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Conference Feedback and CEU/Attandence Certs-an update

10/23/2016

3 Comments

 
First of all thank to each and every one who came out to support the 2016 TCI Maine, New England and Beyond conference.  Many thanks too for all that completed the survey so thoughtfully.   We are getting A LOT of really helpful feedback (like lunch was, schedule the day more thoughtfully and end earlier, WE NEED DEMOS!, ANNE MATAVA is so helpful, FLES really appreciated having something at the conference, etc, etc, etc)  and we PROMISE TO TAKE IT ALL INTO CONSIDERATION WHEN PLANNING NEXT YEAR.

The State has not sent us the CEU credits yet.  We have contacted them a few times to no avail.  We will try again tomorrow and do our very best to get the two forms to all those who completed the feedback survey as soon as we possibly can. We are very sorry for the delay!

We are already planning for next year and are very excited about initial contacts we have had.  Please stay tuned. 

Best of luck on your 90% journey!
Skip and Beth
3 Comments

Eulogy:  TCI and my mom's life

6/28/2016

15 Comments

 
My mom's celebration of life service was yesterday.  My wife Beth wrote and delivered  the eulogy.   She tied it to CI.   I am sharing it here:I


I first met Kathy 24 years and 3 months ago. I jokingly say that the 2 of us spent the first eight years thinking that neither one of us liked each other. It wasn’t until I became a mom to a son that I was able to understand and appreciate our relationship a bit better and over the next 16 years I grew to love and respect her more and more deeply.


I began reflecting on why it took so long. I kept likening it to the Foreign Language method that Skip uses. It’s called Comprehensible Input or the belief that languages are ACQUIRED and not learned. Language is only acquired when we understand messages (CI) We acquire when we understand what people tell us or what we read, when we are absorbed in the message and that message is repeated again and again over long periods of time just like when we acquired our first language. You may be thinking that that’s great if you’re  a language teacher...how does it affect me or apply to this? The link is this...modeling. I could spend hours TELLING you that mariposa means butterfly and at the end of the day, you may or may not understand, or remember it. However...if I SHOW you this, and repeatedly say mariposa….chances are almost 100 times greater you will remember, or acquire, that BECAUSE IT HAS MEANING.

Kathy entered Hospice care on April 8th. She was admitted to Hospice House on June 6th, and called all her family & friends together on the 10th to impart what were to be her final words of wisdom. This was her final attempt to make sure WE had ACQUIRED the things she always strove to model for us.

**The first thing was to LOVE each other. Kathy was a master of modeling this in ways both seen and unseen. Would anyone dare to guess how many meals she missed over the years because she was up & scurrying about the kitchen serving others? What about the countless hours she spent rocking babies...any baby would do, but her grandchildren were her favorite (after all,they were just so custard cute!) Bridget, Tina, and I can attest to her willingness to babysit any day, any time so that we could go grocery shopping or simply take a shower. The 30 years she worked as a CNA/Med Tech lovingly caring for those who, for various reasons, could not care for themselves - sometimes it wasn’t glamorous and sometimes it was as simple as doing a little jig with them. She selflessly became an angel for her neighbor Dana as she battled cancer…. And her rolls - her rolls were in and of themselves an expression of love.  If you were sick, grieving,or hungry...her rolls were just the medicine you needed

**The second was PEACE:  To keep the PEACE. In the family. At work. At church. Within friendships. Whether it was due to her genetic DNA or her psychological make up, Kathy had zero tolerance for drama. How many of us can hear her voice echoing the words “Keep the Peace!”  or “peace in the Family!”  If she overheard discussion she was always quick to remind us not to judge because we don’t know what we’d do in that situation. If we were complaining or trying to wallow in our misery she liked to remind us that things could be always be worse.

Show love….keep the peace….

The next was simplicity.   Kathy’s power was in simplicity.   She modeled being happy with and enjoying what she had and making sure that what you have consists of having those you love around  - a lot!  We were reminded this of this the Sunday after she passed.  Mark had a campfire at Gordon and Kathy’s house.  As we each pulled up to the driveway and saw all of her family, closest friends and grandkids sitting around the fire having Kathy missing was a very bittersweet reminder of what made her most happy.

Love, Peace, Simplicity….

Then there was faith.  In the final hours of her journey she wanted to make known that she new EXACTLY where her journey would take her and that she was ready….The path to her final destination began deeply rooted in the faith of her French Catholic family. Though faith always involved  tension for her, in the end Kathy, simplified this too - crying out that she “only wanted Jesus.”   

