Make your everyday teaching a masterpiece

Post on 18-Nov-2014

451 views 1 download

Tags:

description

 

Transcript of Make your everyday teaching a masterpiece

+

Make Your Everyday Teaching a Masterpiece

1

+ 2

Let’s Begin…

What are the most pressing issues on your mind as you begin the school year?

+ 3

Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. And today?Today is a gift. That's why we call it The Present.Babatunde Olatunji

+ 4

Let’s start by thinking about your own life …

IF your life were a painting, what would it look like? Sit back, close your eyes and imagine your life on a canvas. What colors are most dominant? Tell me about the figures you see, the shapes and lines that are forming. Is it abstract? Is it defined by still life? Is it set in a meadow with red poppies? Tell me what you see.

"LIFE is a great big canvas and you should throw all the paint on it you can." -- Danny Kaye

+ 5

Designing And Creating The Masterpiece Called Your Life

You are a creator, designing and creating the masterpiece called your life. Each one of us is a potent being orchestrating our life down to the finest details. All we have to do is recognize this and utilize our power to create what we want in our lives.

+ 6

Make Each Day a Masterpiece

If this day were a painting, would it be a masterpiece when it's done? Embrace life as it happens. Seize the day. Make each day your masterpiece!

+ 7

Today is really the only day that matters. . .

You can’t make your past self do anything. You can’t make your future self do anything, either. Your only freedom of choice is right now, and thus today is your one chance to paint your masterpiece.

What are you going to do today to make it your masterpiece?

+ 8

MAKE EACH DAY YOUR MASTERPIECE In other words, how would you spend today if it

were the one day by which your entire life would be judged?

This is something I make a genuine effort to keep in mind every single day of my life.

What would I write if I knew I only had one shot at making a difference in someone’s life?

How would I spend the next hour with my four year old son if I knew it was the only hour he’d remember from his childhood when he was an adult?

+ 9

MAKE EACH DAY YOUR MASTERPIECE How would I spend this evening with my wife if it were

the last evening we would spend together?

How would I spend my money today if I knew that today spoke financially for the rest of my days?

Would I hold my temper? Would I stop being such a slob? Would I set a good example? Would I not worry what the neighbors thought and just run through the sprinkler in my clothes, laughing with my children? Would I make a perfectly delicious, tasty meal and smile at my daughter across the dinner table – or would I just throw a box of Tuna Helper out there?

+ 10

MAKE EACH DAY YOUR MASTERPIECE Every single day, we’re making an impact on the

people around us. The people we love. The people we merely like. The people we will never directly know. Even on ourselves – our future health and happiness and relationships and skills and finances.

Every single day, we have a chance to really make all of those things shine – or we can buy a sack full of double cheeseburgers and sit in the basement all evening watching Seinfeld reruns.

+ 11Let’s Start With a Joke . . . A burglar broke into a house one night. He shined his flashlight

around, looking for valuables when a voice in the dark said, 'Jesus knows you're here.'  He nearly jumped out of his skin, clicked his flashlight off, and froze. 

When he heard nothing more, after a bit, he shook his head and continued.  Just as he pulled the stereo out so he could disconnect the wires, clear as a bell he heard 'Jesus is watching you.‘ Freaked out, he shined his light around frantically, looking for the source of the voice.

Finally, in the corner of the room, his flashlight beam came to rest on a parrot.  'Did you say that?' he hissed at the parrot. 'Yep', the parrot confessed, then squawked, 'I'm just trying to warn you that he is watching you. 'The burglar relaxed.

'Warn me, huh? Who in the world are you ?'  'Moses,' replied the bird. 'Moses?' the burglar laughed. 'What kind of people would name a bird  Moses?'

'The kind of people that would name a  Rottweiler Jesus.'

+ 13

+ 14

+ 15

+ 16

Innovating The Future So You Don't Have To”

+ 17

+ 18

TOWARD A GLOBAL PARADIGM SHIFT

+ 19

The Mission of EducationTo develop or to encourage in

young peoplea desire to learn and

to continue learning over a lifetime

+ 20

If you always do what you always did, you will

always get what you always got.

J. “Moms” Mabley

+ 21

So then, shall we innovate ?

“The main problem is not an absence of innovation in schools, but rather the presence of too many disconnected, episodic, fragmented, superficially adorned projects.”

+ 22

It's as simple as choosing what you want, claiming it as yours, and owning it. Every aspect of your life is your creation; you get to do what you want with it. Once you own the power within you, you can be a magnificent creator!

+ 23

We all have a paintbrush and a palette . . .

We may not all be great painters like Van Gogh, but each one of us does hold a paintbrush and a palette. Inspired and moved by everyday experiences, we create a beautiful work of art with our own strokes and colors. Each day we live has elements that we add to the ultimate masterpiece -- our own lives.

+ 24

What did you see when you closed your eyes?

If putting a painting in your mind might prove difficult, let's seek help from the great artists.

