Thursday, July 31, 2008

Self Reflection of Teacher Leadership in Curriculum

This has been an intensive learning experience within the area of curriculum. I have been challenged to think deeply about my mission as a teacher and coach. I have learned to articulate my mission and defend my practices with learning theories, as well as create a unit plan that puts my mission into action. I have refined my professional voice. The process was often tedious however it helped me to recognize and name purpose in my instruction. The collaborative work done with my partner on this project has proven my theory that collaboration is the key to best instruction. The process of creating a unit plan according to Grant Wiggins Understanding by Design was both enlightening and challenging. I would like to further explore the use of it and see how it unfolds in my instruction.

In my opinion, the curriculum Mary and I wrote is internally coherent and representative of our individual missions.

We began with our goals by asking ourselves some questions. What is the purpose of this unit? What is the big picture? What do we want our students to understand, to know, to be able to do? After establishing our goals, we simultaneously formed the essential questions and understanding for the unit, being sure to link them back to the goals. We explored essential questions used by educators in the past and revised them to suit the needs of our students and our envisioned learning outcomes. Our list of understandings informed us as to what our students should know which in turn helped us develop our list of what our students should be able to do. Our work was cyclical. All parts connect both to what comes before it as well as what comes after it.

This idea of working cyclically ensured coherence throughout the entire unit plan. Our evidence – what would be acceptable work – was based on our goals, EQs, understanding, knowledge, and what we expected the students to be able to do. Assessment connects to the goals in the same way the goals connect to the assessment.

The lessons literally fell into place because our results and acceptable evidence of understanding were clearly defined. At the core of each lesson are the goals and essential questions. Once again, each stage aligns with the one before and the one after to create a unified learning plan.

To further illustrate the idea of internal coherence, let us use an example from our unit plan: Finding History in Historical Fiction. On Day 3, one of our goals was to build a knowledge base of a specific time in history to support and enhance the comprehension of historical fiction. This connects directly to our essential question: How do historical artifacts help us understand stories? In order to answer this EQ and achieve the goal, students must understand that objects enhance our ability to envision history. Knowledge of what artifacts are, and how they are used by historians, will aid in the aforementioned understanding which enables students to connect the artifact to the story and explain its relevance historically speaking.


My role as a library media specialist is to coordinate an integrated program of library and information skills instruction for my students. I strive to cultivate a love of literature as well as the information literacy skills needed to satisfy inquiry. I believe that this unit clearly aligns itself to my mission as a Library Media Specialist. This unit blends both literature and information literacy skills. The use of historical fiction fits in both aspects of my mission.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

I'm Sold!

Okay. It took two weeks of convincing, but I know for sure that object based learning can enhance any curricular area. I wittnessed it today. From Family and Consumer Sciences to Business to First Grade, each and every table top exhibit used artifacts to teach the content. And, some went way beyond the literal content into big ideas and essential questions that go to the heart of each discipline.

It was also quite important for others to see our finished products. The visitors ranged from MSU faculty, to Newark Museum faculty, to NJEA members and even our own Curriculum Center. Of course the refreshments were a treat as well but the best part was the accolades and affirmations that what we are doing and creating as teachers using artifacts reflects our teaching.

But, I know I am biased, but I think the best part was having my son there. My father made a special trip to bring him down to the museum just to view the exhibits. After all, these exhibits were created for children, and he had the undivided attention of teachers eager to share and "test it out" on a real live kid! The volcanoes and body parts especially caught his eye and he spent time exploring each exhibit.

See the brain in his hand? Wearing a Civil War hat? Listening to an iPod?



Now, of course, my son's favorite exhibit was his Mom's. So here are some photos (see sidebar slideshow) that don't do it justice because what it brings to the classroom interactively is impossible to capture on film. Again, I am sold!


Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Do's and Dont's of Teamwork

This short entry is just a reflection on what my Action Research project has morphed into over the past few months. I have decided to study myself and what promotes collaboration:

Collaboration is the work done among individuals that results in a product that, in our case as teachers, benefits instruction. Currently, creating the exhibit for the Newark Museum, I am working with two talented, successful, and dedicated teachers. We have created an exhibit that I am brimming with pride over. And, the reason this exhibit (pictures to follow) is such a success in our minds is because we have worked together, collaboratively, to make it happen.

