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A Vancouver Island Teachers' BlogAn Independent News and Blog Site. July 05 Good Teaching-A Matter of Living the MysteryBy Parker Palmer
Good teaching is an act of generosity, a whim of the wanton muse, a craft that may grow with practice, and always risky business. It is, to speak plainly, a maddening mystery. How can I explain the wild variety of teachers who have incited me to learn--from one whose lectures were tropical downpours that drowned out most other comments, to one who created as arid silence by walking into class and asking, "Any questions?" Good teaching cannot be equated with technique. It comes from the integrity of the teacher, from his of her relation to subject and students, from the capricious chemistry of it all. A method that lights one class afire extinguishes another. An approach that bores one student changes anothers life. Faculty and administrators who encourage talk about teaching despite its vagaries are treasures among us. Too many educators respond to the mystery either by privatizing teaching or promoting a technical "fix." The first group uses the variability of good teaching as an excuse to avoid discussing it in public--thus evading criticism of challenge. The second group tries to flatten the variations by insisting on the superiority of this or that method of subtlety. In both quarters, the far-ranging conversation that could illumine the mystery when we think of it as a "black box," something opaque and impenetrable that we must either avoid or manipulate by main force. Mystery is a primal and powerful human experience that can neither be ignored not reduced to formula. To learn from mystery, we must enter with all our faculties alert, ready to laugh as well as grown, able to "live the question" rather demand a final answer. When we enter into mystery this way, we well find the mystery entering us, and our lives are challenged and changed. Good teachers dwell in the mystery of good teaching until it dwells in them. As they explore it alone and with others, the insight and energy of mystery begins to inform and animate their work. They discover and develop methods of teaching that emerge from their own integrity--but they never reduce their teaching to technique. I want to share a few reflections on the mystery of good classroom teaching, whether in large lecture halls or small seminars. I want to name some of its challenges, and suggest some responses, without treating it as a "problem to be solved." Only by doing so, it seems to me, can we enlarge the community of discourse that might encourage more and more of us to teach well. For the rest of the piece see:- http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/events/afc99/articles/goodteaching.html
February 14
The easiest way to cut the education budget...idnak
11 seconds ago The public system has lost 50,000 students and the private system has picked up 7,500? I guess I know where BCTF teachers will be looking for new engagements once the public system makes them redundant. And won't they be surprised by the expectations in their new working environments - like that they will have to work full time to receive full time pay and benefits? Truthfully, I feel sorry for teachers. Their union has engendered a culture of entitlement which does nothing to encourage them to strive for excellence and reap financial reward when they do their jobs well. And while their union has succeeded in achieving a handsome wage structure for them, it exceeds the renumeration for school custodians by only about 15%, and teachers shoulder how many years of post-secondary debt before they can get to work? Rural School Closures[b]Many rural schools are closed. They, obviously, couldn't be converted for old people's, or low rent homes, but little kids now have to go on 2-3 hour bus rides every day. Boards will prefer to close rural schools first because they can collect the extra grant they get for operating them for up to Two full years. They could remain open if partnerships to cover costs could be reached with a local library board or community centre. Windsor Ontario has schools that are partnered with just such groups. When BC boards can collect operating grants on closed schools where's the incentive to look for alternatives. A Message from Alberta: Hey Buddy, who's boat you tryin' to rock? I agree in full, but I think you might be taking a bite out of some politicians ass. Declining EnrolmentIn my opinion the Public Educational system that we have in BC at this time is a direct reflection of the condition of the Province as a whole. All of the factors being debated, demographic changes, lower birth rates etc are parts of the picture that has led to drastic drops in enrolment. Stephen January 21 Nutritious fare is tough sell in schoolsLucrative fast-food contracts, plus students' taste for sugar and grease, thwart efforts to promote healthy eating CAROLINE ALPHONSO With reports from Rick Cash and Liana Giovando
