Showing posts with label Teachers Lead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teachers Lead. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Building Empathy. Building Understanding. Building Apps.


Cult Lit III Empathy Apps: Seeing the world through the eyes of the heart... wrapping our minds around the power of the human spirit. 

How might we help students to develop digital literacy skills and the confidence to express themselves using emerging forms of media?

(Previous empathy building experience: "Using Design Thinking to Learn About the Great Depression")


Student App Showcase | Empathy Apps (Modern & Historical)










Start Building Apps in Your Classroom Today | Templates to Remix, Modify, and Share


Jennifer Lanas | The Fluency Project "ICMA" App Building Template (Inquiry - Case Making - Advocacy)

Dr. Brandao | CL III App Template for Remixing by Students


Getting Started: How might we add App Building to your curriculum?

- My work with the Fluency Project Cohort yielded tremendous personal and professional moments of growth. I also created a wealth of resources that we are publishing together. Here is a unit on challenging stereotypes that also encompasses app building. Please feel free to share, providing  link to my site and attribution to me and The Fluency Project.

High School +/- 9 weeks  | Challenging Stereotypes, Empowering Youth-Led Change

Self-Evaluation | Public Issues Discussion Rubric

Peer-Evaluation | Think-Puzzle-Explore

Project Proposal | Challenging Stereotypes, Empowering Youth-Led Change


Getting Started: How might we digitize SketchNotes and incorporate 21st century tinkering?


Interactive SketchNotes in Google Drawings - YouTube (1:55)

Tutorial: Use Google Drawings to Make Interactive Sketchnotes - YouTube (3:00)

NexMap: Hack Your Notebook - YouTube

Monday, February 22, 2016

Turning Up the Volume on Student Voice & Choice: Social Justice & MediaProduction

The media is the message & the signal is coming in loud and clear. Our teens are responding. They are the voice of a new generation. Theirs is a world where critical thinking and 21st century citizenship are valued.

Our social justice and media production club met to plan our next project. To gear-up for production, we studied "game film" as pro athletes would. 

National Treasure: 


@youthradio
#TheFix


Local Icons:

#CatchTheFuture


Saturday Light Brigade
@slbradio
A Pittsburgh staple, broadcasting for as long as I can remember... Still as relevant and important as ever!


A brainstorming session followed the debut of Youth Radio's program on "White Privilege". Our students had passionate viewpoints to share with one another. Our goal is to work our way up to the production quality of an organization like Youth Radio.

In the near future, we are taking a tour of the Pittsburgh Children 's Museum and laying down tracks in the Youth Express recording studio. This is a big deal for our students--many of whom are amateur musicians, rappers, and spoken word performers. To get an opportunity like this is a tremendous boost of confidence and motivation to keep at it.

Mason edits a shared Google doc while Destiny updates her spoken word performance on her cellphone.

I have a lot to learn when it comes to media production. But, when I look around my classroom, I have a huge incentive to put extra time into discovering emerging forms of media and learning how to get the most from existing platforms, like Soundcloud and YouTube.

Friday, February 19, 2016

Small School, Big Heart: Our First Pep Rally & School Spirit

An innovative school for families of any means, welcoming students from every neighborhood in Pittsburgh's metropolitan area... We are a diverse community of learners. We are proud. We are just getting started.
We celebrated the coming of the final game of the season by hosting a pep rally.

Students and teachers competed in various athletic and academic events--all in the name of fun. Winner takes bragging rights, and a few incentives:

-Dress down day
-Pajama day
-Sports team jersey day
-Pizza party 

The best part about these incentives, other than the fact that they won't break the bank, is that the students came up with the prizes themselves. They made this day a success!

Students emceed the event, coordinated schedules, and ran the sound system. The amount of elbow grease that went into this event was a sight to see. It was a celebration of our school community. Mrs. Alvarez (seated to the right) organized the event as part of Integrated Studies' team 3 project to increase school spirit.

Our administrators got in on the action and battled for a hard fought victory against our students. Knock-out is a serious sport!

