Monday, October 19, 2009

The Writer Within You


I was on http://www.teacherlingo.com/ and read so many incredible postings today. It then dawned on me how many teachers must be in the process of publishing books or thinking of publishing books with real classroom stories or fiction.

The October 2009 issue of Writer's Digest http://www.writersdigest.com/ has a good feature (in its print edition only for now, posted online down the road) entitled "First Impressions," where writers discuss their breakthrough novel or non-fiction book. I particularly like Stephen Jay Schwartz's response to SECRET TO SUCCESS:

There's no secret to success. Success cannot be defined by one single event. The secret is in loving the process. Writers have no choice but to write, so when they are writing they are a success.
Write on, Mr. Schwartz.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Who Is The Best Teacher You Ever Had?


This post is a reminder of how many lives you touch every day, every year!

I found this link (under the topic "HEROES") with several posts on Daryn Kagan's blog - she is the former CNN anchor who set out to provide inspiring news stories.



Sample posting:

I have had many fine teachers. I don't think I could pick just one. One thing I did findout in school was that when I liked the teacher I usually did very well. And when I didn't,I usually underperformed. I had one teacher at the University of Dayton that said I scoredthe highest out of anyone on his final. Then the next semester, in a related class, Istruggled just to pass. Good teachers have a way of inspiring us to want to learn.And I think they are one of the most underpaid professions.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Everyday Heroes


Make sure to check out New York Teacher, which features Everyday Teacher Heroes

This week - Master of the universe
He’s the Captain Kirk of public education, running a tight ship from the control console so kids in the school system can take a virtual trip through the solar system.


Astronomy teacher creates Murrow planetarium to beam light on science education

Friday, October 16, 2009

Teachers - Exaggerate to Illustrate!






Learning and retaining dense information isn’t all about laughter, though it helps. For class, I comb the internet each day for wacky law cases. After a while, I can sense which stuff gets the best laughs. Like a comic working in a club testing out new material, I constantly work on delivery, timing, and audience engagement. However, the use of exaggeration in a classroom or boardroom is not about telling jokes. In fact, I can recall telling only one joke in class:

“What’s the only thing worse than biting into an apple and finding a worm?”
“Finding half a worm!”
And that’s why I stay away from joke telling.

Exaggeration is the secret to effective learning. It requires me to plant a picture so implausible and outlandish in the learners’ minds, that they can’t help but remembering the concept. For example, I use this hypothetical to discuss the legal concept of self defense:

You: Well hello there, Mr. Limping Crazy Man wielding a lumberman’s
axe. Your blade looks mighty sharp and shiny, even from 100 yards away.
Him: Why yes, better to slice you to ribbons.
You: Hang on a second as I record this scenario on my video cell phone.
Him: Did they give you a rebate on that phone? Hey, by the way, my name
is Johnny. Heeeeeeeere’s Johnny!
You: Great. Come a step closer. And by the way, say hello to my little semiautomatic
friend!


Take Away: I believe that storytelling is a learnable skill, as demonstrated in the movie, Reservoir Dogs. In a few scenes, an undercover detective tirelessly trains a colleague on the fine art of spinning a tale. The key, he explains, is in remembering and exploiting the story’s rich details.

© 2009 Perry Binder, J.D. This passage contains excerpts from the book:
Unlocking Your Rubber Room: 44 Off-the-Wall Lessons to Lighten and Transform Everyday Life http://www.yourrubberroom.com/

Monday, October 12, 2009

Q&A on Teacher Participation in Social Media and Blogging


To Blog or not to Blog - Isn't that the question?


I sat down with Andy Payment, Director of New Media at William Mills Agency (and a superstar former student) and we discussed the following topic as it relates to companies - but there are clear analogies which may be drawn for Teacher/Employees:

Q&A on Employee Participation in Social Media and Blogging

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Characteristics of a Great Teacher



Best Answer, as Chosen by Yahoo Voters:
Respect, High Expectations and Humor


I like this one:

A good teacher likes and respects students, and loves teaching.A good teacher understands learning styles, different learning and student needs, curriculum scope and sequence, and their subject matter very well.A good teacher can inspire students to want to learn.Maybe I worked in more than three, but they are connected.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Computers Replacing Teachers?


The “typical 2030 faculty will likely be a collection of adjuncts alone in their apartments, using recycled syllabuses and administering multiple-choice tests from afar.”


"Colleges, like newspapers, will be torn apart by new ways of sharing information enabled by the Internet"


"Students starting school this year may be part of the last generation for which “going to college” means packing up, getting a dorm room and listening to tenured professors. Undergraduate education is on the verge of a radical reordering. Colleges, like newspapers, will be torn apart by new ways of sharing information enabled by the Internet."


The Washington Post ran this story by Zephyr Teachout that examined a shift already underway. http://education.zdnet.com/?p=3078

Relax profs. It's not going to happen. While I see a blended use of the internet on the rise in traditional universities, we're still a brick and mortar industry. Lecture halls, dorm rooms, and libraries are not going anywhere. At least not in this century?


Saturday, September 12, 2009

Teachers on Facebook - creepy or valuable tool?


Some students are recruiting professors for Facebook, prodding them to join and even creating fake profiles for them....


I use Facebook in class as a valuable learning tool about what NOT to have on a student page, as future employers may see it before hiring you!

Good article on the topic from a few years ago...
Professors find friends on facebook too

Some students are recruiting professors for Facebook, prodding them to join and even creating fake profiles for them.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Teacher has crazy idea


"I have a crazy idea": Those five words changed a simple meeting of school officials into the realization of Kim Ursetta's dream. ... "I want to start a new kind of school," she said, a union-sponsored public school led by teachers, not a principal.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Tweeting Teachers


From the Chronicle of Higher Education:

Professors Are Not Sold on Twitter's Usefulness
By Marc Beja
We’ve been told that college students aren't Twitter's primary audience – people under the age of 25 make up only a quarter of the service’s users. But are college professors driving up membership? Not really, a new survey from Faculty Focus shows.
According to
results of a survey released this week of more than 1,900 higher-education professionals, more than half say they have never used Twitter, 30 percent use it, and nearly 13 percent tried it but decided to abandon it.

I haven't used Twitter for class; however, I have seen effective use of Twitter by a professor teaching the value of social networking to Public Relations students in a School of Journalism. I'm honored to speak at their upcoming conference: http://www.grady.uga.edu/connect/