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Wednesday, December 7, 2016

ISTE Standard 4 Project & Reflection

 ISTE Standard 4 Project & Reflection


The poster below is designed to teach parents and children know about the importance of digital health and wellness. It was simplified so students at any grade level and parents are able to understand the meaning behind it.People don't want a large amount of information in front of them. The poster was also needed to be catchy and pleasing to look at. It had to have eye-catching visuals and only have the most important information for the people to know. The QR code at the end sends people to a website designed to help parents get more information on how to be proper digital citizens. If parents wanted more information on the physical and mental effects of the overuse of the internet than what I provided, then that QR code would given them more detailed info.




Sunday, December 4, 2016

EDTC: Extra Credit Blog Post

           Since I started teaching I have used the educational social media site, Edmodo.com. In it I had a place to post videos, extra worksheets, and assess my students using the program. What I also did was use its community capabilities. This has been very helpful when I needed answers for geometry project ideas and apps to use for my students. It has been helpful, but as other social media sites have now taken the place of edmodo, I see it may be starting to lose followers. I might look into other places like Twitter to their educational community boards so I can gain a broader area to gain information. Enclosed are screenshots of me working with other teachers in edmodo by helping each other with questions.









Accomplished Teaching: End of Course Reflection

From the beginning of the course I was a novice teacher with some leadership skills. I led a Geometry Professional Learning Community (PLC), collaborated heavily with others in my math department over baseline exams, awards, etc. However, I felt that I lacked the full traits of being considered “a leader”. Over the course of the quarter I will admit I was a bit scared going into this program due to a possibly extreme learning curve especially not being in the University Place School District (UPSD). I was thankfully surprised over the support I received over the time by the class facilitator, Angie Franklin, and the rest of the classmates. Based off of the standards I learned from Seattle Pacific University’s School of Education I felt I gained the most in:

Standard 2: Analyze learning to promote student growth.

Standard 4:  Engage in analysis of teaching and collaborative practices.

With my district’s Danielson Framework of TPEP I found that I did use most of what I was taught in my classroom already. The standards included were:

          1e: Designing Coherent Instructions

          4a: Reflecting on Teaching

          4d Participating in the Professional Community

          4e Growing and Developing Professionally


    During the course of the quarter I found that an accomplished teacher always reflects on their practices. They are ones that look back at their lessons, see how well it went, and how to alter their plans for the future. In this class I found that the reflective strategies have helped. Brookhart, S. M. (2016) pointed out that lessons that support higher-order learning are also likely to interest and engage students. So I focused my time reflecting on how I could structure my lessons to interest the students. During the first meeting with the rest of the UPSD cohort I found the coaching session to be quite useful. Working with Pat Perkins during the coaching session, I wanted him to focus the time on methods to engage my students and an area in which I struggled was questioning and discussion techniques. Hintz, A., Kazemi, E. (2014) pointed out that the goal of questioning and discussion techniques are what the teacher can listen for, ideas to pursue, and which to highlight in the lesson. His years of expertise helped shape my lesson on lesson 3.2, different types of angle pairs to promote discussion as well as making it relevant to students. While forming the lesson plan for me to teach, his knowledge of English pushed me to influence more vocabulary by incorporating different strategies into the lessons to benefit my students learning geometry.
    After taking what my coaching partner told me I taught my lesson to my students. The overall lesson went well, but I knew I could have done better. Before showing it to the cohort, I wrote down different ways I could have improved the lesson so the class could tell me if that component would have been a better choice  During the second cohort session I was placed with Conrado Julian, Vanessa Oh, and Cleo Hagen. We reviewed each other’s lessons and gave critiques. I was glad to have teachers who did not know me too well to examine my lesson and give me critiques with less of a bias. The overall experience was useful as they gave more ideas on how to alter my lessons to engage more students and more questioning techniques. York-Barr et a. (2006) found that in groups, more resources are available and the participants gain significant improvements with their colleagues.
From this class I can now consider myself a more accomplished teacher and closer to my goal of being a leader. As I continue my future lesson planning I will make sure to influence more lessons that will engage students. For example, at the end of this unit that I am teaching on Transformations, my Geometry PLC and I will be giving the students a project I designed, “Transformations Logo Project” as a way to demonstrate to my students how geometry is used in everyday life in a creative way. I will also keep pushing myself to look for more questioning and discussion techniques for my lessons. As I continue to pursue my goals I will continuously look back on this class as it has been beneficial to how I reflect on my instructional practices.






































Works Cited

Brookhart, S. M. (2016). Start With Higher-Order Thinking. Educational Leadership, 74(2), 10-15.

Hintz, A., Kazemi, E. (2014). Intentional Talk: How to Structure and Lead Productive Mathematical Discussions. Portland, ME: Stenhouse.

The Danielson Group. (2013). The Framework for Teaching Evaluation Instrument 2013 Edition. Princeton, NJ: Danielson, C.

