Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Authority with Grace - stolen cell phones, cheating on tests and misbehaviour


The most common reoccurring ethical issue that I have experienced in the classroom have been concerns regarding student attitudes to school and work. When I first started teaching, I confess that I thought that the most effective way to deal with a disruptive student in my classroom was to send them to the office. And as I discovered from the first student that I sent to the office for acting out in class, that this type of discipline was not discipline at all. The tone of  this interaction was not appreciated by the student and in fact it was ineffective in shaping the classroom environment that I was trying to create.

I remember a fellow new teacher suffered from the same misconception that I had, and in her case the office was more direct, they sent that student right back to the classroom, telling her to manage the misbehavior herself. 

Sending students out of the classroom is often not the most ethical way of dealing with student misbehavior. Instead, our most ethical response depends on our ability to decipher the cause of the misbehavior. This ability depends in a large part on emotional intelligence. For example, students can motivated to misbehave:
  • Because they do not know what the proper behavior is
  • For no other reason than they are having a bad day
  • They are bored with a certain subject
  • They feel uninvolved with the classroom or classroom decisions and feel it is an unfair environment
  • Their teacher seems to expect negative behavior from them
  • They want attention, power, or revenge
  • They have given up on themselves and feel anxious or inadequate.
Since I have a lot of control over what goes on inside my classroom and little control over what goes on outside, I began to focus on how I interacted with students while instructing them.

First, I started by incorporating the philosophy of inclusion in the classroom (using the Tribes philosophy).
The Tribes philosophy focuses on incorporating activities that are designed to create an atmosphere of respect and responsibility in the classroom.

From the first day of school, I discuss the concepts of respect, responsibility and participation, and develop both curriculum and community learning goals for each lesson. Immediately I noticed that the students responded very positively to these changes, the quality of our discussion improved, and the quantity of disruptions dramatically decreased over time.

An important part of the Tribes  process is setting up four key classroom rules which govern our interactions. These are:
  • Mutual Respect
  • Attentive Listening
  • Appreciation - no Put-downs
  • The Right to Pass 
The idea is that through discussion, the students and teachers can reach the stage of community where students and teachers can work together creatively to contribute their talents to the classroom.

 

Restorative Practices

My second step was becoming trained in restorative practices. Restorative Practices has deepened my practical understanding of classroom leadership.

Restorative practices focuses on the art of seeking to solve problems collaboratively, instead of seeking to solve problems by placing blame.  The premise of restorative practices is that students are happier, more cooperative and productive and more likely to make positive changes when those in authority do things with them, rather than to them or for them. Restorative practices is proactive, rather than reactive, and it works to improve and strengthen human relationships by repairing harm. Students feel fairly treated and are less likely to re-offend. 

Since I started using restorative practices in my classroom, a lot of what I choose to do in terms of classroom management has to do with involving the student into the problem solving process and re-affirming our relationship, rather than relying on punishment as a social regulator.

When I encounter an behavioral dilemma, the main tool in my arsenal are the restorative questions. These questions provide an opportunity for everyone involved to tell about the incident from their perspective and how it affected them. Everyone gets to speak, and because they feel heard, I frequently get apologies from students and the process ensures they do not repeat their actions that caused the harm. The their behavior has changed and our student-teacher relationship has strengthened. My classroom feels much friendlier.

The restorative questions are purposely scripted, and provide all involved with an opportunity to speak and listen to one another in an atmosphere of safety and equality.
Restorative practices has helped me to successfully mediate a variety of classroom conflict: from stolen textbooks, cheating on tests, finding missing cell phones, dealing with poor word choices and excessive lates.

Teachers face ethical dilemmas on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. Our focus as teachers is to provide equal opportunity for education for all. One size does not fit all. In teaching, what is considered the most ethical often comes down to determining what is in the best interest of the particular student involved with the situation. Both the Tribes Philosophy and Restorative Practices have been critical in shaping my understanding of classroom leadership.

References:

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Personality Colours in the Classroom

Myers Briggs
The Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)  measures the preferences in how people perceive the world and make decisions.  It's a comprehensive test and quite involved since there are 16 different personality types defined in this test. You can see these 16 types in the image to the right. 

