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Friday, November 20, 2015

MRVED Business

Upcoming Meetings
November 20, 2015  Principals' Council (11:30 a.m. start)
November 25, 2015  Superintendents' Council

December 1, 2015  Industrial Technology
December 3, 2015  English Language Arts
December 4, 2015  Title III Teachers
December 7, 2015  District Assessment Coordinators (DAC)
December 8, 2015  World Languages
December 11, 2015  Social Studies

MELT Networking Facilitators - Last Chance
The MRVED is looking for facilitators of networking groups.  As a facilitator you are not expected to be the expert in the room, but rather move the discussion along.  The goal of a networking group is to share resources and ideas with people who have the same interest.  They are meant to include a give & take. Bring something to share and take something away that someone else shared.  The only networking groups that will be offered are those that have a willing facilitator.  If a networking group does not have a facilitator, it will not be held.  If you would like to sign up, please click the link below and add your name to the list next to the group you would like to facilitate.  The networking sign up will close at 3:00p.m. on Friday November 20.  If you have any questions or cannot access the form, please contact Brandon (braymo@mrved.net).


MELT NETWORKING FACILITATOR SIGN UP LINK



Best Practice Meeting Updates
Title I
The Title I teachers came to the MRVED on November 3rd.  The Title I teachers get a treat every year as Brandon and Karen both run the meeting.  In the morning the group spent some time with Karen discussing Mindset.  The conversations were awesome!  After Mindset, the group read and discussed an article on learning styles.  Lunch was amazing as usual.  In the afternoon the group networked and shared a wealth of resources.   Brandon then talked about how to search Google effectively and efficiently and the day was over.  A very productive day for all.

Phy Ed & Health
The Phy Ed and Health teachers gathered at the MRVED in early November for their annual best practice meeting.  The morning was centered around a great conversation on grading practices in the classroom.  It has been really neat to see how each content area approaches this topic.  The activity has expanded the thinking of many.  Then the group aligned their curriculum with the standards using a Google Doc.  In the afternoon, the group networked and finished the day with aligning the health standards.  It was a very productive day with some great conversation.

FACS
The MRVED meeting with the FACS teachers was combined with the Southwest West Central Service Cooperatives meeting this year.  The two meetings were scheduled so close together that it was in the best interest of the teachers to combine.  The teachers had the opportunity to hear from their state specialist as well as an introduction to the Frameworks for FACS Education.  In the afternoon we heard from Neal, who works at the U of M as a researcher in the field of food defense.  Yes, food defense!  Basically defending our food supply from any terrorist attacks, both foreign and domestic.  It was another awesome day with a great group of ladies!

Agriculture
Brandon and the Ag teachers ventured to Hutchinson on a beautiful Friday afternoon.  The morning was spent on the Ridgewater campus, touring and meeting with faculty in the manufacturing department.  In the afternoon, we toured MITGI on the Hutchinson Technology Campus.  After a short meeting with the President of MITGI as well as the HR and Safety Director, we had the opportunity to tour the building.  MITGI is a precision carbide cutting tool manufacturer.  Not only was the process amazing to watch, but the atmosphere at MITGI and the way the business is ran is awesome.  Overall it was a great day of learning about what higher ed is looking for as well as employers in the industry.

SAMR Series part 5 of 6

Climbing the Ladder
Over the past 2 months, we have looked at the SAMR model of integrating technology into your classroom. We started talking about Substitution and then worked our way through the ladder to Augmentation, then Modification, and finally ended with Redefinition.  It's great to learn about these steps to the SAMR ladder, but how do we effectively move up the ladder?

1. Examine you tasks
As the SAMR model is task-oriented, it only seems logical that in order to climb the ladder, we need to examine the tasks we are having our students do in the classroom.  If you can answer Dufour's first question of, "What do I want my students to know and be able to do?"  Then you are well on your way to climbing the SAMR ladder.  By answering that first question, look at the verbs in your answer.  This will guide you to any tasks you will have your students do.  Be sure to achieve the level at which the standard is asking you to go to.  For example, if I want my students to "recall" information versus "create" something, my task will look totally different.

2. Examine the Apps and Websites
This is where many teachers fall into the traps and struggle to get out of the Substitution level.  The reason they struggle is because they are using content specific apps or websites.  In essence all these sites and apps are, are digital worksheets.  It becomes very difficult to climb "above the line" into transformational practice if we are doing the same thing we were doing before, but only with technology.  There is nothing transformational about having a student sit on an iPad and do flash cards versus taking a stack of note cards and doing flash cards.  Use the Apple slogan "Think Differently"!

3. Always, Always Start with your Learning Objective
This will be discussed a little deeper next time, but not matter what you do in your classroom, always keep that learning target (objective, outcome, etc...) in the forefront.  Don't be blinded by cute activities or flashy technology.  We are in the business of school.  We are here to teach kids.  We teach kids content (and then some).  We can easily become blinded by the newest greatest piece of technology, but if it doesn't fit our learning objectives, we are wasting time.

Resources to Teach About Thanksgiving

Here are a couple great resources to help you teach about Thanksgiving in your classroom.



Free Science Professional Development

KnowAtom
KnowAtom has tons of great resources for Science teachers.  They have everything from Evaluating your Science Curriculum for the Next Gen Standards to Understanding your Team Teaching Culture.  They also offer a variety of free webinars related to Science.  Check out this great resource today.


Also, don't forget about the Minnesota Math and Science Frameworks!


Tech Tip - Symbaloo

SymbalooEDU
SymbalooEDU is the visual resource management tool that helps educators and students organize and share the best of the web. Users save their resources in the cloud and access them from anywhere with any device. But it doesn’t stop there! With features like embedded content, group tiles and sequenced tiles, educators around the world are creating lesson plans, research assignments and personalize learning in many different ways. SymbalooEDU is used in schools to support:
  • 1:1 Classroom
  • Blended Learning
  • Flipped Classroom
  • BYOD

Symbaloo is a great way to organize the resources for your classroom.  You can make a general page or use it for different content areas or units.  Direct your students to it to help them navigate through the world wide web.  You have to check it out today!  It's Free!

The Growth Mindset is the Only Way to Learn

Mindset Article
I stumbled across this article from Edudemic about a Growth vs Fixed Mindset and thought it worthy to share.  It does a nice job of breaking down each Mindset and then providing an argument as to why the Growth Mindset is the only way to learn.  If you have not read the book Mindset by Carol Dweck, I highly suggest it.

Edudemic Mindset Article
Mindset Works