Welcome to our blog!

The Fund for Transforming Education in Kentucky (The Fund) inspires and scales innovation and excellence in Kentucky’s public schools, resulting in a better future for all of our children. Here on our blog, we share about our work in a more in depth manner. Blog posts are written by staff members, teachers we work with, board members and others.

The Fund believes in unlocking the unique potential of every student by spreading innovative ideas, shining a spotlight on transforming teacher leadership, and driving sustainable change that will increase academic achievement for all students in Kentucky’s public education system.

Thank you for your consideration and visiting our blog. If you share in our vision of an innovative education culture, we welcome the opportunity to partner with you. Please visit our website at www.thefundky.org for more information.

Barbara Bellissimo
CEO
Showing posts with label Connected Educator Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connected Educator Month. Show all posts

Friday, October 2, 2015

On Being a Student of Reading

By: Janice Bullard

As teachers, we know the importance of reflecting daily on our own teaching. We look carefully at the teaching moves we make, so that the next time we teach, we are a tiny bit better. But how often do we do the work we are asking our students to do, and then reflect on how it went? How often do we “give it a go” ourselves before evaluating their efforts to learn? This past summer, I was lucky to be a part of a virtual book club that did just that.

I learned of the book club from Julieanne Harmatz’s blog To Read to Write to Be. I had been following Julieanne’s blog for months, so I knew that participating in a book club with her and others would be an amazing experience. I was not disappointed! The goal of the book club was to read the book A Handful of Stars by Cynthia Lord, write in our journals, and share our journals and our thinking in Google doc. We read and wrote both as students and teachers. As students, we responded to the reading with writing, in whatever way felt authentic. As we read and responded, we also listened to our teacher voice, and asked ourselves “Is the writing growing my understanding of the book?”, “How does it feel to be a student?” and “How might this work in the classroom?”

As a teacher, my takeaways from this experience were many:
  • Sharing my thinking with a group of teachers that I didn’t know was intimidating and a little scary - a reminder of how important it is to develop a trusting learning community in the classroom. By collaborating, though, I deepened my understanding of the story and ways I might help my students learn. 
  • My first reader’s response was in the form of a letter to the other readers. This form of writing was helpful to me, because it personalized my purpose. I could think of it as beginning a conversation. Might this also help my students?
  • Having choice in how I responded was huge!
  • Using an anchor chart of sentence starters helped me kick start my thinking and writing. I need to make sure these are available for my students!
This was a great exercise in making my thinking visible and learning from the visible thinking of others. The wise words of Dorothy Barnhouse and Vicki Vinton, in What Readers Really Do, come to mind: “What’s needed is a willingness to peer into the recesses of our own reader’s mind, attending to the work we do internally that frequently goes unnoticed or that happens so quickly it often feels automatic…”

Perhaps the most helpful insight was this (interestingly, this was shared by many of the readers in the club!) - I wanted to just read. I wanted to get lost in the story and not have to worry about writing on sticky notes or in my journal. A reminder that while we need to push students to deepen their thinking through writing at times, much of their reading needs to be for personal enjoyment. Otherwise, we risk turning them off to reading!

To check out my final entry to the virtual book club, click here.

These insights and lessons stay with me as I begin another year with my fourth grade students. The power of learning and collaborating with others is an experience I look forward to repeating when I work with teachers through NGID. And as I plan my LDC unit, a first priority will be to “give it a go” as a student.

How will you learn by collaborating with others? What are the ways you gain insight as a student?



Thursday, October 1, 2015

Connected Educator Month

By: Renee Boss

From teachers collaborating across state and district lines in face-to-face and virtual meetings to hundreds of teachers gathering at regional and state ECET2 events across Kentucky, The Fund for Transforming Education is known for our connectedness. October 2015 marks our third year participating in the national Connected Educator Month movement.



In 2013 and 2014 we spent the month of October highlighting different connected educators each day of the month, and we facilitated other learning events and connected with other organizations as well. We learned Kentucky really likes to connect and collaborate not just in October but all year long.

As we continue to iterate in our practice, this year’s connected educator month includes 
  • selected blog posts
  • an opportunity to connect with us in person at the Louisville screening of Most Likely to Succeed
  • an opportunity to share with us what you are learning and how you are connected. Tag us in tweets @thefundky 
  • a book twitter chat on October 27th with one of the authors from the book What Connected Educators Do Differently. Read about the book in this review by Renee Boss
  • social media posts from us about how to be involved with #CE15 nationally
Stay tuned & get connected!

