It鈥檚 May. It鈥檚 spring in Colorado. My 6th graders are starting to sound, smell, and act like ... 7th graders. Sunshine and storms trade places depending on the day, so outdoor recess is not a given. Energy is high and motivation is a struggle. Summer is just around the corner and weeks, days, and hours away. Many instructional hours away.
And yet, it鈥檚 been a great week in room 214. A rich week of learning. Why?
I wasn鈥檛 flying solo鈥擨 had backup. Every day, but especially in May, students need their teachers鈥 A-game. I鈥檝e noticed that I鈥檓 more willing to take risks, try new things, and reflect 鈥渋n the moment鈥 with a colleague in the room alongside me.
On Tuesday, Joe Dillon, the instructional coordinator for educational technology in Aurora Public Schools, supported me in my classroom. We talked through the lesson, he observed my class, and he interacted and conferred with kids. Following the lesson, he provided me with meaningful feedback around leveraging digital tools to increase student ownership.
On Thursday, Lori Nazareno, teacher-in-residence with the Center for Teaching Quality, visited my classroom. She helped me monitor the 鈥渄ouble bubble鈥 Socratic circle as kids engaged in text-based discourse鈥攆ace-to-face in the inner circle and on in the outer circle. This was the first time I鈥檇 tried this twist on the Socratic circle with this group of students. Having two adults monitor the live discussion and push the online discourse to deeper levels was invaluable.
Neither visitor is my evaluator. But I respect them both highly as accomplished 糖心动漫vlog who know their stuff and 鈥済et鈥 adolescents. Their mere presence in my classroom makes me a better teacher.
The great poet Maya Angelou says, 鈥淒o the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, be better.鈥 I鈥檝e adopted this as my new teaching mantra.
Seeing Things Anew
Becoming better teachers is easier than we sometimes think. At the beginning of the school year, as a way to vet the quality of our tasks, prompts, and assignments. Letting others into our classrooms is another way to get better. Just opening our doors, wide and often, can help us see our students and practices with new eyes.
How can we do this?
鈥 Start small. Invite a colleague in during their planning period and reciprocate by visiting their classroom during yours. Bonus points if you share students and can see them in action in another content area.
鈥 Get bigger. Host a 鈥淏ring the Community to School Day鈥 as a way to 鈥渇lip鈥 the 鈥淏ring Your Child to Work Day鈥 annual event. Create several 鈥渧isit鈥 days throughout the school year as a way to showcase student work and strengthen community partnerships. Invite parents, school board members, and other district and community leaders. Great teaching and learning deserve an audience.
鈥 Leverage tools. Be your own coach by videotaping frequently and sharing clips with colleagues you trust, your evaluator(s), your students, and others. Watch the footage yourself to see your classroom from an outsider鈥檚 perspective. Follow teacherpreneur Ryan Kinser鈥檚 approach to 鈥渂lowing the doors off your classroom鈥 by starting your own (video learning community).
Opening our doors, videotaping instruction, and sharing our practice can be scary. Classrooms are unpredictable places and interruptions are inevitable. Even the most well-planned lesson rarely goes exactly as planned. I was reminded of this when I had to reschedule my colleague鈥檚 visit multiple times due to testing windows that invaded our protected learning space. Be persistent and take the plunge. It鈥檚 worth it.
If you haven鈥檛 done so already, consider going through the submission process, which includes videotaping and reflecting on your practice. Engaging in the certification process has helped me identify the professional-learning experiences that have made me a better teacher. (Hint: Transformative experiences rarely happen in 鈥渢raditional鈥 professional-learning structures like staff meetings, conferences, or workshops.)
Videotaping instruction and hosting visitors motivates me to reflect on why I do what I do, and how I can do it better. What would happen if we taught as if every lesson was being videotaped for an external audience or being observed by someone whose opinion we valued? Collective improvement.
If you want to get even better鈥攕tarting today鈥攐pen your classroom door and let the camera roll.