Goals for the 2011-12 School Year

Posted by on Sep 5, 2011 in Planning, Portfolio, Reflection | 1 comment

Following on the heels of my last post, here are my goals for the upcoming school year:

Teaching (The first two are also my “official” school goals that are being used to guide observations)

I will improve the way I give feedback to students.  Formally, I hope to develop a system to give students feedback about writing that meaningfully a) tells students where they are, b) what they need to do to improve and c) is efficient enough that I can provide frequent and timely feedback to all students.  I also need to make sure I am giving informal feedback more frequently to all students.  (I hope that moving to a Standards Based Grading system will enable these things to happen organically).

Students will have multiple opportunities to rethink and revise their answers to large essential questions throughout each unit, and will also reflect on and revise all major work.

I will solicit bi-weekly feedback from my students to ensure they understand why they’re doing what they’re doing, and to give them a voice in what happens in the class.

Leadership
The Social Studies Critical Friends Group will meet once a month, and will be valuable for its participants.

Advisory
100% of my new advisees will either graduate or earn at least ten credits by June.

100% of my advisees will be accepted to college, and will have a plan to pay for it or whatever else they choose to do next year.

Personal / Professional Development
At least once per week, I will write and publish a piece of writing about teaching social studies, be it about my practice or teaching in general.

Every two months, I will write and publish a self-evaluation of how I am doing on these goals.

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My 2010-2011 Teaching Portfolio

Posted by on Jun 26, 2011 in Portfolio | 1 comment

It’s done! Last year, along with two other teachers at my school, and inspired by a similar program at the Manhattan Village Academy, I put together a teacher portfolio this year to help my own personal development, consisting of the following sections.  This year, five of us are completing the process.  Hopefully there will be more next year, at both Bronx Lab and my new school.

  1. Inquiry Question: How can my engagement with online education communities improve my teaching?
  2. Year’s Best Unit and Reflection
  3. Best Major Assignment: French Revolution DBQ
  4. Goal for the 2011-2012 School Year
  5. Reflection of School Year Goals #5 – Late June
  6. What I Wish I Had Known at the Beginning of the Year
  7. Top Memories from My Time at Bronx Lab
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Inquiry Question: How can my engagement with online education communities improve my teaching?

Posted by on Jun 26, 2011 in Portfolio | Comments Off

2010-11 Teaching Portfolio Entry #7

I first started blogging toward the end of my first year of teaching, back in 2005.  At the time, there were very few teachers who were doing reflective writing about their practice.  I maintained the blog for a couple of years through grad school and the beginning of my time at Bronx Lab.  However, I stopped blogging as I felt more of a disconnect between the problems I faces in my urban classroom and the issues the other teachers I communicated with engaged with in their suburban ones.

I returned to the “blogosphere” last spring, seeking once again to connect with others beyond the walls of my school, walls that at the time seemed to retard my professional development.  I was very quickly encouraged to join Twitter, which I did just in time for the maiden #sschats last summer, giving me a quickly expanding network of teachers who could support my growth.  My network would grown organically over the year.  Through my experience at the Educator Writers Association seminar, I also became connected to a much larger circle of more activist teachers.

My number one goal when I started writing again was to force myself to be more reflective in my practice.  In the past year, I’ve published 62 posts.  Thirty-three of these were reflective, or otherwise directly connected to my classroom.  Twenty-nine of the posts would fall more into the “advocacy” territory.  I’m proud that I was much more reflective than I was in the past years, but at the same time, I think I often allowed myself to get distracted by the hot educational topics de jour, which allowed me to focus more on larger issues of which I have no control at the expense of thinking deeply about the classroom that I do control.

The most important thing that came out of my online engagement was a frequently needed morale boost.  Especially as I moved into more of a coaching and leadership role this year, having another network of like-minded teachers to engage with kept me going through a lot of difficult periods this year.  I was able to get regular reminders of the value of the work I have been trying to do with my students, as well as hundreds of big and little ideas for improving my practice.  The best thing about being connected is the ability to get resources on demand, be it the right document for a lesson, or a better rubric for discussions.  There are so many things I took from others this year that it’s hard to even differentiate what I came up with and what was inspired directly or indirectly by others.  They all made me a better teacher for my students.

Looking back though, perhaps the most important things that my virtual interactions did was to encourage me to make new physical connections, which in the long run, may be the most important things I did this year.  It was only because I was online that I learned about EdCamp NYC, and on a whim when I woke up that morning early, I decided to put a presentation together.  It went well, and it gave me the confidence to step up to two other opportunities that I otherwise may have allowed to pass by: presenting at NCSS this fall, and much more importantly, taking a job doing professional development around inquiry-based assessments that are being piloted as part of NYC’s new teacher evaluation system.  Not only has it been an incredible experience to be part of this new work as it’s being developed, but working with the three other educators involved has been the best professional development of my life, and has completely transformed my approach to a lot of things I do in the class.