It's complicated. I took a leadership course in which we determined our Myers Briggs personality type.  We spent two of the four sessions just getting a handle on comparing and contrasting the four aspects:
  • Extraversion with Introversion
  • Sensing with Intuition
  • Thinking with Feeling 
  • Judging with Perceiving
By far, the  most rewarding part of the course was working with purposefully diverse teams and experiencing first-hand the interaction styles of all personality types.

Personality Colours
I use Personality Colours test extensively in my classroom. The four colours in the test simplify the sixteen types of the Myers Briggs:
  • Blue for the Harmonious
  • Orange for the Adventurous temperament
  • Green for the Curious
  • Gold for the Responsible
Right now I am teaching one very ‘orange’ class. More than 80% of my students in this science class of mine are ‘orange’. This means that they tend to be extroverted, outgoing, active, and kinesthetic learners.  

I am a green/gold personality, so the enthusiasm and natural inclusiveness of my students came as a welcome surprise to me. I am continuously warmed by their sheer willingness to participate in activities and their extremely positive response to our classroom lessons of inclusivity and respect.

Knowing that this class is orange helps me find solutions to their natural busy-ness in science, a subject that works on developing the green/gold personality traits. For example, it helps me to be understanding when an ‘orange’ student asks yet again to be let out for a drink of water (really a walk and a destressor). It also helps me create assessments that involve their kinesthetic tendencies, such as setting up laboratories as stations activities.
 
In addition, knowing their personality colours really helps my students.  It helps students understand why they like to do the things a certain way,  and why sometimes a different choice makes more sense for them than their peers. It helps them understand why some subjects come naturally to them to see that even if another skill or subject does not seem as natural, it is still important and worth the effort to learn. Personality colours also helps me to create a purposeful teamwork in the class. I purposefully pair complementary colours or diverse colours, so that my students can gain a practical understanding of their own strengths in relation to the strengths of their peers.

I feel that I as a teacher have a great role in teaching personality colours. I think the tests of the personality colours are remarkably accurate for me. They reflect how I think about me, my preferences and what I make a priority. Personality colours provides a framework in which my students can reflect on their strengths and develop strategies for their areas of need.

Try them:
Myers Briggs - Test, YouTube video
Personality Colours - Test, YouTube video
A Personality Colours handout for the classroom handout

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Anxiety and the Classroom - helping students to move through alarm to courage

Gordon Neufeld, a developmental psychologist from Vancouver, British Columbia, conveys a warmth that is natural, welcoming and supportive when he speaks. I have heard him speak twice, once at the Peel District Board Office during a PD session, the second at the Waldorf Academy in downtown Toronto last year.

Dr. Neufeld speaks on anxiety.  Just saying the word anxiety conjures the feeling of sweaty palms, a dry throat, butterflies and a pounding head. These are natural symptoms of our body`s response to our thoughts of alarm and unease, when we are faced with a perceived danger. In his talk, Dr. Neufeld first points out that anxiety is meant to be beneficial. The feelings of anxiety are our natural, internal activated alarm system.

Gordon Neufeld estimates that today, 1 in 5 children suffer from moderate to severe anxiety. Sometimes a school subject itself may create alarm in a student. I have taught anxious students in my math class.  Math anxiety is “a feeling of tension, apprehension, or fear that interferes with math performance." Every day, when the class time approaches, I may see that student begin to exhibit the symptoms of alarm. If there is no intervention, their feelings can lead to decreased motivation, resulting in math avoidance. Ultimately their confidence in their ability plummets. It's a reinforcing downward spiral. It's a real problem, for the teacher and the student, because an alarmed state prevents learning. Learning requires a tranquil mind.

So how do children cope. These students try to deal with their feelings of alarm through avoidance and distraction. Common coping mechanisms can include:
  • Refusing tasks
  • Making frequent trips to the washroom 
  • Developing attendance problems
  • Engaging in intensive procrastination such as using technology
  • Creating distractions by performing a 'show' for their peers
  • Developing physical complaints such as stomachaches, headaches, fatigue. 
  • Becoming aggressive or defiant
The good news is that a teacher can step in to support the student in resolving their alarm and help return them to a state of calm, so they can learn.