The three-legged-relay provided awkward fun for participants and a spectacle for spectators, alike. Finding and hitting your stride are two distinct things...

Volleyball provided some tense moments and spirited debate between the students and faculty. It was a close match, but in the end the teachers squeaked out a victory.

Final thoughts:

We are a small school with limited resources, but the imagination that went into making our first pep rally a success came from a limitless supply of inspiration. It's the desire to be one--to bring our community together and celebrate that which makes us unique, extraordinary... 

We are Holy Family Academy: a start-up school educating teens to be contributors to the world in which they live, work, and play. I'm proud to be a part of this community.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Find Your Tribe: Celebrating Digital Learning Day - #DLDay

To mark #DLDay 2016 I'm sharing "super" Twitter chats. Far from a definitive list--Think of this as a PLN on-demand: no superhero costume necessary.


Spider-Man, Sprout, & Lanas... Now there's a formidable crew! Holy dangling modifier, Batman! We rapidly prototype our way to justice and stop to SketchNote the bad guys for the real crime fighters.

A Definitive List of Twitter Education Chats & Days/Times:



Some of my favorites:

#bfc530 - A Daily Dose of PD & Inspiration

#dtk12chat - Design Thinking in Education

#2pencilchat - Innovative Ideas, Analog Tools = Celebration of Creativity

#tlap - Teach Like A Pirate 

#totallyrossome - Off the Wall Communal Celebration of Learning

#sschat - Social Studies Chat

*#sstlap - Social Studies Teach Like a Pirate... I just learned about this today via reading last night's archived #totallyrossome

#libchat - Librarians & Information Science for the Digital Age

#edtechbridge - Bringing Ed Tech Developers & Teachers Together

#badgechatk12 - Digital Badges in Education

#sunchat - Sunday AM PD

#ditchbook - Toss Out Your Expensive Textbook & Opt For Digital Media & Tools 

#aplangchat - AP English Language & Composition

#aussieed - Aussie Ed Chat

Some of these chats occur way too late (or early, mates!) for a high school teacher sleeping/waking on Eastern Standard Time...

But that's the beauty of Twitter: Conversations are archived using the hashtag. So, I'm more likely to participate in #bfc530 or #2pencilchat... But I find myself reading the highlights from the previous night's #tlap or #drk12chat the very next day.

The key is to find your tribe!





Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Speech & Debate: A Resolution To Transform Lives & Provide LimitlessOpportunities

I pace the halls, talk to walls & resolve to make 3/15 National Speech & Debate Education Day!

I have so much to be grateful for...
My first flight as a high school student... 
My first "real job" as a college student... 
I owe my life, my career to the National Forensic League and the world of speech and debate.

Thank you to every coach, every judge, every bus driver and to all of those who watched us grow up pacing the halls and talking to walls.

When I learned that the National Forensic League (@SpeechAndDebate) started a campaign to have the US Senate name March 15, 2016 National Speech and Debate Education Day, I had to do something. I am an educator because I found my teaching vocation through speech and debate. 

Here we are, the 2008 Wildcat Debaters at the Grand Canyon! (Me, Spencer, Marla, BS, and state champ LT!)

Q: What's crazier than hosting the national championship tournament in the summertime desert heat?
A: Inviting thousands of high school students to Las Vegas for a week: yikes!

It was working with the Greater Latrobe High School Speech Team throughout college that helped me to discover my vocation. I discovered that I enjoyed coaching young people and that I had a knack for breaking down complex processes and arguments. Moreover, I was a better coach than I was a competitor--as athletes describe the oddest of sensations, things just seemed to slow down and I was able to see the nuances of arguments and issues in a way that I couldn't once before. This was my path--and I relished every bus trip, tournament, and stale cup of coffee in the judges' lounge.

In fact, as a competitor one of my chief rivals happened to be my dear friend Alan--a Latrobe debater himself!

Fun fact: Just as I found my first taste of gainful employment of the non-work-study-service-industry variety via speech and debate, Alan did too!

