I love the title of this post, Innovative Asset Educator. I think I want this to be my new title, it sounds so more significant than say teacher. Now before steam starts coming out of your ears, I'm not degrading teachers at all---I'm tryig to lift us up. I'm on a mission, a mission to get us the respect we deserve and bring professionalism back into teaching, that is the professionalism teachers didn't take out. So let's break down this title.
Innovative-one who changes or introduces something new. I'm going on my 9th year as a teacher, and never has one year been the same as the other. My available materials have grown, my knowledge has expanded, and I've learned from my mistakes. Next year I want to go virtually paperless, not sure how I'm going to do it. It will absolutely be a process that may take a few years to master. If we want to educate 21st century innovators we must be innovative with technology.
Asset-A useful or desireable thing or quality. Well I know my students enjoy being in my class, and I hope to provide a quality education. How do you measure that? What is the success rate? We grade schools based on AIMS test. We judge students on how well they can complete a worksheet. So, how do we really know we are an asset. This past year I had a reluctant and trouble making student. I won't go into details, but by year end her parents (and her) made it a point to let me know what a difference I made in their daughters life. That is being an asset. Unfortunately, these things aren't published in newspapers, web pages, or used as criteria to evaluate any educational system.
Educator-One who teachers. Not one who dissiminates information, not one who does the same thing as the previous year. My mother did that when she taught in the 1960's. She wrote lesson plans in year 1 and used the same plans for six years. In the 1960's it worked, we are 40 years away from those days. An educator must incorporate ever changing technology, if we don't we are literally robbing our students futures. We are in a learning, unlearning, and relearning stage of society. Think about the telephone in the 1970's, 1980's, and now (hint: rotary, touch tone, and cell). You learned, unlearned, and relearned at least 3 times on how to use a phone.
I thoroughly enjoyed my experience as a Classroom Innovator. I enjoyed working on a project for GO PBS Kids, which changed me. Innovating! I enjoyed sharing and learning knowledge through the net, in person, and phone conferences. Asset. I enjoyed being engaged with the wonderful staff at ASSET.
So the biggest gift as a classroom innovator? My new title. Next time someone says, "what do you do for a living?" My response will be, "I'm an Innovative Asset Educator." Are you willing to be bold with me, and change your title?
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
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