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Leanna Prater



In what ways are you a connected educator?
I am a connected educator because I seek out people and information to build my personal woven network for learning. I’m connect to educators, coworkers, researchers and community members, including some that I have never met in person.  My personal learning network is just a tweet, email, text or post away and available 24/7.  Being connected is a two-way street, while I love to get ideas from others it is just as important that I share as well.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?
My classroom is really teachers, since I provide professional development and support to them and their students.  In technology, the tools are constantly changing so being able to ask questions to experts or share new ideas with others in a quick manner is important to me.  I remember how isolated I felt when I first began teaching, before the internet had made its way into our homes and classrooms. My only means of contact with other educators, parents or students outside of school was by the “old school technologies” of telephone, paper/pencil or face to face.  I really noticed the impact of being connected when I became interested in new technologies such as robotics.  My need to know how to use LEGO Mindstorms with my students drove my quest for finding a more knowledgeable other.  I relied on contacts I had made at conferences, local professors and other educators to help me understand the power of this tool.  My students benefited from the knowledge of people I had connected with over the years. Now, if I have a question or struggling with a solution, I have a large group of contacts that I can reach out to for advice and ideas.  By navigating the waters of social media, unconferences and online educational communities for professional use, I’ve been able to share those experiences with other teachers and help them begin their own journey towards being a connected educator.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?
Before the ability to connect easily with others, my professional growth as an educator was limited to only a few choices due to budgets, location or professional development offerings in my school or district. Being a connect educator has allowed me to grow as professional in ways that were difficult before.  One of my favorite things to do is attend free educational unconferences like meetups and edcamps. These organic gatherings allow me to tap into the expertise of those in attendance, ask my own questions and share with others things I learn best by talking with others!   I typically continue those conversations with people I’ve connected with face to face through Twitter chats.  Last spring, I spent some time following teachers chatting in WV on twitter and learned about an edcamp in my hometown.  I was so excited to be able to connect with some teachers in our neighboring state and share work that we are doing here as well as learn about the great work they are doing, too!


What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?
As for resources, I really enjoy Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter and edWeb.  They are very different and allow me to connect to others in different ways. For example, I use Pinterest to follow group resources posted by organizations and other educators on topics like digital citizenship or STEM.  I use Twitter for both Twitter chats (scheduled conversations on topics grouped by hashtags) and to follow educators with similar interests as well as researchers and authors I enjoy.  For conversations over time on topics like game based learning and educational technology, I use edWeb.  Facebook is more personal but it allows me to keep in touch with friends who are teachers.
I would find something you feel comfortable with and try it out. Most importantly, remember you have a voice!  You are doing great things in your classroom that others would love to know about, too.

Bio:Leanna Prater, M.A. Ed. is a as a District Technology Resource Teacher for Fayette County Public Schools in Lexington, KY where she conducts professional development and provides supports to educators in the area of instructional technology, including game authoring software like Scratch and LEGO Robotics! She is also doctoral candidate in Instructional Systems Design in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction at the University of Kentucky, College of Education.  Her research interests include digital game-based learning, play, new forms of  authentic assessment and computational thinking.  Outside of work and graduate school, she enjoys spending time with her family, baking and making things!

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Josh Trosper



In what ways are you a connected educator?
I believe a connected educator is a well-rounded educator.  I strive to be connected to be a better educator for the students in our school.  As an Assistant Principal, I am constantly looking for ways to improve in my job performance.  I consider myself a lifelong learner and have a passion to share that learning to help others.  As an administrator going through the Professional Growth and Effectiveness System, I am gaining immense knowledge in the Danielson Framework.  I use Feedly to keep up to date with education related blogs and information. I use Evernote to help keep my life in order.  For me, being “connected” is to be on the forefront of all education related news.  As an administrator I am constantly looking for technology and organizational tools to make life easier.  In my experiences people believe being “connected” refers to technology but I also have a love for notebooks and pencils.  This brings me back to being a well-rounded, adaptable and progressive educator.  I was recently voted on to the Board of Directors of The Bluegrass Center for Teacher Quality, a nonprofit offering high quality, research-based professional learning opportunities to teachers in Southeastern Kentucky.  This has provided me with an expanding knowledge of professional learning and ways I can help teachers in our school.  Most importantly, being connected is a benefit to our students.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?
Being connected has made be a better educator and a better leader for our school.  If I adopt a system that simplifies tasks, then I will have more time to be available to teachers and students throughout the day.  Staying on top of education news helps to provide faculty and staff with up to date accurate information.  Having a vast knowledge of technology, I am able to communicate in a more effective way.  I stay connected to better serve the parents, students, and staff at our school.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?
As a married father of three and school administrator, my daily routine is down to an exact science.  My life would be chaos without the tools I use to keep me connected.  Apps I currently use to keep my life running include: Dropbox, Swipes, Swiftkey, Drive, Evernote, Sunrise Calendar (my favorite ios calendar).   Workflowy and Any.do are extremely helpful with tasks and to dos.  These apps hold pictures, documents, notes and I would be lost without them. I firmly believe the ways I stay connected help just as much with my personal life as it does my professional life.  

