680 Course Reflection

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About 18 months ago, I started the Teaching with Technology endorsement program through the University of St. Francis. My first course was EEND 675: Foundations of Educational Technology. My final reflection today marks the last day of the last course in the endorsement sequence, EEND 680: 21st Century Educational Leadership, and my last hurrah in this program.

The ISTE standards have been the common thread throughout every course and each USF adjunct instructor has done a respectable job reminding course participants of their importance in education today. My goal is to continue to incorporate the student, teacher, and teacher-leader standards in my curriculum and be a resource in my school building.

Speaking of instructors...Michelle Nevin, Kristin Beeler, Scott Hagedorn, and Kim Darche were phenomenal leaders in their own right as they helped many of us along this path. I've also had the pleasure of meeting some great educators from all across the DuPage area who have participated in these courses with me. I've enjoyed the countless face-to-face and virtual encounters with many of you and have learned a great deal from your experiences.

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It's fitting that I end the program with this course because leadership has taken on a new meaning for me as I've progressed through the course sequence. Educational technology programs, applications, and platforms will continue to improve, and newer, better things will come along to enhance curriculum and guide student learning. Compared to 18 months ago, I can clearly see the importance of developing better digital citizens in my classroom, maintaining/modeling a positive and ethical presence online, and using technology to address the 4 Cs - communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and creativity. Part of my job as an educator is preparing 21st-century learners to be successful, contributing members of society.

I doubt I will every move into an administrative role as I'm quite happy being a science teacher, department head and ed tech leader in my building. I endeavor to redefine my leadership role and be a lifelong learner in fulfilling this quote by John Quincy Adams: "If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more, you are a leader."

680 Artifact Reflection #1

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Professional Development. It's a very interesting word.

A word that conjures this notion that information, discussion, and practice improves our profession.

Educational PD topics are broad and limitless; usually tied to school improvement goals, established by administrators, or (hopefully) shaped by teacher input. As I approach another school year, no doubt chockfull of PD opportunities, I reflect in this post about my opportunity to design a day of professional development and reflection.

In Module 6, I developed a full-day PD opportunity designed around the Edcamp model which
  • allows educators to take charge of their own PD and attend sessions that most pertain to their needs or goals
  • allows educators to collaboratively determine session topics
  • encourages educators to facilitate sessions by sharing experiences and conversations, not a planned presentation
Edcamps were “born” to include sessions about using technology in the classroom but don’t always; many times it’s related to general education topics.

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I’ve attended a few edcamps through conferences I’ve attended and was pleased by the overall outcome. I walked out feeling better educated on topics than if I had attended an individual conference session with one main presenter talking to me. Edcamps are hard to implement if the school climate isn’t receptive to this sort of idea. Some teachers are comfortable being told what to do and where to go. Those teachers sit through sessions and (usually) don’t pay attention but are perfectly content to waste a half-day sitting there. But, there are other colleagues I work with who would like to see more personalized PD that relate to topics in education or technology that we grapple with day after day, year after year. Why not experience PD together and be expert presenters together?

With these ideas in mind, I developed a professional development day for the CTE, Science and Math Departments at my school. The design of the agenda allowed for teacher choice, personal reflection, and small group work that would continue throughout the year during PLC meetings. I was pleased with the outcome and hope to present my ideas to the building administrators at my school.

680 Artifact Reflection #2

Robert Marzano said, “when professionals share their talents and skills, they help the whole school develop a collective wisdom.” Why is this the case? Because we are proud, hard-working teachers who collaborate in a school building with other talented professionals and we can all learn from each other and be the best teachers for our students. But how can we do this when we feel stuck in our classroom? The answer is a learning walk.

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I think it's important for teachers to have the opportunity to visit other teacher's classrooms. The walkthrough model allows for a short 5-15 minute visit in another teacher's classroom, and depending on bell schedules, a teacher could possibly visit 3 teachers in one period. As technology becomes more commonplace in the classroom, it's imperative that teachers acknowledge technology standards alongside their content standards to ensure that they are molding the brightest 21st-century digital citizens. The best way to see these standards being addressed is witnessing the skills being developed in our colleague's classrooms.

My first artifact comes from Module 3 where I created a Learning Walk Google form to record information during a classroom observation. Here is the form if you'd like to take a look. This new and improved form is a modification of one I have used in the past for science classroom observations. The original science form included the Next Generation Science Standards. The form created for Module 3 incorporated some of the ISTE standards. Content standards are just as important as technology standards, but I only chose a few ISTE substandards to be used in my form. If there are specific student or teacher outcomes related to technology, I can easily add or subtract ISTE standards to my Google form. This activity was fun to create and emphasized the importance of observing and learning from others to compare their practices with other knowledgeable professionals in the building.

