to confront their mistakes, and helps them acknowledge uncongenial truths about the world,” say the authors. This goes beyond refraining from plagiarism and cheating; it means facing up to ignorance and error and accepting reality.
            • Courage – This is standing up for what one believes is true even when other people disagree – including those in authority.
            • Fairness – Students need to evaluate the arguments of others fair-mindedly. “They need humility to face up to their own limitations and mistakes,” say Schwartz and Sharpe. “They need perseverance, since little that is worth knowing comes easily. They need to be good listeners because students can’t learn from others, or from us, without it.”
            • Wisdom – This, say Schwartz and Sharpe, “is what enables us to find the balance between timidity and recklessness, between carelessness and obsessiveness, between flightiness and stubbornness, between speaking up and listening up, between trust and skepticism, between empathy and detachment. And wisdom is also what enables us to make difficult decisions among intellectual virtues that may conflict. Being fair and open-minded often rubs up against fidelity to the truth.”
            How do we teach these virtues? Primarily by example, say Schwartz and Sharpe – in how teachers ask questions, how we pursue a dialogue, when and how we interrupt, how carefully we listen, and how often we admit that we don’t know something. “We are always modeling,” say the authors, “and the students are always watching.”

“Colleges Should Teach Intellectual Virtues” by Barry Schwartz and Kenneth Sharpe in The Chronicle of Higher Education, Feb. 24, 2012 (Vol. LVIII #25, p. A72),

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Spring Break Revision and Research for Coleman's Camp

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:
  • Reviewing and revising Coleman's Camp informational flyer as parents have begun asking about summer enrichment for their children.  Copied in below is the information used when I first created the enrichment program.
    • What if the only constraints on learning were based upon best practices borne out through educational research?
    • What if a teacher used students’ passions and interests to shape instruction and practice?
    • What if students’ classroom learning could be supplemented and deepened?
    • What if the goal of teaching was the expansive enrichment of students
    • What if the reality of teaching-to-the-test was completely removed
    • What if materials used were exciting, individualized, and based upon student choice
    • What if a powerful connection to a teacher did not need to stop based on a nine-month calendar?
    • Coleman's Camp Vision
      • Mr. Coleman is forming an innovative tutoring program named Coleman’s Camp, an ambitious undertaking to utilize a decade of classroom experience at nearly every grade level as well as training in administration, special education, and research-based practices to create a weekly enrichment and support camp for elementary-aged children. In Coleman’s Camp, small groups of students meet as a specialized class to study, explore, and interact with their own learning process in highly individualized and personal ways. The two-hour sessions aim towards mastery of grade-level curriculum taught in Shawnee Mission classrooms but also provide a pervasive environment and cross-pollination of wisdom, art, humor, music, and high quality endeavors.
    • Beginning Coleman’s Camp and Considering Enrolling Your Child(ren)
      • Coleman’s Camp was initiated and developed specifically for Prairie Elementary students in collaboration with Prairie Elementary parents who desired a quality enrichment program that far exceeded the traditional tutoring sessions offered by Mr. Coleman. Coleman’s Camp is structured to be a student-centered, adaptive, and highly engaging environment to deepen student character, intellect, behavior, and peer community.
      • Included below are questions that have been voiced regarding Coleman’s Camp. In considering whether to join us in this adventure I hope these explanations are helpful. Please feel free to contact me if any other information is needed. 
        • Who may attend Coleman’s Camp?  Any student, whether they have had Mr. Coleman as a classroom teacher or not, may attend (except students currently in his 2nd grade class). Students of different ages are encouraged to enroll as themes will be explored within the students’ ability and interest level. Coleman’s Camp uses elements of the Shawnee Mission EL program for high learners and multi-age groups to ensure advancing opportunities. 
        • What is the curriculum of Coleman’s Camp?  Mr. Coleman will utilize teaching experience spanning 1st through 5th grade as a foundation for all enrichment. The objectives, skills, and knowledge taught in the regular education classroom are supported, strengthened, and enlivened. 
        • How often should my child attend?  Students are encouraged to attend either Thursday sessions or Saturday sessions, but not necessarily both, as there is a replication of activities and themes. Skipping sessions, attending twice a month , every other week or similar intermittent scheduling is discouraged; Coleman’s Camp lives and breathes the energy of the participants. 
        • Can students from other schools attend?  Yes, though I anticipate the roster will fill quickly with Prairie students. 
        • How many students will attend each session?  As Coleman’s Camp is newly formed and the overriding standard is high-quality instruction, there will be a limit of approximately 12 students per session. 
        • Does my child need to bring anything?  Participants in Coleman’s Camp can bring a backpack with pens, pencils, markers, scissors, crayons, etc. Any crucial supplies will be provided by Mr. Coleman. 
        • When is payment due?  I ask that parents pay for either the week or month ahead. 
        • How long do sessions last?  We will follow the 9 week quarters of the Shawnee Mission District, meaning the sessions beginning this week will run through the end of 2012 winter break with new sessions beginning in January. 
        • What else do I need to do?  Please call or e-mail to reserve a spot.