What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?
I started with research and hours of reading.  As I stated before, I stay connected with blogs through the Feedly app.  “The Together Teacher” is a wonderful blog and one that I visit daily.  The information I learn and use then goes into Evernote notebooks (using Evernote Web Clipper -google app).  Once you start, it is very difficult to decipher what is best.  Use the system that best fits your lifestyle.  One of the most important tools in my arsenal is the Bullet Journal system, a notebook and pencil.

BIO: Josh earned a BS in Elementary Education from Campbellsville University in 2003 and a MA in Educational Leadership from Union College in 2008.  Josh began his career  at Lillington-Shawtown Elementary School where he taught Kindergarten.  A year later, he returned to Kentucky and began teaching at Bell Central School Center in Bell County, KY.  During his tenure in Bell County, Josh has taught elementary level students and is currently the assistant principal at the K-8 Yellow Creek School Center in Middlesboro, KY.  Josh currently resides in Barbourville, KY with his wife, Christina and their three children; Seth, Harrison and Caroline. 

Monday, October 13, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Jason Reeves

Dr. Jason Reeves Union College 


In what ways are you a connected educator?

As Dean of the Educational Studies Unit at Union College, I never seem to be “unconnected” as an educator. LinkIn, Skype, Google Docs, Twitter feeds, Facebook updates, and online newspapers and periodicals greatly advance the work of the faculty and staff in our Unit. We work very hard to model our technology expectations for our program candidates.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

A critical component of our Teacher as Leader preparation model is preparing our candidates to integrate technology usage in their future classrooms through avenues that spark creativity, engage all students, and provide authentic student achievement data. These advantages of technology usage are foundational to the success of a teacher leader blending pedagogical and clinical knowledge bases in a “real world” P-12 classroom.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?

The impact has been incredible. The world, both real and online, continues to open itself up in ways that most never believed imaginable. For educators, this type of environment is both exciting and very rewarding since we thrive on ways in which to continuously improve our abilities to connect with students.

What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

Take the first step now! There are many ways that a person can become connected. I am sure it won't be your last step once you see how eye-opening being connected can be.


Bio: Dr. Jason Reeves is currently the Dean of Educational Studies and Assistant Professor of Education at Union College in Barbourville, KY. In addition to his roles at Union College, Dr. Reeves is a member of the Continuous Assessment Review Committee and Board of Examiners Team for the Kentucky Education Professional Standards Board (EPSB). Dr. Reeves also serves as a trained  teacher educator program accreditation reviewer for the national Council of Accreditation for Educator Preparation (CAEP).

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Tricia Shelton

Boone County High School Science Teacher
Boone County Schools Teacher Leader

In what ways are you a connected educator?

Being connected is an essential part of my professional life.  Here are some snapshots of how I learn, share, collaborate, lead and grow as a connected educator.

A Week in the Life of a connected educator...
Sunday: Virtual meeting with my Minnesota teacher partner (who I met through Twitter) to plan our next NGSS learning progression for our classrooms connected through Schoology.

Monday: Adobe Connect meeting planning a webinar to support other teachers learning how to teach using the NGSS practices with two educators from Michigan (who I met through Twitter).

Tuesday: Lync session with KDE partners in developing an NGSS Multi Tools Online Community powered by teachers to support Kentucky’s implementation of the KCAS standards.

Monthly meeting with the Prichard Committee Student Voice Team via Google Hangouts to coach each other on our Op-Ed Drafts.

Wednesday: Google Hangout Meeting for our SBG PLC involving five educators representing 4 states who meet monthly to learn, share and support each other on our Standards -Based Learning road.

Thursday:  Twitter chats! Co- Moderate #NGSSchat after participating in #KyEdChat.

Friday:  Google Hangout Meeting with our classroom business and grant partner discussing our action research around video in the classroom.

Saturday:  Morning Twitter chats and asynchronous work on shared documents in google drive and website for Connected Classrooms. Write and post a blog.
Share our next reflection question for our NGSS voxer group.