Love, Peace, Simplicity, Faith
And laughter.   Kathy made us laugh - sometimes, OK  most of the time, at her own expense.  I call them “Kathy-isms.”  From stating that she was “glad I’m not in their feet!” to telling about how someone had died in a car crash from “falling asleep on the wheel” Did you ever hear her proclaim that someone was a controlling freak? Don’t you dare forget those custard cute grandkids of hers! Kathy had her own special way with the English language. She became even more humorous in her final stages of life. While rehabbing at D’youville after her fall, she and Skip were on pins and needles to learn if Skip was going to be named Maine Teacher of the Year.  One night before leaving her room for the night she asked Skip to take her bra off.  Horrified, he refused and said that that was the limit and there was no way he would do that to which she replied in a very irritated tone “well - you sure wouldn’t be named caretaker of the year that’s for sure!”  Then, on the last day before she lost consciousness, the boys were feeding her pudding.  Pudding got on her mouth and nightgown.  When asked if she wanted more she quipped, “no - you’ve  done enough damage….

The past 22 months had not been easy ones for her and I am so grateful that she "let me in" to journey this with her. Over her last 10 weeks her sense of humor grew, she became wiser, and she showed us how to approach death with dignity & grace (even though she stated it "wasn't fun.") Last Friday, she somehow summoned us together again without saying a word. As we all sat around the hospice house dining room feasting on ice cream, at 5:10pm she quietly completed her earthly journey confident we had ACQUIRED what she spent her life modeling for us.

So, as you leave her today - remember: Show love, keep the peace, live your faith simply, laugh and make others laugh.  
Thanks Kathy, for showing us how! We love you and will miss you so much!





15 Comments

Looking Ahead to 2016

12/29/2015

0 Comments

 
To our TCI Maine New England and Beyond family

I just wanted to write to everyone as we come to the close of the year and approach 2016, to express my sincere appreciation and gratitude for each one that has supported Comprehensible Input in their classrooms.

I do trust that everyone has a wonderful Christmas and are able to enjoy some time to relax, recharge and reflect.

I would encourage us all to continue to reach out to each other to encourage, support and, of course, ask for encouragement and support too!

Beth and I have taken a bit of a break from thinking about the 2016 conference.   We will start again as we start the new year.  (and, as always, we certainly welcome your thoughts as to who we invite, topics we cover etc.) We have been given access to a room in the high school which will help us organize more  "conference" style ."

Again, accept our warm wishes.   We truly do appreciate the support you have given to encourage TCI in Maine, New England and Beyond!

Sincerely,
Skip and Beth
0 Comments

I would welcome feedback on an activity I tried

9/5/2015

1 Comment

 
1 Comment

REflections on the 8/19 Peer coaching session!

8/22/2015

3 Comments

 
8/23

Blog on the 8/19 peer coaching session.

On August 19 fifteen teachers meet on a very hot and humid day in Lewiston Maine for a peer coaching session.  It was the first session we had had since Laurie Clarcq met with us in January to train us in the “Coaching from the Heart” process that she developed in which teachers who “practice” are ONLY given positive feedback on what they did that was good TCI practice and what they did to help students learn.

As I outlined in a previous post, the process included a coach, a coach on deck, a panel of “students” and a panel of “observers.”  The coach asks a series of questions to the teacher.  The coach on deck makes notes on everything the coach did to help the teacher.   The students give feedback on what the teacher did to help them learn. The observers tell the teacher what they saw that was effective in helping students learn.

The session was tremendous!   More than a few teachers commented on how it was, by far, THE BEST professional development that they ever have as a teacher.   

The incredible power of the process is that over the course of the day everyone gets to see all of the teachers do things that are effective.   If one teacher does something that is not so effective or even wrong, you can be sure that before the day is over, someone will demonstrate that skill better or in a more effective way.

I learned many things from the session:
  1. I learned the how much more effective it is to tell the students to motion or indicate when I as the teacher am not being understandable or comprehensible.   I have always told the students to tell me when they don’t understand.   We discussed as a group how students would be more likely to indicate that they did not understand if it were clear that the responsibility was mine as a teacher to make myself understood.  
      2.  One teacher used a gesture to ask students what a word meant.  I too will use a gesture to indicate I am asking what something
         
means  as a way to limit English on my part.