Perhaps you are yearning for stability amidst the overwhelming fluidity of life, much like Edvard Munch's "The Scream."

Or perhaps you're serene and content like Claude Monet's "The Artist's Garden.“

+ 25

What did you see when you closed your eyes?

What if you're graceful and learning like Edgar Degas' "Danseuse"?

Or maybe there is a dynamism only you understand about your life, that others may or may not see like Pollock's "No. 1, Lavender Mist."

+ 26

Or what if you're feeling like you're in the autumn of your life, but known deep inside there is still something within you that is still blooming, similar to Georgia O'Keeffe's "Dark and Lavender Leaf"

What did you see when you closed your eyes?

+ 27

Have you already visualized your life on a canvas ???

Which one is most like your life? Now that you've visualized your life on a canvas, do you like what you see? If you do, pat yourself on the back and celebrate that happiness.

And do remember that you still continue to paint for as long as you're breathing, so take care of that masterpiece you are creating. If you don't like what is on your canvas, no worries. You have a palette of unlimited colors and you are in control of what colors and strokes to use. Maybe you'd like to spice it up with amber and red, or tone it down with sea green.

+ 28

Creating Your Masterpiece

What activities, hobbies or other experiences will lead you towards the masterpiece you want to create? In knowing this, your canvas will fill with more elements that will give you much happiness.

Sometimes we don't have that end in mind, or we get frustrated when the colors don't turn out right. It's alright. Enjoy the act of painting. Enjoy the different hues and tones. Relish each action you contribute to your canvas everyday, and before you know it, a masterpiece will be right before your eyes. You wield the paintbrush and the palette of your life's canvas.

Your life is a masterpiece, a work of art. Color it in as much as you can, and enjoy every moment of your painting.

+ 29

The Parable of the Pencil Maker

The Pencil Maker took the pencil aside, just before putting it into the box, “There are five things you need to know before I send you out into the world,” he said. “Always remember these five things, and you’ll be a great pencil.”

+ 30

The Parable of the Pencil Maker

You are capable of many great things, but only if you allow yourself to be guided by someone’s hand

You will experience a painful sharpening from time to time, but you’ll need it to become a better pencil

You have the ability to correct the mistakes you make

The most important part of you will always be what’s inside

On every surface where you are used, regardless of its condition, you must leave your mark.

+ 31

Is teaching a calling or an occupation?

CALLING AND OCCUPATION

I define calling as follows: "The most important thing you can do in which you would be most difficult to replace."

I define occupation conventionally: the work you perform that supports you financially.

Your calling should be your legacy. Your job probably won't be.

A few occupations lend themselves toward callings. Teaching is one. Preaching is another. Writing, too. Being a star anything is a calling. But stars are mostly shooting stars. Fame fades.

+ 32

Four Corner Discussion

Why I became a teacher

How my life would be different if I had not become a teacher

Who influenced me to become a teacher

Aspects of teaching you didn’t know until your started

+ 33

Today’s Inspiration comes from . . .

+ 34

Developing my personal masterpiece . . .

“Although I would like to consider myself as a painter, creating a masterpiece from nothing more than a blank canvas, some paint, and the vision in my artist’s mind, the time has come to admit that I am more of a collage artist. I take scraps of things other people have created and put them together, hoping that the total sum will be greater than it’s parts. And so, this book is a collage of all the gifts given to me by the very brilliant people in my life.”

Robyn R. Jackson , “Never Work Harder Than Your Students”

+“Never Work Harder…” Intro

Individually, get acquainted with the book by reading pp.1-5 of the Introduction.

Personalize your reading: write notes in the margin, underline key points, etc.

+ 36The Mastery Principles

Locate the mastery principles on pg.4

Rank order the 7 mastery principles and justify your top choice

What does your top choice look like in the classroom?

+ 37

The Mastery Principles

Start Where Your Students Are

Know Where Your Students Are Going

Expect to Get Your Students There

Support Your Students

Use Effective Feedback

Focus on Quality, Not Quantity

Never Work Harder Than Your Students

+ 38

Are you a Master Teacher, Practitioner, Apprentice or Novice? Individually, read through and complete the mastery

self-assessment on pp.7-21.

Calculate your scores on the scoring sheet on p.22 and identify your overall score and teaching level.

Give yourself a score for each principle. Total the number of points in each column of the scoring sheet. Then, divide the number by 7 for your average score. Record your average score for each principle.

Based on your assessment, what principle will you work on first?

+ 39

Small Group Reflection

Regarding the self-assessment:

Where are you overall? Did this surprise you?

What was your weakest principle? Is this something you were aware of?

Which principle do you consider an area of strength?

+ 40

"I wake up every morning determined both to change the world and have one hell of a good time. Sometimes this makes planning the day a little difficult.“

--E. B. White

+

Think of a successful learning experience. Identify three characteristics that made it successful: 1.

2.

3.

+ 42

Priscilla Ruiz de Vergara, M.Ed.