Being connected enables me to partner with stakeholders in education across my state as well as across the nation as we work to grow and contribute to the national education conversation, learning and leading from the classroom.


How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

I connected myself to honor a request from my students to leverage social media in our action research around communicating thinking. Educators that are willing to be brave, embrace something new, and think outside of the traditional lens of what a classroom looks like can open up a whole new world for their students by flattening the four walls of the classroom.  After connecting  myself, I could connect my students and support them in building a personalized professional network for a lifetime of learning. We regularly learn and share with experts, scientists, and other students globally, and have an authentic global audience to share our thinking and our story.  Not only does connectedness support 21st Century Skills initiatives, it also enables and encourages a full partnership with students as both teacher and student discover ways to leverage social media and collaborations in the classroom. Students have so much knowledge and understanding of technology and social media.  The culture created with this partnership to connect ourselves and share our thinking, our voice and our story with the world has been a game changer for us.  In a brainstorming session to develop interview questions for our first videocast, the students shared the question “How can teachers help you develop technology skills”  I said in reply, “What about..How can students help teachers find new ways to use technology and social media to enhance learning?”  Their eyes lit up.  Being connected has empowered all of us, teachers, students and parents, to be true partners and lead others as we learn together and work for student achievement.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?

Since connecting myself in the summer of 2013, my professional career has undergone a transformation. The personal reflection, collective conversation and collaborations on both a virtual and face to face level, have resulted in tremendous personal growth and an opportunity to support other teachers on a national scale.  As the Week in the LIfe demonstrates, the connections I make on Twitter have not only supported changes to my instructional practice to enhance student learning; they have also led to deeper conversation and on-going collaborations to support my growth as an educator.  In the classroom, being connected has transformed our classroom to a 21st Century focused space where students are engaged, empowered and excited to learn and share.  Their mission now is to start a videocast to share our story to encourage more classrooms to do the same. This means a have a new focus to search for resources, ideas and support from my PLN to make this reality happen in my classroom.  For me, being connected means I have endless opportunities to learn and share in my quest to grow as a professional.

What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

There are many ways to connect yourself.  The key component is that being connected is about personalized professional learning.  You can explore for a few minutes several times a week as a lurker, or use reflection, conversation, and collaboration as anchors of your professional experience. To get started, I love the #NT2T or the New Teachers to Twitter chat on Saturday mornings at 9 AM EST.  This group of educators is ready to answer questions and offer ways to leverage Twitter and also has a Google plus community  to provide support.  I also recommend the TweechMe app which has a quick Twitter course as well as a chat schedule and hashtag list.  As you can see from my Week in the Life, Twitter has been the doorway to deeper conversations and collaborations and a constant source of inspiration to fuel my passion to uncover new ways to support student learning.  Twitter is a great place to start your exploration of “being connected” and discover all of the ways you can leverage the technology at your fingertips to engage, enhance learning, share your voice, and lead by contributing to the conversation and supporting others. You can then be a model as you support those same opportunities for your students.  



Tricia's bio: 
Tricia Shelton is a High Science Teacher and Teacher Leader with a BS in Biology and MA in Teaching, who has worked for 19 years in Kentucky driven by a passion to help students develop critical and creative thinking skills. Tricia is a 2014 NSTA Distinguished Teaching Award winner for her contributions to and demonstrated excellence in Science Teaching. As a Professional Learning Facilitator and NGSS Implementation Team Leader, Tricia has worked with educators across the United States to develop Best Practices in the Science and Engineering classroom through conference presentations, webinars, coordinating and co- moderating #NGSSchat on Twitter, and virtual and face to face PLC work.  Tricia’s current Professional Learning Facilitation includes work around the Next Generation Science Standards and helping STEM students develop the 21st Century Skills of critical and creative thinking, collaboration and communication (including Social media and Video).

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Matthew Courtney

Executive Director Bluegrass Center for Teaching Quality


In what ways are you a connected educator?

I am a connected educator because I strive to keep my finger on the pulse of education.  It is important to me to always be aware of upcoming changes in policy, legislation, and research based practices.  These are the things that effect what teachers do every day.  By making sure that I am a part of these conversations, I am able to build lasting relationships with teachers across the state.  

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

Having a wide network of friends and colleagues across the state has greatly strengthened my work in the schools.  As a teacher, I was able to reach out to a diverse and supportive group of peers when I needed help or guidance.  It also helped me adjust to major transitions in the school, such as the implementation of CIITS or PGES.  Having other people who knew what I was experiencing and who could lend perspective and new ideas helped me greatly.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?

