Super Teacher's Job is Never Done!

Super Teacher's Job is Never Done!
Photo courtesy of DiscoveryEducation.com

Teaching is the profession that teaches all the other professions. ~ Author Unknown

My goal is to reveal one teacher's humble journey of self-reflection, critical analysis, and endless questioning about my craft of teaching and learning alongside my middle school students.

"The dream begins with a teacher who believes in you, who tugs and pushes and leads you to the next plateau, sometimes poking you with a sharp stick called 'truth'." ~ Dan Rather



Thursday, June 9, 2011

Modeling Teacher Evaluation & Improvement

My county was recently highlighted in The New York Times for its teacher evaluation program. Check it out!


June 5, 2011

Helping Teachers Help Themselves



ROCKVILLE, Md. — The Montgomery County Public Schools system here has a highly regarded program for evaluating teachers, providing them extra support if they are performing poorly and getting rid of those who do not improve.
The program, Peer Assistance and Review — known as PAR — uses several hundred senior teachers to mentor both newcomers and struggling veterans. If the mentoring does not work, the PAR panel — made up of eight teachers and eight principals — can vote to fire the teacher.
Sitting in on two cases last week, I could not tell from the comments which of the panel members were teachers and which were principals. In one of the cases, 11 of the 12 panel members present voted to follow a principal’s recommendation and discipline the teacher; in the other, they decided in a 10-to-2 vote to reject a principal’s recommendation and support the teacher.
In the 11 years since PAR began, the panels have voted to fire 200 teachers, and 300 more have left rather than go through the PAR process, said Jerry D. Weast, the superintendent of the Montgomery County system, which enrolls 145,000 students, one-third of them from low-income families. In the 10 years before PAR, he said, five teachers were fired. “It took three to five years to build the trust to get PAR in place,” he explained. “Teachers had to see we weren’t playing gotcha.”
Doug Prouty, the teachers’ union president, said, “It wouldn’t work without the level of trust we have here.”
Nancy S. Grasmick, Maryland’s state superintendent of schools, called PAR “an excellent system for professional development.” Senior staff members from the United States Department of Education have visited here to study the program, and Montgomery County officials have gone to Washington to explain how it works. In February, the district was one of 12 featured in Denver at a Department of Education conference on labor-management collaboration.
Dr. Weast, who calls the United States secretary of education, Arne Duncan, “a good friend,” said, “He’s told me, ‘Jerry, you’re going where the country needs to go.’ ”
Unfortunately, federal dollars from the Obama administration’s Race to the Top program are not going where Dr. Weast and the PAR program need to go. Montgomery County schools were entitled to $12 million from Race to the Top, but Dr. Weast said he would not take the money because the grant required districts to include students’ state test results as a measure of teacher quality. “We don’t believe the tests are reliable,” he said. “You don’t want to turn your system into a test factory.”
Race to the Top aims to spur student growth by improving teacher quality, which is exactly what Montgomery County is doing. Sad to say, the district is getting the right results the wrong way.
It does not seem to matter that 84 percent of Montgomery County students go on to college and that 63 percent earn degrees there — the very variables that President Obama has said should be the true measure of academic success. It does not seem to matter that 2.5 percent of all black children in America who pass an Advanced Placement test live in Montgomery County, more than five times its share of the nation’s black population.
The 12 states that were awarded the billions of dollars in Race to the Top grants are using student scores as a measure of teachers’ worth. New York has decided that state tests will count for up to 40 percent of a teacher’s grade; Maryland does not have a magic number yet.
Mr. Duncan’s supporters have marveled at how he has used Race to the Top money to pressure states into adopting his education agenda. Dr. Grasmick, the Maryland superintendent, said the administration made it clear that if a state wanted to win a grant, the proposal had to include a formula for calculating student growth. Maryland toed the line and was awarded $250 million.
Asked if the state could make an exception for Montgomery because of the PAR program’s history of success, Dr. Grasmick said Gov. Martin O’Malley had been told that no modifications were allowed. Nor are districts permitted to appeal to federal officials, said Ann Whalen, director of the Implementation and Support Unit at the Education Department.
So here is where things stand: Montgomery’s PAR program, which has worked beautifully for 11 years, is not acceptable. But the Maryland plan — which does not exist yet — meets federal standards.
Dr. Weast said a major failing of Race to the Top’s teacher-evaluation system is that it is being imposed from above rather than being developed by the teachers and administrators who will use it. “People don’t tear down what they help build,” he said.
Maybe that is why Race to the Top has been divisive in so many places. In Maryland, teachers’ unions in 22 of the 24 districts refused to sign the state’s grant proposal. In New York and New Jersey, the competition has made the war between the unions and state officials even nastier.
Every politician who micromanages education today should visit a PAR meeting.
At a session on Thursday, a principal recommended that the panel give a tenured middle school teacher a year to improve before deciding whether to dismiss her. The principal argued that the woman did not meet three of the district’s six teaching standards: how to effectively teach the students, how to assess students and help them grow academically, and how to act professionally.
Among other things, the principal told the panel that the teacher’s lesson plans were too vague and created on the fly; that her students were not being challenged; that her assessment of them was weak, and that most were given A’s; and that she repeatedly missed meetings and did not work well with her colleagues.
A senior teacher testified that she had not noticed problems when observing the classroom. The middle school teacher then defended herself and was questioned by the panel, which discussed the case after she left.
Panel members said they were concerned that the teacher had not saved her lesson plans from year to year; that the principal had given her an improvement plan in October, but she had not begun to carry it out until January; and that she complained about having insufficient curriculum materials, but had not tried to correct the problem.
After 90 minutes, panel members voted to provide her with weekly mentoring visits from a senior teacher, with the caveat that if she did not show improvement she could be dismissed.
Administrators and union officials credited the good will developed through PAR for some of the district’s other successes. Five years ago, the district created a budget committee, half of whose members belonged to unions. Last year, when Larry Bowers, the district’s finance director, said the schools could not afford a scheduled 5.3 percent raise, the teachers’ union agreed. “Saved us $89 million,” Mr. Bowers said.
Mr. Prouty, the union president, said he knew Mr. Bowers was telling the truth. “We formulate the budget; we know where the money is, which makes us much more trusting,” said Mr. Prouty, whose members also agreed to forgo a raise next year.