We, as a team, are willing and eager to listen to each others ideas. We are similar in our dedication to the exhibit, and we feel it is important to divide our tasks evenly. We are all on the same page, so to speak.

And what this teaches me, is that if teachers of different backgrounds and disciplines come together around instruction, with respect for each other as professionals, we create a product that is both instructively sound and increadibly innovative. Who benefits? Our students.

So, how does this speak to my self study Action Research project?

Advice to myself on collaboration:
  1. Listen to each other. Hearing what others have to say is essential.
  2. Incorporate everyone's ideas. Instead of saying "Yes, but" say "Yes, and"
  3. Even out the workload. Nothing breeds resentment like doing the lions share of the work.
  4. Work with others like you. Let no one take advantage of your work ethic. Show colleagues how working hard is done with grace.
  5. Don't sweat the small stuff and don't make it personal. This is business. We are here for the same purpose. Don't let little frustrations distract you from your ultimate goals.

Remember, this list is not so much a preaching list but rather a selection of do's and don't's for myself, but sharing here on my blog.

Collaboration is, I believe, the secret to education. If we can learn from one another, keep our students learning as a priority above our ego, we can impact learning in the ways we have only dreamed.

More to come...

Finding History in Historical Fiction

The weeks spent at the Newark Museum have been a refreshing boost to my instruction as a Library Diva (LMS). The work I have been doing thus far in the Masters for Teacher Leadership has mostly been about my role as Professional Development Coach (AKA Literacy Coach or Staff Developer). But, this work has brought the instruction in the library home for me.

Our concept, as mentioned in an earlier blog, is finding the History in Historical Fiction. We focused on, again, as mentioned earlier, the Battle of Gettysburg. Talk about an embodied response to art: I am consumed by this process. I am talking about this exhibit with everyone I see. In fact, my son has let me "borrow" a book about the Civil War to add to our Lit Links portion of our exhibit. I think about the faces of the pictures I have downloaded for our slide show. The music that accompanies it tugs at my heart! I read over and over again the picture book The Cemetery Keepers of Gettysburg and learn more each time I do. I touch the cape and hat that once clothed a union soldier and I think about the sacrifices made by the generations that came before us. Even more, I think about the pain and suffering of the soldiers and those who loved them. They have created the country (united!) that we are today. The picture below haunts me-- their eyes and pride. The resolve in their faces, with a bit of fear in others.

This is the kind of response and understanding I can bring to learning in the library.

There were a new set of standards just released by the American Association of School Librarians that indicate the need for students to be able to think critically, create meaning through inquiry, utilize technology, to share knowledge in a productive and ethical manner, and to take that learning and pursue personal growth in areas of interest. The role of object based learning is clearly supportive of these standards, most especially in motivating students to learn more about a particular area of interest and to think critically about those areas. Surely the use of artifacts and cultivate the learning and standards set forth here by the new wave of thinking from School Librarians. I know this because I am experiencing that desire to know more and learn more about a subject I had really no prior interest in.

So, my conclusion is that finding the History in Historical Fiction will have the draw for my students the same way it has had the draw for me.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Table Top Exhibit

For the past two weeks our cohort of Teacher Leaders has spent our days at the Newark Museum trying to wrap our heads around Object Based Learning. The final product is a table top exhibit that illustrates a concept in our chosen discipline. The items shown in the exhibit are part of the Newark Museum's loan collection and are meant to bring to life the curriculum of our chosen fields.

Honestly, up until the moment we started brainstorming our options for a table top exhibit I had absolutely no idea what I would do. I was originally hoping this would work in with my Coaching position, but clearly, it fits much better with my role as Library Diva. And, as we were discussing, it just clicked. One of my favorite genres to read is Historical Fiction. I also love using picture books with older readers as read alouds: the same concepts, expectations and content as found in novels, but in a smaller package. A picture book leaves more time for talk as well. So, the concept was to highlight, bring to life so to speak, the history of historical fiction. So, we grouped up, chose a picture book (The Cemetery Keepers of Gettysburg) and started creating our exhibit.

