New Jersey Students Petition the White House – Prevent Bullying

Today I discovered the following post from someone whom I follow on Twitter, @Techbradwaid; the post is from a classroom of students in New Jersey – the power of Twitter is to “flatten our world” – the students are connecting learning from a social studies unit on Ancient Rome to the scourge of bullying in our modern society … after reading their post (re-published here in its entirety) I felt compelled to sign their petition … I share as a way to show support for these creative students and their teacher … F Y I:

Accessed from: https://www.smore.com/jzhv-bullies-knocking-down-potential

Bullies: Knocking down potential

Let’s move to a better future!

#FaceOurFuture

Please sign our petition!

Wednesday, March 12th, 11:30am to Friday, April 11th, 11:30am

This is an online event.

 Please follow the links below to help us reach our goal of 100,000 signatures!

Bullies: Knocking down potential. Let’s move to a better future! | We the People: Your Voice in Our Government

Bullies: Knocking down potential. Let’s move to a better future! | We the People: Your Voice in Our Government

wh.gov
 How did this all begin?

As part of our unit on ancient Rome, students learned about the plebeians, who made up 95% of the population, but had no say in the government. The plebeians joined forces to create a single vision and enact change on the government of Rome. Just as the plebeians faced their government, our government provides an opportunity to voice our own opinions. Therefore, we decided to speak up against bullying and face its harmful impact on our nation.

Our Goal, Our Voice

We are a group of students from Monroe Township Middle School (NJ) who have submitted a petition to the White House to prevent bullying across America. We ask for your help to stop this serious issue. We are submitting this petition on the behalf of all of the kids that that have faced bullying throughout their life. With your help we can encourage the potential in these students, promote their future, and therefore the future of America. We hope that the White House will recognize this as a serious issue and create an anti-bullying movement, so that all students can reach their potential and contribute to our nation’s future.

 Please Sign our Petition!
Bullies: Knocking down potential. Let’s move to a better future! | We the People: Your Voice in Our Government

Bullies: Knocking down potential. Let’s move to a better future! | We the People: Your Voice in Our Government

wh.gov
 How do I sign?
  1. Go to our petition site http://wh.gov/lVOQL and select “Create an Account.”
  2. Follow the simple steps to create an account.
  3. Verify your account: You will receive an email within a few minutes asking you to click on a link to verify your email address. Click on the link in the email (or cut and paste it into your web browser).
  4. Once you have verified your email address, you’re logged into the system.
  5. Return to our petition.
  6. Click the button to sign the petition!

#FaceOurFuture Petition Signatures Map

mapsengine.google.com
Check out how our petition to the White House to create an anti-bullying movement has spread! These are all of the signature locations. Sign today to add your location! http://wh.gov/lVOQL

Deadline

In order to get a review and official response from the White House we need 100,000 signatures by Friday, April 11!

Promote Us!

Please share our petition URL with EVERYONE you know!

http://wh.gov/lVOQL

Use #faceourfuture with our URL across all social media.

Feel free to use our logo as you spread the word about our petition.

#FaceOurFuture by K. Lowden

#FaceOurFuture by K. Lowden

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#FaceOurFuture – ThingLink

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Journey toward meeting the needs of all learners

In this blog post my aim is to share a personal journey and the relationship of video and technology in meeting the needs of all learners. The overall purpose of this blog post is related in part to my participation in the Blogamonth Challenge, #Blogamonth on Twitter, and http://blogamonth.weebly.com/ on the web.

I’m participating in the Blogamonth Challenge, and this month’s optional topic is: “Great movies challenge our thinking, speak to our emotions, and take us to distant worlds both historical and fantastic.  Integrating the power of videos into your classroom, professional development, and/or school culture offers even greater potential impact as there is the opportunity to reflect, discuss, and critique the quality and message of the video.

Suggest one – two of your favorite videos (Ted Talks, YouTube Clips, Vimeos, Movie Clips…etc) that you have used in your school setting, and share how you used it. Explain how incorporating this visual into your presentation or lesson has helped you to achieve your goals.”

The journey began in 1993 when I first stepped into the classroom at Blackhawk Middle School in Bensenville, Illinois. We’ll fast forward to an experience from 1995 which was pivotal in my journey toward meeting the diverse learning needs of all learners with whom I had the honor of teaching.

In 1995 I attended a professional development 5-day workshop led by Dr. T. Roger Taylor (link to his website). The point of this workshop was for me, then a middle school social studies teacher and district K-8 social studies coordinator, to learn how to integrate video clips, audio clips and H.O.T.S. (higher order thinking skills) into all units and lessons of study. This was in the early days of the “standards movement” and the change in Illinois from IGAP to ISAT (we’re now watching the ISAT go the way of the IGAP in favor of the PARCC) … but I digress … The Roger Taylor unit/lesson planning was also a way to get “general education teachers” like me to DIFFERENTIATE instruction. Differentiation is a “buzz word” and an oft misunderstood concept in education. Meeting the needs of ALL learners is a goal of instruction and an often elusive goal for many teachers.

Using video clips (1995) to You Tube (2014) in and of themselves will not be sufficient to reach and motivate and challenge each and every learner. But the use of multiple modes of content delivery and use of multiple ways for children to show learning WILL lead to meeting the different needs of all learners. In my classrooms where I taught, in social studies, I always had multiple levels of ability. As a recipient of an Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy (IMSA) Caring Enough To Challenge Award early in my career I realized the value of meeting the needs of the highly gifted in a differentiated classroom. As a teacher of children with special needs, regular needs, and every need in between, I learned the value of lessons learned from Roger Taylor and others of differentiated learning.

