Friday, October 5, 2012

Three Questions

I came across this and believe it is an effective reflective activity:

The answer to three questions will determine your success or failure...

1.  Can people trust me to do my best?

2.  Am I committed to the task at hand?

3.  Do I care about other people and show it?

Have a great Friday!


CS

Craig Smith

The opinions shared in this blog belong to Craig Smith     and do not represent the school or district in which he works.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Energy in the Room

I recently formally observed a Beginning Teacher in my school that demonstrated how important and beneficial it is for the teacher to be the energy in the classroom.

You can find hundreds of articles and resources discussing how important it is for the teacher to be the energy in the classroom.  Why is it so important?

Two primary effects:

1.  Instructional time is maximized.

2.  The students are engaged.

You ever notice how fast an observation goes when you're in an energetic classroom?  Forty-five minutes fees like 15.  The best compliment a student can give a teacher is, at the end of the class, you hear, "It's time to go already?!?".  This only occurs when the instructional time is maximized, keeping students engaged for the entire class period.

Last week, I retweeted a tweet by @Jaymelinton (who will be moderating Wednesday's #ncadmin chat, "New Teacher Support", at 8 pm [shameless plug]), which was originally posted by @coolcatteacher:

"Students will rarely exceed the energy you put into the equation."

The importance of energy and enthusiasm was best demonstrated near the end of Thursday's observation:

Since this occurred in a world language class, I'm not sure what exactly the teacher said (it was not a Spanish class-I can normally hold my own in a Spanish class).  All of the sudden, 24 high school students had their feet off of the ground and were sitting on top of their desks, working furiously on the activity and participating with the dialogue led by the teacher.  It was some sort of quick-paced, relatively silly, "the floor has turned into hot lava that is rising towards the desk" activity.  These students could not care less about "looking cool" in front of others.  Remember, these are high school students.

Every single student participated; Every single student was engaged; This was the result of the energy in the room.

Thanks for reading!

CS

Craig Smith

The opinions shared in this blog belong to Craig Smith     and do not represent the school or district in which he works.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Walkthrough's and Learning Objectives

I can't quite explain why I feel so strongly about it, but this TeacherTube video clip is fantastic:

Walkthrough's and Learning Objectives

(remember the similar Sprint commercial)

CS

Craig Smith

The opinions shared in this blog belong to Craig Smith     and do not represent the school or district in which he works.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

"How to be a Common Core Instructional Leader"

Chat from 9/5: "How to be a Common Core Instructional Leader"

This is a summary from the September 5th #NCADMIN chat:

#NCADMIN Chat Summary




CS

Craig Smith

The opinions shared in this blog belong to Craig Smith     and do not represent the school or district in which he works.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Thank you, Coach Hoke

Getting blown out on a national-stage in the Cowboys Classic against the defending national-champions was not an ideal Saturday evening for Michigan fans.  Personally, my popularity sky-rockets during Michigan games when they are playing poorly, and my phone was constantly buzzing from 9 pm to around 11.

But this post isn't about football.  It is not about the University of Michigan.  It's about sending a message.  

It's about leadership.