It is a multi-media display of civil war artifacts, with a focus on the Battle of Gettysburg. And, as we were taught, the objects are the focal point of the exhibit. I also found a free download from iTunes that has Jeff Daniels reading the Gettysburg Address (also has Sam Waterston and Johnny Cash) with photos to view while listening: this is our listening center. I also created a slide show of faces of the Civil War, including battle scenes from Gettysburg (see the show to the right). The artifacts on display include confederate and union uniform pieces, a haversack, canteen, bullets, and flags of both sides. The backdrop of our exhibit is a blown up illustration from the book that inspired the exhibit. We furthered the learning with links to other pieces of literature set during this time, inquiry questions about the literature, objects, and centers.

And, a moment of clarity came today when our professor explained to me that I needed to step away from my instinctual teaching-- literature first, then objects. And into a new advance of objects followed by literature. Ah ha! I see now the benefit for myself as an instructor-- a new approach is always worth a try. I can certainly say that this exhibit is absolutely fascinating and exhilarating! My students will be enthralled by this.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Essential Questions

At the moment I am struggling with the concept of Essential Questions, what they are and what they aren’t. This is a term that is used in many different ways by many different people in a variety of circles. When looking at the essential question from an inquiry or research point of view, this is the question that is narrowed and refined to point the researcher in the direction of learning. We have heard this term again and again in the experience at Newark Museum, and often the learning stations are filled with these kinds of essential questions.

But the Wiggins and McTigue concept of Essential Questions (with a capital EQ) is a bit different. From the work that I have done with Grant Wiggins as part of the Task Force for Clarifying the New Jersey Core Content Standards, the work of selecting Essential Questions was long, tedious, and controversial. A team of us from around the state needed to decide on what we believe the Essential Questions for Language Arts should be. Essential Questions by Wiggins and McTigue are seen as “doorways to understanding” and push to the heart, or the essence, of learning. These questions are not just topical, looking for an answer that remains simplistic in its answering, but rather has many layers, can be continuously explored, year after year.

Some examples of these kinds of Essential Questions in writing are (Wiggins 2007):

v Why write? What if writing didn’t exist? Why share personal experiences in writing? How is written language different from spoken language?
v What makes writing worth reading?
v What makes writing flow?
v How do effective writers hook and hold their readers?
v Why am I writing? For whom? What am I trying to achieve through my writing? Who will read my writing? What will work best for my audience?

These questions practically beg to be investigated. They are created to uncover ideas, create meaning and inquiry to bring students to new understandings. Furthermore, these Essential Questions come from what Wiggins and McTigue call Big Ideas: a conceptual lens for prioritizing content which act as an organizer for connecting important facts, skills, and actions. Examples of Big Ideas are: writing as self expression or writing to persuade.

While these definitions are clear, actually creating Essential Questions to begin a unit of study is quite challenging. I just need to live with and try out the questions, grapple with their validity, revise, and move from there.




Resources:

Grant Wiggins, Powerpoint Presentation at the NJ Task Force for Clarifying the Core Curriculum Content Standards, 2007.


Wiggins, G. & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by Design 2nd ed. ASCD: Alexandria, VA [ISBN 1-4166-0035-3].

Friday, July 18, 2008

Object Based Learning

As one of the comments to my postings pointed out, all of the posts in this blog that are about learning have illustrated the belief that people learn best by doing: apprenticeship, mud pit, running.

But, lets face it, not everything can be learned by doing it. There are concepts that are simply out of reach, out of budget, or out of time. For instance, history is a subject hard to learn by doing. It happened already! Reading fictional text is genre that makes it challenging to learn by doing—how can we expect our students to deeply comprehend experiences a fictional character is having if they have never had a similar experience? Research has stated that students, especially of the younger set, develop a fixed interpretation of a text and do not budge from that the way some stronger readers might (Grossman & Schoenfeld 2007) And, if we are expecting students to construct meaning for themselves, how do we do this without experiential learning?

