Ideas.Inspiration.Solutions.
Education is the greatest civil rights issue of our time. It will take solutions around the HOW, not words around the WHAT.

URBAN.LEARNING

Only the educated are free. - Epictetus

At a symposium today on accountability for teacher prep programs. It is an excellent reminder that not only teachers, but those of us that support teachers, are also accountable to our students.

30 Day Challenge - Gratitude for Every Day

For 30 days, show one person gratitude a day.  Every day that you do this, you will begin to see great positivity in your life and work.

Here are groups of people that you can appreciate:

1.  Colleagues - Who do you work with that deserves your thanks?  If you are unhappy with the people you work with, strive to find something you can appreciate.  Or, strive to model the behaviors that you would appreciate.  The more you appreciate others, the more you will be appreciated.

2.  Family members - Sometimes we take for granted the people that are closest to us in our lives.  I know I am guilty of this.  Show your appreciation for your family and tell them one characteristic that brings joy into your life.

3.  Strangers - When you are at a store and someone helps you out, show gratitude.  We all know what it is like to experience poor service!  If someone opens a door for you, say a sincere thank you.  Believe it or not, when you look, there is a lot to appreciate!

4.  Friends - When was the last time you thanked the friend who is the first person you call on a bad day?  Or, the friend that makes you laugh often?  You won’t have to go far before you find a friend that deserves your thanks.

5.  Students - Needs no explanation.

How can you show your gratitude?

1.  I love to write notes and cards for people.  I collect them when I see them on sale and carry them with me.  See my post on positive notes.  :)

2.  Text messages.  A nice text that shows your thanks can uplift people in a spare moment of their day.

3. A photo email.  If you come across an image online that reminds you of the individual, send it along with a thank you.

4.  Photo aps.  There are several aps on the iPhone that allow you to add graphics to pictures or make cards.  A couple that I like are Red Stamp and Labelbox.

Let me know all of the good things you begin to experience as you focus on the positive.  30 days.  Every day. 

NGU

Teaching Mindsets Post 1 - It’s not about you, it’s about them.

Great teaching is about great mindsets.  If you believe it, you will achieve it.  Yes, that last line is cheesy AND it is true.  So much about what we do in our life is a direct manifestation of WHAT we think and HOW we think.

Teaching Mindset 1 - It’s not about you, it’s about them.  Them being the students. 

As you sit down to plan, answer these questions of yourself to ensure this lesson is about your kids and not about you. 

1.  Who will be MOST engaged in this lesson?  (If you are going to talk more, think more, explain more, engage more - the answer is you.)

2.  Who will OWN the learning & DO the work?  (If the students will have a chance to process, produce, and perform, THEY are doing the work.  SCORE.)

3.  Am I risking control in this lesson?  (Hard one.  As the instructional leader, you should always maintain control.  I’m talking about controlling the space and the voice.  Are the kids getting in the driver’s seat in this lesson?)

During the lesson, pay close attention to the following:

1.  Talking for long, extended periods of time.  Determine how many minutes you will talk before you feel like it’s time to let the students have a little bit of airtime.  For me, it was 5 minutes.  If I went OVER 5 minutes, I knew it was time to get the voices going. 

2.  Passive learning.  Are the kids passive learners in the classroom or are they active?  Active means they are doing something (copying does not count).  What counts?  Thinking, talking, acting, reading, writing, moving, grooving. 

After the lesson, ask yourself the questions above, but in past tense.  Reflect and react for the next class. 

And, in case you ever really want some good data, ask the kids.  Who talks more in this class about what we are learning, me or you?  Watch their reactions closely.  You might be surprised.

It’s not about me, it’s about you.  What do you want to see on the blog?

NGU

Check it out » How can Zappos' Strategy Improve Investment in your Classroom?

Zappos is incredibly well known for their customer service success. When I think about classroom teachers that are able to achieve results beyond belief, it is because they have motivated and invested their students in a purpose… and some joy along the way.

Think about how Zappos cares about their customers and how they use that strategy to create investment and a long term relationship.

How can teachers replicate this same relationship with their students? And a desire to keep them coming back for more? Learning, not shoes.