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Spring Break TO-DO List, Work Related

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:
  • TO-DO list of items related to work I plan on completing during Spring Break:
    • Write report card comments for 18 students
    • Apply for principal positions in two districts
    • Complete on-line documentation of support and accommodations for several students
    • Reserve room for Coleman's Camp extra session and alternative space for regular session
    • Research places to buy a Bearded Dragon for classroom pet
    • Acquire new items for classroom treasure chest
    • Teach four sessions of Coleman's Camp
    • Catch up on e-mails and other correspondence
    • Sell current digital recorder and buy nice quality video recorder for use in student pen-pal messages with school in Italy after Spring Break 
    • Track down book that recommends graphic novels/comic books for use in classroom with reluctant readers

Friday, March 15, 2013

Spring Break Activities with My Boys

Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:

  1. Every few nights I play a game with my boys, age 5 and 8.  They are large mutant scorpions that have infested a spaceship and I am a robot soldier sent to find them.  They have eaten the crew, the ship is derelict, floating through space, and the power is out so all lights are turned off (in our living room and kitchen).  I hunt them with a workshop flashlight, scanning with the beam to find them, vocalizing audible search indicators.  We pull the couches away from the walls and sometimes flip them for recessed caves or hiding areas.  The scorpions scurry about, hiding from me under and behind things as I perform regimented and predictable search patterns; but I find they are much faster than me and learn my movements.  Quickly the situation sours as they become emboldened and grab at my legs, yell out at me, taunting, and charge at me.  My resolve lost, I send increasingly panicked radio messages to my field commander, who remains unswayed, demanding I continue the mission.  In the rare times when I am able to corner one and shoot them, I later find they are gone, having regenerated and crawled away to join the others in hunting me.  I am alone with them.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Research, Research, Re...actually, Stuff you Probably Already Believed but Wish You Had the Data to Reference

  • School Recess Improves Behavior:
  • Green outdoor settings (play, recess, and being outside in general) can reduce ADHD symptoms in children across a wide range of individual, residential, and case characteristics:
  • Algebra too early in school can have negative impact on kids:
  •  Modern Parenthood - Roles of Moms and Dads Converge as They Balance Work and Family
  • Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children
    • An amazing book to read, though the findings and message can be understood immediately and the benefits of knowing the research can be implemented immediately, free of monetary cost, and can help your child excel.
    • From the book description on Amazon: "
      • "By age 3, the recorded spoken vocabularies of the children from the professional families were larger than those of the parents in the welfare families. Between professional and welfare parents, there was a difference of almost 300 words spoken per hour. Extrapolating this verbal interaction to a year, a child in a professional family would hear 11 million words while a child in a welfare family would hear just 3 million" (emphasis mine). "The implications for society are staggering: Hart and Risley's follow-up studies at age 9 show that the large differences in the amount of children's language experience were tightly linked to large differences in child outcomes. And yet the implications are encouraging, too. As the authors conclude their preface to the 2002 printing of Meaningful Differences, "the most important aspect to evaluate in child care settings for very young children is the amount of talk actually going on, moment by moment, between children and their caregivers." By giving children positive interactions and experiences with adults who take the time to teach vocabulary, oral language concepts, and emergent literacy concepts, children should have a better chance to succeed at school" (emphasis mine).



Wednesday, March 13, 2013

On the Passing of Pets


Helping Children Cope

by Moira Anderson Allen, M.Ed.

Copyright © 1987, 2007 by Moira Allen. Excerpted from Coping with Sorrow on the Loss of Your Pet.  http://www.pet-loss.net/children.shtml

Pets and children seem to just naturally go together. Researchers who study child behavior and development have come up with a number of complicated explanations for the reasons children and pets mesh so beautifully. They speak of the numerous benefits children derive from this relationship, including an understanding of responsibility, interpersonal interactions, communication and more.

