Friday, March 18, 2016

HSE21 and Collage Tacos

From Stephanie: HSE21 in My Kitchen
  • How will we know our work with HSE21 is working?
  • What will be different for our youngest HSE21 learners in years to come?
  • We know HSE21 is about learning and not technology. Technology will come and go, but what will endure?

Let’s watch our children grow in their disposition, inquiries, initiative, confidence, stamina, grit, determination, and skills as we enjoy Collage Tacos at the dinner table!

A messy kitchen is a happy kitchen, or a sign of a good cook, or are you supposed to kiss the cook? I can’t recall, but last week I was struck by the evidence of our HSE21 best practices at work in my kitchen.

Our daughter has recently become very interested in cooking, and I have her amazing third grade teacher to blame—I mean thank! J

My daughter researches recipes and creates scrapbook style cookbooks worthy of a Martha Stewart review. The revisions to her recipes are recorded on a “sticky-back anchor chart” that hangs on our kitchen wall. 

Her mother is an educator who doesn’t always have time to make dinner but always travels with poster paper. Sound familiar?
I'll take this over anything Martha Stewart has to offer!

Last week, we sat down to “collage tacos.” This photo captures her display: a welcoming collage themed invitation next to a mixing bowl full of shredded chicken, salsa, lettuce, and sour cream.

I asked her to tell me more about her work. I literally hung on to every word because I was so struck by her language.
Bring balance to life
and to your taco!

I kept running into problems with your tacos, Mom. You take a bite and only get the lettuce and sour cream on top. You can’t get to other stuff all at the same time. So I thought I would make collage tacos in a bowl, and we’d put everything in the shell all at once. Our bites would be balanced.

We sat down to eat her collage tacos and talk about our day.  Then she interrupted:

I need to collect some feedback. What did you think? Were they too runny? I think they were a little soggy.

We were so fortunate to see true inquiry in action. Her growing confidence and determination is tremendous. We laughed and smiled—and then I kissed the cook!

What Will Endure?

Collage Tacos are part of the answer to the questions I posed at the beginning of this entry:
  • How will we know our work with HSE21 is working?
  • What will be different for our youngest HSE21 learners in years to come?
  • We know HSE21 is about learning and not technology. Technology will come and go, but what will endure?

We will start to know HSE21 is working when we see inquiry transferred to situations outside of the classroom, and when we see a desire for feedback and growth as a way of being.  It's true that technology will always change, but what we hope will last is the dispositions of a lifelong learner.

Share Your Stories

I would love to hear from you.  How are your little ones growing in their inquiries? Where are you seeing the lasting impact of HSE21?

Please send photos and share your stories with me!



Respond to Stephanie: sloane@hse.k12.in.us




Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education




Friday, March 11, 2016

Spread the Word: Best Buddies

HSE Schools has lots and lots of incredible kids doing lots and lots of amazing things.  Our high school Best Buddies programs certainly fit this description.  Best Buddies has life-long impact on our students, and the relationships that are formed are nothing short of miraculous.

Please take time to read about the Best Buddies programs at Hamilton Southeastern High School and Fishers High School, and then take a few more minutes to watch two excellent videos.

Each one is only a minute long, but these will be two minutes well spent.  Our guess is they will put a smile on our face and remind you of how great our kids really are.

Enjoy!

From Risa Petty: Sticks, Stones, and Words

Anna and Cole
The Best Buddies program at Hamilton Southeastern High School has over 200 members.  The goal of Best Buddies is to create one-to-one friendships between students with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their general education peers.  The students get together as a club several times a year to help foster these friendships, which often continue beyond the walls of the high school and beyond the years of attendance.


This week, all of the HSE Best Buddies are focused on the Spread the Word to End the Word campaign.  This campaign is an ongoing effort by Special Olympics, Best Buddies, and our supporters to inspire respect and acceptance by raising the consciousness in society about the “R-word.” 
 
Our Best Buddies are doing what we can to end the use of this hurtful word that disrespects people with intellectual disabilities.  We know that the old saying about sticks and stones is absolutely wrong!  Words can and do hurt as well.

Please take a minute to watch the video below and consider what words can do.  If you are moved by this video, join our campaign and spread the word to end the word.

From Jenny Ourand: Friendship and Inclusion

Our chapter of Best Buddies at Fishers High School includes more than 75 students.  We have students paired in one-to-one friendship matches as well as students who commit to being associate members and come to events as they can.  

Our goal is to spread a message of friendship and inclusion throughout our school.  