E-mail: oneducation@nytimes.com

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

We are #1 in Graduation Rate Again!

Yes, I am a bit proud of my school system and its recent achievement for having the highest high school graduation rates of districts its size in the nation. It all starts in kindergarten too!


MCPS IS #1 IN GRADUATION RATE


Dr. Jerry WeastTo my colleagues,
Today, Education Week released its annual “Diplomas Count” report and I am thrilled that, once again, Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) has the highest graduation rate among the nation’s 50 largest school districts. This is the third year in a row that MCPS has been at the top of this list and in this year’s report, the MCPS graduation rate increased to 85.7 percent.
While I am excited and proud of these results, I am not surprised. Montgomery County Public Schools has the best staff in the nation, bar none, and this report provides further proof of that fact. Even as we have had to make difficult budget cuts and have asked you to take on more responsibility, you have responded with professionalism and excellence. The results speak for themselves.
As I prepare to retire in a few weeks, I want to thank you for the extraordinary work you do each and every day. For the past 12 years, we have been through a tremendous amount together. We went through the tragedy of 9/11 and the horror of the sniper shootings. We have experienced dramatic shifts in our student population and are still weathering the impact of the Great Recession. We have celebrated numerous victories and endured a few defeats.
But through all of that, we have remained focused on the needs of our students. And, as a result, our students are better prepared for college and the workplace than students in any other large school district in the country. More students are succeeding in Advanced Placement classes, on the SAT, and on numerous other measures. Most importantly, we have demonstrated for the world that every child can succeed if you build a culture of high expectations. Today's “Diplomas Count” report is simply the latest testament to your hard work.
Over the past several months, I have been honored to receive several awards and I have heard many kind words about my tenure at MCPS. While I am grateful for the recognition, I make it clear wherever I go that I have been the manager of the greatest team in America and that the success attributed to me and to our school system has been the result of your effort, your dedication to excellence, and your commitment.
It has been an incredible honor to be a part of this school district for the past 12 years. Over my 42 years in education, I have made stops in many different locations--Kansas, South Dakota, Montana, North Carolina--but Montgomery County will always feel like home to me.
I wish you and your families a safe and relaxing summer and much success in the future.
Respectfully,
Jerry D. Weast, Ed. D
Superintendent of Schools