The Lighthouse: All Together NowThree lighthouses on three nearby islands flash their lights every evening. On one island, the light flashes every 45 seconds. The lighthouse on the second island has a light that flashes every 2 minutes. The third lighthouse flashes a light every 1 ¼ minutes. Suppose all the lights flash together at 8:35 p.m. At what time will all three lights flash together

again?

Justify and explain your answer.

+ 43

The Lighthouse: All Together NowThe Answer

The lights will flash together every 30 minutes, so the next time will be 9:05 p.m.

The Explanation

If you start by converting all the times to seconds, then the time intervals for the lights are 45 seconds, 120 seconds, and 75 seconds, respectively. The least common multiple of 45, 120, and 75 is 1800. So, all the lights will flash together every 1800 seconds, or 30 minutes.

+ 44

Four Driving Forces of School Change

Shifting from… Shifting to…

A Teaching Focus

A Learning Focus

Adapted from Lipton, L. & Wellman, B. (2003) Data-Driven Dialogue: A Facilitator’s Guide to Collaborative Inquiry. Sherman, CT: MiraVia, LLC.

+ 45

Four Driving Forces of School Change

Shifting from… Shifting to…Teaching as a Private Practice

Teaching as a Collaborative Practice

Adapted from Lipton, L. & Wellman, B. (2003) Data-Driven Dialogue: A Facilitator’s Guide to Collaborative Inquiry. Sherman, CT: MiraVia, LLC.

+ 46

Four Driving Forces of School Change

Shifting from… Shifting to…School Improvement as an Option

School Improvement as a Requirement

Adapted from Lipton, L. & Wellman, B. (2003) Data-Driven Dialogue: A Facilitator’s Guide to Collaborative Inquiry. Sherman, CT: MiraVia, LLC.

+ 47

Four Driving Forces of School Change

Shifting from… Shifting to…Accountability Responsibility

Adapted from Lipton, L. & Wellman, B. (2003) Data-Driven Dialogue: A Facilitator’s Guide to Collaborative Inquiry. Sherman, CT: MiraVia, LLC.

+

ASCD Allen Parish 2010; Rye and Herold

48

Taking a Different Tone

Use only the phrase on the left to convey the different messages on the

right.

Hello: I’d like to get to know you better.Leave me alone.Can you hear me?

+ 49

Taking a Different Tone

Use only the phrase on the left to convey the different messages on

the right.Excuse me:

Pardon my interruption.What did you say?I completely disagree with you and am disgusted you feel that way.

+ 50

Learning and Teaching – Hay McBer Report

3 Key Factors that Influence Pupil Progress:

The teacher’s professional characteristics

Teaching skills

Classroom climate

+ 51The teacher’s professional characteristicsAttributes which contribute to effective teaching:

Flexibility

Ability to inspire trust in pupils (fair, consistent)

Professionalism: (respect, confidence, optimism, challenge and support, creating trust)

Thinking and Planning

Leading (managing pupils, flexible, holding people accountable)

Relating to others

– Hay McBer Report

+ 52

Teaching Skills High expectations – appropriate, clear

Planning – lesson, HW, pace, review

Methods & Strategies – variety, interaction

Discipline – proactive, prompt, routinized

Assessment for Learning – pupils set goals, range, integrated, achievement recognized

Effective use of Homework – regular, checked, related to classwork, reinforces & prepares

Time & Resource management – pace, transitions brief, finish with review

- Hay McBer Report

+ 53

Good Classroom Climate Clarity purpose & context of each lesson

Order discipline & civilized behaviour

Standards high, explicit & consistent

Fairness no favourites, affirmation earned

Participation variety of discussion & activity

Support confidence to risk, err and learn

Safety absence of bullying & fear

Interest interesting & stimulating lessons

Environment attractive, organised & clean

- Hay McBer Report

+ 54

Teaching skills … not random

Effective teaching requires planning:Attention to detailA focus on individual pupilsEffective use of information from pupil

assessment to inform future teaching and learning

Clarity about standards and expectations

– Hay McBer Report

+

ASCD Allen Parish 2010; Rye and Herold

55

+ 56

Classroom Management– Key Issues Classroom climate – respect, rapport

Clear & consistent procedures

Lesson presentation & activities

Pre-emptive strategies

Counselling, reprimand, sanctions

Confrontation - avoid or defuse

Consultation with colleagues

+ 57

Teaching ‘All researchers agree that the

impact of decisions made by individual teachers is far

greater than the impact of decisions made at the school

level’

(Marzano, 2003)

+ 58

School Culture

If we attempt to implement reforms but fail to engage

the culture of a school, nothing will change.

Sylvester Sarason

+ 59

Indicators of an Unhealthy School CultureLow performance is blamed on students

and parents

No connection is seen between teaching and learning

Underachievement is rationalized

Staff is unwilling to collaborate and is resistant to change

Little involvement with parents - especially parents of minority students

Discipline is punitive - not rooted in values