I worked for Latrobe for four years, coaching with my friend and Nat Boards juggernaut teaching role mode, Lisa BS. The job helped me to survive my lean undergrad years at St Vincent and ever-challenging years of grad school and student teaching. 

When I landed my full time teaching position in February '08, it was the week before the state qualifying tournament. Wouldn't you know that my classroom was the staging ground for the final round of expository speaking. 

LT delivered her state champion caliber speech on "dumpster diving" in room 171. I finished the year as Latrobe's assistant coach and passed the torch to another former extemper who recently wrapped up his undergrad and was returning to school to pursue his vocation as a minister--Alan, the young man pictured above.

We prefer the term "power suit" more than "pantsuit", FYI.

Life is funny. And beautiful. And short. I hope the US Senate acts fast to pass this resolution--a resolution to transform the lives of young people... Just as it did for every single person pictured in the photos above. 

Thanks for the RT @speechanddebate. I meant all 140 characters.
Seriously--thank you and the many, many people who volunteered evenings and weekends to provide opportunities for ragamuffins Iike me.

-Jennifer Sylves Lanas

Friday, February 5, 2016

Because It Is The Right Thing To Do, Right Now: #CSforAllStudents & #PDforAll Educators

The White House's #CSforAll initiative is a forward-thinking call to action. It extends across the aisle and can easily be championed by all political parties.

I'm especially fortified in making this claim, seeing the recent push to democratize the STEM field and to tear down the bro-culture of silicone valley's coding world. Whether it's featuring Lego kits with female scientists or Hollywood making a commitment to showcase STEM roles for actors and actresses from underrepresented minority groups, we are moving in the right direction. Couple this with grassroots efforts by groups like Black Girls Code and we have the inspiration for the next generation of problem solvers.

A snapshot with the ladies during Hour of Code. They made unbeatable versions of Flappybird & Star Wars games.
HFA students participated in Hour of Code in December. Witnessing exponential growth in only its third year, this global movement highlights access to CS initiatives. Schools need not have a mega lab to join in--just a willingness to try to code. Our students made games and even crafted binary code bracelets--mine being green and yellow, go SVC Bearcats!

Checking Out Game Design
Today I joined the sophomore Game Design students in Dr. Brandaõ's class. The students began the year modifying games, or creating mods. Already halfway through the course, their growth is impressive. I checked out the video games that they designed for the arcade-a-thon. Similar to the Mario of my youth, the game design students used Floors to create six level games that can be designed and played via the Floors app. There is even an option to design it on-paper, then snap a pic and upload your creation. Pretty groovy if you ask me!

CS for All Students - PD for All Teachers
Computational Thinking for Educators
(I sketched this note upon completing my Google class... As a child after a hard-fought victory on the softball diamond, I hopped on my bicycle and grabbed a celebratory ice cream cone.)

I'm serious about this initiative--as I believe that the White House and other vested stakeholders are. If we want it to happen, for real, we need to get more teachers on board. The best way to do this is to open up quality, free PD. 


For example, I took a free Google class over the summer--Computational Thinking for Educators. It was awesome: at its completion, I felt proud, knowledgeable, and empowered. I even designed my own CS project that can be used to track the frequency of word use across decades. This will be incredibly useful as we begin to study the rhetoric of the Civil Rights era.

Teachers will buy-in when they see the opportunities presented before them--the world that our students are entering is vastly different than the one that we stepped into upon graduating from high school. We need to equip our teens to meet these diverse challenges.


Looking Toward the Future

I'm proud to work at a school that prioritizes professional development. I'm optimistic that there are districts that feel the same way. Perhaps, while the house and congress wrangle over the dollars and cents behind making this CS for All initiative a reality, companies like Google, Microsoft, Intel, and others will continue to offer high quality PD. 

More than that--lets advocate that they open these PD sessions to educators and other stakeholders with a vested interest in our children's futures. That these corporations see that this is critical is a no-brainrd... But will they finance the PD for the teachers shaping and molding the next generation of innovators, that remains to be seen.