Graduation rates in the nation's 50 largest school districts
                         See the full list

MCPS scores higher than the state and the nation
The graduation rate published in Diplomas Count 2011is calculated using 2008 data, the most recent available through the federal Common Core of Data. The report calculates the graduation rate using the Cumulative Promotion Index. For more information on the calculation, go to http://www.edweek.org/go/dc11.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Teacher "Auditions" Now Required to Work in DC Public Schools

A 30 min. taped audition in front of a live group of DC public school students? You betcha! Check out this fascinating article on the new process for hiring of DC teachers:

New D.C. Schools' Hiring System Requires Teacher Audition By Sara Beladi

Saturday, Jun 4, 2011
Updated 10:41 PM EDT

An emerging body of research suggests a correlation between observations of teachers and student achievement.

Apparently, there’s at least one business like show business.
Starting this summer, the District will mandate teachers to make like show people when it premieres a new teacher hiring system that will require applicants to submit 30-minute taped auditions, according to Education Week.
The auditions are a part of an online database that will help principles decide which teacher-candidates to formally interview.
“It signals to candidates that DCPS is a special place to work and takes teaching very seriously,” said Benjamin Lindy, the manager of teacher-selection design, to Education Week. “All of this is designed so that we present useful and distilled information to principals so they can make the final decisions about who teaches in their buildings.”

The current candidate selection process typically consists of a background check, a review of transcripts, licensing test scores and a resume.
Such mechanisms generally don’t take into account a prior record of success among experienced teachers or provide an indication that novice candidates have the potential to be successful teachers given the right supports, said Elizabeth Arons, a New York-based human-resources consultant for school districts, in the same report.
The District’s new teacher-hiring model will consist of four distinct phases: an online application, which includes responses to two essay prompts -- a pedagogical content knowledge test that requires candidates to analyze a students work, determine where the student falls short, and devise a strategy to improve necessary skills -- an interview and model lesson -- and, of course, a video-recorded audition, in which the candidate teaches a 30-minute lesson, in a D.C. public school, geared to an objective provided by the host teacher.
Other urban districts, such as Denver, Pittsburgh and Tulsa, are taking similar steps to move their human-resources offices toward the “strategic hiring” system.
These districts would not have the luxury of being picky about candidates, were it not for a surge of talent looking to enter the teaching profession.
“You can be very selective right now in who you’re picking in some of these urban districts,” Arons told Education Week. “But that’s certainly not the case in all areas.”
Remember D.C. teachers: they may have told you would not go far, that day you open and there you are, next day on the dressing room they’ve hung a star, let’s…sorry, too much?

Monday, June 6, 2011

Come hear Mayor Fenty speak on education reform in DC on June 28!

I will be vacationing in FL and miss out on this event, but definitely check out Former DC Mayor Adrian Fenty speak on education reform if you are in the DC area on June 28!

Mayor Fenty speaks about Education Reform!

Come hear the Honorable Adrian M. Fenty (Mayor of the District of Columbia 2007-2011) speak about education reform!


Mayor Adrian M. Fenty

Come hear the Honorable Adrian M. Fenty (Mayor of the District of Columbia 2007-2011) speak about education reform! 


Tuesday, June 28 @ 7pm
Hogan Lovells, Fulbright Center
555 13th Street NW
Washington, DC 20004
(red, orange, blue line Metro center)



Want to make sure your question for the Mayor is answered?  Please email your question to carter_AT_post_DOT_harvard_DOT_edu.
$5 for members of the Harvard Club of Washington, DC$10 for non-members
*The Harvard Club of Washington DC is a 501c(3) organization. Funds raised from this event will support the Harvard Club in its charitable mission, including the sponsorship of summer stipends for college students to work at other DC area non-profits.
SPACE LIMITED! Click here to buy tickets TODAY!    
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Adrian M. Fenty was the fifth Mayor of the District of Columbia. Elected in November 2006, he championed innovative solutions to the District’s greatest challenges, especially in the District’s public school system. 