York-Barr, J., Sommers, W.A., Ghere, G.S., & Montie, J. (2006). Reflective Practice to Improve Schools: An Action Guide for Educators.  Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

EDTC: Blog Post #5

ISTE Standard 5: Engage in Professional Growth and Leadership 

Teachers continuously improve their professional practice, model lifelong learning, and exhibit leadership in their school and professional community by promoting and demonstrating the effective use of digital tools and resources.

Question: How can I utilize technology to participate in digital learning communities and development so I can emulate what I learn into my Professional Learning Communities. 




Teachers are powerful people because they are ones that create the future of the world. For them to be the way that they are, teachers often collaborate with others to create a professional learning community  (PLC). They allow teachers to construct curriculum, design formative and summative assessments, as well as support each other. Teachers working together in PLCs make it easier to obtain the ultimate goal which is for student achievement. However, PLCs can only go so far. With the use of professional development (PD) it lets the teachers go outside of what they know by learning from professionals who would be able to help them gain more knowledge then bring it back to their fellow colleagues.

Now with the use of technology it makes it easier for the teachers to expand their knowledge in order to help their PLCs.  It is important for teachers to have that space to work with others. Nicholson et al. (2016) found that by creating a protected space where burdens could be castout to the group is beneficial so they can help them feel supported in navigating the hardships of their chosen profession. Although the PLCs can only go so far. Teachers have a limited amount of information to share with others in the group. Now it comes to the use of PDs. An SPU student, Michaela Clark found in her article that, PDs aimed to develop teachers’ capabilities by using instructional technologies in  order for a plethora of ways to benefit the teachers and students (Twining, P. et al., 2016 ). In these PDs it would allow teachers to practice different strategies and utilize them in hopes to demonstrate with other teachers.

A way to have productive virtual PDs is through The Mode Dimension Within the Computer Practice Framework. Twining, P. et al. (2016) found that teachers should be involved with finding ways to alter their pedagogy by ways to support learning objectives, extend the curriculum outside the textbook, and transform the content using technology. PDs that are focused on those areas lets the teacher expand their current knowledge of teaching so they can help students achieve.
From what I have learned from virtual PDs I found issues with bringing them to my PLC. The biggest issues are at with content blockers on district wifi. Some districts, including mine, have blocked access to wordpress, edmodo, and blogger like the ones in the hyperlinks provided. This can cause issues because if some strategies have videos to demonstrate its practice then it could not be shown during normal PLC locations which would be at school. Other issues are with time. My PLC can be a bit sporadic with some teachers not able to come to the PLC meeting times and others refusing. One solution is to send them the virtual PDs that I find and have them look at them at home prior to the PLC then come to the meeting with the information provided and use it to further our goal.

Another method to construct more solutions to bring to the PLCS is through the use of digital learning communities. In it there are places for teachers to post topics, communicate with one another, and find solutions to problems that other teachers may have asked. These can be located in different websites like edmodo.com and blog sites like wordpress.com as well as Blogger.com. Specifically blog sites like wordpress or blogger have a high benefits to newer teachers like myself. Anderson, J. et al. (n.d.) found, It is a place where teachers can blog about experiences and engages in practices that work in formation to form the new teacher’s identity. It has benefits for veteran teachers by giving ideas to  revamp their curriculum, look at different teaching strategies and creative formative assessments that can be used in the classroom. These types of uses have been especially beneficial to new teachers. In a study by Luik, P., & Taimalu, M. (2016).with new teachers found that in the group there were 85 participants who found that they grew immensely utilizing the blog capabilities. After looking through different blogs and other education type social medias I came across, ISTE’s post, “19 Education Twitter Chats Worth Your Time”. In it there were links to different education Twitter accounts that dealt with, general education, content specific, organization sponsored, and others like it. After looking through them I will now get a Twitter account so I can take advantage of all of the potential for me, and my PLC.



















Works Cited

Anderson, J., Justice, J., Gorham, J. J., Wall, S., Boyd, A., Nichols, K., & Alheieser, L. (n.d.). The Affordance Of Blogging On Establishing Communities Of Practice In A Pre-Service Elementary Teacher Education Program. Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 21(1), 49-88.
Luik, P., & Taimalu, M. (2016). Factors of Participants and Blogs that Predict Blogging Activeness During Teaching Practice and Induction Year. The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 17(1). doi:10.19173/irrodl.v17i1.2169
Nicholson, J., Capitelli, S., Richert, A. E., Bauer, A., & Bonetti, S. (2016, Winter). The Affordances of Using a Teacher Leadership Network to Support Leadership Development. Teacher Education Quarterly, 29-50.
Twining, P., Raffaghelli, J., Albion, P., & Knezek, D. (2013). Moving education into the digital age: The contribution of teachers' professional development. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 29(5), 426-437. doi:10.1111/jcal.12031