Gordon Neufelds key message is that by understanding the natural process of alarm in our bodies, we can help children to overcome their feelings of alarm and move forward, beyond the fear and tears and into courage.

Neufeld describes that the three possible outcomes of our internal alarm system are caution, which if not resolved, moves into a state of adaptation (to the situation, creating a new steady state) and, if not resolved, finally moving through into courage. This is described by the image below (taken I believe, from a Neufeld talk):


  1. Alarm - At the top of the diagram you can see the child becoming alarmed in response to perceiving a danger. This activates the internal 'alarm system'.
  2. Caution is the first response after a child feels alarmed. Caution is a natural and good response to an alarm, it allows the child to focus and pay attention. Caution can be resolved once a child realizes the situation they are in is not dangerous after all, and they can relax from their hyper-attentive state.
  3. If however the situation causing alarm is persistent unavoidable, the child moves from caution into the stage of futility. Tears are usually released and this leads to adaptation and the child experiences release and becomes restful at this point. At the stage of adaptation, the alarm system is internally recalibrated and the child experiences a calm state.  This is a good outcome of the alarm process, the child has successfully resolved their alarm by adapting to the new situation.
  4. If adaptation stage is not reached, the child will need courage to continue to face the alarm-filled situation that confronts them. Courage isn’t possible without mixed feelings and children are not capable of experiencing mixed feelings until the age of 7 or 8. If a child reaches courage, the child becomes brave. They are able to  persevere in the face of difficulty, work toward their goals.  Reaching this stage frequently requires an adult's help.
Teachers are an important support in helping students develop productive strategies to cope with alarm in classroom situations. Neufeld suggests specific strategies based on the natural alarm process.

First, Neufeld suggest anxiety reduction behaviors that  relieve anxiety and turns off the alarm. These can include:
  • Physical activity 
  • Eating
  • Focusing on a sensory input like a squeeze ball
  • Doing relaxation exercises
 These behaviors temporarily relieve anxiety and turn off the alarm.

Second, Gordon Neufeld’s suggests anxiety can be addressed by reducing the separation the child is facing. Strategies include creating a a classroom that is a place of rest and safety. For a child safety means that as teachers we can first accept our role as an alpha figure in a child's life so the child can relax. This is a state of being that influences our approach to classroom management in a fundamental way. It means that teachers:
Until we meet again.

Sources:
The Neufeld Institute
http://sensationalchildren.blogspot.ca/
Gordon Neufeld: Making Sense of Anxiety in Children and Youth - an hour-long presentation

Friday, 14 June 2013

Classroom climate and intercultural understanding

I have had the question, on occasion from one or two people who ask me how I compare creation stories to scientific evidence. I've been asked because I am a science teacher and I also am interested in multiculturalism. Last week I helped to organize and host and Educator's Tour of the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation.

Well, to be honest I think this question arises from a misunderstanding. Comparing creation stories to scientific inquiry is like comparing apples to oranges.

I want to first highlight the intention of Ontario's curriculum documents. What I teach in science class is scientific literacy. Scientific literacy is "the scientific knowledge, skills and habits of mind required to thrive in the science-based world of the twenty-first century." (Ontario Ministry of Education. (2008), The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 and 10: Science).

Science is responsible for much of the prosperity and technological advances we have achieved in the past 100 years. For instance, the scientific method of analysing data is used extensively in business, marketing, science and engineering and is responsible for:
  • discovering life-saving pharmaceuticals
  • developing vaccines to prevent global pandemics
  • determining from the evidence that the climate is changing
  • creating sustainable and renewable energy sources
  • improving the productivity of our agricultural sector to provide sustainable sources of food
  • protecting the environmental health and economic vitality of the oceans, among others.
I teach scientific literacy every day in the classroom, I teach students how to observe the world around them and to distill conclusions from data.

Our curriculum document also says that  "the overall intention is that all graduates of Ontario secondary schools will achieve excellence and a high degree of scientific literacy while maintaining a sense of wonder about the world around them."  (Ontario Ministry of Education. (2008), The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 and 10: Science).

I communicate the wonder of our world  every day in my classroom. I enjoy the wonder of creation stories, and I leave it to various religions to explain how their version of the creation story fits with the scientific evidence that we all equally share.