ANNAPOLIS VALLEY, N.S., AND TORONTO -- Colin Sneyd sits at a crowded lunch table eating his sliced chicken breast, cheese, carrot sticks and apple. As he sips a small box of milk, a friend across the cafeteria table inhales a mound of gravy-soaked poutine. Another snacks on a bag of chips, washed down with a can of pop. Behind the counter, a worker at Toronto's Northern Secondary School slits open bags of frozen fries, plunging them into boiling oil. "People just have fries for lunch," says Colin, a slight 15-year-old who brings his own packed lunch to school. "I think it's kind of ridiculous. I don't think they need to serve fries. If you're trying to get kids to eat healthier, you should serve them only nutritious food." Colin may be an unusual teenager, but Northern's sugar-and-grease-filled fare is all too typical of many schools across the country, according to a Globe and Mail survey. Of the 74 boards that responded to the national sounding: 8 per cent reported that none of their high schools serve French fries; 93 per cent allow hot-dog days or pizza days; 74 per cent said their schools sell pop (six boards did not respond), 72 per cent sell candy bars (five boards did not respond), and 77 per cent sell chips (four boards did not respond); 30 per cent said all their schools offer nutrition counselling. In other words, while they talk a good line about healthy fare and food-education programs, most schools are nutritional wastelands. Worse yet, many boards make no apologies, saying they are merely giving students what they want. Catherine Moraes, senior manager of business development and nutrition services at the Toronto District School Board, says the board does make sure that students have a healthier option in the cafeteria. But she doesn't believe eliminating junk food is the answer. "If we disregard what they're looking for, they'll leave the school property at lunchtime," Ms. Moraes says. "They'll go to hot-dog vendors, they'll go to local convenience stores where there's no hope of finding a healthier option." Nutritionists aren't impressed with this kind of thinking, especially from educators. "If we're really serious about fostering healthy habits in our future generation, then we need to take more action," says Leslie Beck, a dietitian and columnist for The Globe. "We can't just do this lip service any more." "I would hope that schools would take the high road," adds Rhona Hanning, an associate professor in health studies at the University of Waterloo, "that they would be an example of healthy living, and that kids would have the opportunity to practise the nutrition and healthy-living messages that they're getting." In an ideal world, the dire statistics on children's health would be a wake-up call for schools to toss the deep fryer. The overweight/obesity rate among adolescents aged 12 to 17 stands at 29 per cent -- more than doubling between 1978 and 2004, according to Statistics Canada. And the younger a child becomes heavy, the greater the risk of health problems such as diabetes, heart disease and some forms of cancer. To be sure, children are not eating well. A mere 14 per cent of those between 9 and 12 consume four or more servings of vegetables and fruit a day, studies show, and about one-third of Ontario students drink pop daily. While some provincial governments are taking steps to ban junk food in schools, those changes are coming slowly. The British Columbia government has introduced "voluntary guidelines" to eliminate candies and sugary drinks from schools by 2009. Manitoba, too, has put forward guidelines, but is not banning outright the sale of greasy and sugary foods. Nova Scotia is one of the most progressive provinces, outlining a three-year plan to wean children off junk food, with ice cream, chips and pop off the menu this month. In Ontario, junk food has been purged from vending machines only in elementary schools, but hot-dog days are still allowed; high schools continue to sell greasy fare. Indeed, The Globe survey found that, while the sale of junk food may be waning in elementary schools nationally, little if anything has changed in middle and high schools. On this particular day in Northern's cafeteria, the special is shepherd's pie with vegetables or salad. There are some sandwiches and salad as well off to the side. But more tempting options with less nutritional content stare students in the face: hamburger patties, greasy French fries (spicy or plain), poutine and pizza. The vending machines offer a choice of pop or other sugary drinks. In her practice, Ms. Beck said when she visits the schools, spotting a healthy meal on the menu is like finding Waldo. "Nutrition and food and healthy eating and physical fitness are important life skills that kids need to learn," she says. ". . . The choices in the cafeteria are part of the students' education during the day, for sure." Mary McKenna, associate professor in kinesiology at the University of New Brunswick and a registered dietitian, says the problem is complex. "On the basis of public health, no, we're not acting fast enough," she says. "On the basis of what schools are prepared to accept as part of their responsibilities for making improvements, I'm not sure we could move much faster without a significant backlash." Industry, after all, has done a superb job of enticing cash-strapped schools with contracts worth millions of dollars if they're allowed to wheel in their vending machines and sell their food in the cafeteria. When schools sign on, they enter into revenue-sharing agreements with the company, and spend the resulting funds on everything from updating school computers to buying library books and team uniforms. And as education budgets tighten, schools say they are left