Final thoughts: as I listened-in on the #CSforAll teleconference earlier this week, I was delighted to hear the questions about adaptive technologies for the visually impaired and others living with disabilities. We need to be mindful that the progress that we make in STEM fields acknowledges the challenges faced by individuals with disabilities.  As our nation marked 25 years since the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, we need to make strides to incorporate better design and accommodations for the disabled. Furthermore, we must ensure that individuals with disabilities make up the diverse workforce of highly sought-after careers in STEM fields.  

Equity and access is key.
#CSforALL students
#PDforALL teachers

Monday, February 1, 2016

Catholic School Remixed: An Innovative Approach That's Making A Difference

This is my first year teaching at a parochial school. The differences between teaching in a public school vs an Independent Catholic school are numerous--but at the end of the day, it still comes down to solid pedagogy and compassionate teachers doing whatever it takes to place their students' learning at the head of the class... I just have a feeling that it will be a lot easier to score a tuna fish sandwich on Fridays this year.

First Impressions:
Catholic Schools Week kicked off with a fascinating discussion on the Catholic educational tradition in the US. Father Tom captivated our students' attention when he chronicled the settlement and history of California with the missions spanning the state's majestic coast. He continued to tell tales of settlements among French speaking peoples in the parishes of Louisiana and the founding of the first diocese in Baltimore.

Our students were genuinely intrigued when he spoke of the Sisters of Providence and their order consisting entirely of African American women--the pivotal link to a broader theme: Catholic Schools are not just for Catholic students... But rather are for all students.

This is the point where Father Tom broke from his "spoken from the heart" portion of his homily and hit us with data... The type of numbers that made everyone sit up and listen.

Parochial Schools: Improved Outcomes For Urban Youth

In his article published in September, 2015, Andy Smarick cites, "Catholic schools have an unusual ability to help underserved kids succeed. Newer research suggests that longstanding urban Catholic schools foster social capital outside their walls, helping decrease crime and other societal ills."

Smarick details a host of innovations that parochial schools leverage in order to help "an overwhelmingly low income, minority student body, underscor[ing] the Catholic Church's centuries-long commitment to the disadvantaged." One program that he cites is the establishment of Christo Rey schools that have students enlisting in the workforce one day per week.

Our school, Holy Family Academy is built upon a similar model--all of our high school students are employed by corporate partners across the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. This innovative corporate work study internship program provides our young people with many opportunities for growth. Our students develop valuable skills at the workplace, gain the additional support of having supervisors and adult mentors, and in most instances the CWSP pays almost the entirety of our school tuition. 

Our students reap the benefits of a world class private school education and have experiences few, if any teen could boast... And this is for families of any means.

To accomplish this bold mission, we are working toward expanding our flipped learning opportunities, so that our students may have learning opportunities that are portable, on-demand. Additionally, we work very hard to establish the connection between school and careers. 

Our school is only two years old...It's a start-up for all intents and purposes. But it is one that we are all betting on.

When breaking the news that I was leaving my position at another school to take a role at HFA, I joked with my friends citing that this was like getting a call from Sergey Brinn and Larry Page: 
"Hi, Lanas--stop by the garage and check out this cool thing we're working on... We think you would like it. We're gonna call it Google."

That was almost six months ago. It's good to know that very little has changed in that span of time. Sure... The learning curve for me has been steep--and now that I'm back to blogging that would make an excellent post... But I step into the parking lot at the end of the day with a renewed sense of urgency in my vocation as a teacher and mentor.

A lot of that was put into words today... Funny that they weren't mine. Those syllables belonged entirely to Father Tom, whom I dedicate this post, my first ever on Catholic Schools Week. Cheers!