It is my goal to create a classroom environment that is safe, positive and equitable. I include creation stories in my teaching to provide context for my lessons and to broaden intercultural understanding of my students . It is my goal to celebrate individual differences and to teach students to enjoy the diversity of cultures in our world.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Educator's Tour - Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation

Last weekend, 45 educators from the Peel and Dufferin-Catholic school boards boarded buses bound for Hagersville, Ontario. Our goal was to learn about the culture, history and issues facing the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation (MNCRN). The tour was offered by our group Beyond Our Classroom and was made possible by the financial suppport offered by the:
Many, many grateful thanks to the sponsors and to the people of the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation for their hospitality.

The Reserve is directly adjacent to the Six Nations Reserve in southern Ontario.  The MNCFN Reserve is about about 2500 acres in size. This is a bit more than two country blocks (a country block contains 10 farms of 100 acres each, in a rectangular pattern).


It is also a picturesque, fulgant green spot. On the map above, you can see it outlined in green because a significant portion resembles beautiful park land. The Reserve Urban Planning Committee has designated one third of the Reserve as virgin forest, and an additional one third as cultivated green space. The Elders also encourage reserve residents to plant native species. The day's events unfolded at Lloyd S. King  Elementary School:
  • A traditional drum ceremony by the students
  • A traditional greeting and guided tour of the school given by Max King
  • A comprehensive overview of the beautiful mural which depicts the history of the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation by Kim Sault, a teaching elder
  • Margaret Sault and Carolyn King providing an overview of treaty information regarding the  MNCRN, and  the historical timelines of Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation
  • A bus tour visiting the Old United Church, the Grove, a gift shop and commercial ventures such as the Reserve commercial complex
For me, a highlight of the tour was the beautiful mural in the library of the LSK Elementary School.


The mural is a visual depiction of the First Nation's history. Kim Sault, a teaching elder, spent an hour with us, explaining the concepts and symbolism of the mural in detail. The mural has five main parts that describe the:
  1. Anishinabe (Ojibway) Creation Story and teachings
  2. Transition from woodland life to village life at Credit River in the Mississauga/Toronto area
  3. Relocation from traditional land to the present location and the residential schools that forced assimilation
  4. Participation in World Wars I and II, acknowledging the many members that enlisted
  5. and a vision for the future, youth seeking guidance of elders for journey into future
The mural starts with the Anishinabe (Ojibway) Creation Story, which you can see below.

The story begins with seven circles representing the seven fires of creation. Starting from the left, the black circle represents the void and the white circle represents the first thought that appeared. The next two circles describes first the appearance of the sun and then the moon. The sun and the moon are in close proximity, representing the unfolding of twinness. Mixed together, these became the spiral circle, which became the first movement, causing universe to move and to be balanced by the four directions. The first thoughts of the Creator and shaped them into kernels of seeds containing the essence of life, and the birds then spread the seeds of thought on the Creation of Earth. The final fire was creating man in the Creator's own image.

It is a very beautiful and powerful story that shapes the Mississaugas of New Credit First Nation, linking the past with the present and the future. It clearly provides an sound moral compass to the First Nation and shapes their progress as a people, together, as they make decisions for the future. Part of my vision as a teacher is creating global citizens. I found this trip very helpful in broadening my worldview and discovering more about Canada and our heritage.

As Tony Pontes reiterated in a personal message to all Peel Board employees, the Peel Region is on the traditional territory of the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation.  This trip was an opportunity for all of us to recognize the value of diversity.  Living in Peel is a gift.  It was also a reminder that all Canadians are “treaty people” and that Canada would not be the culturally diverse, compassionate and prosperous country we know today without the First Nations peoples.

I will definitely share with my students.

Thursday, 30 May 2013

Cycling - Bike to City Hall and Niagara River Trip


My favorite school event of the year was this past Monday: our school-wide Bike to City Hall event, to support Mississauga's Annual Bike to Work Day.  Hundreds of students from schools around Mississauga participated. This yearly event is a great opportunity to promote bike safety, road safety, the sport of cycling and sustainability. Bike to Work Day is part of Bike Month. Bike Month is a community celebration of cycling that happens across the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area. Bike Month 2013 begins on Monday, May 27 and continues until the end of June with hundreds of events in the community.