Mayor Fenty became a national leader in the area of urban education reform after changing the District public school governance structure and placing the city’s school chief as a direct report to the mayor. The change allowed Fenty to institute unprecedented reforms, remove layers of bureaucracy and negotiate a breakthrough collective bargaining agreement.  Following the reforms, student test scores and graduation rates have risen steadily, while achievement gaps at both the elementary and secondary levels have narrowed.  In 2010, enrollment in District of Columbia Public Schools increased for the first time in 39 years.

In 2009, the Fenty Administration was recognized by the Kennedy School of Government Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation.  The District was the winner of the 2009 Innovations in American Government Award in Urban Policy.  “The District’s efforts to democratize access to data create increased government accountability and transparency while opening up new arenas for substantial citizen engagement in government,” said Stephen Goldsmith, director of the Innovations in Government Program at Harvard Kennedy School’s Ash Institute.

Fenty has traveled extensively speaking on education reform and on using a private-sector approach to running a government.  During the spring 2011 semester, Mayor Fenty spoke on the topic of urban education at the Harvard Law School, the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.  In the fall of 2011, Mayor Fenty will serve as a Distinguished Visiting Professor of Politics at his alma mater, Oberlin College.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

To Teach or Let Them Explore -- That is the Question.....

Countless teachers, including me, are constantly wondering whether direct instruction or student-based learning better benefit our students. I firmly believe students, especially my middle schoolers, need a strategic combination of both. 


Check out this interesting Economist article below:


http://www.economist.com/node/18741484.


Have a beautiful weekend! Learn something new today!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Let's here it for MUSIC in education!!

I got to spend last Friday at Hershey Park with over two hundred middle school band, orchestra, and chorus students. They spent the morning performing some incredible music at nearby schools and then got to celebrate on the rides at the park (where I hadn't been since I was in 5th grade!) and then sweep top honors at the awards ceremony. The magical music they created was truly inspiring and yet another reminder on the power of music to change lives.


In case you needed more of an argument on the power of arts, especially music in education, read on:


http://www.artsusa.org/public_awareness/artsed_facts/002.asp#



Preschoolers who were given music keyboard lessons improved their spatial-temporal reasoning. A peer group, who were given computer lessons, showed no improvement. Spatial-temporal reasoning is the abstract reasoning that is used for understanding relationships between objects such as calculating a proportion or playing chess. Spatial-temporal reasoning is important in subjects such as mathematics and science.
source: Educational Leadership, November, 1998, p. 39
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
article: "The Music in Our Minds"
Norman M. Weinberger, Professor of Psychobiology at the University of California, Irvine, referencing research of F.H. Rauscher, G.L. Shaw et al, 1997, Neurological Research , 19, 2–8

First graders who received instruction in music listening had significantly higher reading scores than those first graders who did not receive the instruction but were similar in age, IQ and socioeconomic status. The same teacher taught reading to all the students. Those given music instruction were taught for 40 minutes a day for 7 months and learned to recognize melodic and rhythmic elements in folk songs. They scored in the 88th percentile for reading performance and the non-instructed control group scored in the 72nd percentile.
source: Educational Leadership, November, 1998, p. 38
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
article: "The Music in Our Minds"
Norman M. Weinberger, Professor of Psychobiology at the University of California, Irvine, referencing research of Hurwitz et al, 1975, Journal of Learning Disabilities, 8, 45–51

Elements of music and reading are highly related in first graders. Students were tested on various elements of music and reading and a strong relationship was found between a student's awareness of pitch and their ability to sound out material in reading--material that included standard language and phonetic material.
source: Educational Leadership, November, 1998, p. 39
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
article: "The Music in Our Minds"
Norman M. Weinberger, Professor of Psychobiology at the University of California, Irvine, referencing research of S.J. Lamb and A.H. Gregory, 1993, Educational Psychology, 13, 19–26

Second grade students given piano instruction in addition to spatial reasoning instruction improved more in spatial reasoning than those given spatial reasoning instruction only, English language training instead of piano, or no special instruction.
source: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development, 2002, p. 110
study: Enhanced Learning of Proportional Math Through Music Training and Spatial-Temporal Training

Fourth grade students considered "emotionally disturbed" improved their writing quality and quantity when given music to listen to (via headphones) versus writing in silence. 
source: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development, 2002, p. 118
study: Listening to Music Enhances Spatial-Temporal Reasoning: Evidence for the "Mozart Effect"