Being a professional is all about being connected.  Professionals know about the shifting tides of their profession.  More importantly, they know where to go when they don't know!  When you are well connected, you may also be called on to speak about your profession.  These opportunities, while intimidating at first, help you grow.  They help you to build networks outside of your classroom that later can be used to help bring resources back to your students.


What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

The biggest piece of advice for someone interested in becoming a connected educator is to join and participate in multiple teacher networks.  Network membership is like a gym membership.  It is only as good as you make it.  Be involved in the discussion.  I also suggest being in multiple networks because each network has their own perspective and it is important that leaders are open minded and hear a wide range of ideas.




Bio:

Matthew B. Courtney is the Founder and Executive Director of the Bluegrass Center for Teacher Quality.  Before creating the Bluegrass Center for Teacher Quality (BCTQ), Matthew worked as an elementary music educator at Mayfield Elementary in Richmond, KY.  After spending several years watching his friends and collegues struggle to meet their professional learning goals, Matthew created BCTQ with the mission of providing high quality, research based professional learning opportunities to teachers; free of charge.  In his role as Executive Director, Matthew works with teachers to ensure that they have the professional knowledge and skills they need to be successful in a wide variety of situations.  He is also engaged in researching professional learning techniques and travels to speak about the importance of teacher leadership in professional development.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Buddy Berry

Superintendent Eminence Independent Schools
Board Member The Fund for Transforming Education in Kentucky

In what ways are you a connected educator?

I am constantly connected to my work, our staff, and our students. Good or bad, my work has evolved into a constant connection to the world of education and otherwise, 24 / 7. Gone are the days of clocking into work and “leaving it at the office”. I find myself uber-connected to my digital PLN on Twitter, our staff on Google, and our students via our Learning Management System. I think though that being a connected educator is much more than being virtually connected to your work and colleagues. I think it is about connecting to new ideas, new paradigms, new techniques, new tools, etc. and then applying those to the vision we’ve created of preparing students to be World Class students embodying Eminence Excellence.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

I am a major advocate for the power of the design thinking process. Three of the major components of effective design thinking is that of prototyping, feedback, and empathy. All of which are easily and readily obtained through being a connected educator. Being a connected educator allows you access to every innovative model being applied in the world. It also allows you to be able to obtain feedback from experts in every field as well as colleagues from around the world. Lastly, it allows for their to be real input from students on their needs, learning preferences, and learning styles. Also, my personal connectedness allows for our staff and students to further their ability to grow and connect to the world / resources that they have available to them. How we connect to information and apply it is vastly different that at any other time in the history of the world.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?

Being connected as a professional has proven to be a lifeline of encouragement. It has also allowed for immediate access to experts from all fields and all levels of learning. It has provided countless models and strategies to explore while also ensuring access to best practice techniques from practitioners all around the world. Being Connected has allowed me to grow exponentially as an educator unlocking limitless potential for myself and our district.


What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

JUST DO IT!

Deciding to be a Connected Educator is a defining moment in the career of a current practitioner. I firmly believe that either the moment will define you or you will define the moment. With our students being digital natives, we owe it to them to maximize their learning potential for #FutureReady Careers! Define the type of educator you want to be today! Get Connected!

For some examples of how some of our students are currently connecting to content, check out these screencaptures made by a first grader and a fifth grader:


Some Eminence Connections:

The Eminence Independent school district has redesigned its instructional experience, for kindergarten through 12th-grade students, with its School on F.I.R.E. (Framework of Innovation for Reinventing Education) model. The model revolves around the Council of Chief State School Officers’ six critical attributes for innovation.
In the area of anytime, anywhere learning, all students in grades 3-12 are issued a MacBook Pro; while kindergarten, 1st- and 2nd-grade students are provided with iPads, iPods, and MacBooks. Student instruction occurs onsite, virtually and offsite, and the district proudly has the state’s first Wi-Fi-equipped bus.

In the district, learning is personalized, as are lessons, to students’ interests, activities, skill levels, and mastery. Eminence Independent has created the Student D.N.A. (Digital Narrative Album) to create a comprehensive overview of student data. Our ICE (Interventions, Connections, and Enrichments) model for all individual lessons and courses includes a Monday-Wednesday-Friday schedule of core classes and a Tuesday-Thursday schedule for ICE. All students also are given personalized progressions for their learning pathways.

