Slow Starter

Weeks leading up to the PD with George Couros, my Vice-Principal approached me about an opportunity. I consider myself an open-minded person that is confident in what I do but I lack in my integration of technology within the classroom.  With that in mind, he thought I would be a perfect candidate for Mr. Couros and I agreed.

During the first session with George I was trying to wrap my head around how would I use twitter in my classroom. I knew very little about twitter and it’s capabilities before the session. I was a little reluctant during the session to sign up for twitter because I just couldn’t figure out if this was a gimmick or something that would benefit me. I am also the individual that has an old cell phone that can’t even access the internet from it. I really enjoyed George’s presentation and it made me really think about my own teaching. Later that week, I decided to sign up for twitter and added co-workers, friends and professional people that I thought would be interesting to follow. I immediately saw the benefit that twitter provided. Every time I signed in, I was able to see a lot of great ideas in teaching Math (I teach Math and follow people involved in the Math world). I didn’t even have to search for anything, the ideas were there on my homepage.

Within my classroom, I feel that I do a lot of hands on activities that makes learners really think and grasp concepts that are presented. Students seem to be engaged and excited about Math. For example, students would estimate how much candy rockets would fit into a three dimensional object and then go and find the actual volume using water and a graduated cylinder. We also compared our findings with the formula calculation. As a class, we were then able to discuss our findings. Is this lesson innovation?

I will be the first person to say that I am a beginner on the journey of innovation and technology within the classroom. However, I am constantly growing and looking for ways to make the material more current to the culture of today’s society. I already see the benefit that twitter can have in getting ideas for me in teaching and I know I am just scratching the surface in terms of what twitter can do in the classroom.

 

 

Tim Holfeld

River Heights School

1965 Cluster

Just Another Initiative? Making Time for Innovation

A quote that really stood out to me from George Couros’s book was the following:

“…it’s likely that most educators would find it easier to list the initiatives that have been added in the past couple of years than to list those that have been subtracted in the same time period. The constant addition of initiatives is leading many educators to feel burned out or leave the profession altogether.” (p. 164)

This is how many of my colleagues often feel whenever something “new” comes down the pipeline. We are told every time that this new, fabulous initiative (whatever it is) is quite simply going to transform our practice and our students’ learning.

And, then, it doesn’t.

Or, at least, it feels like it doesn’t. Whatever the new initiative is feels like just “one more thing.” My experience has been, overall, that “initiatives” don’t work. But innovation does work. My colleagues innovate on their own, within their own classrooms, and within our school, because our goal has always been what is best for the learning of our students. Innovation that succeeds is most often school- based and is geared for the learners that teachers are engaging with on a daily basis.

That being said, if something has worked somewhere, it could also be great somewhere else, especially if it’s customized for those particular students and that particular school. Which brings me back to what I most thought about after reading and hearing George Couros – it’s time for a re-emphasis on collegiality.

Because is what we heard from George really “new?” Is it an “initiative?” Or, perhaps, are we just being encouraged to use technology to continue what has always been best practice – which is connecting with our colleagues and learning from them? If so, the idea of connecting with more colleagues, through these meetings and through social media, excites me.

I have been teaching for almost twenty years now (which seems a little unbelievable to me!), and I like to think that I have altered my practice every year – trying new things (including with technology!), teaching to the students in front of me, meeting students where they’re at each year. I was lucky in my first few years to have some excellent long-careered mentors at my school, all of whom improved their practice in small or large ways each year, right up to retirement. That inspired me to try to do the same.

All of that being said, I really like what I heard from George (and also what I have read in his book). I like that the intent of what we are doing during these meetings is meant to connect innovative teachers (or those who are interested in innovation) with others who are like-minded – and not just within our division, but across the province, country and world.

I like that George is honest – if you are going to use social media, in particular Twitter, to develop a learning network, then there is some time required to “front load.” Being someone who has connected with others via the internet for other personal interests, I know that this is true, but that once you have put in those hours at the beginning, the rewards more than reap themselves. I am excited to see what others are doing and to take off from there. As mentioned above, I have always learned best from other teachers and have often called myself a “photocopier crook.” If I see something that a colleague has left behind on the photocopier that looks great, I ask them about it, and will often “steal” it to adapt for my own classroom. I love the idea that connecting with other educators across the world could expand that a million fold.

So, maybe, in the end, this whole process isn’t about innovation at all, at least not in the sense that we all hear that word (technology, technology, technology). Perhaps it’s really about something that isn’t that innovative at all, but that has become so recently because of teachers feeling overwhelmed and so losing the drive to pursue it. I am going to see this process as an attempt to return us to “collegiality.” Connecting with fellow teachers has always resulted in me feeling less overwhelmed and more excited about my practice. The best way to help each other to innovate is to support each other and to share our ideas. Because putting in the time to support and share with each other is what is best for the learning of our students.

And I’ll always have time for that.

 

Katherine Abra

École River Heights School

Cluster 1965