Friday, April 24, 2009

"A Random Walk through the Forest" an evening with Dr. Christopher





We here at Teacher Talk must say that this show was rather informative and would encourage everyone to purchase this book. Dr. Christopher has taken the time to record the history of education in Bermuda, the book places it all in context as he shows what was going on in the cummunity, and how that helped to shape the events that forged new pathways in education. This is truly a book that is a must for every library, and will be an important read for generations to come. Make sure you purchase this book!!

Monday, April 20, 2009

A place at the table- Not ready for the rocking chair

Here's a finding worth mulling over:

At the end of their careers, accomplished veterans who still have much to contribute are being separated from their schools by obsolete retirement systems.

I’m one of those highly accomplished Baby Boomer teachers. I love working with my students. I love working with new teachers. I love working with colleagues in staff development. I love writing and researching. I love being a keeper of institutional knowledge for my school and my school system. I love developing my professional skills with experiences such as the Santa Cruz mentor training. My own children are grown, my personal life is in order, my professional network is strong, my knowledge is current, and my skills are refined by practice. I’m not ready to quit. I’m ready to do more.
I'm ready to take on new challenges, but I find that there are few options at this point in my career. Those of us who chose to stay in the classroom in our 30s are now expected to stay in our classrooms in our 50s. But by limiting how we are used, school systems fail to realize the full return on their investment in skilled classroom practitioners.


...It is a faulty and costly assumption to allow accomplished veterans, who have been the beneficiaries of a substantial, long‐term professional development investment, to walk away from their careers just because they are in their fifties. We must develop selection criteria and processes that enable veteran teachers to contribute to schools according to their expertise and level of commitment.


What do you think? Post your thoughts.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Discussion Questions for Chapter 1




We would like to thank you for joining us on this venture. Here are the discussion questions for Chapter 1. Please feel free to post your thoughts.

1. Why do you feel Dr. Ladson-Billings felt it necessary to entitle the Chapter – A dream Deferred? Give evidence to support.
2. Interpret the 5 vignettes used in the chapter to address cultural relevant teaching.
3. What are differences between educating whites versus educating blacks. In order for our students to receive a quality education, do they need to attend private schools? Why or why not?
4. How are teaching practices (how we teach/ the way we teach) different from curriculum (what we teach)? Is having a new curriculum going to improve teaching and learning practices? Why/why not?
5. What can teachers take from this chapter, to take steps to empower themselves and make a difference in their classrooms?


Here you go- post your thoughts, we can't wait to see what your groups have discussed.

Celebrate our Students



This past show featured our young scholars and what they are up to. We had Mr. Wendell "Shine" Hayward on to talk about the wonderful Spring into the Arts event that has just started and features talent from both public and private schools. In case you haven't seen it yet, you must check it out this week. It starts at 7 at the Ruth Seaton James Performing arts Center, you will not be disappointed as you bare witness to the best in amateur talent that this island has to offer. We also featured three people from the Berkeley Institute who were talking about their upcoming student conference, and event designed by the students, for the students, designed to address the issues that they want to know about. Kudos to them!! Then we had Mr. Harris and Mr. Virgil fro the Educational Center who shared their heartwarming experiences about their trip to Ghana, West Africa. Mr. Harris, personifies the statement- "The audacity of hope" as he is doing everything that he can do to reach his students, planting the seeds that will hopefully take root. Click here to listen to the show.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Try something new in your class, encorporate technology. Want to hook all of your students? Take the battle to their ground, use what they know best to reach them. Here is what a school is trying:


DAVIE - The fourth-graders sit in clusters in a darkened classroom at Nova Blanche Forman Elementary School, headphones over their ears and pencils in hands, jotting notes into science journals as they watch a report on the sun's layers play on iPods.

Down the hall, a class of third-graders watches a podcast on iPods to help them solve math problems. And in another classroom, first-graders read books and create their own video book reviews for their classmates to watch.

At this elementary school, iPods are more than just trendy devices for listening to music or watching movies. They help give classroom lessons, facilitate parent-teacher conferences, serve as teacher-training tools and deliver messages from the principal.

Students still get traditional drills from teachers and textbooks, but the iPods are a regular part of the curriculum.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

What do you think? Try it, you just might hook them.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Using cell phones in class? Well what?!?!?

In less than an hour, the Mary Passage Middle School students worked their way through more than 70 questions for a semester exam review, with every eighth-grader participating in a drill that looked more like a game show than a quiz.

"They only get one crack at it so they have to make sure they are right," said Neeley.

Cell phones, considered a nuisance or worse in many schools, are welcome at Passage. At least eight teachers are using them for a range of lessons, from reports to quizzes in English, social studies, science and math classes.

Principal Kipp Rogers is the man behind the move. Rogers teaches a math class in addition to his administration duties.

Last year the school ran out of calculators needed for a math exam, so he let a student use the calculator function on his cell phone. The student was excited to use a phone instead of a calculator. He found 19 of his 22 students had phones, a finding that squared with a 2008 Harris Interactive research study reporting four out of five teenagers carry cell phones.

But Rogers was aware of the potential for trouble, from students sending messages to each other during class to cheating or taking inappropriate photos and sharing them, an activity known as "sexting."

Click here for the rest of the article.

What do you think?

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Why will they miss you?

If for whatever reason, you were not able to teach tomorrow, or next month, or next school year, would you be missed? The bigger question is, why would you be missed? Would you be missed simply because you were a fixture, having been in the same classroom, or at the same school for a looooong time? Or, would you be missed as you were an enzyme for change, you encouraged collaboration amongst your colleagues, you sought to use innovative methods to present your material, or you stood for what was right, no matter if it went against the popular opinion, namely, your chances of upward mobility may have been hindered by you simply expressing, even in a respectful way, what was right?

Why would you be missed? Think about it. If necessary, set your sails now, set a new and positive course, its never too late to change.