Social Media in Schools

Social media can be an important teaching tool if used and implemented in the correct way. There are many apps out there labeled and marketed as social media; some that entice our students more than adults! Ultimately social media in education should be used to promote and communicate the learning process, activities, and products that students create to demonstrate their growth and learning.

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I use Twitter infrequently to communicate about my classroom and professional development as a teacher. I share my likes and passions as a teacher by tweeting and retweeting science-related things that I feel more people should know about. Twitter is beneficial in the way it conveys information succinctly by limiting characters in a tweet and getting right to the point. Twitter is also beneficial because it separates my personal life on Facebook from my professional life on Twitter. Students, parents, teachers, and administrators can follow me to see what’s happening in my class. In turn, other stakeholders outside my school community can learn about things in my class, just as I would seek out new ways of learning and doing from others.

Although I don’t seek out feedback on my Twitter feed, “likes” and retweets would be the best form of feedback. I have teacher friends, colleagues and administrators who follow my Twitter account but not as many students and parents follow me. At the beginning of last school year, I made an effort to communicate the fact I had a Twitter account to students and likewise to parents at open house and parent-teacher conferences. I think we’re on the cusp of parents using this as a means to glimpse their child’s school day.

Using technology with students in school has been a game-changer for me as an educator, but with it comes certain problems that I’ve learned to predict, model and reinforce with students over time. At our school, we use a program called Gaggle that informs the local police and administrators of any serious situations, suspicious pictures or words being communicated by our students while using school-issued Chromebooks or over the school’s network. Within our classrooms, teachers have the right to determine and interpret the “rights and wrongs” of technology use. In my opinion, it’s important for teachers to talk with students about the appropriate use of technology in their respective classrooms and determine fair and equitable consequences when expectations are not met. All students are expected to follow the general AUP guidelines, but teachers and students should have the autonomy to interpret those rules for their classroom.

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I can clearly remember who the bullies and mean girls were growing up. Back then hurtful words were written on notes and passed around in class or spoken in open areas at recess. Bullies have been around forever, but technology now gives them a whole new platform for their actions. Cyberbullying in the 21st century cannot be ignored. As a parent of two middle school children and a teacher of high school students, I’m fearfully aware of what potentially takes place online when students interact and communicate. Most teens have devices that keep them constantly connected to the Internet. Because having a phone usually means 24 hour access to the internet, those being bullied may find themselves unable to escape or avoid the negative attention that bullies give. Any kid that has access to a digital device (phone, computer, tablet, etc), is at risk. So although my youth experiences are much different than those of my two children and the students I teach, the use of technology to harass, threaten, embarrass, or target another person is still unacceptable.

Here are some signs I think might indicate cyberbullying based on what I’ve witnessed with students and their devices (their school-issued Chromebook and their personal phone) in my school:

  • a student seems distracted by their phone or upset after glancing at their phone screen
  • a student hides tabs on their Chromebook or acts secretive when I approach their desk/table
  • students who avoid class discussion and seem reserved or checked-out
  • skipping lunch or eating lunch with a smaller (trusted) group of students in a teacher’s room
  • student’s grades start to slide
  • feeling easily overwhelmed or angered

Just like trying to identify students with mental health issues like stress, anxiety and/or depression, however long-term or infrequent a teacher might see changes in a student, we should always take the precaution to check in with the student, their parent/guardian and notify a counselor immediately.

Introduction

Greetings! My name is Becky Schwartz. I teach Earth Science and, after a 7-year hiatus, Biology at Lisle High School and I also serve as the 6-12 Science Department Head for District 202. I have been a science teacher for 17 years. I received my B.S. in Biology from Northeastern Illinois University and received my M.A.T. from Dominican University. I also moderate the Ecology Club and National Honor Society.

I was born and raised in Chicago but live in the western suburbs. I have two kids, Liam (12) and Nora (9) and our dog Juno! My hobbies include hiking, biking, camping, reading, gardening, cooking, photography, and scrapbooking. I'm also an avid sports fan of many Chicagoland teams.

I have all but completed this educational technology endorsement program and will finish this summer with EEND 680. I teach in a 1:1 building and I'm looking to expand my repertoire of assessments, educational technology tools and use of multimedia for science.

STEM is a large part of our district's science curriculum, so incorporating and using technology is an integral, daily part of my lessons. I am very much a risk-taker when it comes to technology. I'm always looking to use new ideas in class and share technology success stories with my school colleagues. I get many ideas from colleagues on Twitter and email listserves. I'm looking forward to adding/enhancing my edtech repertoire and add to my PLN as I get to know all of you!