Tag Archives: education

iPod Touch – A Jump Start in 21st Century Learning?

 

New-review-apple-ipod-touch-third-generation_large By Tracey

I apologize for my absence from the recent discussions, but I’ve been wholly and completely absorbed by two time-zapping projects.  Both of which I plan to blog about, and one I’m excited to launch in my classroom tomorrow. 

Over two years ago, I was one of many teachers across Washington lucky enough to receive a Peer Coaching grant from OSPI.  The grant included lots of training about being a peer coach to help others (and myself) integrate technology into classroom instruction, plus money to buy equipment.

Most grant recipients knew exactly how to spend their money and purchased hardware immediately.  I’m not much of a shopper.  I never know what to buy.  And since my school already had the big ticket items- a document camera, student response system, and an Airliner (a cheap alternative to the interactive white board)- we focused on learning how to use these.  We bought some Flip video cameras and rechargeable batteries, but most of the money stayed put.  Until, thanks to Mrs. Brown, the laptop cart-hogging sixth-grade teacher down the hall, I developed an expensive dream.  I wanted a class set of iPod Touches.

Continue reading

Merit Pay is Not the Answer

Trophy Image 3By Mark

My email inbox this last week has been peppered by NBPTS SmartBrief articles with distinctly contradictory messages. First, there was the report from Tennessee that a three-year longitudinal study on merit-pay in Nashville revealed that merit pay had no impact on student learning. Then, quick to follow, was a rebuttal from an administrator in Texas arguing that merit-pay does impact student performance. And, lo and behold, Friday, I read that the feds ponied up $422 million for use in teacher merit-pay initiatives. Merit pay is certainly a "pretty" idea and a publicly palatable solution, so no wonder we're throwing millions on the bandwagon.

Personally, ten years into this business, I don't want more money for the work I do. More pay won't give me what I really need to be a better teacher. I'm dealing with finite resources here, and despite what Oprah might want America to believe about all educators, I'm not a "lazy teacher" who leaves promptly at 3:00pm to munch bon-bons during a leisurely afternoon and who has nothing better to do than complain about not being paid enough (Oprah, why all the hate?). More pay won't motivate me to work harder…since that implies that I'm not working hard enough as it is. Tempting me with more pay simply won't make me better at my job.

But give me more of something else and I guarantee you'll see a better teacher.

Continue reading