"Juvenile Delinquent" males ages 8–19 who were given instruction in and performance opportunities on the guitar improved both their self-confidence in terms of their musical ability and general self-worth versus other "juvenile delinquent" males of the same age group given instruction but no performance opportunities.
source: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Developments, 2002, p. 119
study: The Effects of Musical Performance, Rational Emotive Therapy and Vicarious Experience on the Self-Efficacy and Self-Esteem of Juvenile Delinquents and Disadvantaged Children

A high level of involvement in instrumental music co-related to high achievement in math proficiency. This held true among all students and among those students in the lowest socio-economic (SES) quartile. More than twice as many 12th grade, high music-involved, low SES students performed at high levels of math proficiency as non music-involved, low SES 12th grade students. Instrumental music involvement also related to high-music, low SES students closing the math achievement gap with higher SES students. In 8th grade, high-music, low SES students closed the expected achievement gap that low SES students would usually have with the average student. By 12th grade the high-music, low SES students had pulled significantly ahead of the average student in math proficiency (33.1 percent to 21.3 percent).
source: Champions of Change, 1999
p. 11, figures 8 and 9
p. 12, text and figures 10 and 11
Graduate School of Education & Information Studies, University of California at Los Angeles
study: 
Involvement in the Arts and Human Development: General Involvement and Intensive Involvement in Music and Theater Arts

The opportunity to be instructed in music or dance disciplines offered a variety of compelling social benefits for students in addition to the knowledge and skill of an art. For some of the underprivileged students offered this opportunity to be treated as gifted and talented, the participation in the art form was an emotional safe haven from family turmoil. The art forms were an assimilation tool for recent immigrants and other new kids. Achievement in the art and friendships built in that process bolstered students as they entered new situations of various kinds. Performances brought the broader community together in pride. Horizons were broadened through access to classes at studios and trips to theaters outside of students' immediate neighborhoods and offered a glimpse of the broader cultural world. "Ultimately the skills and discipline students gained, the bonds they formed with peers and adults, and the rewards they received through instruction and performing fueled their talent development journey and helped most achieve success both in and outside of school."
source: Champions of Change, 1999, p.77–78
National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented
University of Connecticut, Storrs
study: 
Artistic Talent Development for Urban Youth: The Promise and the Challenge

The various approaches to music instruction that were found to support learning in spatial-temporal reasoning reflect the same approaches included in the national standards in music education. Learning traditional music notation led to even stronger results than other music instruction.
source: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development, 2002, p. 114
study: Learning to Make Music Enhances Spatial Reasoning

In a review of many studies, the "Mozart-effect" was found valid and important for educators in an unexpected way.  The positive effect of listening to Mozart's, and others', music on spatial reasoning (mentally visualizing, moving and relating objects without any present) helps contradict some current ideas about learning that consider different learning functions in the brain to be distinct and unconnected.  The "Mozart effect" shows that areas of the brain used for spatial reasoning are also used for processing music.
source: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development, 2002, p. 116
study: Listening to Music Enhances Spatial-Temporal Reasoning: Evidence for the "Mozart Effect"

A student making music experiences the "simultaneous engagement of senses, muscles, and intellect. Brain scans taken during musical performances show that virtually the entire cerebral cortex is active while musicians are playing." Different areas of the brain perform different functions from directing movement, to thinking, to feeling, to remembering including many sub-regions within those areas that relate to more specialized activities. Making music engages, and is increasingly seen to strengthen, a vast array of brain power.
source: Educational Leadership, November, 1998, p.38
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
article: "The Music in Our Minds"
Norman M. Weinberger, Professor of Psychobiology at the University of California, Irvine

Monday, May 30, 2011

Teachers Pursue Professional Learning Around the Globe

As someone who is extremely passionate about teaching abroad, I highly recommend reading this article. It is amazing to learn of the multitude of opportunities available to teachers to spread your skills, knowledge, and perspectives around the world. Here's to making a global impact to education, one student at a time!