      3.  I was so impressed by how the board was completely clear after one of the teachers had finished teaching.  He took only one
         
structure and did write anything besides that one structure for the entire  lesson.   That was so clear and so powerful.  The entire
          focus for the students could be on that one structure.

    4.  I was reminded of the “fuego artificiales” - how the teacher leads the students in the “cheer gesture” in the form of fireworks…

I asked the group at the end of the for some feedback/thoughts on the “Coaching from the Heart” process.  Here is what members of the group said:
  • Focusing on the what I am doing “right” is a nicer way to grow than to be told what I am doing wrong.  Nice to be given the opportunity to grow by watching and taking away what one is ready to grasp.  That is how I want to grow.
  • Observing is SO powerful
  • My experience is that any feedback you give is taken positively.  Peer coaching allows me the opportunity to see what other do and see that it is what I do - that is reaffirming
  • Coach and Coach on Deck are  vital roles - we must train teachers for our students
  • Training others as coaches is vital so they can take it back to their school and train their teachers.   TCI depends on good teaching and good teaching depends on good coaching.
  • It is a bit uncomfortable hearing positive b/c I am so apt to browbeat myself.  Teaching is such a difficult job - I feel so inadequate that to get affirmation offsets the negative voices.
  • I supply enough negativity for myself.   I treasure positive feedback.
  • I think reading and attending workshops is helpful and necessary - but  peer coaching puts you in the moment.
  • The positive feedback seems so rare.  It seems that everything in education (like the Danielson rubric which lists all the ways possible to screw up) it is so affirming to get positive feedback.
  • I think watching other people teach lets me know what I am doing “wrong.”
  • I was really reluctant to play the role of the teacher at the session in January until I saw the positive approach.  I saw the “user friendly” process.  The feedback makes me want to be the teacher.
  • Very few circles understand what I do and how challenging it is.  It is so affirming to hear people who know how to teach compliment me.   Much more meaningful when a fellow WL teacher compliments me than if my mom or husband does.   
  • It adds a whole new dimension to relationships seeing colleagues  teach and appreciating them in new ways.

Throughout the course of the day we discovered that one of the teachers present had actually resigned in the Spring!  She brought the teacher that had replaced her because she views the peer coaching as THE BEST professional development that she ever participates in.  Another teacher announced that she will be retiring at the end of the year.  She traveled two hours to join us.  She wanted to go out on top and get the “shot in the arm” that the peer coaching training allows.  Three other teachers traveled 2-3 hours from other states.

I am so excited by what is happening in Maine and the momentum that TCI is gaining!  Thanks again to Laurie Clarcq for training us and giving us the process, skills and training that we needed to bring our peer coaching session to the next level!
3 Comments

what I learned from NTPRS: Super 7 Verbs 2015

7/25/2015

5 Comments

 
A few times during the conference various presenters mentioned "Super 7 verbs"  I had  not heard about those before.  It turns out that Terry Waltz has come up with what she feels are fundamental and foundational verbs that, if students can master them, will be useful in propelling their proficiency.  They are:

To have
To want
To go
To like
There is/the are
To feel like (doing something)
To be

Here is the article that Terry posted on MoreTPRS.  It comes from Haiyun Lu's blog: 
http://tprsforchinese.blogspot.com/2013/07/super-seven.html

I will make a point to have students acquire these as soon as possible.  I wonder how they fall in the "natural order?"




5 Comments

2015 FLAME TOY acceptance speech

3/7/2015

12 Comments

 
     I am most grateful and humbled that FLAME would recognize me with this great honor.  I promise to pay it forward and invest in others as others have invested in me. I also pledge to use the platform and voice that have been given me to promote language teaching and  acquisition for ALL students.
    If you look really closely you will see every person that has ever invested in me as a teacher over the past 25 years. From those at the very beginning like my student teaching mentor teacher, Deb Roy, Grace Leavitt, Barbara Connell, Don Reutershan and Marty Brooks, to those later in my career like Alice Yates, Michelle Fournier, Anne Matava, Ben Slavic, Susie Gross, Blaine Ray, Laurie Clarcq, my TCI colleagues, my wonderful peer coaching group and many, many others who helped me become the not only the educator, but even the person, I am today.

    I also want to thank Cari Medd, my principal who started the whole process by nominating me for Maine Teacher of the Year. She is unable to be with us today and I am grateful to our Co-curricular coordinator, Don King for representing her and for enabling our students to share this day with me.