One answer to this challenge is object based learning. Using an object that illustrates an historical concept can help that concept come alive. In my personal experience at the Newark Museum, the Ballatine house has done just that. When driving through downtown Newark, and looking at the remnants of what used to be a prominent part of the city, there are bits of history that hint toward the prosperity of the days gone by: a particular ornamental piece still on the building, the size and length of the window frames, the peaks of the roof. And, I try to picture what it must have looked like. Step into the Ballatine House and instantly I see in front of me the way life was in the late 1800’s when that street was one of prominence and wealth.




Now, it is impossible to bring the entirety of the Ballatine House to a classroom, but it is not impossible to bring smaller objects to enrich the curriculum. After looking at the room housing the 15,000 objects that can be on loan to a school—ranging across time periods, cultures, and subject areas—our curriculum can be much richer by using them.

Our group is planning on blending history and literature by creating an exhibit based on Historical Fiction, namely picture books set during the Civil War. We are looking at using The Cemetery Keepers of Gettysburg and The Ghosts of the Civil War with objects such as a union soldier hat and a confederate flag. Our hope is that this will bring to life the history in historical fiction through object based learning.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Embodied Response to Art


Okay, I know the image above is both religious and a bit uncomfortable. But I decided to add it to my blog after reading Complete Engagement: Embodied Response in Art Museum Education (Hubard 2007).
Pretend for a moment that the above sculpture, the Pieta by Michelangelo, is no one named Jesus or Mary. Pretend it is just a mother and her son.
The reason I chose to post this image is because this is the first time I recall an embodied response to a piece of art. My mother and I took a trip to Rome, where art is just everywhere-- literally everywhere-- you look. And with all its pomp and circumstance, age, and decadence. I was impressed but never emotionally touched by the art I witnessed. Most of the time I was looking at headless naked male statues with a fig leaf over anything interesting or angels with wings and swords. And, when we visited the Vatican, it was the same art, different day. Except for the moment I saw this sculpture at St. Peter's Basilica. It took my breath away. It brought tears to my eyes. Honestly, it feels callous to cut and paste such an intimate image into a blog.
I should mention when I first walked up to this scupture, I was pregnant, at the time, with my second child. I had some challenges with this pregnancy, and had my son as my only child.
So, again, lets remove the names from this sculpture and simply look at the sculpture itself. A mother holding the body of her dead, grown son. Even in death, he seems to fold into his mother for comfort, but his mother is neither sad nor angry, she is numb and pensive and prayerful, but able to comfort her son even in death. And, when you look closely, she looks larger than he is. He is limp in her arms, on her lap, and she is holding her son, her heart, in her arms.
It took my breath away. And, Michelangelo was quite intentional in his raw and realistic portrayal of a dead son in his mothers arms. And so I think about the fact that is was an embodied response to this work of art. And, I wonder how I can bring this same emotional, engaged, and memorable response to learning in the classroom. I don't yet have an answer to this question, but hope for answers as these weeks unfold.
Reference:
Hubard, O. (2007). Complete engagement: Embodied response in art museum education. Art Education, 60(6), pp. 46-53.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Running as Learning (and therefore teaching)



Running and teaching... Running and learning.... I've made some discoveries for myself in the running, learning, teaching continuum.

One belief that holds true for me is that the best way to understand the challenges our students face as learners is to continually put myself in a learning setting. In other words, teachers need to be students. While, that may seem obvious or cliche, I think that there are some learning settings that can teach us far better than others. I believe that in a setting where we know nothing (or very little), are challenged greatly, and need to depend on other resources to really learn provides the best insights to teaching and learning. This is where the greatest knowledge about pedagogy and instructional craft can be discovered.

And so, running is that place for me. I am certainly challenged by it. Running on and off my whole life, but never really succeeding due to low morale, injury, pregnancy, distractions, excuses, blah, blah, blah. It was my beast to tame. And this time around I was absolutely going to do it.
I set myself a goal (great place to start, right Grant Wiggins?) back in November to run a 10k on Memorial Day. First thing I did was sign up so there would be no excuses and I was keeping the end in mind. Just like Backward Design...

