Saturday, February 25, 2012

Things I've Learning in Grad School #3

Being humble, helpful, and generally nice does not mean you have to allow people to walk all over you.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Things I've Learned in Grad School #2

When in doubt, go with "it depends"--a pretty reliable answer to almost any question. Granted, you might have to be prepared to next discuss on what "it" depends--but if nothing else, it'll buy you some time :)

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Things I've learned in Grad School: #1

New weekly post idea: things I've learned during this grad school/doc program thing--and mostly those things I've learned OUTSIDE of the classroom (with a few exceptions, I'm sure), but still directly related to my enrollment in the program.

The very first lesson learned in grad school: Grad school can make you doubt your ability to get along in the real world. Then again, one must remember that grad school is a far cry from the real world.

And yet another new dissertation idea...

Qualitative study--interviews with teachers working at Durango High School as they prepare to launch the new learning-communities model in August 2012.

Freshman and sophomore students at Durango will select one of three learning communities within the larger high school to commit themselves for the first two years of their high school experience (during Junior and Senior years, it sounds like they will still "belong" to their learning community, but be free to take a wider range of electives). The three learning communities: (1) the DaVinci school of creativity and innovation; (2) the Atlas international school of inquiry; and (3) the Basecamp school of expeditionary learning. Apparently, this model was actually formulated and proposed by the teachers at the school, and they are currently participating in additional professional development to prepare for this change in the upcoming school year. As I said above, I want to interview the teachers about the process--the development of the idea and proposals from teachers' perspectives, their process in selecting a community of which to be a part, anticipated challenges and opportunities, the professional development opportunities (and if teachers find them to be sufficient, or if there is additional support they feel they would like), etc.

Haven't even started reviewing the literature, yet, so this is a very early-stage idea, but doable (as long as the school district and teachers will have me!)