with little choice but to make these lucrative deals. Calla Farn, a spokeswoman with Refreshments Canada, the main trade association representing non-alcoholic-beverage companies, defends the industry's practice. She says that industry has been proactive in modifying what is sold in schools, especially as parents increasingly fret about kids' widening waistlines. Elementary schools signing new contracts or renewing existing ones are only permitted to sell fruit juices, bottled water and no-fat and low-fat milk in their machines, she says. High schools, however, can still offer diet soft drinks. "It's important to understand that it's the school and the school board that approach the beverage company and ask them to provide partnership proposals," Ms. Farn says. "The schools then decide which partnership agreement works best for them. So it's the schools that make the decisions and they are in the driver's seat." The sad truth is that even when parents try to change the menu at their school boards, they're in for a struggle. Caroline Whitby, a mother of two, has been at it for almost a decade. The program manager of the health-promoting schools project at the Annapolis Valley Regional School Board in Nova Scotia drives between schools, advising principals on how to change their cafeteria menus and rid their vending machines of junk food. At least now she has the backing of the provincial government, which has implemented a three-year plan to phase out food and beverages of low nutritional value. The Globe survey found that 100 per cent of Nova Scotia boards have banned pop this school year, up from 20 per cent in the previous year. Chips, too, have been banished (as opposed to Ontario, where 93 per cent of boards say their schools sell them). "Things take time," Ms. Whitby said. "But the movement is there." Take the case of Port Williams Elementary, a Nova Scotia school of 242 pupils where, almost a decade ago, the lunch menu consisted of hamburgers, pizza, fried chicken and hot dogs. Ms. Whitby led the charge. Her motto: "Let's keep it simple. Let's keep it fresh. Let's keep it non-processed." There was some resistance at first; a couple of parents were reluctant to change the menu. But Ms. Whitby said that through school-wide meetings and food taste-tests with children, she won them over. Today, small hands drop their loose change and reach over the cafeteria counter for bags of raw vegetables (broccoli, carrots, mushrooms and celery), apple slices, sunflower seeds, boiled eggs, and tuna melts on whole wheat bread. The school's physical-education teacher has seen fitness levels increase. And principal Cathy Woodford is quick to point out that not only are pupils more alert in class, but there are "fewer chubby children." But can Port Williams be replicated? Can schools offer only healthy options? Alison Bell, chef instructor at David Thompson Secondary School in Invermere, B.C., is doing her part. Despite the jumble of fast-food joints in town, the students in Ms. Bell's class prepare lunches of butternut squash and apple soup and chicken stir-fry with steamed rice to sell in the student-run cafeteria. If fries are served, don't count on a deep fryer -- Ms. Bell did away with it, teaching students to cut up potatoes or yams and bake them in the oven. "There are ample, ample, ample opportunities for them to have other choices of foods in their life," she said. "But not in here." If it can be done -- albeit in very few cases across the country -- why is it so difficult at a school like Northern? The students learn about good eating habits in their food and nutrition classes. "It's . . . important for me to get them to eat properly and be happy with who they are," says Jenni Marr, a family studies teacher. But once the lunch bell tolls, and students step out of their classrooms and walk down to the basement cafeteria, Ms. Marr's teachings seem almost ironic. Student after student carries baskets of fries to their lunch tables. There are no hamburger patties or pizzas left behind. "Those are empty calories," lectures a cashier to a boy whose lunch consists of a can of Pepsi, a bag of Skittles and French fries. "I like it," he replies, shrugging. It's another typical lunch hour in Canadian schools. By the numbers 29 per cent Proportion of adolescents who are overweight or obese 14 per cent Portion of children between nine and 12 years of age who have four or more servings of vegetables and fruit a day 25 per cent Percentage of vegetables eaten by children that are French fries 33 per cent Portion of Ontario students in Grades 4 to 8 who consume soft drinks daily 25 per cent Portion of Grade 6, 8 and 10 students who consume candy and chocolate bars daily SOURCES: STATISTICS CANADA, HEART & STROKE FOUNDATION OF CANADA, CALL TO ACTION: CREATING A HEALTHY SCHOOL NUTRITION ENVIRONMENT With reports from Rick Cash and Liana Giovando December 12 Gap year 'gives students valuable work skills'Gap year 'gives students valuable work skills' (07/11/06) PA News Published: 07 November 2006
November 03 American Sex Offender Exiled to Canada...School Teacher Convicted of Having Sex With a 15-year-old StudentBUFFALO, N.Y. — A former school teacher convicted of having sex with a 15-year-old student has been ordered by a judge to leave the United States for the next three years, returning only to meet with his probation officer.
