EAGLE MOUNTAIN NEWS & NOTES #37
May 23, 2016
EAGLE MOUNTAIN ELEMENTARY
Email: bmclain@ems-isd.net
Twitter: @bmacEME
REAL QUICK:
The final countdown is on – 8 days! Our Awards Assemblies begin this week as well as our Field Days & Kinder Graduation. The time is literally zooming by!
Important Information this week!
* Today I emailed you the precise format to use when making tentative class lists. Those lists are due to us next Tuesday please.
* Kelli will have your End of the Year Checklist to you this week also.
* Today Hope puts on the last Author’s Celebration of the year.
* Also, if your students made vocabulary posters let’s get those hung in the halls as our Vocabulary parade will be tomorrow morning at 8AM. Parents are welcome. The students will walk around the school two times displaying their favorite word.
* Yearbooks will be distributed next Tuesday, May 31st.
* We’re almost ready to send out our final parent newsletter of the year. Thank you for submitting highlights. It should be ready to go out by Wednesday.
* Our last Eagles of Character Celebration will be held this Thursday.
* If you have end of the year certificates for me to sign for our end of the year awards, please get those to me when you can.
Educators: Connect Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself!
Grow Your Professional Learning Network Before You Crash and Burn!
Education is a profession in which connections are a must. We connect with kids, families, colleagues, and the community in order to provide the best learning environment. What about connections outside of our norm? Educators need a network where they go to receive affirmation, are challenged to grow, and stay current on best practices to support kids. Learning must be ongoing for educators to truly be effective in their efforts to impact their students. We can no longer live in our comfort zone of six hour PD sessions, book studies, and administrative directives for what is to be learned. Every educator must make the commitment to take charge of their own learning; to branch out beyond the local networks and into one of endless opportunities… it is time to step into the social media side of professional learning and grow a PLN (personal learning network).
As a lead learner, I have high expectations for networking within my school family. We are all in different places regarding the level of comfort with social media such as Twitter, but I am proud to say that @CentralCabotpK4 we all have a Twitter handle! I encourage the use of Twitter not only to brand our school and showcase the greatness of our kids, but to promote professional connections and learning for each teacher. My friend Brad Currie once tweeted a graphic that said, “Connect Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself!”, and is the inspiration for the title of this post! Although this phrase makes us laugh, there is so much truth behind it. We absolutely cannot be who we are meant to be for kids if we aren’t connected professionally. We need to seek learning continually, and look for people to follow who will uplift, challenge, inspire, and ignite the passion within us. There is no longer an excuse to NOT be a connected educator. When I hire teachers, this is something I want to know. If the person interviewing isn’t connected, I will not consider the applicant. YES…it is THAT important.
So…here are some questions to ponder, and they may make you uncomfortable. I say often, “If you are too comfortable, you aren’t growing.” Kids don’t have time for us to be comfy and cozy…they need us to be out of our box, looking for ways to encourage, inspire, and help them find their genius. We stay uncomfortable for THEM. Think on these questions and be honest with yourself…ready?
- Do you use social media for your own personal learning — -Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Medium, LinkedIn, Voxer, Pinterest, Instagram, Snapchat, blogging? (there are so many more)
- Are there any of the above listed that you have never heard of? If so, are you willing to find out more about them?
- Do you share with other educators publicly, and often?
- Do you participate in educational chats via Twitter and Voxer?
- How often do you celebrate what you do with kids on social media (or do you at all)?
- How many times a week do you share something you found on social media with a colleague (or do you ever)?
- Do you connect with families and the community via social media (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Google+)?
- Do you have a professional profile that encourages others to learn along with you?
If you are unable to answer some of these questions, and are feeling uncomfortable…don’t stress! You can change that today by getting yourself connected in multiple ways. Follow great people and organizations on Twitter to fill your feed with knowledge and inspiration. Find educational and inspirational Facebook pages to add to your personal feed. Set up your professional profile on Google+ and LinkedIn and search for other educators. Most importantly…SHARE who you are with your network. Don’t hide your love for what you do. Share your passion and curiosity with others. Be vulnerable and seek knowledge in areas where you are in need. Do this for your personal growth, but most importantly, do it for the kids you invest in each day. Avoid the wreck. Don’t crash and burn. Connect yourself before your wreck yourself.
Common excuses for not being connected…
- I don’t have time.
- I don’t want people to see my business.
