20 posts tagged “physics”
So here I am at a workshop last week with my principal, AP, and 3
colleagues. They are all scrambling to fill out their clock hour forms
and grumbling while I am sipping a nice cup of coffee and reading my
email. "You know you need to do this clock hour form, Luann," my
principal said to me.
"Thanks. I really don't need them, " I replied.
She looked shocked. "How can you not need them?"
"I renewed my national board certificate so in Washington, I'm good until June 2019."
"You mean all you had to do was sign something instead of doing clock hours?"
My principal continued to be enraged that when I arrived in Washington from another state, I was immediately granted a professional certificate in Science. Only Science, mind you, even though my out-of state certificate has an old Comprehensive Science which was the equivalent of one major science field and an academic minor in 3 others (Earth and Space, Chemistry, Biology, Physics are the 4 fields) each individual cert endorsement, and all math 7-12, and that I have countless hours in both education and the sciences, at the graduate level, 20 years in the high school classroom, a few years teaching at 2 state universities, and am completing a doctorate in science education in a program that required original research in both a science field and science education, and a dissertation with more rigor than I've seen completed by doc students at UW. I did go take the Praxis II in Chemistry ( I didn't miss any questions) and Biology and Physics ( I got the overachiever certificate thingy.)
The conference was a great learning experience for us as we are beginning to implement standards-based grading. Of course I want to "grade" my students in the most fair way, a way that shows everyone's alignment with standards, in the most accurate and reliable way possible. In reality, I've embraced many of the philosophies presented at the conference in a more informal way. I've not "graded" homework for many years, as such. Given a few token points for completing it, because this gives students confidence and a sense of accomplishment, but not ever demonstrated a technique on one day and expected students to hand me a perfectly completed problem set the next day. I've said to a kid, "No, you are not ready to take a test today. Let's do yours tomorrow after we talk." I've taken late assignments with no penalty because of some circumstance, like, "I just didn't get this one - may I have a little longer to work on this?" I don't give a rip about tardies or attendance so long as the kid can do what's expected and don't disrupt class by making a grand entrance (yes they have to come in on their own to make up labs.) I've marked different assignments "no count"when completing the assignment didn't seem to impact the student's real learning and mastery of a standard. I could go on .......
We can't fix what's going on in education right now just by changing our assessment methods. It takes a deeper approach, beginning with the engagement of students and holding them accountable for their learning. The learning certainly takes place at a different pace for different students, each student benefiting from different approaches to the standard to be mastered. Although I saw in almost every presentation at the conference that it was important for students to know their learning targets, where they are in the progression of that learning, and how to get to mastery level for each target standard, I don't think my principal saw that. I think she truly believes that if we just allow late work into infinity and don't include a mark of zero, ever, that grades will look good and students will be "successful." I wholeheartedly disagree. Fair assessment is essential and as with my entire teaching practice, I am always looking for a better way - but if there is no learning, what is there to assess?
Apparently, although we as NBCT's attempt to educate our administrators
about the certification process and how valuable it is in shaping our
practices in ways that lead to above average gains in student learning,
we still have work to do. We've talked and are not sure that we like
the direction our administrators are taking - administrators who were
not strong educators and who have no real clue what good teaching IS -
and are going underground with our efforts; grassroots, if you will.
My plan is to get together a group of NBCT's in my district for some
discussion, and I have a few plans in mind. I'll let you know how it
goes.
There are 70 guppies. I found 3 more the day after I moved the rest. I added 6 Glolight Tetras a week ago and they are doing fine too. Today, a school board member is donating a tarantula. I am beyond excitement. Best of all, TTFH, Princess, despises spiders.
I would post updsates to the room appearance, but it really does not look any differently. I am doing lesson plans for my FIVE classes, 1 of which is new this year and 1 of which was new last year so really has no curriculum yet as I designed the course, so I am busy.... meanwhile Princes TTFH is fluffing about making things look nice and hoping I am sure to scab the Biology lesson olans I will eventually have to create. I've put that class off till last for that very reason. She usually likes to have things done ahead, and it makes her crazy when I have procrastinated ( i have the first month roughed out on a little paper calendar but have not yet put it on the web) so she ends up doing her own.