May 2011 | Volume 53 | Number 5


From Umbria to Ulaanbaatar    
From Umbria to Ulaanbaatar 
Teachers Pursue Personal and Professional Learning
Willona M. Sloan

Three teachers share their experiences of transformative personal and professional growth achieved through exciting, death-defying, and enlightening adventures.
During her third year of teaching, Erika Tepler was assigned to teach a humanities course with two weeks' notice. The versatile educator, who is primarily an English as a Second Language (ESL) teacher, had previously taught government, math, and other courses as needed—so she felt she could handle this "opportunity" despite the lack of materials or textbooks.
"I got to be creative with my curriculum," says Tepler.
During the year, as she thought about ways to improve her course, Tepler realized that engaging in some learning of her own would enhance her teaching. Tepler heard about the Fund for Teachers (FFT) program from colleagues who had previously received grants. FFT (www.fundforteachers.org) offers funding for teachers to pursue personal exploration and professional development through travel experiences.
Tepler, who was already fairly well-traveled, wanted to find a special location—someplace, she says, about which there wasn't a lot written. She considered traveling to exotic locales such as the Kingdom of Bhutan (a landlocked country in the Himalayas) or even Mustang (Nepal); but when "reality" set in … the young teacher set her sights on traveling with a nomadic tribe in the Gobi desert of Mongolia.
Tepler was fascinated by the idea of the nomadic lifestyle but, as she discovered, there truly is very little information available about the nation or this particular population. Through Internet research, Tepler found Ger to Ger (www.gertoger.org), an organization that offers "nomad-centered geotourism." Ger to Ger matched Tepler with 12 families that would provide her with room and board and teach her a special skill, such as woodworking, sewing, or making fermented camel's milk. By living with Mongolian families whose livelihood and culture were tied to the natural environment, Tepler says she had hoped to gain information to augment her geography curriculum with new lessons about human-environment interaction and world cultures.
When asked how she prepared for the month-long journey, Tepler admits that preparation really wasn't possible with only scant tourism information available. Armed with a copy of the only Mongolian/English dictionary available in the United States, she boarded a plane destined for Ulaanbaatar.
"To be perfectly honest, I really didn't know what I was getting into." Tepler says.

To Ulaanbaatar and Beyond

Mongolia is the most remote place Tepler has ever visited. "I would say 80 percent of the roads, not including the small roads in really remote places, are unpaved. I had no idea how vast Mongolia is—it's the least dense country in the world."
Ger to Ger provided Tepler and the other participants with a cultural sensitivity class before sending them out to the desert. After that, the true journey began.
"You take a public bus and you go out to a middle of nowhere place and someone who does not speak English greets you and takes you to the first family," Tepler explains.
Over a 12-day period, Tepler lived in different tents made of sheep's felt, camel hair, rope and wood; eating what her hosts ate and drinking what water was available. Tepler says Mongolian nomads move anywhere between 4–20 times per year with their animals. Traditionally goat and sheep herders, they rely entirely on their environment for survival.
For Tepler, the adventure was physically challenging and often excruciating. "There are limited amounts of food. Their diet basically consisted of white flour, water, and dried goat," says Tepler. "There were times when I was hungry. I would dream about fruits and vegetables."
And it was hot. "For five days, the temperature in the Gobi reached 120 degrees with whipping winds that sucked all of the water out of my body. The only water available was hot and smelled of goat. It was constantly physically uncomfortable, and it was also emotionally taxing," she says.
But, Tepler says, she gradually adjusted. Without modern technologies or amusements, she learned to play traditional games (using sheep and goat ankle bones) and even picked up enough of the language to have basic conversations.
Tepler came away with an understanding of a truly unique culture and some new friends. "They are the most warm and welcoming people I have ever met," she says. "They are proud of their culture; they want to share it with you."
When she returned to Ulaanbaatar, Tepler also had a chance to talk with Mongolian teachers. "I got to meet some super motivated, really neat teachers and share teaching experiences. I also got to teach a five-day ESL conversational class to Mongolian teenagers," says Tepler, who prepared the young people for potential conversations with American teens.
Back in her classroom, Tepler uses her photos and souvenirs such as fabrics, ankle bones, horse head fiddles, and music to enhance her curriculum. "I gained a rich understanding of an ancient and disappearing culture in a specific geographic context that I can now pass on to my students through hands-on activities with real, foreign artifacts," says Tepler.
She has developed several lessons, including a "Near Death" lesson plan that prepares students for the essay portion of the state assessment. The goal of the lesson is to provide students with background information about desert regions and practice reading strategies, including reading sections from True Tales from the Deserts. Students analyze the essay "Near Death," comparing and contrasting it with a reading about cold environments such as Antarctica and the Himalayas.
Tepler also came back with an invigorated attitude. "For some teachers it's hard to get inspired to write an original curriculum. This [type of experience] is a huge inspiration for that. I think when teachers are excited about what they're teaching—students know that. When you are excited, students are excited and it leads to more learning. When you are an expert in something, the students learn more," says Tepler.

