What if teachers regularly shared their best teaching day ever to a global audience?
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Amanda Bingham - Can't believe I'm getting paid for this!
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
Ann Sielaff
Ann Sielaff
Third Grade Teacher
That day, I gave my kids voice. They filled out a simple survey. It was a survey of “What would you change”, “How do you like our classroom?” type questions. But that day led to a paradigm change for me. My classroom is about the students, not about me. It’s about growth for us all. Not that it wasn’t before, but I’m not sure it was. And this learning, from these professionals around the globe has led to places and activities I would never have imagined.
Thursday, March 23, 2017
The Future is Near
Carlos Perez
Middle School Math Teacher
Sarah Coleman My Best Teaching Day Ever
Picking my best teaching day ever is surprisingly difficult. I think this is because every day that I have been a teacher, I have loved what I do. Every day I leave my job with some anecdote that makes me smile or laugh. This isn’t to say that my job is consistently sunshine and roses. I teach at an alternative high school, so there also isn’t a day that I don’t leave in near tears because of another difficult life struggle that one of my student’s is facing. That being said, my best day teaching ever was earlier this year at Sun Valley High School. I was teaching a unit on American Women’s History and I had my class doing a PearDeck I created on some basic background information on important women and events in history. Through PearDeck, I was able to insert videos after each woman/event in order to give students a more interesting background while they took notes. I also inserted a Blendspace so that they could further research women’s suffrage. I have been teaching this class for years, and have never seen such engagement and interest. As students became involved, I added some discussion questions, and even encouraged students to stop and Google for additional information on various topics. This lesson was early in the course (2nd day) and through PearDeck, I was able to get so much information about each student, that by the end of class I knew everyone’s name and their interests. Also by the end of class, each student had chosen a topic for their first essay, and they were actually excited to begin their research. The end of the PearDeck included questions where they told me what they found most interesting about the lesson, and also gave them an opportunity to tell me what they would like to learn about in this class. This provided me with the feedback I needed to modify my course to their interests. That day was the beginning of the best class I have ever taught. 95% of the students passed with nothing lower than a C+, and the discussions, cooperative learning, and engagement that occurred was better than I have ever had.
Saturday, March 11, 2017
AnnaEiban
Saturday, February 25, 2017
My best teaching day wasn't a day at all...
My best teaching day wasn’t actually a teaching day, but it was certainly my best day as a teacher. After 24 years of teaching elementary school, in the same school where I did my student teaching, I reconnected with a former student on Facebook. Jessica had been in my first class ever, a sweet fifth grader who had Grand Canyon dimples. I was thrilled to get her friend request and added her immediate. We arranged a lunch date and got together a couple of weeks later.
It turns out that Jessica had graduated from our local high school and completed a masters in psychology. She is currently a living donor counselor at a world-class hospital, working with patients who are donating kidneys to family as well as strangers. Oh, boy, was I so proud to hear this. I know that she had so many more teachers besides me, but I still feel like this was my doing.
Jess was one of those students I kept in touch with through middle school and high school. I attended her clarinet recitals and even her quincaƱera. Her parents celebrated their nuptial mass (having been civilly married in Mexico) and I was lucky enough to celebrate with them.
When we got together for lunch at La Scala in Beverly Hills, we had the best long talk. She asked me how I had seen her when she was a student. I told her that she was one of my smarties, and that I knew she was destined for great things. She told me that it was hard to believe, because she’d had such a poor self-image when she was a child because she was a recent immigrant from Mexico, and didn’t start school in the US until she was in the third grade. When she was in my class, she told me that she felt so stupid because she wasn’t fluent in English. I told her that she was very good at hiding her insecurities, that I thought she was just shy.
Those recitals I attended 22-23 years ago made such an impression on a sensitive little girl. What she didn’t know was that I was feeling so burned out, and had lost so much of the passion I once had for teaching as a profession. Hearing her words brought back so many positive memories, and rekindled the fire.So my best teaching day wasn't just a day at all. It was my career.
Saturday, February 4, 2017
Measurement
Mark Ybarra
SPED - RSP
FCSS - VHEA Community School
I was thinking of a lesson I could co-teach with the math teacher. I decided to present a real-world environment that included using tape measures, a yardstick, and a rolling measurement wheel.
I started by taking a Google Maps screen capture of our school, and shared it with the students. To access prior knowledge, I asked students to name as many shapes as they could find - i.e. rectangles, squares, circles, triangles, etc.
I told students we were going to measure the school, starting with the basketball court, and ending with the block our school is located on. The students were told they would annotate the dimensions on the Google Maps picture. The students would work in teams.
So the students would know how to measure using a tape measure, I included a YouTube video, on how to use a measuring tape.With the dimensions recorded of a basketball court, we continued and found perimeter, area, circle area, radius, etc.
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