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The Big Fresh from Choice Literacy
Literate Environments January 20, 2007 First-Class Touches
What kind of environment do you learn best in? Over the past few
months I've been working with hotels and resorts all over the
country, reserving space for the Choice Literacy summer leadership
workshops and institutes.
It's a funny thing - when I mentioned to event coordinators that
the workshops are for teachers, not one said, "Oh wait - teachers?!
We've got a dreary, moldy space in the basement reserved just for
people like you." Everyone knew our group would expect the best
facilities they had to offer, and that's what we got.
I think we've come to expect so much less than we should when it
comes to the "basics" of what anyone needs to learn - adults as
well as children. As Shelly Harwayne writes:
The teaching profession has never been honored with any first-class
touches. But a quiet room used for staff development can become
truly elegant when it contains a tray of cookies, a basket of fresh
fruit, a pot of good coffee with real milk. It can be made elegant
with the addition of carefully duplicated articles,
well-thought-out calendars, and invitations to attend relevant
conferences.
(Shelley Harwayne in Going Public Heinemann, 1999)
First-class touches in school-based literacy professional
development programs needn't be expensive, but they do demonstrate
a sense of care and handcrafting of the learning experience for
teachers and children. Small items, seemingly insignificant, can
make all the difference in a teacher moving from being intrigued to
actually testing out a new idea in his or her classroom.
I've been inspired over the years by the first-class touches of
Jennifer Allen, a literacy coach who contributes frequently to
Choice Literacy. She transformed an ugly basement room (which was
dank and dreary) at her school into a charming "literacy room"
chock-full of resources and inviting spaces for teachers. Her
advice for literacy leaders looking to add some first-class touches
to study groups on a "coach" budget:
*Save room in your budget for small items from the local
dollar or office supply store like baskets for books, post-its,
inexpensive frames for children's writing or quotes, etc. so that
when these needs arise from a study group discussion, you can
purchase them for colleagues.
*Materials tied directly to study group themes are a nice
surprise gift at any time during the year (i.e., hand-held tape
recorders for a fluency group; dry-erase boards and markers for a
word study group; colorful individual journals for a writer's
notebook group).
*Use bonus points for a small fridge to house a supply of
bottled water and light snacks, with a coffee maker on top. This
encourages teachers to pause, browse, and chat with colleagues as
they look through resources.
*Coffee is great, but bottled water is really appreciated by
teachers who are tired and thirsty at the start of late-afternoon
meetings.
*Distribute purchase orders for books from the nicest local
bookstore at the end of the summer or just before a school break,
rather than just asking for lists of books from teachers to
requisition. This gets teachers out into the bookstores browsing -
a lovely environment for anyone to explore, and the experience
inevitably introduces teachers to new books and new ways to display
books in their classrooms.
*If you live nearby, host the education technicians
(assistants) at your home for a breakfast discussion of needs and
goals one morning. Platters of baked goods from a local bakery
aren't expensive, and these colleagues can easily be overlooked
when it comes to honoring their contribution intellectually and
building community.
This week we've got advice from literacy leaders who value the
"first-class touch" in everything from classroom design to study
group meetings. We've also started posting the registration
materials for our summer institutes. Plus more as always. Enjoy!
Brenda Power Editor, Choice Literacy
***Free for All***
We welcome new contributor Jan Miller Burkins, a literacy coach in
Athens, Georgia who will have her book, Coaching for Balance,
published by the International Reading Association later this year.
Congratulations Jan! In her first contribution, Jan shares an
observation form for coaches who want to support, not intimidate,
the teachers they visit:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/255.cfm
Choice Literacy is offering two-day institutes for literacy leaders
in Maine, Oregon, and Ohio this summer. Jennifer Allen's
workshop, Becoming a Literacy Coach, is now open for registration.
We have strict enrollment limits for numbers to ensure the
workshops are a quality interactive experience - only 55
participants for two-day workshops. You can access all the
content, format, and registration details here:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/department22.cfm
***For Members Only***
Classroom management may be the most common issue for new teachers.
In this January update to her ongoing series on mentoring new
teachers, Ruth Shagoury shares how this month's meeting with new
teachers focused on management. The narrative includes a meeting
plan and description of how to initiate helpful conversations about
the issues:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/256.cfm
The Sisters (Gail Boushey and Joan Moser) admit to being reformed
"Teacher Shriners" - giving over too much room to the teacher desk
(or "shrine" area). In this six-minute classroom design video,
they show how minimizing the space for the teacher desk and
materials opens up the classroom. The classroom tour also includes
design principles for the meeting area and wall displays:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/245.cfm
If you only have dial-up access and can't view videos on the web,
you might still enjoy Gail and Joan's design principles for
classrooms, a print download from the Choice Literacy archives:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/145.cfm
This week the winter awards season started with the Golden Globes.
In the literacy world, there is a new award "kid" on the block -
the "CYBILS" are awarded by the on-line children's literature
community. Franki Sibberson reveals the nomination process, the
books nominated. This booklist is an excellent source of wonderful
new books you may have missed in the last few months:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/246.cfm
That's all for this week! |