I am also quite proud of the EDUSolidarity initiative I conceived and helped organize.  It was great to see over a hundred bloggers step up in solidarity to share why, as good teachers, they support unions.  I hope that for many it was an experience that encourages them to get more involved with larger educational issues, where teachers’ voices desperately need to be heard.  On a personal note, helping to make that happen was an incredibly empowering experience, greatly increasing my sense of efficacy in the world.  Had that not happened, I never would have believed I could do something like raising money for a scholarship for one of my students who is undocumented.  Last I checked, we had raised somewhere north of $6000, which along with the money already in the scholarship, is enough to cover almost all of her first two years’ tuition.

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Best Major Assignment: French Revolution DBQ

Posted by on Jun 26, 2011 in Portfolio | Comments Off

2010-11 Teaching Portfolio Entry #6

I’m using “best” loosely here.  The most important “best” is the assignment that elicits the best work from my students, which was my History Day assignment.  Another “best” might be the project that demands the most of students, thus serving as a model for the directions I want to move in my teaching.  The best example of this work was the Bill & Ted Project.

The “best” I am going to talk about, though, is the best assignment I gave to develop and assess students’ historical thinking, which is on the surface, a relatively simple DBQ essay on the French Revolution (for copyright reasons I can’t post the whole assignment, but the documents are here).

Like just about any history teacher, I’ve been using DBQ essays for a long time.  The structure is an easy way to make you feel like you’re “doing history” in the classroom, while still assessing traditional skills such as depth of knowledge and writing ability.  While AP teachers seem to be used to DBQ’s that force students to think critically, the ones that are used on the New York Regents are rather straight forward tasks that ask students to write explanatory essays using the supplied documents as factual evidence.

I tried something new with DBQ’s in the second half of the year, and the results were extremely promising.  I modeled what I did on Historical Thinking Matters, which presents students with contradictory documents, asking them to then develop historical arguments based on the evidence in front of them.  Because students are faced with conflicting primary documents, the students need to assess sources for credibility and perspective, which is an increasingly important skill in our information-rich world.  I took my assignment to an even deeper level by including a questionable secondary source from Wikipedia, which was actually contradicted by evidence in another document.  Students were asked to write an essay evaluating the extent to which the French Revolution was successful.

The most important move for me was in how I assessed these essays.  Previously, I would have assessed the students for the strength and coherence of their arguments.  For this essay, I went further, demanding that my students demonstrate the historical thinking skills that I had been working on with them throughout the year.  Students were assessed for not just the their arguments and organization, as I had in the past, but also for evaluating evidence in terms of its perspective, believability, and accuracy.  Students were expected to not just take a black or white side and support it, but to demonstrate their understanding of the shades of gray that make up history.  No student who argues that the French Revolution was entirely a success or failure is making a historically accurate argument, and it was high time I held my students accountable for that.  Students were also held accountable for engaging with counter arguments.  (It was a pleasant coincidence that all this jives completely with the new Common Core Literacy Standards for Social Studies).

I had 14 different aspects of students’ writing that I tracked on this assignment, divided into four larger categories: argument, use of evidence, content, and organization.  The argument and organization categories were basically the same as how I previously assessed my students, whereas the evidence and content categories contained most of the new expectations.  As this was only the second time I was formally assessing my students in this manner for evidence and content, it is not surprising that students scored the most poorly in these categories.  This points to the need to be doing this kind of assessing explicitly from day 1, which is something I plan to do moving forward.

The more interesting development, though, is that for argument and organization, students did their best work on this assignment.  By asking my students to do much more complex work, they exhibited a far superior ability in the “basic” skills I had been teaching and assessing all along.  This is perhaps the most important takeaway I have from this project, as well as from my time at Bronx Lab: the key to helping students to develop the basic reading and writing skills that many of them lack is not simplify the curriculum, but rather to make the thinking and content required for the curriculum even more complex and advanced, so that it demands them to better their skills in order to engage with complex and engaging topics.

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Goal for the 2011-2012 School Year

Posted by on Jun 26, 2011 in Portfolio | Comments Off

2010-11 Teaching Portfolio Entry #5

As the school year gets nearer and I have more clarity around the expectations of my new school, I will set more specific goals.  For now, I have one main goal, which is to get back to being primarily on the side of my students.  Since the first year at Bronx Lab, I have been primarily concerned with building an institution.  Often, there were moments where the needs of individual students had to be made secondary to the larger goal of growing a new school.  Similarly, as I have taken on more leadership responsibilities over the past years, I have had more of my time focused on adults than the students in my classroom, an experience Jose Vilson recently described quite well.  While I certainly am still excited to support other teachers in my new school in any way that I can, I am looking forward to being able to focus all my energy on my students, to ensure that I can serve them with the entirety of my professional self.

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Reflection of School Year Goals #5 – Late June

Posted by on Jun 20, 2011 in Portfolio, Reflection | Comments Off

2010-11 Teaching Portfolio Entry #4

At the beginning of the year, I set a number of goals for myself, one of which was to reflect on said goals every two months. My first four reflections can be found here, here, here, and here. My fifth and final remarks are in italics below.

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