Darling-Hammond brings up some interesting ideas. She has given all of us a lot to think about. She is a little skimpy on the solutions,
though. The last chapters have a annoying ring of
idealism. Fine for her, but call me cynical, as veteran classroom teachers the sounds of reality overshadow any sort of
idealism we might have once had.
Now the half-full stuff...
So, I found myself searching for suggestions that might work in my
reality, and I started thinking about her ideas on networking and
collaboration. As the only English 9
(and 11 and 12) teacher in my school, I really am an island. I recognize that I frequently reinvent the
wheel, and lots of new materials or activities that I use only come to be
through trial and error. But I don’t
need a whole bunch of state or federal dollars to reach out to other teachers
who are teaching what I am. In the age
of blogs, emails, and Dropbox, I could easily build a support system for myself
and my teaching.
Technology could also be used to set up collaborations as
well. I usually think about
collaboration as being something that goes on within the same building, (something
we are not good at) but it doesn't have to be within the same school.
With the resources at my disposal, I could
collaborate with other teachers across Idaho, nationally or even
internationally. On my recent trip to
Costa Rica, I made a connection with a teacher who works in a one room school
house. We talked about connecting her students
with my high school kids. She is
interested in building projects about the environmental issues we face in the US and how they are being
handled, and comparing them to what is seen in Costa Rica. Wouldn't it be great if we found other people
in places with different climates to work with us as well? Something like this could include math,
science, history, economics, art, Spanish and English. How’s that for networking and collaboration.
I love the idea of building a support system for yourself that leads to professional development, which is just another way of improving yourself and your teaching. One of the suggestions that I think has already happened (or is happening) is the Common Core State Standards. She advocated for this level playing field and it is happening. Change is incremental and slow. Maybe some of the other ideas will also come to fruition.??
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