Thursday, August 25, 2016

Planting the Seed



Tricia & Kaela
We are soul mates, best friends, inseparable companions, twins by heart and sisters by blood.  Most people who meet us for the first time assume I (Kaela) am the oldest because of my slightly “louder” presence.  In truth, Tricia is the older sister by a brief 13 months.  Our sharing started at a very young age and the fact that we work better together has always been intuitive.  Throughout life we’ve been able to communicate in a manner where completing one another’s thoughts is routine and many times no words are exchanged, yet we know what the other is thinking.  In college we had an idea.  We wanted to share a teaching job and help each other raise our children.  At the time we had no idea how this would happen, we just planted the seed and believed our dream would come to fruition.


1-11 Cousins
The writing was on the wall when Tricia left a district only to land a job in my district.  Two years later, with support from administration in Edina Public Schools, we were granted a job share.  We work at a middle school in Edina, MN.  Our schedule has been a dream as far as a job share is concerned.  We teach 9th grade English every other day.  When we aren’t teaching we run a family daycare.  In 2008 we started with five children at daycare.  My brother and his wife are teachers also.  My sister-in-law watched the babies in the family as she worked on her degree.  When she completed her schooling we took over the daycare and finally watched the seed we planted several years earlier bloom.  All in all there are 11 children between the three of us.  Over the years we have been able to love and adore this beautiful bunch of cousins, while we pursued our passion in our professional lives to educate youth and make an impact on today's learners.


For years we called our learners “students” but our motto has changed.  Four years ago our district eliminated levels in 9th and 10th grade English.  The leaders of this change felt each and every student should have access to rigor and as professionals we should be able to educate ALL our learners regardless of a “course label”.  Thus began our first steps on an enlightening path to understand personalized learning.  Our hope is that other teachers can be inspired and energized by reading about our journey.  As we started to re-write our course, and in reality our personal philosophies in education, we encountered many challenges.  An innate fear of change and intimidation from people who simply didn’t understand our intent could have hindered us.  But neither did because from day one we have practiced a Growth Mindset. Now we move forward in our work feeling empowered by a mindset that is frankly contagious and unstoppable.  

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English Teaching Siblings
Our Family Daycare Cousins


Rethinking our Space




With our commitment to personal learning we will continue to analyze our space and ask ourselves, “How does the space reflect the experience we want learners to have?” 

One of the most exhausting parts of going back to school is agonizing over getting one's classroom ready.  In the last few years we have been rethinking our classroom to make the space reflect the experience we want learners to have and it has proven to be less stressful.   


First, we got rid of our oversized, heavy, teacher desk and filing cabinets. We replaced the traditional teacher desk with a circular table that would allow for conferencing with small groups of students. Next, we got rid of our “traditional student” desks (that haven't changed that much since the 1800's) and replaced them with tables and chairs.  We would have loved to do a combination of high desk tables, "Node Chairs", and other innovative classroom furniture but it was not in the budget.  We were happy to settle for tables with wheels and chairs that allow for many variations of collaborative groups.  


Think of Walls as Canvas for Learning


"I notice...wonder...what if"
Canvas Wall
Last year we reconsidered our wall space and bulletin boards, after hearing and reading more about personalized learning.  Pernille Ripp talks about classrooms being cognitively distracting, affirming our thinking that less is more.  The book, The Third Teacher, gave us the idea to think of walls as a canvas.  As a result, we removed a bulletin board and some posters from an entire wall so that space became a canvas for learners to draft, question, collaborate, brainstorm, share, draw or whatever else the learning lends itself toward.  We still kept our "ideal self" tree and the signature board our learners sign after drafting class norms to create our class culture(see pics below).  And while we keep a photo of our families by our computer, we want the learners to see the class is a collective space for all and not just Mrs. Loo's/Mrs. Pettis' classroom, so we keep our knick-knacks at home. 

Once The Year Got Started


Another freeing aspect of personalized learning was getting rid of seating charts.  Allowing for learners to sit where they choose encourages natural collaboration.  If a learner struggles with focusing in their chosen seat, we step in as teachers and help them monitor their choices to ensure learning.  Each day we set up the tables so they are conducive to the day's learning targets.  Most days, our tables are set up in sections that included teacher seminar (half circle at the front for direct instruction), collaborative groups (grouped in pods), and tables lined along the wall for independent work.  During formative work time, learners would choose to sit in the section that allowed them to access and engage with the information at hand. 








Kristin Hogan, a personalized learning coach at Westside in Omaha, Nebraska, poses the following question and suggested layouts.  The possibilities are numerous even without fancy furniture. 
 


Kristin was a Math teacher before she became a coach.  In her classroom she had the desks set up in pods, numbered with a dry erase markers.  Learners would move about the pods based on learning targets for the day.  It also allowed for some pods to be working collaboratively, independently or with the teacher. 




For each unit the essential question in posted on this board.
     
Learner's answers to our first essential question on "Growth Mindset"
Funky Team Signature Board

Learners add signatures after drafting class norms together.
Our "Ideal Self" Tree Bulletin Board
Learners wrote growth mindset quotes to make leaves for our "Ideal Self" tree

Part of our Learner Profile for goal setting




 
   





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