Courtesy of facultyfocus.com:
1. Think about what needs to change before deciding on a change – I regularly lead workshops on campuses across the country and often worry that there are carts being placed before unseen horses. When I’m asked to present, I’m usually counseled that faculty attending will want techniques, new ideas, strategies that work, and pragmatic things they can do in the classroom. But that’s not where the change process should begin. It should start with a question, ‘What am I doing that isn’t promoting learning or very much learning?’ Or, ‘What am I doing that I’ve probably done the same way for too long?’ Once you see the horse, you can better pick out a cart to put behind it.
2. Lay the groundwork for the change – I regularly object to the “just do it” approach to instructional change, as if we all work in a Nike commercial. The motivation is admirable but every instructional situation is unique. Teachers are different, students are different and we don’t all teach the same content in the same kind of courses. Whatever a teacher does must be adapted so that it fits the peculiarities of the given instructional situation. Don’t just do it before having given careful thought to how the change will work with your content, your students, and when you use it.
3. Incorporate change systematically – Beyond adapting the change, teachers need to prepare for its implementation. This means considering when (or if) it fits with the content, what skills it requires and whether students have those skills. If they don’t, how could those skills be developed? It also means valuing the change process by giving it your full and focused attention so as to ensure the new approach has the best possible chance of succeeding.
4. Change a little before changing a lot – Too often faculty have “conversion experiences” about themselves as teachers. They go to a conference or read a book, get convinced that they could be doing so much better and decide to change all sorts of things at once. They envision a whole new course taught by an entirely different teacher. Unfortunately, that much change is often hard on students and equally difficult for teachers to sustain.
5. Determine in advance how you will know whether the change is a success – It’s too bad that assessment has come to carry so much negative baggage, because when it’s about a teacher trying something new and wanting to know if it works, assessment provides much needed of objectivity. If you determine beforehand what success is going to look like, then you are much less likely to be blinded by how much everybody liked it. In this giant review of the change literature I mentioned earlier, only 21% of the articles contained “strong evidence to support claims of success or failure.”
6. Have realistic expectations for success – No matter how innovative, creative and wonderful the new idea may be, it isn’t going to be perfect and it isn’t going to be the best learning experience possible for every student or the pinnacle of your teaching career. Everything we do in class has mixed results; any new approach will work really well for some students, in some classes, on some days. Know that going in, remind yourself regularly, and don’t let it discourage you from continuing to make positive changes.
Click on the link to read 10 Art Related Games for the Classroom
Click on the link to read 5 Rules for Rewarding Students
Click on the link to read Tips for Engaging the Struggling Learner
Click on the link to read the Phonics debate.










Some Teachers Just Desperately Want to get Fired
January 23, 2013Yesterday I wrote a post about a teacher unfairly on the brink of losing her job. Today I’m writing about one that probably never deserved to have one in the first place:
As an RE teacher it was her job to enlighten pupils about Christian values and the beliefs of other religions.
Instead, Catherine Reynolds encouraged her class to have lots of sex and ‘sleep around’ before marriage.
In expletive-ridden lessons, she told pupils to ‘stop bloody talking’, ‘sit on your a***’ and warned them: ‘If you don’t want to learn RE, you can p*** off’.
An investigation into her behaviour also found she posted offensive comments on her Facebook page. Following a parents evening she wrote: ‘That was the most f****** horrendous evening of my life’, and branded parents ‘retarded’.
Yesterday Reynolds, 27, was banned from the classroom for five years after Michael Gove decided she was a disgrace to the profession.
Describing her conduct as unacceptable, the Education Secretary declared it fell seriously short of that expected of a teacher and added that a disciplinary panel had struggled to identify any ‘understanding, insight or remorse’.
Reynolds taught RE at Saddleworth School near Oldham, having joined the state-run secondary as a newly-qualified teacher in 2008.
The Manchester University graduate initially showed promise, and was feted by pupils on a ‘rate my teacher’ website.
However, she got into trouble after her Facebook comments of September 2010 came to light, a report by a Teachers Agency panel found.
These included: ‘F****** retarded parents’ followed by: ‘That’s because only eejits pick RE’.
Further complaints followed in January and March 2011, the panel said.
Reynolds made numerous references to ‘sex from a personal perspective’ and told one pupil ‘not to get married because then you can’t sleep around’ and that ‘you should have sex all the time’.
In one lesson, she recounted a visit to Amsterdam in which she saw a sex show involving a horse and a woman and revealed she had been for a naked massage.
She used inappropriate language on a regular basis, the report found, including a string of swear words used to describe various people. One pupil was apparently told to ‘F*** off’.
Reynolds, who is married with a one-year-old daughter, told her class of taking a morning-after pill and of having a relationship with an older man.
She also showed pupils the tattoos on her lower back and her thigh and played them ‘inappropriate videos’.
Question: How on earth did she last this long?
Click on the link to read The Mission to Stop Teachers From Having a Sense of Humour
Click on the link to read School Instructs Students on How to Become Prostitutes
Click on the link to read Proof You Can Be Suspended for Anything
Click on the link to read The Case of a Teacher Suspended for Showing Integrity
Click on the link to read Primary School Introduces Insane No-Touching Policy
Share this:
Tags:Catherine Reynolds, Catherine Reynolds fired, Catherine Reynolds RE, Catherine Reynolds sacked, Education, Michael Gove, Michael Gove decided she was a disgrace to the profession., News, Parenting, RE teacher, RE teacher fired, RE teacher sacked, Saddleworth School near Oldham, teacher called parents retarded, teacher encouraged students to sleep around before marriage, teacher posted offensive comments on her Facebook page, teacher swore in front of students
Posted in Professional Conduct | 2 Comments »