This past week we participated in the national Spread the Word to End the Word campaign.  Our students made videos for announcements to explain the campaign and how the use of the R-Word can be hurtful.  We have a table available at lunch for students to take the pledge to end the use of the R-Word, as well as a banner they can sign.  
FHS Best Buddies with student signatures

The kids sell bracelets to increase awareness, and the week culminates in our annual spaghetti dinner.  We held the dinner on Tuesday, March 8th as a way to promote our club and come together in friendship.  

It was a blast!



Click Here for the Best Buddies Videos: 



Thanks for sharing, Risa and Jenny.  And thanks for making sure everyone feels involved and that all really means all in HSE Schools!





Respond to Risa: rpetty@hse.k12.in.us








Respond to Jenny: jourand@hse.k12.in.us








Have a great week!

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education



A few final thoughts on friendship:

A real friend is one who walks in when the rest of the world walks out.  
     –Walter Winchell
Friendship is always a sweet responsibility, never an opportunity.  
     –Khalil Gibran
The only way to have a friend is to be one.  
     –Ralph Waldo Emerson



Friday, March 4, 2016

Whole to Part or Part to Whole?

From Jan: Putting the Pieces Together

I often hear the lament, “Oh no, it’s one more thing….  Another new initiative….  Another new expectation.” 
Do you ever feel this way?

What I have come to realize is that, as educators, we often get and give pieces without understanding how it connects to the whole.  I liken this to giving someone 1,000 pieces to a jigsaw puzzle without the picture of what happens when those pieces come together.
There is no way to know what this puzzle
will look like when completed by looking
at the individual pieces.

We do it in the classroom when we teach students isolated skills without helping them with conceptual understanding and application.  We do it as leaders when we roll out “initiatives” without helping everyone understand the whole—what it is that we are becoming and how those “initiatives” help get us there.

The “whole” for our district is HSE21, classrooms that are learning labs filled with creativity, inquiry, real-world applications, and student voice—driven by the use of research-based instructional best-practices. 
This is the "Big Picture" for Hamilton Southeastern!

Challenge Us!

When we start with the whole, the individual parts make more sense. 

Our professional development should support teachers in that transformational journey toward leading a HSE21 classroom.  All of the individual pieces of professional development should be united and moving us closer to our vision of preparing students for life in a global society.

If you do not see the connection in your professional development to HSE21, challenge us!  

Help us put the pieces together.  Help us get better!

Have a great week, HSE.

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education





Respond to Jan: jcombs@hse.k12.in.us






A few closing thoughts:
  • “To be a champion, I think you have to see the big picture. It's not about winning and losing; it's about every day hard work and about thriving on a challenge. It's about embracing the pain that you'll experience at the end of a race and not being afraid.”  --Summer Sanders
  • “Children astound me with their inquisitive minds.  The world is wide and mysterious to them, and as they piece together the puzzle of life, they ask ‘Why?’ ceaselessly.”  --John C. Maxwell
  • There is no end to education.  It is not that you read a book, pass an examination, and finish with education.  The whole of life, from the moment you are born to the moment you die, is a process of learning.”  --Jiddu Krishnamurti

Friday, February 26, 2016

Zen and the Art of Mini-Marathons

From Phil: First One Step, Then Another

My wife came home the other day and announced that we were going to “run” in the Geist Half Marathon.  I was intentional about putting “run” in quotation marks.  It’s a euphemism for “walk,” and perhaps “stumble” would be a better word.
It's coming May 21!


It’s not that I’m opposed to the concept.  It’s a good one.  In the past, having a specific day out in the future has helped us get out of the house and exercise.  It gives us a goal to work toward and a timeline to help in our preparation.

So we have started to prepare.  Since we don’t have lots of expertise in the area of fitness training, we went straight to our iPhones hoping, “There’s an app for that!”  And, of course there was—actually about 20.  We used a less-than-scientific method to make our final choice.  We picked the one with the coolest logo and ended up with the Zenlabs Fitness app called “13.1,” which seems aptly named—pun intended.
This logo brought back memories of a book I read
in my college days.  Will this app help in other ways?
I'll get back to you on that one.


Interestingly enough, this app doesn’t start by requiring us to do much running.  The first day had lots of warm up and cool down time.  In between, we “walked briskly,” “jogged,” and “walked.”  In our case, the difference between the three was more about intent than action, but that’s a story for another time.

In the days to follow, the running portions will increase.  (I cheated and looked ahead.)  But we also have days where we “cross train.”  The app, apparently knowing that we might not have lots of experience in cross training, suggests swimming, yoga, or weights.  We’re not really sure yet what we will do on these days.  We do know we won’t try all three of these suggestions at once.  Instead, we may opt for simply walking—briskly or otherwise.
Inspirational or just grammatically horrendous?
You decide and let me know.


