3. … a box of chocolates
… getting your teeth pulled whether you need
it or not.
… Snuffleupagus. Important but nobody has
really seen it.
… Water to a thirsty soul!
… like completing a 1000 piece puzzle.
… an interesting trailer for a movie which
disappoints when you have to sit through the
whole film.
… discovering what you need to be your best.
5. From the Research…
Professional development programs for teachers frequently:
• Are not learner centered.
• Are not knowledge centered.
• Are not assessment centered.
• Are not community centered.
National Academies Press How People Learn (p.27)
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=9853&page=27
19. Thank You!
Mike Ritzius
• Teacher:Camden
County Technical School
• Edcamp Foundation:
Co-founder and Board
member
• NJEA: PD Consultant
• Website: http://Ritzi.us
• Twitter: @mritzius
Notes de l'éditeur
[tweet] Presenting about edcamp. Please complete the following in at the link “Professional Development is like…” http://todaysmeet.com/NJPSA12
Simply transmission of information Are not learner centered. Rather than ask teachers where they need help, they are simply expected to attend prearranged workshops.Are not knowledge centered. Teachers may simply be introduced to a new technique (like cooperative learning) without being given the opportunity to understand why, when, where, and how it might be valuable to them. Especially important is the need to integrate the structure of activities with the content of the curriculum that is taught.Are not assessment centered. In order for teachers to change their practices, they need opportunities to try things out in their classrooms and then receive feedback. Most professional development opportunities do not provide such feedback. Moreover, they tend to focus on change in teaching practice as the goal, but they neglect to develop in teachers the capacity to judge successful transfer of the technique to the classroom or its effects on student achievement.Are not community centered. Many professional development opportunities are conducted in isolation. Opportunities for continued contact and support as teachers incorporate new ideas into their teaching are limited, yet the rapid spread of Internet access provides a ready means of maintaining such contact if appropriately designed tools and services are available.
From presenter to audienceLittle back and forthTransmits explicit knowledge
Everyone contributesWe get to see where everyone is Feedback provided through interaction with the audienceSocially constructed learning provides opportunities to build tacit knowledge – putting explicit knowledge into practice
[tweet] The #edcamp video…http://youtu.be/j7kBnudi_8I [/tweet]
Virtuous circle
Our schools contain a wealth of experience.Rather than constantly bringing outsiders, why not tap into native resources?
Ground rules:Be interactiveContribute to conversations“The rule of two feet”
Explain the schedule board
Top down learning applied to bottom up communities
A Professional Learning Community is a collaboration of teachers, administrators, parents, and students who work together to seek out best practices, test them in the classroom, continuously improve processes, and focus on results. – DuFour, 2002Edcamp is an application of the PLC model outside the school building.It is a great way to introduce PLCs and the ideal PD format to support already functioning PLCsTraditional PD moves from the primary means of learning to a supporting role. When PLC learning plateaus, traditional PD can help it grow again