    My wife Beth and my son Gabe are here today. They both share my passion for providing and pursuing professional development and support and encourage all my endeavors.  I am also blessed to have the students of  my Roundtable here today.   As an advisory group, we have met a half hour a day, every day for four years. They are graduating in June and will leave me with a huge void, wonderful memories and the hope of a future filled with their visits, reports on their success and least one future colleague! A shout out to Taylor who is unable to be here because of surgery she had on Tuesday.

    It all started with my senior English teacher who, in my  last year of high school, took a victim of tracking, stuck in the C and D levels, invited me into his Honors English class with all the smart kids, and convinced me to ignore the labels that had been given me. He insisted that I could be or do anything I wanted to. It is because of him that I aspire to do the same for students today.

    The closer to the end of my career I get, the more passionate I am about doing everything possible to help end monolingualism in our communities. We have generations of WL language students who have little more to say than “I took 2 years of French, Spanish or any other language but I can't speak it.” The competition for education dollars is becoming greater and greater too are the  signs that we are losing ground. From French being cut at USM to stories of WL staffs shrinking from 9 teachers to 3, I am petrified that if we are not able to show greater success in our efforts at language acquisition, the situation will only get worse and WL less relevant.        
 
     I would like each of you to  close your eyes. Now, think about the ideal foreign language student. Perhaps an actual student will come to mind. What characteristics are you seeing?  Perhaps this student is highly motivated.  Perhaps you see self confidence or a willingness to take risks.  Perhaps you see combinations of all of these.  Now I would like you to think of the other 9.  What do you see?
    We must consider methods and strategies that enable the masses and not just the “4%ers (which most in this room are) to find success at language acquisition. Moms have 100% success rate at creating language speakers. Language programs have tended to send the message that languages are hard or inaccessible and something only the really good students can attain. Let us ask ourselves as educators what role we have in realizing the conditions needed to achieve proficiency in high school like starting language education earlier.  How might we use our voice to lead such changes?

        As we face the proficiency based report card it is more imperative than ever that we see more success in helping students not only gain proficiency in language but confidence and even enjoyment. You see, I was one of the “other nine.”  School  had convinced me that I was limited at best and dumb at worst.  The stigma of being in the D track scars me to this day. As a result of being the other 9, I know that the  other 9 in our classes are not interested in learning the mechanics of the language. When language becomes the vehicle through which we talk ABOUT our students or other topics that are compelling to them, students become more interested, walls between the teacher and them are torn down, community is developed and acquisition occurs.

    Please consider the  ACTFL recommendation that 90% of all instruction consist of CI. We know that languages are acquired through comprehensible input. For that comprehensible input to be effective it must be 100% comprehensible, repetitive, personalized and compelling.

    Each year I start classes by having students fill out a card like this one.  On the front, depending on the level, students draw something they do, or that they are afraid of, or what they would do if they had a million dollars. On the back I put an information sheet where they share what is important to them and all of their favorites. Carol Gaab encourages teachers to make their students their curriculum. Each card that hangs prominently in my room for the year loudly proclaims that EACH and every student represented is more important than the language.

     I am convinced that teaching with comprehensible input and the personalization that it allows, is responsible for failure rates at Poland Regional High School that has gone from 40-50 a year to fewer than 4 or 5.  Enrollment in upper levels have gone from 4-5 to 30 to 40.
    We must allow ALL students to achieve success in second language acquisition. Our future depends on it. The other 9 deserve it.
                           






12 Comments

Twitter challenge for WL teachers

2/22/2015

6 Comments

 
Fred Raven, a French teacher in Maine and former FLAME (Foreign Language Association of Maine) president posted this.
It sounds very interesting to me....

Fred wrote on the FLAME Yahoo group:

I just read an interesting blog post by George Couros. In the post the author asked a group of administrators the following question:
“What if every teacher tweeted one thing a day that they did in their classroom to a school hashtag, and they took five minutes out of their day to read each other’s tweets? What impact would that have on learning and school culture?”
Sometimes the biggest ideas are the simplest. Below is the World Language Challenge. I am going to give it try and see if it works. Who is with me?
This is the World Language Teacher Challenge.
For the school days in March, take a few minutes and tweet about something you in did class. Use the hash tag #.