It will be too noisy for me to do any work requiring thought today so no doubt the room will gert put together and I will have photos. In any case, I will have photos of the tarantula.
All 67 guppies are moved into their new tank.
They really are happy:
If only it were that easy for us, when we move. Just keep doing your daily stuff until someone scoops you up and puts you somewhere else, where you just start doing your daily stuff again, but in a new place.
I didn't get everything quite filed today. I will spend 1 hour, no more, on Sunday night, tidying up, and then start on Biology lesson plans first thing Monday morning. New to my curriculum this year is the Understanding by Design approach. I've always sort of designed lessons backwards, from the perspective of, what do kids need to know about this? How will they learn it? How will I know that they are learning it? UbD just takes al this to a more specific level. Add in the differentiation I need to do in my 2 Bio classes and especially in the Intro to Science skills class, and my curriculum will take on a very different look this year. Intro to Science has 17 students. 7 of them are Life Skills students, meaning they take no academic classes but spend their school days learning to make toast, launder their clothes, walk across the street without being hit by a car, dress themselves, and some even learn to handle money. These students are not enrolled in any other academic classes. Some are in PE or adaptative PE, and some are in Choir, but none of the 7 are in any type of social studies, math, or language arts. One is in a wheelchair, is blind, and as far as I know she does not speak. I have absolutely no idea how to share science with this child. She can't even see the guppies.
I'm still putting stuff away. Of course it would have helped had I not, each year for the past 4, gotten tired of filing as school let out and just left the last several inches of stuff to file in a box under the front desk........ so now I have taken it upon myself to weed that all out and file the stuff that I still need. The recycle box in only half full. Does that mean I threw away most of the stuff I needed to, or does it mean I am still keeping too much stuff? Tomorrow, by the time I leave, it all will be put away so that I can start lesson plans. I will take 1 day for Biology, 1 day for AP Biology, 1 day for Physics, and 1 day for Science Skills. Then I will take next Friday off. OFF. I will NOT go in, I will NOT. And I will just hope that TTFH is not in next week, or I will have to stay in my classroom with my door closed and my AC on. Yes, I have certainly taken what others felt was a lemon of a room and made it into a lovely margarita. Others will want to teach there. They already want to come and sit at my desk and look at the mountain :-)
I'm going to be much more gentle with last year's new hire. I'm just now seeing how much help he truly needed. I think that since the last new science teacher I worked with was TTFH, my perspective on what new teachers need is a little slanted. SO, we are back to square one with him, now that he has had his year to make every mistake inthe book. I picked spitwads and gum off the ceiling in his classroom as I was moving in, for pete's sake.
The author deals with why kids are not productive - the real, underlying cause of why a kid isn't doing something. It might be that he lacks the ability to write letters on the page while still keeping the meaning of his thought in his head, or many other things....
I'm going for a run. It has finally cooled off a bit and the sky is beautiful.
After 6 days, including yesterday with 3 kids doing much of the grunt work, here is my new classroom/physics lab:
And my desk, now in the back corner so that when kids aren't there I can work in privacy from the hall traffic and not have to look directly across the hall at Princess, TTFH:
Getting it all to fit was a project. Along the back wall to the left of the desk and then the adjacent window wall are 4 moveable cabinets with the physics equipment 4 groups ( I have 18 this year) will need for Physics, and an 8-foot table for each group. The aquarium, sans fish, is at the opposite corner of the room. It got fresh water yesterday and needs to cycle awhile before I move the guppies. I will move most of their current water with them so that will be helpful - but I think the filter pump that was in their new tank that we moved is shot, so I have the huge filter in their right now. I'll move the actual filter with them as that's where all the good bacteria are.
And the view from my window while sitting at my desk is not bad........ At least I'm not having to look at someone who irritates me while I am trying to work. And when I lock my door at night, she can't come steal my stuff.
I know that she was unwilling to give up her lab because she feels that it makes her look important to be in there. I know that it's just an insecurity thing, and I know that she will use it to make herself feel very important in the eyes of the kids. I only wish that the kids thought she was important. They truly don't like her. I'm sure that some of them learn something, but they sure don't learn to like science and they sure don't learn that they are good at it, even when they are.
