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Welcome to MIT! Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire. William Butler Yeats - Irish poet, dramatist and writer

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Welcome to MIT!. Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire. William Butler Yeats - Irish poet, dramatist and writer. Welcome to MIT!. TEED 510 – Fall 2013. About the Instructors. Charisse Pitre Cowan, Ph.D . Loyola Hall Room 315 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Welcome to MIT!

Welcome to MIT! Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.William Butler Yeats - Irish poet,

dramatist and writer

Page 2: Welcome to MIT!

Welcome to MIT!

TEED 510 – Fall 2013

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About the InstructorsCharisse Pitre Cowan, Ph.D. Loyola Hall Room 315 Office Hours by Appointment (206) 296-5773 office; cowan@

seattleu.edu

Mark Roddy, Ph.D. Loyola Hall Room 310 Office Hours by Appointment (206) 296-5765 office;

[email protected]

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Why Teach? In groups of 3 answer the

following:

“Why do you want to become a teacher?”

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A Peek Inside Schools…….

Think about whether any of your reasons for teaching are reflected in the following school clips.

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Overview of the DayCourse Introduction and Rationale

Group Building

Education for the 21st Century

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Why MIT/why this program?

Consider each of the position statements on how to best educate/prepare teachers (an ongoing education debate).Part I. Select 1 position that represents your own thinking; stand by that position.

Part II. Stay tuned; directions to follow.

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MIT Organizing Theme

The MIT Program is built on a conceptual framework, which states that a teacher is an ethical, knowledgeable and reflective decision-maker who can teach all students to function effectively in a global and pluralistic society.

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Program Design Integrative and sequential Major themes: social

responsibility, personalization, community, equity, and reflection

Faculty model collaborative learning, research-based strategies, and variety in instructional delivery

Guiding beliefs and assumptions

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Enjoy Break!

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TEED 510 – Overview/Syllabus

Introductory course/seminar providing the prospective teacher with a foundation for understanding schools and schooling within American society. SyllabusThemes for the week (overview)

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Group Building Activity

Winter Survival ExerciseTask OverviewIntroductionGroup Roles (1 Observer)

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Lunch……Enjoy Lunch!

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Welcome Back! Afternoon at a glance:

Survival exercise closure

Introductions to the group (6 today)

Future of Education

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Your turn to share…. Introductions

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Survival Activity (con’t)

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Stuff you have:1. Cigarette lighter2. Ball of steel wool3. Extra shirt and pants4. Family-size chocolate bar5. Can of shortening6. Flashlight7. Rope8. Newspaper

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More stuff:9. .45 caliber pistol10. Knife11. Compress kit12. Ski poles13. Quart of whiskey14. Sectional air map made of plastic15. Compass

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Survival Effectiveness Scoring 35 or less: Excellent job—all survive!

36-50: All survive but with severe frostbite

51-65: Outlook is bleak

66 and above: Abandon all hope

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Survival Exercise Closure Training of Civil Air Patrol

Ranking of survival items – experienced survival training expert, U.S. Army and wilderness survival training programs

Rationale

Group process; observer reflections

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Survival Exercise Objectives

To share ideas as a group;

To encourage others to share ideas;

To listen carefully to each other;

To increase awareness of group skills;

To evaluate your functioning as a group.

Do you see some connections to teaching learning?

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Future of Education Teaching in a Global Context

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Group DiscussionEmergent themes from Nobelity video

Connection to Partnership for 21st Century Skills readingGeneral responses/reactions to “21st Century Skills” reading and video clip

Ideas challenged? extended? re-affirmed?

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Think back to the video….What did we see that

connects to change?

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Wrap Up Comments, reflection, feedback Tomorrow— Technology & Culture of

Schools Readings to review:

Wagner, T. Making the Grade, Ch. 1 “How has the world changed for children?”

Edutopia Technology Article

Assignment due: One page reflection paper connecting Wagner’s Ch.1 to Nobelity video

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Welcome!

“A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell, where his influence stops.”

-Henry Brooks Adams, American writer, 1838-1918

Page 27: Welcome to MIT!

Welcome! Overview of the Day:

Morning: “Technology and School” Jim Dunnigan,Seattle Public Schools

Afternoon: Culture of Schools: What Makes a Good School?

MIT Grad Panel

Page 28: Welcome to MIT!

Technology in Schools Guest Speaker

Welcome Jim Dunnigan – MIT grad and School Tech Guy Extraordinaire!

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Enjoy Lunch!

Page 31: Welcome to MIT!

Culture of Schools Reflect on what Wagner wrote

as you view the video clip. In what ways do ideas in the video intersect with Wagner?

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Integrating Ways of Knowing

Group reflection (discussion in fours):

1. Consider the video and Wagner’s discussion of “How the world has changed for children (Ch.1).” Issues raised? Your thoughts,

reaction, response to these issues?