Check out Andy Smarick's piece "Catholic Schools Are Back" (Yes, it gets a little political at the end... "the next administration, etc." I will not inject politics into this blog... this just happens to be a really sound article from a publication with political leanings... Next time, I'll throw-in an article from Huff-Post to balance out the National Review.)
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/424409/catholic-schools-are-back

Forthcoming update to the post: running the numbers on Catholic Schools vs Public Schools, via the US Dept of Education


- graduation rates 
Catholic > Public
- median salaries for graduates
Catholic > Public
-socioeconomic data on Vatholic vs Public

Friday, January 29, 2016

Creative Synergy: Good Partners In Crime & Adventures in Curriculum Hacking

Freshly picked ideas are worth climbing to the highest branches. Luckily, we need not always scurry up a tree, but rather we can find inspiration in much closer confines. Today's post is about the brainstorming and spitballing that makes classroom magic happen.


Cultural Literacy at Holy Family Academy

As part of a dynamic duo teaching Sophomore Cultural Literacy at HFA, I work closely with my partner in crime and co-conspirator, Ro Vigilante @vigilantewords. Together, we integrate American literature into the cultural context of 20th century American history and culture. 

This means that the students are truly developing a sense of the world in which they immerse themselves. In a way, we develop a taste for what it was like to live within the world that once was--to test its boundaries and limitations... To tackle it's challenges and embrace it's opportunities. 

For example, our exploration of the 1930s demonstrates a good mix of complimentary content, skills, and dispositions needed for students to connect with the world of the past, and engage the present moment via 21st century skills and design thinking.

Ro selected a bold play, Clifford Odettes Waiting for Lefty. Together we conducted a table read of the play--I thought this was neat on so many levels: Ro has an extensive background in theatre, so the students experienced Ms. Vigilante not just in her teacher costume, but as a real person, passionate about drama and the arts.

On the heels of this discussion, focusing on the nascent labor movement, a push to unionize, and the plight of young people facing a bleak and uncertain future, we transitioned to the Works Progress Administration and the Alphabet Soup programs designed to get us out of the Great Depression. 

Instead of focusing on content alone as in a traditional history class, we looked closely at the principles of human centered design and embarked upon a collective journey--project based learning and role play. Our students explored the way both the Depression and WPA affected the lives of real Americans. 

Want to learn more? Check out my blog post on using the principles of design thinking to develop Depression Era persona profiles. There's a groovy YouTube video of student perspectives on the making of the persona profiles, too.

The tech skills that we acquired using GAFE and our knowledge of the Depression helped students to build persona profiles. This also helped us to focus our attention on the disposition critical to being a good amateur historian: empathy. 

After students shared their work and posted their persona profiles to our learning management system, they recorded reflections discussing the critical need for empathy when embarking upon a venture such as this. Our students really developed context spanning the bounds of time, geography, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. Where else could all of this be possible but in Cultural Literacy, an integrated classroom.

Inspiration comes in many forms... It helps to have a good partner and to work at an innovative school that empowers teachers to have the creative confidence to "go for it" and take their moonshot ideas from the drawing board to the classroom. Needless to say, I have rediscovered my teaching vocation at HFA this year.


At my former school and alma mater, Trinity High School, I worked closely with a cohort of teachers whom happened to be my lunch buddies, too. In a public school, there are fewer opportunities to modify the curriculum, unless you get the chance to write curriculum. 

I took advantage of this offer when designing the curriculum for AP Lang & Comp a few years back. Last year I shifted gears again, when I jumped at the chance to incorporate 21st century tech and active learning strategies in the 9th Grade Academy. This lead to a bit of curriculum hacking and creative use of resources to build a low resolution Makerspace in my classroom. 

First, it should be noted that freshmen are in a precarious state of knowing all of the answers and being terrified that they will be exposed for not having all of the answers... They are miniature versions of the juniors and seniors that I taught for years, only more malleable. I jest... But with lots of elements of the truth.

In the 9th grade academy, there were no opportunities to rewrite curriculum, but as previously reported, plenty of chances to "hack-curriculum " existed. For instance, Vonnegut's Harrison Burgeron was teamed up with NPR stories about an autistic classroom and their iPad band... The classic short story The Most Dangeroous Game was coupled with a podcast on street violence and a gang of teenagers on Long Island profiling and hunting Latino youth.