In terms of comprehensive systems of support, the district uses an advisor/advisee mentoring program for all students. SPARC (Student Parent Advisor Readiness Councils) teams meet regularly to success plan and goal set for all students. The district is currently working on the creation/design of a Competency Collector application for tracking competencies met.

To ensure all students graduate with world-class skills and knowledge, the district’s policies and practices include a “B or Better” grading policy in a mastery model. The Exemplars of Eminence Excellence outlines 21st-century skills for each grade level; more than 30 hours of college credit opportunities in the district’s Early College Program; and a next-generation skills continuum created for kindergarten through 12th grade students that includes web 2.0 tools, 3D printing, coding, gaming, and multimedia presentations beginning in kindergarten.

Eminence Independent also has a Student Voice Team that participants in all district decision making and includes voting student members as part of district school-based decision making councils.
In measuring performance-based assessment, Eminence Independent uses a districtwide cloud learning management system with standards-based grading, project-based learning and panel reviews for graduation of each school for kindergarten, 5th grade, 8th grade and 12th grade.

BB-Bio: Buddy Berry is Superintendent of Eminence Schools and founder of the School on FIRE Model.  Follow Buddy and Eminence Schools @BuddyBerry, #Eminence, #SchoolonFIRE on Twitter. Certified Secondary Mathematics, Secondary Guidance Counselor, K-12 Principalship, and Superintendent Certification


Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Connected Educator Christopher McCurry

Christopher McCurry was recently named as one of The Fund for Transforming Education in Kentucky's Innovative Teacher Leaders.
Read more here.
Teaching.jpg
Christopher McCurry High School English Fayette County



In what ways are you a connected educator?

Continual professional and educational development outside of the classroom is one way I’m a connected educator. I really enjoy attending conferences: TALK and AWP being among my favorites. I appreciate how they allow teachers and writers to lead.

I spend summers in at the Bread Loaf School of English working in a professional network grounded in graduate level content studies at Middlebury College. The relationships built in these environments lead to multi-state, multi-school collaborations throughout the year enhanced by technology.  

I teach my students to reach out to our community for funding and support. I’m a big fan of Donor’s Choose and crowd sourced funding for the classroom. To allow students to engage in the community and for the community to trust what is going on inside the classroom is a valuable relationship to build and maintain.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

It’s a process of continual feedback. The reciprocity of being connected through technology is analogous to the way we are connected in the classroom. A successfully funded Donor’s Choose project demonstrates that I have found an aspect of English education that the community finds valuable and worth supporting. The students then respond to this message from their communities with engaged work in the classroom and writing about their experience in Thank You letters.  


How does being connected impact you as a professional?

The Bread Loaf Teacher Network is a student-centered network that thrives through social and digital media. The chance to collaborate with teachers and students from diverse backgrounds around the globe enhances my pedagogical skill and content knowledge, preparing me and my students for a world that is increasing digital.  

What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

Use what you have in place already, but don’t be afraid try new things. Talk about your classroom. Don’t be afraid to reach out beyond the walls of your building. Try Donor’s Choose! Join a Network!

Bio

Christopher McCurry is a teacher at Lafayette High School in Lexington, KY,  a student at the Bread Loaf School of English, and an Editor at Accents Publishing.

Monday, October 6, 2014

Kentucky Connected Educator Laura Sharbaugh



In what ways are you a connected educator?

I struggle with many of the same things that all teachers struggle with, namely TIME! I have not been able to incorporate some of the main ways of being connected (twitter, twitter chats, blogging) into my professional life because of the limitations of time. However, I have found some ways that work for me. I use the blog reader “feedly” to organize my connection to other educators across the world by bringing all their blog entries into one place. I created a separate Pinterest account for my educator life where I can follow educators I respect and share my favorite resources for educators in and out of my district. Although my twitter interaction is usually “one way,” I do keep a twitter account that allows me to search educational hashtags when I am looking for current suggestions from other educators. (Check out this huge list of hashtags!) When I am at conferences, like KySTE, I try to follow the twitter conversations and notice who is doing the talking so that I can continue to follow those people when the excitement of the conference is over. Even though I don’t read their twitter updates frequently, they are a great resource to go to when needed.

How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?

I work with a great group of educators who love collaborating with each other, but haven’t adopted many of the current social media methods of being connected outside of our school walls. Maintaining my own connectedness allows me to offer fresh, current ideas to enhance their classrooms. That being said, I did notice last year that one way many teachers are connected, at least in their personal life, is through Pinterest. When I was looking for ways to share resources, it didn’t make any sense to create “one more place” for teachers to go, so I chose to use Pinterest to connect with my teachers where they are already going for ideas. It has been effective and accessible to many teachers who would never have followed me on Twitter or read my blog.