2. Create a graphic representation of at least one important idea discussed in group.

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Wrap-Up, Notes, Reminders

Review of the last two days; reflection in pairs — What stood out as helpful? What did you learn? Suggestions?

Readings to Review for Wednesday: “The Silenced Dialogue”- DelpitNational Survey Climate – GLSEN“How to interrupt oppressive…” –

McClintock“A Different Mirror” - Takaki

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Welcome MIT Grads!

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Welcome! Today: Cultural Context of Schooling

Multiculturalism in School

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Overview of the Day

Guest Speaker – Dr. Nina Valerio, Associate Professor, MIT Program

(Lunch) Multicultural Book Exchange

Storytelling – “Personal Knowledge”

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Welcome Dr. Valerio!

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Enjoy Lunch!

Page 39: Welcome to MIT!

Multicultural “Book Exchange”

Part I. Sharing in Same Book Groups (25 min)

1. Select a facilitator and timekeeper2. Share quotes or segments of the

book that were most meaningful3. Discuss major message(s) of the

book.4. Discuss connections the book might

have for your future role as teachers.

Page 40: Welcome to MIT!

Book Exchange (con’t) Part II. Re-group with people who

read different books (25 min) Share from each book your

original group’s consensus on questions 3 & 4. Major message/s Connections to future roles as

teachers

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Enjoy Break!

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Ways of Knowing: Exploring “Personal Knowledge”

Telling Your Own Story (small group activity)

Share a story from your life about a significant experience you had relating to multiculturalism, diversity, or in which you were a member of a dominant culture and it had a significant meaning.

1. Reflect individually (5 minutes)2. Share in small groups

Page 43: Welcome to MIT!

Day 3 Wrap-Up Review of the day individually:

What are you feeling right now? Highlights from today? Feedback on 3X5 cards

Tomorrow (Exceptionality, Equity, School Reform): 1 page letter to the editor (case for change &

action/s) Readings to review:

Making the Grade - Wagner “Profoundly Multicultural Questions” –

Nieto Learning Disabilities and Life Stories (select

chs.) “Funding Gap” – Education Trust

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Welcome!Today:

Exceptionality and Special Needs

Equity of School Finance/Making the Grade

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OverviewMORNING--- Program Overview/Schedule for Year Break Individual Response---Life

Stories/Exceptionalities Discussion - exceptionalities

readings

(Lunch)

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AFTERNOON----“Unequal Education” in Public

Education, KozolIndependent opportunity/group

Break---

“Inspired and Inspiring” Teachers

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Exploring Exceptionalities

Part I. Creative, individual response to exceptionalities readings (40 minutes)

Graphic representation Poem Collection of symbols Others

Part II. Group discussion of “creative works” related to ideas, concepts, and future teaching applications(!!) from readings. What was important from the readings?

Page 48: Welcome to MIT!

Talking Points (Rodis) Impact of diagnosed learning

differences on psychological, emotional, social (pervasive sense of incompetence).

Diagnostic labels—liberating or stigmatizing?

Nature of supports needed for individuals with learning differences (during different life-periods)?

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Acceptance of the different ways groups of learners tend to think--how important? Classroom/school levels?

Individuals with diagnosed learning disabilities and those without diagnosable learning difficulties?

Protection from past personal failure impacting one’s future sense of self.

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“It is as outrageous that a child who has a learning disability would not have other arenas for the intense experience of personal mastery and accomplishment as it would be to deprive a good reader who is a poor athlete from the arena of language arts.”

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Enjoy Lunch!

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Independent Reflection Free-write exercise

Develop a short written response to the inequalities video; link to any ideas that you can recall from Wagner’s Making the Grade.

Share/exchange ideas in today’s groups

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End of Day 4 Tasks Readings for Tomorrow:

For review —Epstein and Salinas Parental Involvement Article

New reading —510 section of Field Handbook

1 page reflection/position paper (agree-disagree with Epstein’s ideas, see instructions)

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Welcome and Happy Friday!

“We are strongest as persons when we know who we are and operate from our strengths.”

Isabel Briggs Myers

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Today: Learning Styles/MBTIPreparing for the Field Experience

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Field ExperienceWelcome John Green!

General informationPlacementsLogistics

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Field Experience Assignments

Information

Questions?

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End of Week 1 Tasks Assignment Information

Feedback form Arts retreat Course Readings - Evaluation Forms

Course Closure Course Feedback/Evaluations ENJOY a well-deserved weekend!

Page 60: Welcome to MIT!

Think about a “hope” for your future students

Share “chain of hopes” (word link)

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Course Evaluations Have a restful weekend! We’ll

see you in the schools!