Students arrived early at school last Monday in the cool and pleasant May Morning, with their bicycles and helmets in tow, for the Bike to City Hall event. I, with the other teacher advisors, were the tour guide sweeps, fixing chains, adjusting seats, pumping tires and checking helmets. Nothing that I'm not used to, I help out as a tour guide for Toronto Bicycle Tours. (that's me in the orange, at 57 seconds). That company is owned by my good friend, Terrence Eta.

In teams of 10, we cycled the 10 kilometers from the school to City Hall, where students enjoyed a free breakfast, bike safety check-ups, fun prizes, cycling vendors and a BMX demonstration. The students especially enjoy hanging out with students from other schools, running through the fountains in Celebration Square, thoroughly soaking themselves.

Cycling is a passion of mine, I also helped out guiding a special Educator's Bike Ride to Niagara Falls last weekend.

The Niagara River Recreation Trail meanders through some of the most beautiful countryside in the world. This area is Ontario's only Carolinian forest,  ash, birch, chestnut, hickory, oak and walnut trees abound, a wonderful complement to the pine trees, lakes and rocks of Northern Ontario, which I also dearly love.

The Niagara Recreation Trail, a wide paved trail, runs parallel to the Niagara River from Historic Fort Erie in the south to Fort George in the north.

We made our way through:
  • Niagara on the Lake
  • Fort George
  • Lewiston (stopping by Laura Secord's house)
  • the Botanical Gardens
  • past the hydroelectric dam, before
  • Sampling ice-cream from the famous Reg's Candy Kitchen under the Rainbow Bridge
Not only beautiful, I managed to snap some pictures which I will use in the electricity unit in Grade 9 science. Electricity, and especially electric generation is a focus of this Grade 9 Science unit. These photos will complement the other pictures of solar panel projects I near Peterborough that I took a few weeks ago. It is also entertaining and educational by stopping to read the markers and memorials along the way commemorating events from the war of 1812.

I highly recommend this Niagara Recreation Trail Tour for educators of history, law, geography and science. And here's our team:




This coming weekend, I'll participate in Ride for Heart, cycling the Don Valley Parkway, raising money for the Heart and Stroke Foundation.  Around 13,000 cyclists take part in the event yearly, which raises millions of dollars for the Heart and Stroke Foundation.

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

TEDTalks - the importance of relationships

There has been some discussion in my department surrounding  TEDTalks. As I mentioned in a previous post, last month I attended the Ignite Mississauga, a yearly youth TedTalks event.

The first TEDTalk I want to share will make you all warm and fuzzy, the speaker is Rita Pierson and she says that every student needs a champion. Her best line is "Kids don't learn from people they don't like." This is especially true for kids with low achievement records. The way to build relationships starts with simple things:
  • Trying to understand first before judging
  • Apologizing when things are done wrong and,
  • A persistent belief in the capability of the students. Yes, even to the point of nagging our students to be the best they can possibly be.

 The second TEDTalk is a bit long with good points at the end. Geoffrey Canada talks about the slowness of our school system to adapt to the needs of their customers. We all know the modern school model:
  • Five days a week
  • 8 to 3 pm
  • Five periods a day
  • September to June
Geoffrey's point of view is shaped by the poverty-stricken neighborhoods he serves in Harlem, NYC. Geoffrey offers a customized school model offering services that his community's specific needs:
  • Extended-hours charter schools
  • A chef who prepares healthy meals
  • Health and parenting clinics
  • Community centers for children and adults during after-school, weekend and summer hours
He makes good points, especially regarding meeting our students where they are at.

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

The greatest influence on student learning - John Hattie

What has the greatest influence on student learning?

Yesterday at a professional learning day we looked at the work by John Hattie. Hattie, a Professor of Education at Auckland University in New Zealand has published impressive papers involving meta analysis on student learning. Meta-analysis is commonly found in medicine and epidemiology, where for example, it is used to synthesize the effects of drugs in clinical trials. Hattie uses meta-analysis to provide a birds-eye view of effective education across the world. Hattie’s meta-analysis is fascinating in its sheer breadth. His work draws on "a total of about 800 meta-analyses, which encompassed 52,637 studies, and provided 146,142 effect sizes [...] these studies are based on many millions of students" (Hattie, 2009; 15).

