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If you see this in your RSS reader, please update

Posted by: | July 9, 2009 Comments Off |

I noticed that a couple weeks ago the number of subscribers to my blog dropped significantly. I thought I had my RSS feeds at edublogs routed through FeedBurner, and as such I wouldn’t need to do too much to keep my current subscribers. However, I now realize that this wasn’t quite the case.

If you’re getting this in your RSS reader, it means I messed up and didn’t handle the transition to my self hosted site very cleanly (http://blog.benwildeboer.com). If you’d like to subscribe to the feed for my new online space head over to the blog or use this feed address: http://feeds.feedburner.com/SustainablyDigital

Sorry for any confusion!

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Maslow’s hierarchy of sorts

Posted by: | August 25, 2008 Comments Off |

The Setting

  • Where: Small classroom
  • When: 6 hours (with a one hour lunch break)
  • Environment: 15 other new hires
  • Format: professional development lecture supported by PowerPoint
    • PPT format: 87 slides. White background. Black text. Bullets. Bullets. Bullets. Text. Text. Text.

Maslow’s (modified) Hierarchy of Needs

If I don’t have access to my room, colleagues who I’m supposed to be teaching, or any knowledge about what material to start with when I’ll have real students sitting in my class on Thursday (it’s Monday today), it doesn’t matter how well-planned or effective the professional development, it’s not going to be my focus.

The Update

I did get keys to my room today, managed to talk to one colleague who is teaching the same class for 5 to 10 minutes, and have a rough idea of where they start. I’m pretty sure I have enough information to make it through the first couple of days. By then I should be okay. But seriously…are they thinking when they plan professional development all. dern. day. for new hires?

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New school, new district, new state, new region. I was hired at the end of May and moved to Connecticut the end of June. In mid to late July, I started my attempts to contact my new high school to get information about my new position. What is the curriculum? Who am I teaching it with? What are the school’s expectations?

My first teaching job saw me getting hired only one week before students rears hit chairs in my classroom. As a rookie teacher lacking in experience, I found that extremely intimidating and overwhelming. I was excited that for my new position, not only would I be bringing six years of experience, but also that I would have most of the summer to prepare.

Brick wallMy calls to the high school rang without being answered. I stopped by the high school once to seek out someone who would help me. Upon entering the building, I felt I should’ve been wearing a hard hat. There was heavy construction throughout much of the building. The offices were gutted. Besides the gruff looking workers, I couldn’t find any administrators or anyone else in the building to help.

This week I started the “Teacher Academy” for new hires. School starts next week Thursday, and I was excited to get in and finally get some information on my curriculum and who I’ll be teaching with. As a fairly experienced¹ teacher this time around, I felt I still had plenty of time to effectively prepare for the school year. Arriving at the “academy” on Wednesday, I was dismayed to find no time set aside to find our rooms, go over our curriculum, or meet the colleagues we’ll be teaching with. In fact, there was no official plan at all for getting the new teachers access to our rooms, curriculum, or colleagues.

Red tapeWe were all told all about the district improvement plans, the data teams that meet to help improve instruction, and on, and on. The district’s plans for improvement sound really good. I’m excited that they’ve made a serious commitment to make their schools highly effective for the students. But…how could they possibly overlook the fact that we haven’t even seen the curriculum yet? I’ve seen my room once. I have a textbook for the classes I’m teaching only because one happened to be laying around and I took the initiative to snag it. The only reason I’ve accomplished either of these things is because a few of the high school new hires got together and more or less “demanded” a meeting with someone at the high school to give us a clue what was going on.

My favorite quote of the entire teacher academy, in response to my (and others) inquiries into what scope and sequence the teachers teaching the same class as me use:

Don’t worry, take some deep breaths. All you need to do is make it through the first two days of school, then you have the long weekend to figure out what to do next. Remember, whatever happens, you’ll get paid every two weeks in American dollars.

O.K. I’ve ranted enough, and I’m sure you’ve gotten the point by now. I am excited to work in this district (really!). I’m excited that this time around in a new position I have skills to bring to the table. I sincerely hope the lack of foresight I’ve seen so far is localized in the central administration and isn’t systemic. To look for the positive in the situation, I’ve already overcome my fear of questioning the status quo and have learned that I may need to make a more conscious effort to push for change in this district. All I want to do is be the best teacher I can be for my students, my colleagues, my school, and my district. I sincerely hope that desire doesn’t fly in the face of the professional culture here.

I just want to be like Akeelah, an achiever.

- Common, “The Game”

________________________________________________________________________

¹ If you consider six years as having much experience

Image sources:
Brickage by Asten
Challenge by amsterdamfan

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Fatigued

Posted by: | August 13, 2008 | 2 Comments |

I really didn’t mean for this blog to take a summer vacation. It did, however. I guess I can’t blame it. It moved from Michigan to Connecticut, unpacked way too many boxes, spent a lot of time sprucing up a new house, attempting to work on a Master’s project, and trying to get back into running shape. It’s in between jobs, and doesn’t know too much about the new job it has, thus it has felt some disconnect to the education world: It’s done with the last position, but doesn’t know what the new position is.

The blog is back from break though, and hopefully it won’t be slacking off during the school year (which officially starts in one week). Look for a real post tomorrow. :-)

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At approximately 8:00 am EDT today I will have officially turned in my Michigan resident permit. At approximately 8:00am EDT, I will cross into Ohio with no foreseeable return to Michigan, the state where I’ve spent my last 29.2888… years of my life.

A new adventure awaits!

Receipt from Custom Receipt.com

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smash by Jef Poskanzer
A slight break…

It’s been awhile since I’ve posted. I’d like to say it was a planned hiatus- like I’ve been in collecting lava samples in Hawai’i or taking a meditative break inside a sensory deprivation tank. The truth is much less exotic. As some of you may already know, I’ll be moving to Connecticut to join my wife at the end of this school year. She’s been living in Eastern Connecticut since early January and I can’t wait to get back to living a “normal” married life. While in the long run I know this situation will be worth the trouble, right now it’s a pain. At any rate, let me fill you in on what’s been happening lately:

The Update

What I’ve been busy with recently: (1) House hunting, (2) House buying (it’s not yet 100% official, but we’re close), (3) Interviewing (hoping for a wonderful new placement), (4) Making first preparations to move, (5) Finishing grad classes, (6) starting new grad classes, (7) teaching high school.

Despite the craziness, I’m trying to maintain sanity, and hoping to post a little more often than I have been recently.

picket fence by sniffette

Student Presentations

In my last post I mentioned that students were about to give presentations on volcanoes in which I had banned them from using over two words per slide and encouraged lots of images. The presentations were much better than any other time I’ve done them. Even the poor presentations were more enjoyable. Some students even gave impressive Lessig-esque presentations. I found that pretty amazing considering I’ve never actually shown them any Lessig presentations (they have seen me present in a mild Lessig style, but some were better than my own).

I was amazed appalled while they were designing their presentation at how much difficulty they had parting with their bullet-pointy ways. The most common questions asked: “How’re we supposed to give a presentation when there isn’t any information on our PowerPoint?” I reminded them that they would be able to speak during the presentations, and recommended they utilized verbal communication to convey their information. :)

Overall, I was very happy with the results. The volcano presentations have even had some lasting effect: Recently they had group presentations for my earthquake resistant building project. The majority of groups designed text-light presentations- even without me requiring it. I was excited to see them embracing a style that was totally foreign to them until very recently.

group airtime by *vlad*

Image credits:
smash by jef poskanzer :: via Flickr
picket fence by sniffette :: via Flickr
group airtime by *vlad* :: via Flickr
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