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The Big Fresh from Choice Literacy
January 5th, 2008 Actions and Beliefs
Happy New Year! I hope your year is off to a wonderful start.
While I'm no fan of the snow that blankets my Maine home this time
of year, I love the quiet reflection that comes in January when
everything slows down a little after the holidays.
For many years a simple sign hung on my home office wall, with
these three words:
Action Reflects Belief
I heard the phrase from Heidi Mills at a conference long ago, and
I've held the words close ever since. So much of what we do as
literacy leaders is about helping colleagues match their beliefs
with their classroom practices. Perhaps most important, we bring
our schools and districts together around beliefs we all share, and
then grapple with the many challenges of translating those beliefs
to practices.
The start of the new year is a great time for reflecting on the
match between beliefs and practices, so that is our theme this
week. We've got a range of features on everything from room
arrangement to professional development design. Enjoy!
Brenda Power Editor, Choice Literacy
Free for All
From the Choice Literacy Archives, Debbie Miller provides some
simple strategies for thinking through with pen and paper how to
match beliefs about how children learn to read and write with the
arrangement of furniture and materials:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/129.cfm
One of the greatest challenges in matching beliefs and practices is
assessment. In the recent Educational Leadership article "Learning
to Love Assessment," Carol Ann Tomlinson writes about 10 different
"understandings" that can help you find a better match between your
beliefs and how you assess learning:
Join Choice Literacy for our Winter Workshops at the Sand Key
Resort in Clearwater, Florida on January 27th, 2008. Workshop
topics include literacy coaching and reading assessment with The
Sisters and Jennifer Allen:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/454.cfm
For Members Only
Franki Sibberson writes about the challenges of holding true to our
beliefs in working with struggling readers, and shares the
questions she asks herself as a way of self-monitoring her teaching
with strugglers:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/510.cfm
Jennifer Allen runs her first marathon, and finds the good, bad,
ugly, and ultimately inspiring experience is a great metaphor for
professional development design that endures:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/509.cfm
The Sisters (Joan Moser and Gail Boushey) continue their makeover
mania - this time in a middle school teacher's classroom. Their
redesign of Erin's student work materials area highlights her
belief in more student-centered instruction. If you are
questioning the use of commercial posters in your literacy areas,
there are suggestions in this time-lapse video for alternatives:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/511.cfm
That's all for this week! |