Hattie's bottom line is the "effect size". An effect size of "1" indicates that a particular approach to teaching or technique advanced the learning of the students in the study by one standard deviation above the mean. So an effect size of "1" is very good indeed.


  • Reverse effects in red are self-explanatory, and below 0.0
  • Developmental effects are 0.0 to 0.15, and the improvement a child may be expected to show in a year simply through growing up, without any schooling. (These levels are determined with reference to countries with little or no schooling.)
  • Teacher effects "Teachers typically can attain d=0.20 to d=0.40 growth per year—and this can be considered average"  ...but subject to a lot of variation.
  • Desired effects are those above d=0.40 which are attributable to the specific interventions or methods being researched.
You can see in the normal distribution below, that the mean effect size is 0.4 and the desired effect size is therefore greater than 0.4. Very few effects are above 1.0, called the 'very good' category.

I included a detail of the top 20 or so areas with the most pronounced effect on students learning below. Formative assessment (assessment 'for learning' and 'as learning') matters as much as I thought it would, with an effect of 0.9. I know that effective feedback, delivered at the right time and in the right way enables me as a teacher to change I am doing AND helps the student understand their achievement of the learning goals.




What surprised me in the list above, was that student self-expectations rank the highest in effect, with an impact of 1.44, and that study skills appear more than 20 lines down the list with an effect size of 0.59. 


References
Hattie's two research papers, Influences on Student Learning and Teachers make a Difference, explore what it is that really makes a difference to learning in our classrooms, and the difference between experienced teachers and expert teachers. His book Visible Learning synthesised these results. Hattie's webpage brings together the freely available online resources related to John Hattie’s Visible Learning research  http://visible-learning.org/.

Monday, 13 May 2013

The Best of Chris Hadfield

 Astronaut Chris Hadfield, the first Canadian to command the International Space Station, is preparing to make the return voyage to Earth after almost five months in orbit. Not only is he a gifted astronaut, he's a remarkable communicator. He tweeted, sang songs, conducted science experiments, and took amazing pictures.

There isn't enough room to list all of Commander Chris Hadfields antics and achievements during his 146-day stay aboard the International Space Station, so here are my favorite social media milestones.

  1. Canadarm2 and Dextre debut on new Canadian $5 bank note
  2. Chris Hadfield Sings David Bowie's Space Oddity
  3. Chris Hadfield and Barenaked Ladies: I.S.S. (Is Somebody Singing)
  4. What happens when you cry in Space
  5. Wet Washcloth In Space - What Happens When You Wring It? | Video
  6. Puck Drop at a Leafs game from Space, Live on January 21, 2013
  7. Inspirational Chris Hadfield - on how to become the person you want to be   
 Enjoy!

Friday, 10 May 2013

Culture Night

Last night our school celebrated Culture Night, an evening is dedicated to celebrating our multi-cultural community. Our school had seven Pavilions representing cultures from around the world, giving the opportunity for visitors to “travel the world” in a single room. Visitors moved from one Pavilion to another having their Passports stamped as they entered each Pavilion. Each Pavilion showcased samples of food:
  • Asian  - dumplings and sushi
  • Middle East - delicious rooh afza and turkish coffee
  • Canada - pancakes and maple syrup
  • Europe - meatballs and black forest cake
  • Africa - plantain chips
  • South Asian - samosas served with several fantastic sauces
  • Caribbean - wonderful fried potato cakes

I was an advisor for the Middle East Pavillion. For weeks, these students were dedicated team in creating a wonderful backdrop, a fully decorated table and food representing their culture. They even outfitted me with a hijab and beautiful traditional dress.

Interactive entertainment for children of all ages including dance classes, face painting, campfire photograph postcards, henna, and games such as limbo and a piƱata. Great work guys!

Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Stressed Kids

Last night I was at the Board office, I attended the Mental Health Week initiative, the topic was Stressed Kids. Over 20 community agencies were represented, along with Children's Mental Health Ontario, which sponsors the Change the View video contest. The winning video was by Lankesh Patel from North Park Secondary School in Brampton, Ontario.