Next, I had to look like a runner, right? I bought new sneaks and gear, ipod armband, etc. Looking like a runner was my first way of living like one, trying it on for size before I actually became a runner. In education, this is like the approximating our students must do when learning something new-- they are trying it on for size. The perfect example of this is the "scribble" many emerging writers use instead of letters and words, or the books they read from memorization before actually recognizing words.
Now, goal in hand and dressed to run, I got busy actually running. And badly. I ran terribly slow and awkwardly, often accidentally shutting off the treadmill with my flailing arms. But, no matter what I looked like, I was out there trying on running for size and proud of myself for even getting out there. And, don't we want our students to do this too? Try on some learning for size, even if it is awkward and challenging?

But, I kept my eye on the prize: my 10k in May. And, I figured to get there I just had to run hard every day, to my limit until I couldn't take it anymore. That is how I had always done it in the past. So that is what I did! I ran daily until I hated it, and forced myself on for more. But what was different this time was that I started to talk to a very successful runner/triathlete/endurance athlete for advice. Simple questions like-- "Is it realistic to set the 10k goal for May? What was running like for you when you started out? How do you suggest I get better at running?"

And the greatest bit of advice I learned from him was that rest and recovery are as important as running. There must be a balance. And so, this in turn teaches me about learning. Can we expect our most challenged learners to take on the rigor that I did in my first few months of running? No! There must be balance between rigor and rest. Now, rest in the running world does not mean relaxing and eating Ding Dongs. It means to pick another training and work on strengthening the muscles that support and stabalize the running muscles. An active rest. I believe that is what is best for our students as well: take a break from the most challenging, learn the stuff that supports it, revisit it again to learn more.

And, bit by bit, run by run, I got a little better. My first 5k came and ultra-athlete-advice-giver said he would run it with me. And, obviously, my slow pace was not his, but he slowed down to coach me through the run. "Start the first mile strong, get faster on the second mile, blow out the third...That's not a hill, that's a bump...Lean into the hill and push off your feet...Stay at my shoulder and just stick with me...You are stronger than you think you are..." Is this not what we can do for our students? Coach them as they go? Slow our pace down to be with them, step by step with instruction that is content driven and confidence driven? Coach directly into their learning? And, may I add, in the end, this uber-athlete let me finish first (see pic below) and then used that as his warm-up and ran another seven miles sans slow-poke.



And, then, each run or race after that I took the coaching with me, discovered what else worked for me (and didn't), stumbled, got hurt, got up, kept running, read books, websites, blogs about running, got some running-mates and "archenemies" and created a culture of running around me (AKA immersion in the classroom). I am surrounded by opportunities to run, people who like to run, and chances to continue simply getting better. I am far, far from even being considered a competative runner, but seeing the growth from the flailing arms on the treadmill to the completion of my first 10k is enough to prove that through it all I have become a runner, and believe it or not, a better teacher in turn.




Wednesday, July 9, 2008

The Mud Pit

My eight year old son attends a beautiful, rustic camp during the summertime. The appeal of this camp is that there are countless things to do-- woodworking, stitchery, gardening, sports, swimming, clay, nature hikes, boating, yoga, and on and on. The camp houses a menagerie of animals such as ponies and goats, chickens and their babies, ducks and their ducklings, and even at turkey as tame as a cat that will sit on your lap to be pet. And, despite all of this wonder of nature and science around him, my son chooses to visit, day in and day out, the mud pit. The mud pit?!

Now, at first, the idea of hours and hours, day after day, spent in a mud pit took a bit getting used to on the part of his germaphobic mom. And, really, it is a mud pit. A man-made mud pit. In the center of about an acre of playground and animal corrals is a sandy-soil hill that the camp opens a hose on. The kids go crazy for this.

And, as I think more deeply about the mud pit, the experience that my son is having, and what he is truly learning, I am realizing this may be the most intense and fruitful learning experience in his young life.