I recently discovered that our app even provides daily inspirational quotes.  Some are a bit questionable in the Inspiration Department.  I included today's as an example.  Zenlabs doesn't say who they are quoting, and in this case, that’s probably a good idea because I have no idea what it means or how it is inspirational in any way. 

On the whole, I do believe if we follow the advice of our app and more or less stick to the program, we will eventually run more, walk less, and be prepared on May 21 to successfully complete the Geist Half Marathon.  We have also joined with others who have agreed to run/walk with us in May.

I have no delusions about setting records or finishing anywhere close to the front of the pack.  But really, that’s not the point.  The point is to get exercise, have fun with others, and enjoy the journey.

Education is Not a Sprint

At this point, with good reason, you might be wondering where this week’s entry is going.  Hang in there with me.  I am getting there!

Let’s say that full implementation the HSE21 best-practice framework is our goal—which it is.  Getting there seems difficult at times, maybe even impossible.  It might feel similar to walking out the door and running a mini-marathon with no preparation.  The result is likely to be either a comedy or a tragedy. 

The better approach to running a half marathon and to HSE21 is to work into it one day at a time.  Set a HSE21 teaching and learning goal similar to setting a workout goal.  Where do you want to be by the end of this school year?  By next fall?  One year from now?  If you know that, you can start working toward the goal.  Some days walk, and some days run. Over time, do more running than walking.

You might not set any records along the way.  But really, that’s not the point.  The point is to keep getting better.  Keep moving forward.  Keep having fun with your colleagues and students, and continuing to learn and grow. 
Link to Register: http://geisthalf.com/

As a Teaching and Learning Team, we hope you also join the Geist event, especially since it does so much to support our students and improve our schools. 

More importantly, however, we encourage you to gather a team and support each other in our journey of continual improvement of teaching and learning in Hamilton Southeastern Schools.  HSE21 is best-practice instruction, and it also supports our students and improves our schools.

Have a great week, HSE.  Keep in mind that in education we are running a marathon and not a sprint.  Keep inspiring and being inspired.  Keep learning and growing, and keep moving forward one step at a time.

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education


Respond to Phil: plederach@hse.k12.in.us







Did the title of this blog bring back memories for you old hippies (or new hippies)?  If not, try these quotes from Robert Pirsig that fit with today's topic:
Lots of memories....
  • You look at where you are going and where you are, and it never makes sense, but you then look at where you’ve been and a pattern seems to emerge.
  • The place to improve the world is first in one’s own heart and head and hands, and then to work outward from there.
  • Sometimes it’s a little better to travel than to arrive.
  • Is it hard? Not if you have the right attitudes.  It’s having the right attitudes that’s hard.


Friday, February 19, 2016

HSE21: A Best-Practice Framework

This week, we have one more Elevator Pitch.  This one is on the topic of HSE21.  When you are asked in the coming months about this topic, perhaps the following talking points will prove to be helpful.
All students deserve Rock Solid instruction!

From Phil: What is HSE21 and why should I support its implementation?
  • Best Practice Instruction: Education, like all professions, is evolving.  In Hamilton Southeastern Schools, we study the current educational research and make changes to our instruction.  HSE21 is a research-based best-practice model that provides our students the best opportunities to learn and grow. 
    Professions Evolve
    I had my eyes checked last week.
    The equipment didn't look like this!
  • Children are Not Products:  Each student is different and has unique needs.  School is NOT about sending students through an assembly line and plugging in parts.  Best-practice means knowing both the art and science of teaching and making adjustments to meet the needs of all students.  HSE21 takes the needs of the individual child into account and supports teachers as they make adjustments to instruction.
  • Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow: All of us want students who are independent thinkers, problem-solvers, and self-directed learners.  HSE21 recognizes that our students are competing in the world economy and must be ready to meet the challenges of an ever-changing world.  Our instruction should not prepare our students for yesterday or even for today.  Preparing students for a changing world requires that we provide instruction to prepare our students for the world of tomorrow. 
    Our Challenge and Obligation:
    Preparing our students today for the
    world of tomorrow....
  • Our Testing Reality: The new assessments that you hear so much about are very different than the “old” standardized tests.  The new assessments are designed to measure much more than memorization of facts.  They require problem-solving, critical thinking, analysis, and synthesis.  In other words, for students to be successful on the new high-stakes assessments, they will need a new type of instruction.  This is exactly what HSE21 provides.
Together, we are moving in the right direction and on the right journey.

Have a great week, HSE.

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education
The heart of HSE21....