One student in the audience told the School Board representative that she wrote her 4 exams during the first 2 days of the exam period last semester. She said it was stressful and said this was not fair. The audience murmured agreement. She's right, it's not fair.  However, it is a reality that exam schedules sometimes fall that way. It's easy to forget as an adult, how a teenager deals with stress. Life experiences teach stress-coping skills.

When I asked my students what stresses them, they were voluble in stressing over final exams, writing tests, presenting in front of people, deadlines, subjects like math or science, fitting in at school, and twitter (sub-tweets).

When I thought of that student's exam experiences and compared them to my own stressors, I realized that in the years since high school, I have become more resilient to stress. As the years pass, my stressors change,  and I change and adapt to them too. Adults have developed an ability to manage stress in many forms.
Teenagers can use help learning to manage their stress. As a teacher I do this daily: I sequence my lessons, chunking topics into bite-size pieces, I review difficult topics, I assist in study skills, I show students how to prioritize their time, I remind them that high school is a passage, not a destination.

These are the four A's of Stress Management:
  • Avoid - A lot of needless stress can simply be avoided. Plan ahead, rearrange your surroundings and reap the benefits of a lighter load.
  • Alter - One of the most helpful things you can do during times of stress is to take inventory, then attempt to change your situation for the better.
  • Accept - Sometimes we have no choice but to accept things the way they are.
  • Adapt - The perception that you can't cope is actually one of the greatest stressors. That's why adapting — which often involves changing your standards or expectations — can be most helpful in dealing with stress.
May Clinic on Stress: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/stress-relief/SR00037
Winning video: We Are All Equal -  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGXC7xvUD5k

Enlighten us, but make it quick!

I attended Ignite Mississauga on May 1, 2013 with 25 students and two fellow teachers. Ignite events take place in over 100 cities around the world. At Ignite events, presenters share their personal and professional passions in short 5 minute presentations.

The presentations were fascinating, each only 5 minutes long. Ignite is really a mini TED -talks. It's an event for geeks. And as a math/science teacher, I relish in conscious geekdom.

The messages of three speakers spoke to my heart.

The first speaker described the concept of "shadeism". Shadeism is descrimination that exists between the lighter-skinned and darker-skinned members of the same community. I lived abroad for a number of years and work in a multicultural school, so equity and inclusivity is an everyday reality. But still it's hard to comprehend that a single community can actively work at excluding its own members.

A second stand-out presentation involved a young man practicing 22 acts of kindness for his 22nd birthday, giving acts of kindness rather than receiving them. The video is breathtaking, well cut, with an amazing soundtrack. It is effective at highlighting generosity and heartfelt gifts. I played the video for my classes and as we spent time discussing acts of kindness, I could feel the atmosphere in the room soften.

The last remarkable presentation highlighted that Peel Region is a human trafficking hotspot in Canada. Peel Regional Police Detective David van Allen said of the 60 human trafficking cases that have been reported in Canada, 31 have been Peel police investigations. Constable Jim Zucchero, who investigates human trafficking for Peel OPP, said pimps use Highway 401 and the QEW to move women from Windsor up through Montreal. And since human trafficking victims are high school age, ranging from 12 to 22,  I find that I spend more time reflecting on the choices some of my personally "adopted" students take, and further the consequences that these choices may have on their future.

That's it. Five minutes can change your life.

Information
More about shadeism here: http://shadeism.com/, http://vimeo.com/16210769

Random Acts of Kindness video by searching "22 Random Acts of Kindness" on Youtube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wskG18saKk0)

Read about Human Trafficking in Peel Region here: http://www.mississauga.com/news/article/1349888--i-d-like-to-see-the-mayor-sitting-at-that-table

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Integrating Technology - the SAMR model