Malcolm Watson, 35, agreed to the sentence to avoid as much as a year in jail after pleading guilty to endangering a child and third-degree sexual abuse _ both misdemeanors.
Watson, a former teacher at the Buffalo Seminary, is a U.S. citizen who already lives in Fort Erie, Ontario, with his Canadian wife and three children. He was arrested in April after a mall security guard noticed the pair sitting in a parked car for two hours.
A teacher at a Buffalo private school has been charged with sexual abuse and endangering the welfare of a child following a weekend incident at the Walden Galleria Mall.
Cheektowaga Police say 35-year-old Malcolm Watson, a teacher at Buffalo Seminary, was found with a 15-year-old female student in a car in a mall parking ramp on Sunday.
Mall security twice noticed the car had been parked and occupied by the pair and became suspicious.
When a police officer arrived on the scene, he interviewed the two people in the car and determined an inappropriate relationship existed between the pair.
"There appears to be a situation here where the juvenile tells the parents she is going to the mall to meet friends. At some point shortly after she's at the mall she ends up meeting Watson. Watson then takes her some place and then returns her to the mall where we assume she's going to call her parents for a ride home," said Captain John Galscott of the Cheektowaga Police
Erie County District Attorney Frank Clark called the plea deal"a little dicey"but said the girl's family was happy with it.
Watson's lawyer, Oscar Smukler, said he was surprised by the agreement and was initially concerned that Canada could deport Watson, making him"a man without a country."But Smukler concluded that Canadian officials would be unlikely to act because Watson's crimes were the least serious form of sex offense. September 09 BC Teachers Ratify AgreementSeptember 8, 2006 Teachers ratify agreementBCTF members voted overwhelmingly to accept the five-year collective agreement reached at the end of June. The ratification vote passed by 93.4% with a total of 25,129 teachers casting ballots and 23,468 voting yes. The settlement offers increased stability in the public education system and allows us to focus on the joy of teaching and learning. It was teachers' determination and courage that made these gains possible. Through Bill 33, the government acknowledged the need to address class size and composition. However, there has been no additional funding provided to school boards to ensure that the provisions of the legislation can be fully implemented. The BCTF will continue to advocate for improvements in class size, class composition, and support for students with special needs, and press for full funding for Bill 33. July 19 So Where's the MoneyAs one of the thousands of teachers in BC who don't get another paycheck until mid September I would like to know why we have to wait untill the fall for the signing bonus.
At the time the last minute deal was reached we were assured that the funds would arrive pretty quickly.
"Assurances were provided to the BCTF by BCPSEA that payment of the signing incentive would be made over the summer on the basis of a recommendation by the BCTF Executive Committee to ratify"
No So. According the the latest update on the BCTF site:
"The BCTF and BCPSEA are still in discussions about who will receive the signing incentive. The signing bonus will be paid after ratification. Further announcements will be posted on the web site."
Why not Ratify Now.
There is no reason for not holding a ratification vote using a mail-in, write-in, or email system. Other unions do it, why not ours.
It may not Pass in the Fall.
With all the Global Tensions and Wars in today's News now that the world cup of soccer is over, inflation in Canada is sure to escalate. Starting with the price of gas and housing and ending with everything else, by fall the money in the agreement may not be enough.
Just some early morning thoughts as I prepare to enter the real world of work for the summer.
Stephen.
July 04 Settlement Summary, From the BCTF Site.Settlement SummaryTerm
Salary Grid adjustment and other monetary payments
Signing Incentive (revised on July 4, 2006 4:38 PM)
Workload
Benefits
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