Friday, February 12, 2016

We Need Diverse Books

This week, Kristin Patrick, the media specialist at Brooks School Elementary, both challenges us and asks for our assistance.  She begins by pointing to a problem and ends with a solution that can make a difference for our students.

From Kristin: Windows and Mirrors

What faces are reflected back from
the pages of our books?
The University of Wisconsin’s Cooperative Children’s Book Center reports that only 3% of the 3,200 books written for children in 2013 were about people who are black, and that only 2% were written by authors who are African American. The report continues to light up education blogs, journals, and national media. 

Addressing the lack the diversity in publishing is mostly beyond our reach. Instead of throwing our hands up in frustration, what we can do is leverage the diverse books that do exist as entry points for planning curriculum or matching books to readers. 

The HSE Windows and Mirrors Project

Funded by the Hamilton Southeastern Schools Foundation, the HSE Windows and Mirrors Project includes a wiki dedicated to picture books that celebrate diversity, represent non-majority narratives, and/or incorporate social justice themes. While the project originated within Brooks School Elementary, the wiki’s intention is to be a resource for all HSE educators and families. 

I invite everyone to contribute to the HSE Windows and Mirrors wiki. Visit the wiki link and click Join in the upper right hand corner to request access, or email me directly using the email link below. 


Keep in mind that the wiki is still in its nascent stages. Much work is planned for the summer months to further establish the wiki as an active, living resource. The more people who contribute, the better it will become! 
 
Many thanks again to the Hamilton Southeastern Schools Foundation for making the HSE Windows and Mirrors Project possible. 

Respond to Kristin at kpatrick@hse.k12.in.us
Follow on Twitter: @krismarley12

Thanks for all you do for all of our students.

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education


Sunday, February 7, 2016

What Happened Next Was Magical

We often ask our students to take risks.  "It is part of growing and learning," we say.  Yet, we can find ourselves hesitant to take our own advice.  This week, Jami Wiegand, one of our HSE kindergarten teachers and part of the 1:1 Design Team, shares her story of fears, risk-taking, and growth mindset.

From Jami: You Never Know Until You Try

And they all lived happily ever after… in the iPad cart, each night, right where I liked them. Or so I thought.
Where is an iPad's home?

This year I was given the opportunity to be a part of the 1:1 Elementary Design Team. Upon writing my grant and being accepted, I was given a cart of iPads to integrate into the daily routine of 27 energetic and excited kindergartners. I had many ideas of how I was going to use the iPads, but having the students take them home was not one of them.

We started the year simple, with basic iPad skills and then moved onto a whiteboard app, making picture collages to show our learning, keeping a digital portfolio, and taking our calendar time completely interactive and digital.

I had integrated the iPads into many subject areas and the students’ research skills were coming right along. (Yes, kindergartners can research!) Just when I felt like it was coming all together (as much as a kindergarten teacher can have it all together) I was instructed to begin sending the iPads home with the students each night.

Our journey to learning often passes
through doubt and fear!
I won’t lie. I resisted hard. I had every possible negative scenario outlined in my head. Some students can’t even turn in their folder each day, how will they remember their iPad? What if it breaks? What if they lose it? That will be extra work for me! Nowhere in my mind could I see this going well.

I tell my students every day to “go with the flow” yet here I was doing the exact opposite.

But… I did it. I took the plunge and I sent them home. Then, I waited.  What happened next was magical.

That night, there they were, little red notifications on my Seesaw app. Students were uploading their monthly choice homework through videos, photos, and drawings. Upon seeing them I literally squealed with delight. I sat on my couch and watched the notifications roll in.
The magical little red lights of the Seesaw app....

As the weeks went by, students videoed themselves counting to 100, writing responses to QR stories I had attached, or reading e-books I assigned through Big Universe. They were encouraging each other by commenting on and liking what their friends had posted as well.

Why didn’t I send them home sooner? Now, not only were my students using creativity and collaborating in the classroom.  These ideals were also happening at home, too!


Student work from Jami's kiddos.  "It was magical!"
Sometimes you just have to say “Yes!” and then figure out the details afterward. Releasing control can be one of the hardest things for a teacher to do when it comes to our students’ education.

Will it always end up magical? No, not always, but what I’ve learned is that you will never know until you try. 





Respond to Jami: jwiegand@hse.k12.in.us







Have a great week, HSE.

Your HSE Teaching and Learning Team
  • Jan Combs, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning
  • Stephanie Loane, Director of Elementary Education
  • Tom Bell, Director of Special Education
  • Jeff Harrison, Director of Educational Technology
  • Phil Lederach, Director of Secondary Education