First, may I state the obvious? This is not school. It is summer camp, and yet this learning is the deepest and most absorbed I have wittnessed. Let me paint a picture of the mud pit for you. About a dozen or more kids flock to the mud pit. At first they start to create rivers and dams. All with their hands, piling mud creating chanels so that the water flows (or doesn't flow) to the next person along the muddy river. And once all communities along the river are happy with the flow and rate, size and shape of the river cushioned by mud, it is time to build structures. Notice the picture above of the castle next to the river, and the proud team of contractors, architects, builders, and, most importantly, learners standing behind their project. And, think about the learning that has happened here: collaboration, physics, biology, mathematics, geometry, inter and intrapersonal skills, communication... to name a few.

But it goes beyond this river and mud castles. Kids begin to apply economics to it.


Above are mudballs for sale. Kids are elected by their peers (democracy) to sell mudballs. Well, at first, they don't sell mudballs, they give them away for free (don't many websites start this way?) That is until the mudballs become so popular they must begin to charge for them (supply and demand?). So, kids must pay for mudballs with rocks. The best rocks get you the best mudballs, get you the best foundation and materials for your mud castle. There is even a security guard to keep watch for poachers.

I must think back to an chapter by Roland Barth (National Education Service 2005)
that confirms my instinct: this mud pit is surely an example of what we think of as life-long learning.
  • There is a love of learning-- my son and the other campers can barely pull themselves away from the pit for lunch or swim lessons.
  • This learning experience is completely voluntary! As with all of the stations at camp, they may come and go as they please. They choose to return to the pit.
  • The campers (learners) do everything they can to find the manpower, time, tools and resources to make their mud pit function productively
  • They engage in this over time: day in day out my son comes home with mud-crusted feet
  • They are self-reflective: hmmmm... I think we can create a better mud building tomorrow...
  • And they can name and celebrate their success-- the mudball store, the mud castles, they are all the proud products of my son and his camper-friends

And, I then think about what the mudpit can teach me about my learning. And my greatest wish is:
May all our classrooms be mudpits.

Resource:

FROM BOOK BURNERS INTO LIFELONG LEARNERS

Roland S.Barth, Chapter 6 in, DuFour, R., Eaker, R., & DuFour, R. (Eds.) ON COMMON GROUND; THE POWER OF PROFESSIONAL LEARNING COMMUNITIES. Bloomington, IN: National Educational Service, 2005.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

What does it mean to be educated?



Tucked between the ten month fray of the school year comes the oasis of summertime. And, for me, The Library Diva, I fill my summer with reading and philosophizing (AKA coursework toward my Masters in Teacher Leadership). So, beginning this course of curriculum development, I delve deeply into readings of what is curriculum? What is education? And, finally, what does it mean to be educated? Some well known authors, Parkay, Wiggins & McTigue, write long and thoroughly about how we should be teaching students and the most important and effective ways to implement curriculum.

But, before I can even begin to conceptualize the curriculum, I must think about and define for myself what it means to be an educated person. There are a few things I know for sure. First, to be educated does not necessarily mean a person has gone through a formal education system as we might envision. In so many examples, there are many, many people who are clearly educated but have taken alternate routes to get there. One example is Paul Orfalea (founder of Kinkos) who certainly created his own experiences to become educated, and clearly boasts that school was, at best, a traumatic experience. Abe Lincoln, upon arriving in Washington DC as newbie Congressman, filled out his paperwork and under education he wrote "defective." Even my husband, an elevator mechanic, learned for years in both an apprentiship and classroom setting to master the trade, is certainly educated. So, one thing I know for sure is that to be educated does not necessarily mean a person has followed the traditional education route. As Mark Twain said, "I never let my schooling interfere with my education."

And so, with that in mind, my latest thinking boils down the answer of 'what it means to be educated' to a simple sentence: the ability to use what you know to function in society. An educated person has learned, whether through traditional classes, apprenticeships, experiences, literature or other resources, the knowledge they must have to live within the constructs of society. Society requires a certain knowledge base in a field that sustains an income to provide, at the very least, the basic necessities.

For myself, on a personal level, the feeling of being a bit 'uneducated,' or simply wanting to know more, the constant quest for knowledge, the desire to expand my thinking, to leave the old way of thinking behind with the discovery of new knowledge, the realization I know what I don't know, keeps me here, reading and philosphizing, in the oasis of summertime.