Those of us who grew up with pets understand this relationship in more simple terms. We remember how pets never teased us or mocked our blunders or sorrows, and how we could confide our secrets to them in complete safety. If we were imaginative, we may have turned our pets into any number of companions: heroes, wild Kiplingesque wolves or tigers that only we Mowglis could tame, ferocious beasts to conquer in mock-battles, or faithful sidekicks to rescue us from hordes of imaginary enemies. Pets were our allies against the world, friends who were always on our side when parents picked on us, siblings harassed us, human friends abandoned us and bullies made our lives miserable. Those of us who remember times like these know how devastating the loss of a pet can be to our own children.

Carol F. knew how much her poodle, Chadwick, meant to her daughter, Melanie. "He was her little brother. She was less than 2 years old when we adopted Chadwick, so she could not even remember life without him. He had been her playmate, her baby brother that never grew up. In some ways his death hit her the hardest."

Carol found that Melanie reacted just as strongly to unfeeling comments from others as an adult pet owner might. "One day shortly after Chadwick died, we met someone in the grocery store who we thought would care, and told her about his death. I don't remember who it was or what she said, but Melanie needed to leave in a hurry after that. When we got in the car she said, ‘Mom, she thinks Chadwick was just a dog...' Of course he was a dog, but to us he was so much more, and some people just did not comprehend that."
To make matters worse, the death of a family pet may be a child's first encounter with death, so that a parent is faced not only with trying to soothe the child's grief over the disappearance of a friend, but with trying to explain the concept of death. This can prove no easy task, since few adults have a ready explanation of death at hand even for themselves. Television, one of a child's primary sources of information these days, is little help at all, when cartoon characters survive all manner of violent acts and characters killed off at the end of one season can be miraculously resurrected at the beginning of the next. How does one explain to a child what happened to a pet, and why it won't come home again?

As in all things related to dealing with grief in the family, communication is the key. It's a good idea not to make assumptions about what your child does or does not understand, or what beliefs your child may hold. Television isn't the only source of information children have. Children receive input from a wide range of sources over which you have no control, including books, magazines, music, other children, teachers, and other adults.

Information from these sources may be filtered through the child's own experiences (some of which you may know nothing about, no matter how observant you are), his or her personal values and family values, and by whatever other interpretation and sorting processes go on in a young brain. By talking to your child openly and honestly (which means sharing your own feelings), you may find that the child understands death far better than you anticipated, or you may be able to uncover some misconceptions that you now have an opportunity to put right.

Children of different ages may react differently to a pet's death. In addition, children of different ages tend to have different types of relationships with a pet. While a pet may seem like a cuddly plaything to a toddler, it may seem like a furry sibling and confidante to an older child, and a source of continuity and love to a teenager. Certainly, the older a child grows, the more experiences are shared, and the stronger the sense of companionship grows. Very soon, the pet ceases to be an interesting furry toy and becomes a distinct personality to a child, perceived as capable of understanding and sharing.

You may discover, by watching your pets and children interact, that the pets themselves establish these dividing lines in the relationship. An adult dog, for instance, may regard a baby or toddler rather like a puppy, something that may need watching and guarding, but not something that one romps with as an equal. Cats will often stay well out of reach of young children who haven't learned to be gentle or respectful yet. But as the child grows older and is more able to understand how to interact with pets, the boundaries between them tend to come down.

Counselor Diane Matheny has a suggestion for helping younger children cope with the loss of a pet. "I find it helpful to have them tell me where they think their pet is now. I encourage them to describe the setting, the other animals or people they believe would be there, and what their pet does for fun. Through this creative exercise, I can find out if there are aspects of death that are frightening to the child, and address them. While children may initially have a rather vague idea of the afterlife of the pet, they enjoy exploring the possibilities. Imagination is a big part of a child's life, and this exercise can be a helpful way to introduce information and ease fears when a child loses a pet.

"I am comfortable telling children that no one knows for sure where we go when we die. Honesty is essential when dealing with children, and since we don't know exactly where we go when we die, it is important to tell them that, too. When the family has a spiritual or religious back-ground, I integrate these beliefs in the exercise. Generally, once a child has visualized where the pet might be, feels sure that the pet's needs are met, and realizes that the pet will not awaken in its grave, he can move on to the acceptance stage of grieving."

