Archives for Teacher Development Reflections

Texting and Teachers Experimenting with Technology: 10 Resources

Part of the series: Teacher Development Reflections

Texting with refugeesIn a previous post, I mentioned how I was teaching refugees in Athens, Greece as part of my CELTA certification training. Luckily! I received my CELTA certification! Thanks again to my tutor, Marisa Constantinides. Marisa runs the CELTA center and encourages the educators taking the course to effectively integrate technology in their lesson plans.

For many educators, technology tools can be daunting. In my CELTA course, most of the educators were very new to technology. However, the teachers I worked with had a great attitude towards the technology. It isn’t that they embraced it with wide open arms. They recognized their time constraints. What I really admired is how many tried in their lessons to integrate different technologies when it wasn’t a requirement. They tried something new they admitted they feared. They were digital immigrants with very little technology experience in some cases, yet, they ventured forth and I admired them for their bravery.

Texting with Refugees

One example that really amazed me was when one of my colleagues taught our beginners how to create text messages in English. The topic was Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) which might seem tough to teach to our group of beginners. Our beginner group consisted of several refugee students who lacked reading and writing skills as well as English skills. They had struggles in their daily life with work, affording clothes, to eat, and so forth. Towards the end of the lesson, my colleague asked the students to raise their hands if they had a cellphone. Surprisingly, the majority did. I can only imagine that many people see cellphones as a staple.

Barriers That Chain Us to Our Comfort Zones

Sometimes, I think we imagine the barriers that prevent us from trying innovative practices are much bigger than they really are. During #EDChat, many educators often say they don’t try using technology due to equal access. Unfortunately, every student in the world will never have every resource we want to use. Schools just don’t work that way. The teacher in this case didn’t worry about the students not having the technology. Instead, she encouraged them to share resources. We worked with refugees who hardly have shelter and food but they shared the resources and enjoyed the lesson. When the teacher asked them if they owned computers at home, some replied they access the Internet at cafes. I think that many learners in the world do access the Internet at cafes, public libraries, or community centers. Lack of resources should never be an excuse when students can learn to collaborate and share the resources they do have. In my class of 10 we often share technology. We share one Iphone, one Macbook, and a few audio recording devices. The children learn how to collaborate and I have learned how to manage a small amount of resources. Each one has a role and I love having stations where they can use the various technology at the same time and I facilitate the learning. We don’t need 10 separate computers or Iphones. I think we should keep trying to find ways to implement the effective use of technology. We can all gain access to a few computers for students to share. Most students want to bring their laptops, smartphones, Ipods, and cellphones to school. We can all assign them roles and teach them how to collaborate and problem solve in groups using the technology.

Why Teach with ICTs?

Our students already enter a workforce in which they receive ICTs (Information and Communication Technologies) to communicate with colleagues worldwide, yet many never have been trained to do this effectively. This will become more necessary in the future and we cannot prevent or change this. Change and the continuous advances in this technology revolution are constants. We may long for technologies of the past or a world of the past, but we cannot teach our students to live in this world we want. I hear from adults daily that text messaging ruins students writing or how students should play outside more instead of being on the computer or stuck to their video games. Yes, we can make our students aware of this but not teaching them how to effectively use the tools of their world means we aren’t doing our job. We aren’t preparing them for their world. We have to teach students to live in the world they will need to make responsible decisions.

I think many of the problems with the world are because schools don’t teach these important skills. They are stuck in teaching effective bubble test marking but when do we teach students about digital citizenship, ethics, collaborating worldwide, and applying their learning to finding worldwide solutions? We have wars due to the lack of ineffective communication worldwide. We have countries who treat immigrants and foreigners terribly because students hardly ever communicate with students worldwide. We have problems agreeing on an effective worldwide policy to save the environment because our world leaders cannot agree. Without this collaboration in schools, students continue to hold their stereotypes and misconceptions of others. We are raising students worldwide who only care about their own problems and are stuck in their own microcosms. They hold steadfastly to their beliefs and can’t understand another culture’s beliefs, religion, traditions, or way of life. They won’t even tolerate them. Do we really want to continue to be part of this problem or do we want to be part of the solution?

