Saturday, April 14, 2012

The Teacher Salary Project, or One of the Many Reasons that I Love Matt Damon






"THE TEACHER SALARY PROJECT encompasses a feature-length documentary film, an online resource, and a national outreach campaign that delves into the core of our schools as seen through the eyes and experiences of our nation's teachers. This project is based on The New York Times bestselling book Teachers Have It Easy: The Big Sacrifices and Small Salaries of America's Teachers by journalist and teacher Daniel Moulthrop, co-founder of 826 National and former classroom teacher Nínive Calegari, and writer Dave Eggers. American Teacher is produced by Calegari and Eggers, produced and directed by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Vanessa Roth, and narrated by Matt Damon..."

This documentary brings up many great points, most of which I agree with. I think it is important to deal with the realities of teaching that we are people who work almost constantly during the year, that our job is not appreciated culturally, that administrators can be overwhelmed themselves and therefore support is compromised, and that the problems can be overwhelming.

My one critique of this film is that it does not address inner city schools or rural schools at all; all of the teachers and students in this film are in high- or average-performing schools with a high level of parent and community support. One indication of this, in my view, is that none of the students in this film are going to school in schools with uniforms: all are wearing what I would consider to be a "dress code" but there is no consistent uniform. It is most likely for low-performing, high-mobility schools with a large number of students coming from poverty backgrounds that all students are required to wear a uniform. It is debatable in some circles, but most likely that in higher-poverty, higher-crime urban areas, uniforms do make a positive effect in the achievement and attendance rates of students.

The film does an excellent job of making the logistical, life issues that all teachers face: how do you have your own family if the job takes up so much time and energy and pays so little? While I don't think that money is the answer to the education reform problem, I do think that higher salaries would help. In fact, one of the teachers in this film says that he understands how, when money is devoted to an area of our society and/or economy, things begin to change: there is a shift in focus and resources.

I hope they make a part two! I would like to see them come to the schools that are in real dire straits: urban schools in cities, and rural schools in the country. I would like them to examine South versus North, and address how immigration, ESL (or ESOL up here in Philly!)  and Special Education rates are affecting how schools are running their days, and approaching the organization of teaching time in the classrooms.

Now it's streaming on Netflix.....so check it out!




RSA Animate

If you haven't already been lucky enough that a friend sent you a link to one of these animated videos, then hopefully you will take a few minutes and watch these and then go out to YouTube and find more!

RSA Animate is a product of RSA - 21st Century Enlightenment: a wonderful resource for thinking about the changes that our world is facing at our moment in our speedy, media-rich society. Their mission states:

"In the light of new challenges and opportunities for the human race our purpose is to develop and promote new ways of thinking about human fulfilment and social progress which speaks directly to our strapline - 21st century enlightenment."

Here are two of my favorite RSA Animate videos....there are many more. Check them out!


 Changing Education Paradigms - Sir Ken Robinson, PhD

The Secret Powers of Time - Dr. Philip Zimbardo


Friday, April 13, 2012

43 Days

Sly & The Family Stone - THANK YOU FALETTINME BE MICE ELF AGIN 

Sometimes, on days like today, I feel like I am a bad teacher with horrible classroom management who is trying to impart a sense of wonder in students who have so much stacked against them it is hard to say how they would even cultivate that sense of wonder, anyway.

Despite this, many of them told me that they went home last night and found the Big Dipper and the North Star and Venus. So, all is not lost.

After seven years of teaching, I feel like I should be doing better, but I am not. I know that I have not taught these students as much as they should have learned. I feel like I have let them down: somehow I have not shown them what I should. Somehow, I have failed them. Somehow, no matter what I have done, it has not been good enough.

Next week, we will learn more about planets and stars and the origins of the Universe. As I told them today, the whole purpose of learning astronomy, besides the nuts and bolts, is to inspire a sense of wonder and to realize how small we are in a sea of everything that is so large.

Carl Sagan - Pale Blue Dot

1. Fridays
2. Labs that teach students that the solar system is larger than they could possibly imagine
3. Looking forward to sunbathing in Fairmount Park this weekend
4. Students playing a song by Jay-Z because "we love you"
5. Teaching astronomy and realizing that, no matter what, kids are kids and they all love to learn about space.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

44 Days

Marvin Gaye - Inner City Blues

In honor of the long, slow slide into summer....a song per day. Choosing a song of the day that goes with that day specifically will be a bit of a task, but here is the first. "Inner City Blues" has always been one of my favorite songs, and really does make me think of Philadelphia as a whole, not just the neighborhood in which I teach.
5 Things That I am Grateful for - 12.04.12

1. "What did you think was interesting or surprising about the Cosmic Survey we did on Tuesday?" "That space is really, really big."
2. Watching the students read through their Astrology for Kids (just for fun) information about their zodiac sign with such excitement...they just loved reading in those moments, sharing their personal attributes and thinking about how they applied to themselves.
3. Forgiveness and not taking things personally that, at the beginning of the year, I was unable to not take personally.
4. Finishing the science equipment list for the new school....finally!
5. Teaching students how to find the pole star, and teaching them things they have never learned or thought about before!