Though some counselors believe that teenagers are less likely to grieve deeply over the loss of a pet, Matheny disagrees. "I personally feel that the relationship between a teenager and his or her pet can be far closer than we realize," she says. "I still use some of the visualization techniques mentioned above for this age group. There is a good possibility that many teenagers have bonded very closely with their pets, in light of the less traditional family structures our culture has produced. When a teenager loses an animal, she may have lost the only companion who was always there for her.

"I feel that it is important to encourage the child to explore her current support system, and possibly to advise her how to find someone else who can be there through this difficult period. This age group seems to find comfort from an older adult friend who can listen, offer suggestions, and provide nurturing. Teens often find it difficult to show their vulnerable feelings to peers, who might not understand and who are often unable to answer questions about death and loss.

"With this age group, I use the technique of memorializing the pet by suggesting that the teenager choose one of the animal's endearing qualities and manifesting it in her daily life. For example, if the teenager loved the way her cat always greeted her in a warm manner, she could begin to express more warmth when she greets people. Frequently, people mention unconditional love or being a good listener as their favorite qualities in animals. By behaving in these ways ourselves, we can keep the memory of our pets alive while honoring the benefits of our relationship with them."

The story Regina S. of Pennsylvania tells about the death of her family dog, Queenie, demonstrates not only how much a dog can mean to a teenager, but how important family communication and openness are in dealing with pet loss. Regina was 13 when Queenie, 8, was diagnosed as having cancer and had to be euthanized. Her account, written six years later, shows how deeply sensitive a child may be not only to her own reactions, but to those of other family members.

"I remember driving to the SPCA with Queenie between my parents on the front seat," wrote Regina. "The three kids were in the back seat. I remember thinking to myself that maybe we would get lost and go back home so Queenie wouldn't have to be put to sleep. But we didn't get lost, and arrived at the SPCA sooner than I wanted to. We all took Queenie in and handed her to a man who took her down the hall as we were watching. Before Queenie went into the room, she looked back at us as if to say goodbye. My mom burst out crying and so did I. We hugged each other because we knew we both felt the same pain of seeing our pet hurt as badly as she did. My dad, brother and sister all had tears filling their eyes also.

"After that day, if I saw a picture of Queenie or heard a slow song that reminded me of her, I would start crying again. My family was very helpful to me. My mom would tell me that Queenie had been in pain and now she was at rest. It really helped to know I had my family to depend on.

"A month later my parents went to the SPCA and picked out a beautiful black and white miniature Collie/Beagle. At first I didn't want this cute puppy, whom we named King, because I still wanted Queenie. But as days went by I seemed to love King. Now that little bundle of joy is 6 years old. King is truly my dog and the love and care I give him don't match the great love he gives me in return."

Some people say that one should never use the term "went to sleep" in connection with death, or a child may develop a fear of going to sleep because he is afraid that, like Fido, he won't wake up. They also argue that if you say that the pet was so sick or so badly injured that it went to sleep or went to heaven, the child may fear that this may happen to him if he becomes sick or injured. The child may also fear that if this could happen to the family dog, it could also happen to someone else in the family, like Mommy or Daddy.
Yarden doesn't hesitate to use this expression, however, and it is extremely likely that your child is bound to hear it anyway. "Going to sleep" seems to be our most common euphemism for death, both human and animal, and if your child doesn't hear it from you, he will probably hear it from another child, another adult, a veterinarian or perhaps a doctor. You may need to expand your explanation and point out the difference between sick and very, very sick; between a sprained ankle and a very serious injury. You may also wish to explain that dogs and cats get old much faster than humans do, and that 15 years for a pet is a long life while 15 years for a child is a very short time.

As for the child's fears that what happened to his pet might also happen to him, or to his parents or siblings, let's be honest with ourselves: it might. None of us are immortal, and accident, illness or old age could strike a family member at any time. While your first purpose in explaining a pet's death to a young child is to soothe the child's fears, it may be unwise to try to banish those fears by making promises that in reality you have little control over. The death of a pet can be one way for anyone of any age to come to grips with an understanding of our own mortality.