On another note, the dissertation is getting there, too. It seems the more I run, the more motivsted I am to write. Interesting thought. I have a bit of data analysis to do before I go back to school today, and a bit of laundry to put away as well.
I sucked up and did it.
When I sought teacher certification in Washington, the PTB surveyed my Ohio professional certificate for any science and any math in grades 7-12, my Indiana cert for the same things, noted my National Board certificate, and promptly awarded me Washington's general science cert. This cert allows me to teach all the same stuff in WA that I taught in Ohio. The cert only says, though, "science." Washington also has individual certs for biology, chemistry, physics, and earth science which are apparently held in higer esteem than simply "science" whereas in Ohio,
"Comprehensive Science," which hasn't been issued for at least several years now, was the revered cert. The TFH has, over the years, alluded to the fact that her cert is better because it says science AND Earth Science. Additionally, although I was asked to sit on the committee to re-write the Physics teacher exam for Washington, it could not be added to my own certificate. Another member of the committee was admanat that he would never hire a teacher with onle "science" on their cert no matter what their transcript said or what their qualifications and experience and successin the subject were. So, I scurried off to the testing centers and took the stupid Praxis tests for biology, chemistry, and physics. And of course I passed them all, with excellent scores and have sent off my WA cert to have these 3 areas added and to have it renewed for the life of my renewed NBcert as well, so I'm good until June 2009 at which time I could retire. Yippee.
Now interestingly enough, should I move to another bordering state that shall remain nameless, there is no recoprocity. 47 states would honor this list of credentials, but not the state in which my spouse is currently living and working. I will have to go into most districts at 8 years experience, not 20, and with an initial 18 month certificate, and will take additional coursework. Nevernime that I already have 400+ quarter hours (190 or so are a BS degree) including 200+ graduate hours mostly in the sciences, I need MORE. And I will get to take the methods courses again, courses I have taught in 2 different states at 2 different state universities. Oh please.
I'm through venting now and will return to work on the dissertation, not that it will help my certification issues in this other state. Thanks for listening.
Today was beautiful and sunny and the mountain was out. There was a tiny bit of haze over the Cascades which the TV news attributed to the smoke from the California wildfires. Wow.
The iPod arrived yesterday. I charged it and put on 1244 songs, leaving something like 145 GB free. I ran for 45 minuter this morning and listened to maybe 12-13. I don't think I know 38756 more songs. So I'm downloading podcasts from MIT. I selected like 140 of them this morning and currently have 112 more to go. At that rate, I will be done by next week when I have to drive to a workshop thing each day.
Day 2 of the National Board facilitation for the school group. All 5 are working hard. The difficult part for me is that one of the candidates is TTFH (see posts from last fall and early 2006.) I know that I am supposed to want candidates to certify, but this person should have been coached out of the process this spring. Problem is that I tried, but since she doesn't listen to anyone, it was pointless. If by some fluke she DOES certify, the process will completely lack credibility with me and I will want to send my own certificate back. THe process will lose credibility in our district as everyone knows she is pitiful in the classroom.
The house is spotless. It's obvious that I am avoiding the dissertation. I thought a day off to make my surroundings clean and peaceful would help my concentration. I'm sure they will. once I make myself go back to that desk and start writing. I think my first steps tomorrow will be to clean off the desk and read some articles to add as citations to support a few points I made.
And no AP biology teacher should be without this book:
which will be here in time for reading over the weekend for the AP workshop next week.
I've done essentially nothing on the dissertation today. I have been tidying up the house, doing laundry, running errands, getting ready to host dinner tomorrow night for 5 NB candidates I am facilitating. I just have to go to the farm market tomorrow and get the corn on the cob. I'm doing a drunken chicken for the carnivores and will have a few veggie burgers for the rest of us. Sweet corn, baked yams, salad, and grilled peaches with frozen yogurt for dessert - yum.
I will write a bit tonight. Really, I will.
ya - typing madly again for a week. Spent the 1st week of Christmas break on school stuff and now almost, almost finished with first draft of Ch. 2. OTOH, Biology is pretty well done until semester. Tomorrow, I will go to school and finish prep for physics and intro for the rest of the semester. And of course a ton of grading. But for now, until tomorrow AM, I am writing. I need to update with all the Christmas happenings too - but for now, I am writing.