My students, predominantly Middle-class teens living in a rural suburb of Pittsburgh, were transfixed. Their ability to make relevant connections to both fiction and the new media that I presented them with skyrocketed. From here, we began to supplement the existing curriculum with digital media that highlighted the relevance of the text. It was 9th grade English remixed and reimagined... 

The addition of digital media and relevant, real world content transformed a short story unit into a decisive turning point in our classroom--to work within the confines of curriculum and Common Core Standards familiar to all public school teachers, but find ways to remake learning for our students.

Again, it goes back to having good partners--people that you can trust with your both your heart and your thoughts: because for teachers, we live a thousand lives within our classrooms, and the spillover into our personal world has few boundaries. 

Case in point: I keep tablets and post its around the house (and in my car's cup holder) to jot down ideas for school--I happen to be blogging at the stove on a Friday night, seasoning a pot of chili...but duty calls! 

Yes, and... It comes down to this: To be a teacher is to be fully alive in your vocation. For you and your students are on a path of learning and discovery; it was written in the eternal dream of God. Your mission is to author that story for future generations. A future of wonder and possibility.

Thanks for looking back with me... 
There are so many of my former colleagues that I wish to thank--and maybe that will be a post down the line. But I really want to tip my cap to special Ed teacher and my partner for over 4 years Jen Rakoczy, my best friend across the hall and Empress of Empathy Diana Denman, my Chewba writing creative consultant Swarrow, my Pirate game companion and the golden voice of Trinity Athletics Matt White, my difference-maker/ keeper of perspective and Frida Khalo fan club president Marna Day, my trifecta of oracles of insights at the far end of the school Erin Helmkamp, Nicole Welch, and Gretchen Mountain, my history pals who always encouraged me to brainstorm about World Affairs Council and to bridge the gaps and help students make the connections between our two fields--Mary Ellen Jutca , Joe Dunn, Lou Majoris--and my carpool partner and rogue educator in constant search of ways to improve educational practice and get kids to actually speak another language "German Josh" Baringer, aka Herr Bear.

These folks, as well as a huge cast of characters from all over the district, helped me to brainstorm some of the most interesting and creative projects for our students. I loved my time at Trinity and I grew so much as a watched eight classes of students graduate... I am forever grateful.

So, find your tribe--in your department, in your school, in your world. Next week, I'll write about online PLNs via Twitter.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

"How MIGHT we..." Stoking the Fires of Student Inquiry UsingConditional Language


How might we HOOK our kids on LEARNING? Encourage intellectual curiosity in & out of the classroom.


This past July, to mark the one-year anniversary of the Ice Bucket Challenge, I tweeted the PEEL template that I developed for our Tuesdays With Morrie unit. Click the link below to download a PDF.


Mary Cantwell @scitechyedu proceeded to chat with me, as I tagged the tweet #dtk12chat. Mary & my Head of School, Dr.LisaAbel-Palmieri @learn21tech, founded the #dtk12chat. I'm indebted to Mary, even though she nearly gave me heatstroke... We'll talk about that later. She offered insights and advice for effectively implementing this technique--HMW...

"The 4th word is critical", she remarked. It's true, too: just look at how limiting and scripted my "Ice Bucket Challenge" template appears--full of words like "game-change" and specifics such as "social media campaign" or "fight against terminal disease". Sure--I developed it for a very specific part of a unit. But in doing so, I inadvertently put limits on my students' creativity.

This was "just-in-time" intervention. As I spent my summer traveling between Pittsburgh and Chicago, returning from the Active Learning Summit hosted by Lisa, I was in the right frame of mind to self-evaluate. Mary's observations challenged and inspired me. I had become so engrossed in our conversation, I accidentally got off the red line at the wrong stop. Trust me--an added two mile walk in +90* heat couldn't even slow down my momentum.