Never tell your child anything that will imply that the child was at fault, or that the separation isn't permanent. Statements such as "he went away" or "he didn't like it here anymore, so he left," leave a child with unnecessary confusion and guilt. Did the pet go away, the child may wonder, because I pulled its tail or yelled at it? Is it my fault? Might it come back if I promised to be a nice person? If the child does not understand that the pet can never come back, he may be reluctant to accept another pet, but be determined to wait loyally for the departed one's return.

If your pet is sick and you know that it is bound to die in the near future, you will do your child more good by preparing him for this inevitable tragedy than by trying to conceal the pet's condition. This way, your child will be able to observe the pet's illness and develop a better understanding of the dying process.
"We adopted a dog, Clifford, from a shelter a year ago," wrote Susan K. of New York. "Six months ago, he was diagnosed as having severe kidney damage. The disease is progressing and we must prepare for his eventual death. He and my 4-year-old daughter are best friends. I've prepared her by explaining that he is sick and may die someday. We have read children's books from the library dealing with a pet's death." Susan is also preparing herself during this process, both by explaining the situation to her daughter and by learning as much as she can about her dog's condition so that she can monitor it. "Having lost a pet before enables me to be honest with myself that it will hurt a lot when he's gone."

You can serve your children best by being as honest as possible about the death of the pet, or about an illness that will eventually lead to death. Honesty and openness will pave the way to coping, and will enable you and your children to have discussions about your feelings. If you fail to be open, your children may hear things from other sources that give them confused ideas about what has happened, and without communication you'll have no opportunity to learn what these ideas are or how to counteract them.

Dealing with High Stakes Testing

Each year when I taught a grade that administered State Assessments I would play this video for the kids to relieve some of the stress.  Of course I surreptitiously fast forward and skip the part when he brings out the Pink Panther toy :)   


Brain Discovery Fair, April 13th 10:00-2:00

http://www2.kumc.edu/sfnkc/sfnkcevents.html

A fun event to share neuroscience with area schoolchildren!

The Society for Neuroscience Kansas City Chapter will be hosting the annual Brain Discovery Fair on April 13th from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m at the Hemenway Life Sciences Innovation Center on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus.

The Brain Discovery Fair is an exciting community outreach program, developed to teach children ages 4-12 about the nervous system.  Through the use of hands-on experiments, interactive demonstrations and a fun lecture, children have the opportunity to learn about neuroscience in an engaging and entertaining manner.  There are prizes, games, and tours of neuroscience laboratories.  Best of all, this event is completely free!

Please inform your teachers about this great opportunity to excite the thrill of science in their students.  As always, no RSVP is needed.  If you have any questions, please email SFNKC@kumc.edu or visit us at www.facebook.com/SFNKansasCity for more information.

We hope to see you there!

Sincerely,

The Society for Neuroscience Kansas City Chapter

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

"We've been educated to become good workers, rather than creative thinkers"

Why don't we get the best out of people? Sir Ken Robinson argues that it's because we've been educated to become good workers, rather than creative thinkers (emphasis mine). Students with restless minds and bodies -- far from being cultivated for their energy and curiosity -- are ignored or even stigmatized, with terrible consequences. "We are educating people out of their creativity," Robinson says. It's a message with deep resonance. Robinson's TEDTalk has been distributed widely around the Web since its release in June 2006. The most popular words framing blog posts on his talk? "Everyone should watch this." 

A visionary cultural leader, Sir Ken led the British government's 1998 advisory committee on creative and cultural education, a massive inquiry into the significance of creativity in the educational system and the economy, and was knighted in 2003 for his achievements. His latest book, The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything, a deep look at human creativity and education, was published in January 2009.



Monday, March 11, 2013

700 free comic books from Marvel - sign up now

First appearances of many great comic book superheroes.

"...a promotional effort by Marvel to offer up hundreds upon hundreds of free #1 and related-issue comics in order to get people trying out various titles and Marvel's book on comiXology more generally. This has crushed the site's servers..."  

Still time to sign up and download the comics when they become available, an amazing resource for reluctant readers and their parents who might have grown up reading Silver Age, Bronze Age, and Modern Age of Marvel Comics.

http://www.comixology.com/sale-access

From comixology.com:
"To that end, we’re pausing the Marvel Comics #1 promotion for the time being. For those of you that want to take advantage of the offer – you will get your comics! Until we are able to reinstate this program in our systems, please click here and fill out this simple form, so you can be informed as soon as there is an update."