Friday, April 30, 2010

Teacher Top 10 Video

Just thought I would share a hilarious video about the "Top 10 Things You Don't Learn About Teaching in College."


Enjoy!


Monday, April 26, 2010

YouTube Video: Download and Import to iMovie

If you've always wondered how to get a video from YouTube into your iMovie project, well wonder no more! I put together a simple and short tutorial on how to do this. The video has no audio, but the steps are simple:
  1. Use FireFox
  2. Install Video Downloader add-on
  3. Go to a YouTube video
  4. Click download arrow at bottom of FF
  5. Upload the saved .flv file to ZamZar and convert to .mp4
  6. Check your email and download the converted file
  7. Import the converted .mp4 file into iMovie
  8. That's it!
Watch the video here (it may take a while to load, it's 13MB!):


Thursday, April 22, 2010

Reflection Week 15

Core Values

  • Clarify who we are
  • Govern personal relationships
  • Guide us on how to teach
  • Inform us on how to reward
  • Honesty
  • Transparency with statistics of student/community population
  • Look up Singleton & Linton, 2006, pp 60-61
  • Acceptance
  • Embracing cultural differences
  • Cultural barriers – break them down
  • Break the vicious circle/cycle
  • “Money is never going to make education more equitable if we do not properly desegregates our schools so that the minority population of students have as much to gain from public schools as middle and upper class students.” Jonathan Kozon, 1991.
  • Modeling
  • Model expectations of what I want my students to produce or learn
  • Learn by example
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • I value my own education, never a choice for me
  • Payback, sense of helping others
  • Caring, making a difference
  • Respect and trust
  • Friendly
  • Maintain healthy relationships
  • Focus on building confidence
  • Organization
  • Key to keeping up with the changes in education
  • Ownership and pride
  • http://www.Nps.gov/training/uc/whcv.htm

Decision Making
  • You get paid for your judgments.
  • With good judgment, you can find the knowledge (or those that do)
  • Why is it so difficult to make a decision?
  • Our value in the eyes of others are sometimes more important than the best decision
  • Why is decision making such an important activity for principals?
  • You’re paid for them
  • Decisions made in education are people decisions
  • It’s important, affects the students for the rest of their lives.
  • How do you make decisions? How does you r principal make decisions?
  • Gut instinct? Not in hiring…
  • Think it through
  • How will it affect most involved
  • Involve stake holders
  • Do not ASSUME
  • Are there techniques that would help a principal make a decision?
  • Stay aligned with your core values and school culture
  • Compare and contrast the various models of the decision making process.
  • When should a principal not involve others in the decision making process?
  • Confidentiality
  • Personnel issues
  • Make some minor alone decisions to begin with, to prove to staff that you can.
  • Are there techniques that would help a group make a decision?
  • Are there advantages to having a group make decisions?
Reflection
This class helped me to think more about my own core values and beliefs as they pertain to my future administrator role. I think that, because my values and beliefs have already been heavily rooted in my current teaching roles, that they will translate well to a principalship. Now obviously this might not be the case, but I believe that my current core values are enough to propel me into the role where I can refine and re-evaluate them. This class also brought forth the need for me to always stick to these core values, especially during the decision making process. The notes above are important to my future success in this arena.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Reflection Week 14


SAGE: Student Achievement Gap Elimination
  • The culture behind Nevada’s school improvement process embraces high expectations for every student and is built upon the foundation of the following beliefs:
    1. The work of schools is student learning;
    2. All children benefit from challenging and relevant curriculum;
    3. Curriculum, instruction, and assessments must be closely aligned to State Standards;
    4. Every teacher can be an expert when provided collaborative and sustained professional development focused on improved instruction;
    5. School culture and the learning environment can promote continuous improvement.
    6. Parental support and involvement are critical to improved student performance;
    7. Effective use of data is vital to continuous improvement of teaching and learning.
  • Comprehensive improvement plans take several years to implement and demonstrate improvement in the targeted areas. A continuous improvement cycle provides the opportunity for ongoing identification of effective practices and/or actions that should be continued and ineffective practices and/or actions that should be revised or eliminated. There have been many successful school improvement efforts. The education research literature includes hundreds of examples of school improvement that have resulted in increased student learning, improved parent involvement, decreased dropout rates, and an increased percentage of students who enroll in college. The SAGE (Student Achievement Gap Elimination) school improvement process provides schools with a framework for problem solving to target the school improvement efforts best suited for them.
5-Step Plan for Dealing With Stress
  1. Identify the stress risk factors
  2. Decide who might be harmed and how
  3. Evaluate the risks
  4. Record your findings
  5. Monitor and review

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Reflection Week 13

End of the Year
  • Checklist passed out
The most intriguing items on this checklist include:
  1. Student Portfolios
  2. Classroom Inventory
  3. Lunch charges paid
I included these as the most intriguing because I think they are really site-specific items to include on the end of the year checklist for teachers. What I am saying is that these are items that principals choose to implement at their site.

The June Checklist for Principals is much more insightful. Things on the list that peaked my interest included:
  1. Schedule BTS Nights
  2. Yearbook distribution
  3. Review Testing scores
  4. Meeting minutes

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Reflection Week 12

Is Your School Fun to Work For?
  • This short quiz helped me to understand that it is quite important to work in an environment, especially in education, that is fun.
  • The quiz had some great, yet simple, questions that forced me to really think about the level of fun at my site.

My First Staff Meeting
  • This handout did not do justice to the presentation, but it is useful in its own right.
  • The handout had simple, yet effective, tips that included dressing appropriately, bring a stainstick (probably the most useful!), using humor, keeping it short, staying true to your personality.
  • These were some good tips, and I will most definitely have to revisit these after attaining my first assignment.