One of the major “disruptors”, or “game changers” in education, and in my experiences as a teacher and as an educational administrator is TECHNOLOGY. Flash forward to 2011, as seen and read in the linked video I made regarding district/school technology integration: VIDEO LINK. The power of Technology to motivate learners is easier to see and feel and study and observe than the power of technology (and the tools related to technology) to meet the needs of all learners.  Returning to this month’s Blogamonth Challenge, I’m sharing the reasoning behind the linked video above from 2011. I share this video here – not for shameless self-promotion – but instead to show how a teacher who learns, grows, and becomes a school district superintendent (me) continues the journey to share with broader audiences tools, strategies, methods, ideas, values, goals, and aspirations all centered around the eye on the prize – the prize is learning for ALL students. The most effective way to get there is through carefully and thoughtfully planned out lessons and units and assessments designed to meet the varied learning needs and ability levels of all students!

An additional use of video is linked here to a ROUGH Udemy course I created – emphasis on ROUGH … The point of sharing this set of videos and embryonic entry into online learning with Udemy is an effort to show a unit planning process that like the Roger Taylor work, was instrumental in supporting and sustaining a rigorous course that was designed with multiple student ability levels at the beginning, middle, and end. I used the workshop in 6th grade world history as well as in 8th grade U.S. history (the 8th grade Workshop is described in the Udemy course). Teachers in districts where I have served currently use the Workshop model in an effort to meet the learning needs of all students in their classrooms.

My professional career is based upon the foundation that our society is complex enough to present many challenges to people as they pass from childhood to adulthood. It is my firm belief that a strong foundation in educational preparation will support a person’s quest for success and prosperity. My philosophical foundation holds that young people are our windows to the future; working with them has given me a unique vantage point to assess their goals, needs and abilities. I have been, and I remain committed to preparing our young citizens, and those who teach and support them, for their futures – and ours.

So … as a recap … I’m motivated to Blog as part of professional growth, learning and reflection. I’m participating in the Blogamonth challenge with other educators around the country and world (via the best personal learning network – PLN – Twitter), and I am committed to helping principals help teachers meet the needs of ALL learners. I am also a firm believer that technology and the related tools are and will continue to be the “game changers” in terms of seeing a world where all classrooms differentiate for all learners. And, finally, I am proud to share works in progress of my own tinkering with video, communication, leadership, and growth as I continue in service above self to the various stakeholders whom I serve and with whom I am inexorably linked in a journey to support continued growth and learning for ALL.

Reflections on a day back in the classroom!

Atlantic Sunrise Desktop Image

On Friday I was lucky since I had the opportunity to get back in the classroom as a substitute teacher for the entire day! As an administrator I visit classrooms every week, in fact this year I have already logged more than 100 individual classroom visits, some lasting a few minutes and others lasting a few hours.  I recently had a chance to participate in middle school First Amendment debates all day, and on Friday I was a substitute teacher all day for students in grades K, 1, and 2! Nothing compares, though, to being the substitute teacher all day in relation to “walking in another’s shoes”. There are many ways administrators can learn about the thoughts, feelings, needs, and experiences of teachers, but literally getting back into the trenches as a teacher is one of many highly effective methods we have in our district. This year each member of the administrative team was in a “raffle” to serve as a substitute for interested employees in the school district.  I was selected by an elementary school teacher who teaches students in grades K-2.

To say that I am proud of the teacher for whom I subbed is an understatement. Her lesson plans were among the best I have ever seen, her organization is phenomenal, her team of educational support personnel is outstanding! I think everyone might have given me extra special treatment due to my official position, but at the end of the day (literally and figuratively) I was the teacher and the experiences were awesome. Like the students, I too learned a lot on Friday!

The students behaved beautifully and eagerly learned and went from task to task. I was told that from time to time these students have challenging or even bad days and sometimes they can give members of the team challenges, but on Friday, they were all about learning, doing, being. The students were kind, attentive, helpful, focused, and quite busy. The teachers plans, about which I describe as well organized, helped guide me in math, language arts, computer work, snack time, motor time, etc.

Each of the students on the teacher’s caseload have individualized plans and individualized schedules. The teacher plans with the other certified specialists (speech language pathologist, social worker, psychologist, etc.) to integrate with the students during their daily work. The students work with one another academically, socially, emotionally, and creatively throughout the many subjects, transitions, etc. I was charged with teaching English, reading, math, social skills, technology usage, listening, writing, etc. I was busy pretty much every minute of the day and the students were quite ready for the routine and quite comfortable with the predictive nature of their days.

So often I have to make decisions that affect many people. The best of those decisions are made when I can get collaborative input from those most impacted by the decisions. Having the opportunity to substitute teach yesterday gave me a real life view point from teachers, teacher assistants, social worker, psychologist, speech language pathologist, assistant principal, and others! Being present all day, being in the trenches so to speak, truly helps me “walk a mile in their shoes”. I am so grateful to have had the opportunity to serve as a substitute teacher. I am so grateful to the teacher and the educational team members for their amazing support and work on a daily basis on behalf of the kids; and I am so grateful to the parents of the students for their input, communication, support, and partnership in support of the education of their children!

It truly takes a village to raise a child and I am so happy to be part of this village!