10 Texting Resources

  • Watch the video, which prevents both sides of the argument for students using cellphones in schools. Most students have cellphones so we can begin helping students collaborate and communicate with them. Here are a few more resources to help you along the way:

Challenge:

Find a way to get your students using ICTs to collaborate and problem solve!

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Educating is About Passion, Let Us be Your Green Dots!

Recently, Scott Mcleod, blogged a very thought-provoking post, Are We Edubloggers too Harsh on Our Kids’ Teachers?

My initial thoughts….

As a teacher, I remember throughout my career parents who griped at me about something I didn’t do to their standards. It’s part of the job and I believe this will continue to happen throughout my career. Just the other day a great educator tweeted a parent withdrew his son from his class because he used technology. How many of us get the third degree from parents, administrators, and other teachers for using technology in our curriculum? I bet many of us, because not all are on board and they have their presumptions. Dealing with parents is part of our job. The way I take it is that I rather have parents who care so much to be involved in their child’s education than not at all.

I think we should expect educators and administrators to prepare students for their future successfully. They don’t necessarily have to use web 2.0 tools, but the majority of the curriculum shouldn’t be students completing worksheets, buried in a textbook for hours, or filling out and being prepared for bubble tests. I want my child’s teacher to inspire a passion for continuously learning or to nurture my child’s curiosity. I don’t want my child to hate or be bored with learning. I don’t want my child to be conditioned to think there is only one correct answer to a question, accept rules that have never been explained or else, or to be brainwashed into believing that achievement in life is measured by how well they perform on tests that measure how well you perform lower-level skills and not creativity.

It’s not about the technology….

I’ve seen teachers motivate students to learn without much technology and I applaud them for being passionate and motivating students. What is important is if the child is engaged, problem-solving, and learning how to collaborate with their peers. Yes, I would want the educators who I communicate with on Twitter, Facebook, through this blog, and other online tools to teach my child not because you use technology or know what I mean when I write Glogster, Wikis, Voicethread, Web 2.0, avatar….

I would want you to teach my child, because…

  • you’re passionate about educating and motivating your students
  • you engage in professional development almost daily
  • you love to learn from other educators
  • you love to be inspired and inspire others
  • you collaborate with educators worldwide and get your students to collaborate with their students

I don’t know why we expect parents to stay silent when it comes to their own children, especially if they are also educators. Educators are preparing children to be future CEOs, engineers, politicians, teachers, and more. Being an educator is a serious calling and if we treat it like less then we don’t give it that respect.

Being a green dot….

I’m not advocating that educators in our Personal Learning Networks (PLN) should tell teachers their instructional practices are crap. Instead, I like Kelly Tenkely’s recent post, Be the Green Dot, which was inspired by this incredible post by Seth Godin, How Big is Your Red Zone?. Seth Godin and Kelly illustrate 3 graphs which I have embedded below. These graphs show how teachers not in our PLN react to learning about the innovative practices we are exposed to often by having ongoing professional development from our peers. A majority of educators do not participate in online educator communities so they experience an initial frustration when we share with them resources, links, blog posts, and tools (see the red graph). However, these educators do eventually experience joy (see the blue graph) when they get the hang of it and discover effective ways to engage students. The red zone in the last graph shows the gap between the initial hassle and the joy. This is the critical period when educators are resistant to us sharing with them the innovative practices we are exposed to daily. They believe we are hassling them and often make this very clear in their behavior toward us.

So how do we get these educators to the point where they feel joy about learning about these innovative practices?

Seth Godin writes in his blog:

My contention is that the only reason we ever get through that gap is that someone on the other side (the little green circle) is rooting us on, or telling us stories of how great it is on the other side. The bigger your red zone, the louder your green dot needs to be. Every successful product or passion is either easy to get started on or comes with a built-in motivator to keep you moving until you’re in. This is so easy to overlook, because of course you’re already in…

That green dot is you and me! Our PLN are the green dots that need to be loud with our motivation!

A final thought….