Getting Out Into the Plein-Air

Art teachers Kathleen Courville and Lisette McClung, who both teach in the Clear Creek Independent School District in Houston, Tex., wanted to learn something new. After researching plein-air (which translates to "open air") painting, they applied to FFT for funds to go to Italy, where the painting style traces back to the 17th century.
As they learned more about plein-air painting, they realized the potential for using the painting style to teach their students about more than just art. "We want our students to become more aware of their relationship with nature and the importance of taking care of their environment," say McClung and Courville.
Courville teaches 6th–8th grade art classes, including 2/D and 3/D art, and pre-AP classes at League City Intermediate School. A 35-year teaching veteran, Courville still understands the value of learning. "I had never tried plein-air painting and it seemed like it would be a challenge," she says. McClung also teaches 6th–8th grade courses, including 2/D and 3/D art, and pre-AP art at Space Center Intermediate School. She has 13 years of teaching experience.
They received funding to participate in an intensive two-week program in the Umbrian region of Italy, where they could experience "the golden sunlight and misty blues of the skies that famous artists have explored, and … visit small towns where time has stood still." The teachers studied at the La Romita School of Art and visited Etruscan and Roman ruins, picturesque valleys, orchards, vineyards, and medieval towns.
"The workshop was very intense," says Courville. "We would leave at 9:00 a.m. with a backpack. A van would take us to a village and drop us off, and we would walk through the village and find a spot to work."
But as the artists found, painting outside offered its own special rewards and a unique set of challenges, including 100-degree heat, biting insects, barking dogs, curious bystanders, and ever-changing elements of light, atmosphere, and weather.
"We had to paint very quickly in order to capture the changing effect of light on our subject matter. This [necessity] allowed us to paint with spontaneity and a freshness that we may not have captured otherwise, such as painting from a photograph or in a studio setting," McClung says.
The days were long. "The van would pick us up around 4:00 p.m. and head back to the 16th-century monastery for dinner, and then at 7:00 p.m. we would go to a studio and work on anything from the day or try a totally different technique— maybe collage, assemblage, or mixed media. During the day it was only watercolor or acrylic painting. I came home with 42 pieces of completed artwork!" says Courville.

Back in the Bay

Courville and McClung documented their daily experiences through digital photographs, sketchbooks, journals, video, blogging at www.kandltravels.blogspot.com, and, of course, their artwork.
Upon their return, they willingly exposed their new works to their students for critiques, allowing students to ask questions relating to the process of creating their work. Courville and McClung say that they wanted their students to see them as teachers but also artists in their own right.
At each of their schools, the teachers started extracurricular clubs, where students travel to different sites within the Galveston Bay area to learn about local history and wildlife while also practicing painting.
"The only challenge was to get the students to actually go outside and try it," says Courville. "I started a weekend club so we could go out for several hours, instead of a limited 45 minutes of class, and experience different sites." McClung says her students are now painting in parks, nature centers, on riverboats and kayaks, and during family vacations.
Like Tepler, Courville and McClung believe that their Umbrian experience gave them a renewed understanding of the importance of learning.
"After 35 years of teaching, most teachers would say, 'You cannot teach me anything new’ or, 'I am burned out; this is no longer exciting to me,'" says Courville. "I came back with pure excitement to get back in the classroom and make a difference for me and my students."
McClung agrees. "I feel that it is extremely important that we continue to learn and grow. I am constantly finding new ways to gain knowledge," says McClung, who helped start an adult plein-air painting group.
For Tepler, Courville, and McClung, pushing themselves, learning new skills, and expanding their own horizons has greatly influenced their ability to do the same for their students.
"You cannot be a successful teacher if you are not practicing what you teach and are not fired up about what you do. The students react to your enthusiasm and will follow in pursuit if they are encouraged to do so," says Courville. 





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