Showing posts with label #teacherpreneur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #teacherpreneur. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2015

The Learning Never Stops

We can't say it enough. Our teachers here at Iowa Learning Online are amazing, talented individuals who are able to adapt, encourage, have fun, allow student voice.Thank you, thank you, thank you. #ThankATeacher 

Chat it up with other teachers for a special Teacher Appreciation chat tomorrow. #ThankATeacher on #CTQchat will celebrate on 5/5 at 6:30, or just tag a tweet with #TeachingIs and tell your story.

photo credit: summer love via (CC license)


Ready for Summer?  (What a dumb question.  ;P )

As our Spring semester winds down for Iowa Learning Online, we know that brick-and-mortar buildings are staying busy for a few more weeks. Good luck in those efforts. Many of you have summer teaching options with the organization, others have coaching responsibilities, and we all have people that matter to us.  As you take some time to relax, reflect and unwind, remember that learning is a never-ending process, as long as you want it to be.  Here are some easy ideas to get your started.

Collaborate with the Zoo Blank Park Zoo has several workshops that include cross-connections to other subjects, collaboration with other cool teachers in the state, and re-certification credit.  Check it out.

Spin a webinar or two into your learning mix, or listen to a recorded version as you are grading and latch onto some new ideas.  Edweb.net and Teacher Talk are just two of the many places that focus on online teaching and learning each month.  

What's fun for you may not be another's cup of tea, but there are learning opportunities galore out there for the summer.  The possibilities are endless, but make sure you take some time for some plain old crazy laughter.


Becoming a connected educator is a journey, so take a little time to search all the reflective resources and blogs found at ConnectedEducators.org to find something that clicks with your interests.

Your learning, your way.  Across the state, Iowa AEAs offer summer courses, conferences, and even online professional development tailored to your busy summer lifestyle.  If there's not a course that meets your needs locally, check an adjoining AEA and travel for a new summer experience.

Cultivate your passion.  Whether it's travel, community painting classes, Coursera courses for fun, swimming or reading a novel, we know that teachers squeeze living around conferences and classes that have been scheduled for months.  Summer is not down time--it's a turnaround time for new options, new dreams, and new ways to work with kids.  





ILO Teachers, let us be a part of it.  Iowa Learning Online teachers, the regular summer workshop for Iowa Learning Online is already scheduled for July 28 on-site at the Department of Education in Des Moines, so make sure to save that date on your calendar.  We'll be excited to hear your stories. 




Friday, October 10, 2014

Observations from a Group of New Leaders

Who are these stick figure people?

What part of this should I focus on?

 Is an instructional coach a teacher, an administrator, both or neither?  Yes.

Lead from the middle: What's an Oreo without the creme filling ? 

No capes!  (Why not?)

We don't have all the answers, do we?

Is it all is focused on context?

Is there something in this for me?  What should I focus upon?

 

 

 

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Collaboration: From Me to We



The Iowa Teaching Leadership and Compensation symposium took place on 8/4/2014 at DMACC in Ankeny.  It really was an amazing experience, with more than 500 people in attendance, talking about collaboration, teacher preparation, and re-imagining schools.

The Honorable @TerryBranstad and the Lieutenant Governor, @KimReynolds, as well as Department of Education leadership showed their commitment to the process by spending the entire day, listening to noted speakers talk about a shift in schools.

The state has taken its first steps to re-imagining education, with 39 districts already funded, and a large funding pot to come over the next three years.  In the morning, speakers like Vivien Stewart and EE Ling spoke about transformation in other countries; the afternoon showcased some #stuvoice, teacher, and principal panel discussions.  A final session with Barnett Barry from the Center for Teaching Quality reimagined what Iowa would look like if one-of-four teachers becoming a teacher leader. Tweets throughout the day provided a variety of perspectives and Scott McLeod curated an excellent synthesis of the resources shared. 
 


Over and over, we heard words like leadership, but by far the biggest word out there was simply:

Collaboration

The word echoed through my brain during the day, and later as well.   
More collaboration time.

But that's a truly hyped word.  WHO needs more collaboration? WHAT will they do with it?  That's where it gets sticky.  Because it has to go beyond department meetings.  It has to result in teams that know that they depend on one another. That's a two way street, and it requires a special type of transformational leadership.  It is also fraught with some strong challenges.



Challenge #1:  Teams are not built on superstars.  Win as a team, play as a team, lose as a team.  That means that the coach generally has some authority, but that comes from the respect of the players, not the operational definition of a title. I often wonder if teachers realize that they are a sleeping giant; with ten times the number of  teachers as there are administrators in the country, what happens when teachers collectively demand change and opportunity to lead without leaving their classrooms? Administrators sharing leadership create win-win solutions that allow teachers that desire nontraditional leadership while still staying in the classroom to do so.



Challenge #2: Changing our beliefs about time. As a partially online teacher for the last four years, my paradigm has shifted.  I no longer believe that teaching is a job or an 8-4 passion or even that I am the only one who can teach students; neither do I believe you can make analogous statements about administrators.  It really is a vocation, a profession, a mindset.  As a result, the answer is not to say,  "Teachers cannot lead.  They are a teacher 100% of the time" any more than saying,  "Administrators must lead.  They are an administrator 100% of the time."  We all juggle some of these multiple roles constantly, with no break:  serving as parents, community stakeholders, caretaker, board member.  Teachers and principals and superintendents often work sixty hours or more when school is in session, melding work and life together.

Challenge #3:  Shifting boundaries. What if administrators surveyed their to-do lists, collaboratively matching and asking for help with those tasks meshing with the passions of staff members (as well as their certifications and licensure)?  What if that time that Adam Hartung calls 'white space' was really carved out as a way for improvement and innovation to occur?  What if, as he says, there were opportunities for blurred or flattened leadership, where multiple individuals attended conferences and the administrators could get back into the places where they used to teach?  The alternative often involves ego or what Dan Heath cautions against in his WRAP decision-making process,  where talented people are boxed in, labeled problematic, and isolated from leadership based on emotional factors, including a challenge to the status quo.  


Challenge #4:  Transparency and Shifting Roles.  Teacher leadership, or perhaps starfish leadership,  will have to go two ways:  from the bottom up, as well as from the top down, to become nimble and flexible enough to radically change the ideas.  That's doesn't seem transparent, but it is, in the same way clear water lets us see the entire depth of a still pool.  What happens in interactions among staff members, stakeholders, administrators, and students spreads out in ripples, undercurrents, and ideas.  And so the districts that succeed in this opportunity will know that muddying water obscures the starfish, and trust comes from listening and remembering that we might not have all the answers.. 
               


                            

Collaboration: From Intent to Practice

It appears that many things need to be present to shift a system from one that has followed us through the industrial model to something new.  One thing all of them will have is ever-increasing collaboration.

Current PLCs are the starting point of leadership to something else, but it will vary.  District DNA and culture, of course, give us multiple pathways, including the pilots for TAP in VanMeter and Central Decatur, teacherpowered schools, efforts by ISEA to inspire and develop new leaders, or applications of flex time and online courses.

One thing seems clear, though: we know what doesn't work:  the current system.

Capacity building opportunities across the state will need the creativity of all to carve out these types of positions, and to go beyond the current method of  100% teaching responsibilities.

There must be teacherpreneur stories across Iowa waiting to be curated; I'm excited by the possibilities of looking for them and showcase how they are invented in Iowa.  After all, I was inspired by the vision set forth on Monday's conference:



.