As approved by the Board and complete with relevant appendices, the ET-IL Plan as linked here represents the plan submitted to the Colorado Department of Education on April 30th, 2009. The plan calls for us to embark upon a writing initiative we call Inspired Writing which I have dedicated some time to in previous posts. The project is gaining momentum and it is very exciting to see how our Learning Services team is solving training and curriculum problems... and how our staff are responding so positively. You can access the plan by clicking HERE
Perhaps not literally, but practically, Mr. Moore and Ms. Vander Velde have invited their 5th graders into their professional learning community. In this blog post from East, these innovative teachers have sent out the 5th graders to look at blogs linked from this site to other classrooms. The students are to review what they see other classes doing, evaluate it and return to their own blog with new ideas. This assignment was only just made last Friday and I have seen the first two blog posts. The student comments are constructive and demonstrate a clear understanding. The second blog post in the list shows the student discovered Anne Smith’s High School English blog and was taken with her activities. I wonder what Ms. Smith thinks of 5th graders evaluating her work? I’m betting she’ll be quite pleased… and eager for these students to become 9th graders [;-)
Go check out their work at the Dragon Pagoda and if you like what you see, leave them a comment on their Guest Book. Way to go Chris Moore and Nikki Vander Velde!
Walking into a Spanish III class at Heritage High School, I am immediately thrust into a self-directed learning environment. The students are arranged around the classroom in five areas. Some of the desks have EeePCs and some just have some handouts. Students then spend 10-15 minutes at each station completing the learning activities readied for them. One area is dedicated to “escuchar” or listening activities. The EeePCs are logged online and pointed to a web site that has Spanish language audio clips to listen to. The students listen to the audio streams and answer comprehension questions. Another space has EeePCs logged into a university web site that has conjugation drills ready to go. In other spaces, students read out of the text and write in their journals. The classroom buzzes with quiet conversation as students complete activities in small groups and manage their learning. You can overhear students sharing that this is not the only classroom that uses technology... “yeah, our physics class uses Skype every day to call a high school so they can take our class with us too.”
Technologies abound here... EeePCs and textbooks... journals and blogs. All used to support students learning Spanish. Great job Mary Kay Cummings!
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