I use a lot of technology in my classroom. I'm fortunate, my school board has blanket WIFI access, LCD projectors, a computer in every room and a computer lab on every floor. I regularly use the document camera, mobi, interactive simulations, powerpoints and clickers. I've created assignments that enable students to learn how to parse, evaluate and report information efficiently using both the web and Microsoft Office programs. But something in me still stays, that I can use technology in a better way, I can use it to improve the way I teach. When I look at my students, the question facing me is, how can I use technology to transform the way my students learn?
A few weeks ago, our IT Resource Teacher came to speak to our department. He outlined the SAMR model of technology integration. The SAMR model describes the natural process of integrating technology into teaching and learning. The SAMR model can also be though of in terms of iterative task improvement. SAMR stands for:
  • Substitution - technology is a direct tool substitute, does not change the task
  • Augmentation - new technology is a direct tool substitute that ends up enhancing the task
  • Modification - the task is redesigned o take advantage of the  capabilities of the new technology
  • Redefinition - a new task is made possible by the capability of the new technology
It can be said that as a task progresses through the four stages of SAMR technology integration, the task starts to allow students to work at progressively higher levels of Bloom's Taxonomy. After all, the goal of integrating technology is to enable richer learning, enabling students to engage their community, both in the school and further.
So what does this look like in terms of an assignment? I decided to work on implementing technology into a "statistics in the news" assignment that I use with my grade 11 math students. My goal was to take technology beyond the "substitution" phase of integration, into the "modification" and and "redefinition" stage.
We integrated both blogging and infographics into the assignment. Blogging completely redefined the task purpose, since blogging is only possible with web access and a blog tool. Using infographics modified the task to take the statistical graphing  portion of the course to new levels, previously not possible. I'm very pleased with the result. Here are the before and after descriptions:
Before: Statistics in the News Assignment
Students research articles online, summarizing the article and explaining the meaning of the statistics therein. Students create a realistic numerical problem that uses the information gathered from the article.
Reinvented: Statistics in the News Assignment
Students research articles with statistics, then create an infographic that highlights statistics in an interesting and probing manner, they post their article summary and infographic to the class blog for other class members to comment.
More information:
Blog Sites
If you would like to start blogging with your class, kidblog.org and edublogs.org are two great sites that allow you to create generic student accounts and use a variety of control measures including enabling moderation (the monitoring of comments and/or posts before they are viewed by a public).
Creating Infographics
Infographics are images that convey data in a sophisticated and influential way. There are a lot of free websites that allow can make them easily via the computer. Take a peek at these sites:
Excellent SAMR Model Background and Exemplars are found here on the www.hippasus.com website.

Saturday, 27 April 2013

Share Your Care

I'm always trying to find inspiration in the classroom, inspire myself, inspire the kids. I have a natural enthusiasm for teaching my subject (I'm a high school math and science teacher). And I'm a teacher because I care for kids. I want to ease their transition to adulthood and help influence their growth towards more mature behaviour. Each class I teach, I take some time to talk about smart choices, how to live a life and earning a living.

This week my principal brought into our school a motivational speaker, Andy Thibodeau. His enthusiasm is catching, and his appreciation for the simultaneous similarity and diversity of students across Canada is inspiring.

Andy is perhaps is the most widely traveled school speaker I've listened to: he's visited a lot of high schools across Canada. I lived abroad in Europe for a number of years and I sincerely appreciate that diversity and similarity coexist without contradiction.

Caring is contagious, says Andy Thibodeau. He says that teenagers will only have the courage to take a risk at school if they know that their teacher cares. What I mean by risk is anything that may influence a kids' social standing or popularity. Remember what high school felt like? To a high school student, a risk can be when they:
  • join a club or team that their friends aren't part of
  • stay behind to ask for extra help
  • make a new friend outside their peer group
  • admit enjoyment of an unpopular hobby
Simply owning up to your own personal uniqueness is a risk to a high school student.  Andy's message for teachers is that the little acts of care that we perform are just as significant as teaching the subject matter.
I'm a teacher because I care. I enjoy seeing a student grow a little taller from a genuine compliment, gain skills over course of a single semester, make a mistake but continue to try and try again.  The best parts of my day are the words of greetings and smiles I share with kids in the hallway as I walk to and from class. I'm rewarded whenever I experience the contagious enthusiasm of 30 teenagers are working on an extracurricular project together, their energy makes the air sparkle and my day brighter.

As a follow-up with my class I discussed this fantastic video:
Syed Muzamil Hasan Zaidi - 22 Random Acts of Kindness

Speaker Information:
Andy Thibodeau - http://www.andypresentations.com