I love teaching astronomy.....

Monday, April 9, 2012

Made for You and Me

I just finished reading Made for You and Me by Caitlin Shetterly. It was my roadtrip book alongside A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, and even though I find it flat in parts, I really enjoyed the story of this small family's bust of an adventure to California...

In the story, many things happen to Caitlin and her husband. Most of those things are bad luck, but there are many examples of strength, determination, and flexibility, too. Within its pages is quoted a poem called "First Lesson" by Philip Booth...It resonated with me, so here it is:

Lie back, daughter, let your head
be tipped back in the cup of my hand.
Gently and I will hold you. Spread
your arms wide, lie out on the stream
and look high on the gulls. A dead-
man's-float is face down. You will dive
and swim soon enough where this tidewater
ebbs to the sea. Daughter, believe
me, when you tire on the long thrash
to your island, lie up, and survive.
As you float now, where I held you
and let go, remember when fear
cramps your heart what I told you:
lie gently and wide to the light-year
stars, lie back, and the sea will hold you.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

End of the Year



The same thing always happens.

This time of the year comes, and the end of the school year is very near. Mere weeks lie between the present moment and that blissful day when you tell the students, "you don't have to go home, but you can't stay here" and off they go, and off you go, on summer vacation.

I find, as the sun has sprung back, plants are growing, summer's heat is just around the corner, that I begin dreaming about the next school year and how I will teach differently, change the labs we will do, alter the order of the concepts we'll study, focus on different strategies to teach what I want to teach them....I spend so much time right about now daydreaming about next year and how it will be different and better.

I guess this is when you know that you love your job? That despite all the issues of this year and how hard it has been, I love working with students and teaching science.

So. There you go.

What is Science?

How to Write a Story by Kurt Vonnegut 

Diver Ed --- learning and teaching is not restricted to a classroom! How about a boat?


Friday, April 6, 2012

Going Home

You You You You - The 6ths


I am sitting at the bar in the kitchen of some lovely peoples' apartment in New Haven. New Haven, turns out, is a lovely city with very beautiful blocks of brownstones and row homes. Spring in this area means every tree is in flower and there are branches bursting with white and pink blooms everywhere you look. It seems as if the flowers will just begin pouring off their trees at the rate they are blooming and dropping petals all over the bricked ground.

Their apartment is close to Yale's campus and a historical district, to boot! The park nearby is a perfect rectangle planted, at its edge, with trees bursting with soft, spring flowers. Dark pink, light pink, and white just droop off branches that sweep the grass and bricks that make up the ground. This is such a small-feeling town, and I always thought of New Haven as a big city! Goes to show...you should always stop and walk around a new town! 

Rebellion (Lies) - Arcade Fire

All I want is to be home, in my bedroom, in my bed. I have been away now for a week and am ready to be with my stuff. Not for nothin', I love my bedroom. I love my books. I love my couch and my furniture and my kitchen. I love creating art at 2 or 3 in the morning. I love staring at the streetlight that is right outside my window: the light I love to hate. I love listening to the pigeons, the cars, the sirens, the wind that rustles the power lines.

 Sundown - Gordon Lightfoot

Soon it will be summer and all the loves that I have for the Rosewood house will be transplanted and transformed to a new house. Soon I will be working at least two summer jobs, and listening to wind rustling the locust trees of the lane, watching the tide come in and go out, staring up at millions of stars every night, and spending time with friends new and old.

Take Care - Beach House

Last year, I moved everything I owned to Philadelphia from Austin. I paid lots of money and spent lots of time and anguish getting it to Philly, unpacking, arranging and making a home in a strange city. I find it hilarious, in a melodramatically tragic way, that now I am hoping to sell/donate/throw out the window almost everything that I paid about $3000 to move. After all, it is only money. After all, it is time for a clean slate. After all, it is time to shed some baggage and say....

Thanks, Rodi....

Ultimately, tomorrow begins the journey of taking a new step, a next step. Last year, I shook up my life by moving across the country to a new city that, by all accounts, did its best to test my mettle. Now I feel that Philly and I have lulled into an understanding with each other: not the all-out war I experienced at the beginning. At one point, I thought I would fight Philly. I lost. At another point, I thought I would make an altar to Philly. I realized that this would just be a mockery because I didn't really like her all that much. Hence the lull into mutual dislike.

Philadelphia - Neil Young

My brother called me the other day and I realized how excited I am to be able to live in the same town as him, even if it is only for the summer. It has been thirteen years since we lived in the same place. It has also been thirteen years since I lived in the same place as my parents. I am very nervous about living with them, even for the short time that the summer inevitably will be.

Despite the nerves, I have to remember all the experiences I had in Maine last week and how that was only in one week! The eccentricity of people, their kindness, the beauty of the place, the strange knowledge that it just might work out.....

It is time.