I love Pittsburgh... I'm a "Pittsburgh Girl"... But, my goodness--public transit in Chicago is just incredible. We have much to learn, Steel City.

Big Take-Aways:

I did not realize that July's Active Learning Summit would inspire me to resign my position of nearly eight school years and take on the role of Cultural Literacy teacher at an innovative start-up high school founded in the tradition of Catholic schooling for urban youth and families of any means. 

I did not realize that a Twitter brainstorming session would lead me to question and redevelop so much of my digital portfolio.

I did realize, though, on that hot-hot afternoon, that we need to be brave enough to look in the mirror and critically take stock of our work. To accept that the iterative process is ongoing and will have necessary setbacks and failures along the way. These missteps are not deal breakers, but on the contrary they are moments of exponential growth. Personally and professionally... If we allow them to be.

I completed a class in Computational Thinking, too. Talk about a truly inspired summer--quality time to push myself as a teacher and lifelong learner.

I've posted a few templates below--some are in varying stages of the iterative process. By no means am I an expert--but I want to share my work to help you to find your best work in and out of the classroom, too. Let's encourage each other and motivate one another!

The key, I believe, is to use conditional language as much as possible... Let's not lock our students into looking for one solution, but encourage free thinking in all of its varying forms. We can hook our kids on learning by creating relevant and thought-provoking discussion starters and writing prompts that tap into cultural movements. So, let the iterative process begin!

Templates:
PEEL + image/INFOGRAPHIC + writing prompt (PEEL = point, explanation, evidence, link to main idea)
HMW + PEEL + image


Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Power to the Tweeple - Democratization via Twitter

Is Twitter democratizing our schools in a way that outpaces the acceptable use policy? We are living in the Information Age--social media echoes the sentiments of Marshall McLuhan who proclaimed, "The medium is the message." As we strive to be stewards of educational innovation and improvement, shouldn't we embrace the power of social media in our ever-expanding learning ecosystem?

Think about it: When social media is used to promote the free exchange of ideas and showcase student creativity and innovation, that goes beyond "acceptable". It is downright exceptional!

Twitter Moment: Capturing "That Time Our Students Met Governor Wolf"

Twitter Moment: Introducing "The Child I Was" to the Students I Teach

Twitter Moment: Embodying "The Essence of Teamwork" and "Resilience in Defeat"

#PowerToTheTweeple

For those bold educator-innovators whom are in violation of their district's acceptable use/social media policy, I dedicate this post to you. As of this date, I am you... My district's official policy is opposed to teachers tweeting--but it sure is nice when colleagues, administrators, and students stop by my classroom because they saw the tweets showcasing the "cool and creative" things we do.

I am the high school representative on the Trinity Area School District Education Committee. To me, putting educators in the lead is one of my highest priorities as a committee member. We see the power of sharing and showcasing student creativity and achievements both in the classroom and our community. As a digital innovator, I want this to be as much a part of our culture and identity as reading, writing, and arithmetic. 

Teaching our students to be digitally responsible, 21st century citizens isn't an option: it's what the age of innovation demands. It is my honor and duty as a teacher to lead the way.

Let's make a push to democratize our schools and allow educators to responsibly post classroom artifacts, best practices, and student achievements... Without the fear of violating the same district policies that strictly forbid students from wearing "jams and Zubaz pants". 

The '90s called... They want their acceptable use policy back.

*Note: 

As a sophomore, I was assigned detention for going on the Internet without a signed and approved permission form. It was a beautiful spring afternoon in 1999, and I was locked in the after school detention dungeon with class skippers and bathroom stall smokers.

The website I accessed was a 10th Grade Chemistry Review Guide that I created using Tripod: I was so proud of myself--and so busted by our school's librarian!

My parents did not challenge the penalty, citing that it was a ridiculously silly policy, yet I knew what might happen if I went online. It was my folly for trying to learn independently between the hours of 7-3.

I am still amazed that I found my vocation as a teacher... The beauty and irony of it all. Life is a gift, and a sense of humor is a blessing!