How does being connected impact you as a professional?

I am wired in such a way that I thrive on bouncing ideas off of other people and learning from others. However, I am the only person in my district who does my exact role. Being connected allows me to have a “go to” place to look when I have a question or need a resource. Just googling for an answer is not nearly as effective as going to my feedly reader or pinterest account and searching for a topic. Here, I am getting resources from colleagues that I have chosen to follow and who are writing and posting about what really works in the classroom, not just promoting their products.

What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?

Think about the ways you enjoy being connected in your personal life and start there. Do you like getting hobby tips or staying connected with friends and family through facebook, email, twitter, instagram, pinterest, or blogs? There are educator circles on all of those platforms, so start with where you are already comfortable. Join a facebook group for educators, follow educator boards on Pinterest, join an email list group, etc. It is fine to start in these groups as an observer, but try to contribute to the conversation when you can. You have a valuable voice to add to the mix; others will appreciate hearing from you!

What practical tips and resources to use with students can you share with us?

I believe one of the greatest benefits of technology in the classroom is its ability to break down walls between the classroom and the world. It can bring the world into your classroom, but it can also take your classroom out into the world, strengthening the home and classroom connection. Here are three ideas for strengthening this connection:

One app I love to use for this is 30Hands. 30Hands is an iPad app that allows users to record their voice with multiple pictures. The app turns all the pictures and audio recordings into a video that they host on their website. We used this in 1st grade to digitally publish the students reading books they had written and illustrated. We were able to include a QR code in the hardback books, linking the published video to their physical book. Here is an example. I’ve included a picture below of a father and son experiencing that connection as the Dad gets to listen on his phone to his son read his own book.

Father Son Reading Book.JPG


Laura's bio: I taught high school science in both Illinois and Florida before moving to Kentucky. I am now the technology integrator for Christian Academy School System in Louisville, a private school system serving approximately 3000 K-12 students on 4 campuses. I serve teachers who want to use technology to improve the quality of their instruction. I aim to have teachers start by asking the question “what do I want my students to learn” rather than “what new technology do I want to use.” I am passionate about using all of our resources, including both our talents and our technology, to educate children.

Want to participate in Connected Educator Month? Consider: 



    • Following our blog daily where we will highlight a different educator each day in October
    • Adding tips and resources to a shared Google folder

    Sunday, October 5, 2014

    Kentucky Connected Educator Erika Bowles

    Principal Erika Bowles Boone County


    In what ways are you a connected educator?
    I’m not sure how to be an educator who is not connected, actually.  It baffles me that there are teachers in this profession who still prefer to shut their doors and do their own thing.  The power and ultimate potential that comes from putting two or more heads together to achieve awesomeness is second to none.  I’d feel as though I was shortchanging my students it I didn’t do everything in my power to steal as many great ideas as possible from not only the tremendous educators across our Commonwealth, but around the globe.

    I connect to educators daily through Twitter and Voxer.  Joining group chats such as #satchat, #sunchat, #kyadmin, #kyedchat, and many more insert me into a community of teachers and learners who know there’s more out there for kids than what’s in their own brains and crave that knowledge and understanding so that kids can be better serviced.  Through Twitter, I’ve developed a PLN, professional learning network.  These are individuals that I rely on for their advice and input and I place value on our professional relationship.  I have grown more in the past year as an educator than I have in the 16 years preceding my indoctrination to Twitter.  From my use of Twitter, I began using Voxer as a PLN device during the week work.  Consequently, I now participate in a Daily Voxer chat with the #satchat group where we extend the Saturday conversation through the week.  I also facilitate two Voxer book studies and use the tool as a communication device with my staff through daily “shoutouts” to spread positive vibes but also to use for walkthroughs in classrooms to give immediate feedback to teachers.

    This past February, I created #kyadmin on Monday evenings as a way of connecting with administrators across the state on a weekly basis.  We’ve chatted nearly every week since including a summer book study on Shifting the Monkey by Todd Whitaker.

    I guest moderated the #ubdbookchat this summer and that was about the most fun I’ve had online. Fast and furious.  Lots of interaction and energy.  And...Grant Wiggins was in the chat.  Pretty cool stuff.  Pretty awesome connections.