- Social media is all negative and maybe even the devil.
- I don’t want to be connected.
Here are my responses to these excuses…
- You make time for things that are important. Contributing to and learning from a PLN is important and a top priority.
- People better see your business if they are going to trust their kids with you. Our profession should promote transparency, the love of what we do, and how much we value our own learning.
- For those who follow the wrong people and are in the wrong circle, social media can be negative. It is about who you choose to connect with, and how you choose to contribute. The devil will stay away from positivity, and so will the energy vampires.
- You don’t have a choice in the matter. We are obligated to be connected locally, nationally, and internationally. It is part of what we do for our kids.
NO MORE EXCUSES. Period. The time is now…to get public, to get connected, to share, to promote this amazing profession in which we have dedicated so much of ourselves to. It is no longer an option to learn in our box. It is time to jump out and squash it. NOW.
Go forth and get connected! The quote below by the inspiring George Couros is one of my favorites to share with other educators. He makes a huge point in how the sharing of educators could impact a school’s culture, and also share with the world ideas, greatness, inspiration, and modeling of connected educators. What if…
Lead Learner @CentralCabotpK4• Disruptor•Relationship Builder•Quote Collector•Wannabe Author•Always a Teacher•Forever a Learner
THIS WEEK AT A GLANCE:
Monday – Bryan finishes novel unit with fifth grade, Kelli has CARE team meetings, 4th grade Poetry & Popsicle Palooza/Author’s Celebration, After school we are interviewing for our new music/art teacher – we have several strong candidates to choose from!
Tuesday – Music & Art interviews continue after school/Also our campus Principal Profile Committee will meet with Deborah Dockens from 3PM – 4:15 in the library to create the principal profile – this committee knows who they are. The Design Team will NOT meet as scheduled due to this other important meeting, but I will email the Design Team.
Wednesday –K, 1, 2, 3, Field Day – refer to Suzanne’s email for specifics, 1st grade Awards Assembly at 1:45, Team Leader final dinner at 4:30 at Salt Grass in Western Center
Thursday –Kinder graduation – 8:30 AM, 4th grade Field Day, Beckett Willis serves as Principal for the Day, Eagles of Character 1:30 – Honor Choir Performance
Friday – Happy Birthday to Nala Beal, 5th grade Field Day at Boswell, 2nd grade Awards Assembly at 9:15 AM, 3rd grade Awards Assembly at 1:50 PM
NOTEABLE QUOTABLES:
SHOUT OUTS!
* Madeline Tittle deserves a standing ovation for her excellent coordination of Kinder Round Up last week. It was without question the smoothest one we’ve ever had & parents left feeling very welcomed & excited about coming to EME last year. Thanks Madeline for all the extra finishing touches you put together…it didn’t go unnoticed! Thanks also to the teachers & staff members who lent a helping hand: Donna McBride, Cindy Griggs, Lynnette Darden, Cathy Wells, Sophia Navarro, Debbi Roest, Dedra Jones, Drew Hohman, Donna Bell, Sandra Short, Andrea Reed, Amber Cook, Kelley Rudd, Amy Longspaugh, Beth Carpenter, & Kelli Shipp made all the difference! THANKS to everyone for helping with our Kinder Round-Up!
* Speaking of standing ovations! Leslie Hooe certainly deserves a huge standing ovation for her work with our Honor Choir. Their performance at Bass Hall was remarkable & so so well done! Kelli & I were cheering them on from the Box Seats (thank you Shawn Bell!) & we could not have been more impressed & pleased with the entire production & performance. Please take a well -deserved bow, Leslie! You have put our choir on the map! Bravo! Bravo! We are sure going to miss you next year!
* I have tremendous respect & admiration for Jennifer DeCorte who has graciously allowed me to come in & teach my novel unit for her fifth graders – this particular year the classes were remarkable & became completely immersed with the literature. Thanks Jennifer for letting me get that teacher high that I love & for sharing your classes with me.
* We also want to take a moment to extend our thanks for the job that our team leaders have done this year. Madeline Tittle, Donna McBride, Janet Dickerson, Debbi Roest, LaRae Witsaman, Dedra Jones, Leslie Hooe, & Regina have stepped up on SO MANY levels & have gone above & beyond & are such strong representatives for our campus. We owe them a debt of gratitude & I hope you’ll join me in thanking them for their selfless service to EME!