Yes, we should definitely share with teachers, administrators, and staff resources to help them with their professional development and have them become part of the conversation. We should root them on when they try new things and encourage to persist, eventually, they will learn and they will be better educators for the development. No, we shouldn’t be silent. We are preparing children to someday be in charge of their world! A caring parent’s role is to ensure his/her child is prepared to take the reigns armed with the creativity, imagination, tenacity to search for solutions, and collaborative skills needed.

Challenge:

Let’s be green dots and motivate loudly with passion and share resources with those not in our PLN.

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What are your ideas and resources on motivating educators who do not participate in educator communities (PLNs)?

Learning to be a Better Educator

Part of the series: Teacher Development Reflections

I should be putting the finishing touches on my lesson that I’m teaching tomorrow but I wanted to pause and reflect on my new August teaching post in Athens, Greece. I believe teachers are better educators when they reflect on their learning and for this month I’m learning so much as I work towards receiving my CELTA. A CELTA is the most sought after qualification for teaching English abroad. I quickly learned this when I moved to Germany 3 years ago and searched for teaching jobs worldwide having my Masters in ESL. The teaching positions I wanted required a CELTA.

I decided to study with my friend, Marisa Constantinides, who is an incredible teacher trainer and runs a teacher training center in Athens, Greece. I believe teachers should continually reflect on their experiences so I will be blogging about what I am learning from having such an experienced and creative tutor but in this post I want to tell you about my students.

What I’m Learning From My Students

Completing the CELTA requires observed teaching practice with students. For the past 4 years, Marisa has offered free English lessons to refugees. The refugees come from several countries, such as Sudan, Somalia, Algeria, Russia, Afghanistan, Bulgaria, and so forth. They come with very little reading and writing skills. Teaching them English is a challenge, because we also teach them literacy skills. My students have never really been taught to search for context clues, use a dictionary, listen for key words, and so forth. They struggle with basic skills, yet they come everyday for 3 hours a day. They listen, write what they can, challenge themselves, follow instructions, participate in every game, and applaud each teacher after every lesson.

Empathizing with my Students

Teaching them is a gift! Everyday I get to teach them I feel I am the fortunate one. I have never worked with refugees before and they have taken my teaching to a new level. Part of teaching is trying to find materials my students identify with and comprehend. This means understanding my students and getting to know them. I do this with every student I have taught because I believe this increases motivation. I quickly realized that I know very little about their struggles. I will never know what it is like to have grown up surrounded by war and atrocities. I will never know what it is like to survive, have to leave my home for a better life, then learn basic skills as an adult.

Questioning Coursebook Content

When searching for materials and designing my lessons I continually have them and their experiences in mind. Leafing through several coursebooks I often find that most of the materials aren’t easy for my students to identify with and I have to adapt them. This doesn’t always result in success. For example, there was a paragraph describing the life of Catherine Zeta Jones that I decided to change to David Beckham. The reading focused on a British person living in Hollywood and I knew my students loved playing football (soccer). My writing was a bit above their level but I can say they enjoyed hearing about David Beckham. I’m still learning. I have to note, however, that the coursebooks are helping me identify the grammar progression and I’m thankful for the framework they are giving me.

Giant Leaps

I have never cared so much about my students achieving every objective. I guess it is because I realize if they don’t achieve the objective this may impact their lives. They may not be able to do better in their jobs, get something they need, or communicate effectively. My students continuously awe me. Many of my lessons are far from picture perfect, but I did have one incredible lesson recently. My students were doing a listening exercise and I asked them what key words they would listen for, since Marisa had told our class earlier how much we needed to integrate literacy skills into our lessons. It worked. The students after a bit were able to come up with the keywords on their own, because I didn’t tell them. I waited till they told me. Each of them, even the one who struggles the most with writing words, was able to complete their listening questionnaire. In fact, he got every answer correct! In the past, this student hadn’t really completed any handouts because he couldn’t. This time he understood! For me, this was a golden moment in my teaching I will always carry. We need these moments to spur us to be this passionate with all our students.

What My Day Looks Like!

Here’s a video created by Marisa that shows some of the students, previous teachers, and the center. Enjoy!

Challenge:

Try adapting course content to motivate student interest. It’ll force you to think about their situations and build rapport.

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