Everything but Teaching: Planning, Paperwork, and Processing
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About this ebook
Every teacher knows that what happens before and after class is as important as what happens during class. This accessible resource gives all teachers indispensable tips for managing professional priorities outside the classroom and saving energy for the most essential part of their work: teaching students.
Real-life vignettes, planning sheets, and other templates, illustrate how to master the multitasking demands of the teaching life, including:
Planning time wisely
Tailoring grading practices to provide clear feedback
Holding productive meetings with students, parents, or colleagues
Keeping and using records effectively
Corresponding with grace, tact, and detail
Processing information and refining procedures
Embracing new professional learning opportunities
Without good planning and organization, even the best teachers may not be able to effectively reach their students, and the classroom can suffer. Using this invaluable guide, teachers can develop their professional skills. First year and veteran teachers alike can find new ideas for the business of running a class so that they can focus on the most important thing: teaching.
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Everything but Teaching - Stephen J. Valentine
Introduction
School Time
Versus Classroom Time
No matter how much you have achieved, you will always be merely good relative to what you can become. Greatness is an inherently dynamic process, not an end point. The moment you think of yourself as great, your slide toward mediocrity will have already begun.
—Jim Collins, Good to Great and the Social Sectors
Ihave seen a lot of good teachers exist on the brink of failure. These educators know their content, have a passion for their subject, and get along with kids. So, what’s the problem?
The problem is something I call the 25-percent piranha. Ideally, educators should spend most of their time, let’s say 75 percent, teaching, planning to teach, grading assessments, or meeting with individual students. This classroom time, to me, is the essential part of teachers’ jobs. They should spend the rest of their time, their school time, performing other duties. These other duties could be coaching, talking with parents, attending faculty meetings, or writing reports. In my experience, though, the other 25 percent has a funny habit of tearing off chunks of time from the essential 75 percent. For a variety of reasons—some of which are created by administrators or unspoken public relations pressures, some of which are created by poor habits—teachers either consciously or unconsciously give their peak energy and attention to things that happen outside the classroom. As a result, they often enter their classrooms with less deliberate intentions than they should, they return papers much later than they should, they grab an old lesson that worked
instead of differentiating for their current batch of students, or they simply wear themselves into the ground by trying to do everything.
Schools have become increasingly complex work environments, and the job of teaching is becoming increasingly fragmented. Teachers constantly pass my office at school and say things like, I wish I could just teach,
or, It seems like I haven’t had time to grade in weeks.
In my own complicated job, I often feel like I have to fight my way out of meetings, off the phone, or away from e-mails just to get to my classroom on time. Frankly, I enjoy the challenge, and I do believe that we can accomplish a great deal during our school time. But in order to be successful, I have had to learn to be effective. In this book, I will attempt to share what I’ve learned and to model the attitude that has allowed me to continue to learn in our rapidly changing schools.
To be clear, this book is not about making people better teachers in the classroom. It is not about differentiated instruction or backward design or how to organize a class period. Instead, it is about the other skill set (the survival skill set) that people need in order to stay afloat at school, and it is motivated by the idea that we can enrich student learning by effectively handling outside-the-classroom responsibilities and priorities.
When I work with teachers who are having trouble in the classroom, I usually try to dig around the edges to see how they are spending their free periods. Are they planning enough or are they bogged down with administrative details? Are they dealing effectively with their e-mails or are they simply letting their inboxes fill up with unanswered posts, causing endless anxiety about what’s not getting done? Are they keeping track of what they learn during student conferences or while grading student assessments, and then using this knowledge to clarify or redirect their future work with students? By exploring these blurred edges, these hidden nooks of teachers’ lives, I hope to aid teachers in bringing their peak talents and energies to their teaching, thereby taming the 25-percent