Over the past week I have been a part of some wonderful presentations and discussions about the use of technology in the classroom, been asked to consider producing an online course using the Blackboard program, and brought up to speed with how I should help students read in my physics classroom.
Why do I get all this great stuff at the same point that I am in survival mode? I want to digest, research, and integrate the cool stuff I just heard about, but students return in seven days. The only thing on my mind right now is the first day followed by the first 2-4 weeks.
I understand that the timing of this is dictated by our contract if we want to be paid for it. Maybe by next semester or next summer I will have the time to fully integrate criterion-based grading or establish rubrics for reading for understanding or put all of my physics online. I don't want to sound like a whiner. In all actuality, I am going to attempt to do these things during the year. It just makes me sad that I will not be able to dedicate the time necessary to bring it to the level that I want.
Suggestion: Have an optional (non-paid) session during the summer. This would allow more teachers the time to think about, research, and build into their curriculum in a purposeful way. Or even create a 1-2 week summer course that is dedicated to integrating these new ideas into the classroom. I just remembered why it is a leap of faith to put an idea out there. I might just leap right into being responsible for it.
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