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I wish I'd said it...
When I was finishing up my teaching degree back in
19...uh...mmm...a while ago, and was preparing for my first
classroom experience as a student teacher at Henry Clay High School,
my advisor at the University of Kentucky sat me down to talk about
what my post-degree goals and concerns should be. "Your first
year as a teacher, you'll be acutely aware of yourself. You'll wake
up from nightmares where you're poorly (or under!) dressed in front
of your students, you've lost something important, or you've done
something that made you look completely silly or irrelevant. In year
two, you'll start to be aware of the mathematics - your dreams will
be more about not being able to answer questions, or forgetting
something you were supposed to teach. In year three, you'll finally
notice that there are, in fact, students in the room."
...Of course, his charge to me, at that meeting,
was to speed up the timeline.
None of us would like to admit that, in our first
years as a teacher, we struggled with the concept of paying
attention to student needs. Caring about, and being effective with,
your students require that you are confident enough to get out of
yourself, and listen to what is going on around you. Of course,
there's always one new teacher who "hit the ground
running" - whose poise and skill was evident from the first day
they entered the classroom. However, for the rest of us, confidence
is won through experience, hard work, and constant self-evaluation.
The only way to truly speed up the process is by forcing ourselves
to practice our skills at every opportunity, and to be honest and
attentive to the results.
So it is with technology use and integration.
There are always "geeks" - folks who have no problem
learning new tools, and for whom the prospect of using those tools
in a classroom inspires nothing scarier than a good night's sleep.
For the rest of us, experience and confidence are won the hard way.
There are, of course, a few ways we can speed up the learning
curve...
- Use a new tool even when you're happier or
faster with an old one. Remember those first few days with
touch-typing? If you had listened to your fingers and head, you
would have quit right then! If you stuck it out, you probably no
longer even think about how much neater and faster committing
words to a page is!
- Learn from whoever will teach. One of
the wonderful things about a general sense of
confidence is that it relieves you of the responsibility of
being an expert on everything. Once that corner is turned, your
students will often be quite willing and able to provide help.
Let them!
- Share the responsibilities. As a high
school teacher now with K-12 responsibilities, I am always
shocked to find out how many elementary classroom teachers are
collaborating with each other. High school teachers tend to
just close the door! But no matter where you are, you can
probably find a teacher with which to collaborate - one who has
more experience, skill, and confidence than you do.
But those ideas aren't enough. In order for our
experiences to build confidence, we have to be paying attention to
them. Gone are the days when we can simply drop our students off at
the computer lab, and let some "specialist" take care of
the technology training! Since all of the
responsibilities for learning are on our heads (and that includes
responsibilities for our own learning!), we must gain
the benefit from the technology use, just as our students do. After
all, when it comes to preparing our students for their lives after
Fayette County, there is a limit to how much good decisions and good
help can contribute to change. At some point, we have no choice but
to be changed ourselves!
But, just as many of you managed to graduate from
hunt-and-peck typists, experience and skill builds confidence, and
confidence increases use. And, hopefully, three years is longer than
we need to be confident in our technology use. After all, there are
only so many nightmares of humiliation we should be required to
endure!
--Jeffrey L.
Jones, Editor
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