    Finally, I created the first EdCamp in Kentucky (I think…) almost 2 years ago.  We called it EdCampCoop (we are a cluster of schools within the Boone County system centered around Cooper High School).  The following year we facilitated EdCamp Boone for our entire district and EdCamp NKY for the entire Northern Kentucky area in cooperation with the Northern Kentucky Education Action Council.  We are looking forward to hosting EdCamp Kentucky (spring edition) at Boone County High School this April.  EdCamps are a GREAT way to connect with K-12 educators from outside your building to create and participate in meaningful collaboration about topics you want to learn more about.  No agendas, no rules.  Just learning the way you want to learn.  There’s nothing like it.

    How does being connected impact your practice in schools/classroom?
    Our teachers probably cringe everytime I say, “In my Voxer group…” or “Did you all see that article I retweeted on Twitter?”.  There’s just so much out there that I would not be aware of if I didn’t connect online with educators with such a varied and vast interest in educational initiatives, policy, and practice.  The caution is being able to remain the filter for the building as the administrator.  Not ALL of the fabulous and wonderful things can be brought back to the building level immediately or maybe even in the near future.  Timing is everything, but exposure is as well.  I make certain I’m curating the resources I find online and matching them at the appropriate times and places for our students and our staff.  Some things I find through my PLN are wonderful, but not for us or not at this time.  Enthusiasm for connection is important, but so is tempering of the ideas obtained from connection.


    How does being connected impact you as a professional?
    Does it sound cliched to say it allows me to be more “worldly”?  I suppose that’s how I feel.  I’ve only ever been an administrator in my county.  I don’t know what it’s like to work as an administrator in another district, much less another state or another country.  Learning from administrators that work in districts smaller than mine, bigger than mine, with resources that are different than mine, with structures in place that are different than mine, allow me to see varying perspectives to how to perform at this job.  I’m able to see the position from many lenses.  My students gain from this.  The most dangerous words in the English language are “We’ve always done it this way.”  I don’t allow those words to be said.  My goal is to keep reaching out and determining how we can do better for our kids by taking the strengths of everyone and creating the best possible school scenario for our kids.  I think we owe that to our community.  Don’t you?  If not...why do I have a job?

    I have to give a shoutout to my co-mods on #kyadmin:  Brooke Stinson, Lou Shanda Carter, Kevin Estes, and Shelee Clark.  They make me a better administrator each week.  I’m blessed they bought into the crazy that is #kyadmin.

    PS:  You can join us Monday evenings at 9E/8C.  We’ll hold your hand.  Promise.

    What advice or resources would you recommend to colleagues interested in becoming connected?
    • Tweechme is an app created by Susan Bearden.  It allows the user to learn to participate in a Twitter chat without getting thrown into the vortex that can be a Twitter chat.  
    • I would recommend all teachers in Kentucky participate in #kyedchat on Thursday nights.  The connections that you will make and the amount you will grow in your profession will probably blow your mind.
    • I of course think every administrator in Kentucky should be on #kyadmin.
    • I recommend creating a Google Plus account.  Begin dabbling in communities that interest you.
    • More than anything, take it all one day at a time.  You don’t have to be Super TwitterGirl/Guy.  There’s a name for people like that and it’s Cybraryman. (Oh...also check him out--Google it.  Seriously.)
    • I recommend attending an EdCamp.  Immerse yourself in the experience.  Then next time show up with a plan to facilitate a session.  We only grow when we’re challenged.  Make this your year to stretch, grow, and be challenged.


    Erika's bio: I am a K-5 principal at Longbranch Elementary School in Boone County.  We are a 4-year old school and I’m the first principal (an honor) of my school.  We combined staff members from 10 different elementary schools to make up our faculty and staff of 86 individuals.  850 students attend our school daily.  Prior to becoming the principal at Longbranch, I was the assistant principal at Shirley Mann Elementary in Boone County, also having the privilege to open this building as a new school.  Before working at Mann, I was an assistant principal and 5th grade teacher at Erpenbeck Elementary in Boone County, a 5th grade and LBD teacher at Stephens Elementary in Boone County, and an LBD teacher at Tates Creek High School in Fayette County.  I also worked for three years at Lexmark International as a technical writer and editor for a brief moment of temporary insanity when I left education to pursue a career in the private sector.  Missing “my people” terribly, I returned to public education and haven’t looked back. If my life works out the best I could possibly imagine in 5 years (don’t we all get that question in interviews?)...I’ll be right here doing my thing with our incredible staff.  Making history.  Creating tomorrow. 


    Want to participate in Connected Educator Month? Consider:

    • Participating in #kyadmin chat Monday nights 9pm EST
    • Following our blog daily where we will highlight a different educator each day in October
    • Adding tips and resources to a shared Google folder