#enWLclase
6 Comments

The invisible classroom

2/20/2015

8 Comments

 

“Hope is the only thing stronger than fear.” Suzanne Collins – The Hunger Games


My dear friend, mentor and encourager Jen Schongalla sent me a copy of The Invisible Classroom: Relationships, Neuroscience and Mindfulness in School by Kirke Olson just before Christmas. I have only read the forward, preface, introduction and chapter 1 but the parallels between the blog post I did on Laurie Clarcq's model of positive peer coaching “from the heart” and the book so far are striking.

Louis Cozolimo, Series editor for the Norton Series on the Social Neuroscience of Education says in the forward that:
In American education, what is most important about education has become invisible. If it is true that to a hammer, everything looks like a nail, then to modern educators, everything must be directly relevant to test scores. The human process of education has become a shadow, largely ignored by our educational system.

He also says that:
One of the negative side effects of an emphasis on test performance is a focus on weaknesses – mistakes, missing knowledge and the number of points away from perfection. This can be destructive to motivation, enthusiasm and exploration.

He then says that:
Gangs, on the other hand, who offer attachment, safety, and soul are doing better than ever.

Finally, Kirke says in the introduction that:
Extensive research over many decades shows that from the first moments of birth, human brains are wired to learn best within the context of loving relationships. This does not end because children enter schools, so cultivating a positive relational culture in your classroom and school supports learning and creates a better working atmosphere for you. What's love got to do with it? Well, everything!

I find it amazing what a paradigm shift it seems to be to focus on the positive – strengths instead of weaknesses – what one does well rather than wrong! I wonder why that is? Susie Gross' words that “nothing motivates like success” resonates loudly. I think that even more than TCI, focusing on student success and making sure that students know that I love and care for them has revolutionized my classroom and the teaching/learning experience.

So, I will end with this thought:

How can we communicate to ALL students that
1. We love and care about them.
2 We appreciate them and are glad they are in our class
3. Each person in the class is vital to the class community
4. Each student as a person is much more important to me than the content I am teaching.

What ideas might teachers share for strategies that would allow us to consciously and deliberately send those messages as a teacher and as a school? I will share three:
1. meeting each student at the door in a positive way every morning
2. by making an effort to show sympathy to and understand student behavior and to NOT take their behavior personally
3. by making a point within a few weeks time to check in with every student I have in class. It might range from asking how someone in their family is to how their team is doing or commenting on how I have noticed that they seem down, tired or distracted lately.

I am looking forward to what the rest of the book has to offer. I will keep you posted.




8 Comments

Group work

2/11/2015

2 Comments

 
The administrative team at my school has focused on "student engagement" for two years now.  This year the focus has been on "increasing student engagement via group work."  I am really struggling.  I have tried to explain how group work and TCI really are not compatible.  I have also encouraged folks to come see for themselves how TCI engages students. 

Today we met again.  We had to talk about challenges that group work presents and advantages of group work.   It was a long afternoon.   We now have to create a lesson plan based on group work and have a colleague observe that lesson.


I went to Ben's blog to see what had been written about group work.   There was one post.  Ben opens that post by saying "We basically have no reason to group kids, but a lot of observers come in to our classrooms looking for exactly that so that they can check that box on their evaluation sheet." 

He then shared an idea by Judy Dubois that incorporates group work: 
…I heard about the Dictogloss at the TESOL France conference. The teacher reads a short dictation At Normal Speed and students write down what they remember, then in groups put their notes together and try to come up with the original text. At upper levels, 3 + 4, this might be an interesting exercise. With students willing to stay in the target language, it would involve listening, writing, speaking and reading….

I then started wondering if there might be a place for group work when reading.  Might there be a way to have students read a novel in groups in a productive and effective manner?  I know that voices like Terry Waltz say that it is useless to have beginning learners listen to beginning learners read/speak in the target language.  I wonder if that changes as time goes on and students begin to read quite well? 

I am at a loss.  The overarching issue, or course, is what we do when we are "forced" to do things at the local, state and federal level that seem to go against what we know to be best practices in language acquisition. So many teachers are facing this.  Deb Soifer comes immediately to mind.  She has suffered her fair share trying to do right by kids while pacifying the powers that be.  Her sharing in the fall shows how much she has wrestled with this.

I would welcome your thoughts about how I can do what I am told and still do right by my students.   I think I will try Judy's idea.  I continue to wonder about a role for groups in the reading of the novels.




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    Skip Crosby, Spanish
    Poland Regional High School
    2014 Androscoggin County Teacher of the Year
    2015 Maine Teacher of the Year Finalist
    2015 Maine Foreign Language Teacher of the Year
    Founder, TCI Maine, New England & Beyond

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