For the Love of Learning: Great Teachers, Great Schools
At the heart of every great school are great teachers. In For the Love of Learning: Great Teachers, Great Schools, we explore how to improve the quality of teachers in California and what role parents and community members can play to better support teachers in local schools. How can teachers connect better with their students and build effective relationships with parents and colleagues? We learn that as the community that the school supports changes demographically, educators must adapt their practices to the language and literacy needs of the population.
Click on a program topic to hear audio with voices and stories behind the issues.
Use the study guides to inform yourself about the topic and learn the skills of innovation, including:
- Creative problem-solving
- Strategic thinking
- Entrepreneurial initiative
- Collaborative design
In addition:
- Explore other audio, video and print resources on the topic
- Use the suggested activities to put innovation into action in your community
- Choose from a menu of options to adapt the materials to your specific learning and teaching objectives.
Chaz Garcia is a third grade teacher at Esperanza Elementary School, part of the Oakland Small Schools Foundation which was created “to promote excellence and sustainability in Oakland’s new small public schools.” In a district where only one third of high school freshmen reach graduation, the need for academic, social and arts intervention is dramatic. Most of the children at Esperanza have the potential to become the first children in their families to graduate from college.
Chaz Garcia is a third grade teacher at Esperanza Elementary School, part of the Oakland Small Schools Foundation which was created “to promote excellence and sustainability in Oakland’s new small public schools.” In a district where only one third of high school freshmen reach graduation, the need for academic, social and arts intervention is dramatic. Most of the children at Esperanza have the potential to become the first children in their families to graduate from college.
Casey D’Angelo is superintendent of the Wright Elementary School District near Santa Rosa, California, which has an enrollment 1475 K-6 students. The district seeks to create an environment which: encourages every child to work to his or her potential, builds basic skills, kindles and nourishes curiosity, teaches problem-solving and encourages children to love learning. http://www.wrightesd.org/
Seth Leslie is a Math Teacher East Palo Alto High School in Menlo Park, California, and teaches a problem-based mathematics curriculum at grade levels 9 through 12. He also mentors teachers from Stanford's Teacher Education Program, and serves as a student advisor.
Pre-listening
- Describe your favorite teacher or most memorable learning experience.
- What are some of the primary reasons cited by teachers who choose to leave the profession? What incentives would attract them to work in a low-income school?
- What role can parents and community members play to support teachers in local schools? Why is it so important that they be involved?
- What can teachers do to connect better with their students and build effective relationships with parents and colleagues in the school?
Listening Guide
List the main ideas and interesting points presented. | Respond with questions, connections or applications to your life or work. |
List the main ideas and interesting points presented. | Respond with questions, connections applications to your life or work. |
List the main ideas and interesting points presented. | Respond with questions, connections applications to your life or work. |
List the main ideas and interesting points presented. | Respond with questions, connections applications to your life or work. |
List the main ideas and interesting points presented. | Respond with questions, connections applications to your life or work. |
Discussion Questions
- Chaz Garcia explains that most innovative approaches to teaching draw clear relationships between the curriculum content and the student's own experiences. What other innovative techniques do you think would improve the effectiveness of teachers in engaging their students in the materials they are studying?
- What are some of the issues surrounding the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) laws?
- There are many issues surrounding teacher retention in underfunded, low performing schools. What are some of the primary reasons cited by teachers who choose to leave the profession?
- What kinds of support help teachers stay in the classroom?
- Why do teachers' unions oppose the idea of paying higher salaries to teachers in hard-to-staff schools?
- What are other innovative strategies for staffing those schools?
- Analyze the implications and effects of using language like “combat pay” and other controversial terms with regard to educational settings.
- Many teachers leave the teaching profession within the first five years of their tenure. Research has indicated that teachers do not leave the profession because their own education hasn’t adequately preparedthem for teaching. Why do you think enrollment is down in teacher education programs?
- What recommendation does Ken Futernick have for improving the quality of schools with regard to teachers and administrators?
- How would these recommendations impact students?
- Why is it so important that parents and the community be involved in local schools?
- What role can parents and community members play in supporting teachers in local schools?
- What qualities do parents value in teachers?
- Describe how Ms. Brown models the behavior she believes will help students and teachers succeed in school.
- What message do Ms. Brown and other parents have for policy-makers about how best to support schools and teachers?
- What qualities do school districts look for in teachers?
- What role does administrative leadership play in a school setting?
- Describe some ways that new teachers are being supported in California. Can you think of some additional ways to support teachers?
- Define some of the reasons why some parents or community members are not involved with local schools. What are some possible strategies to get the parents and community more involved?
- What can teachers do to better connect with their students and build effective relationships with parents and colleagues at school?
- Explain the impacts that recent reforms at East Palo Alto High School have had on its community.
- What strategies and programs have contributed to East Palo Alto High School's success?
- What are the financial needs for these and other innovative programs?
- How is the structure of East Palo Alto High different from traditional schools?
- What effect does this structure have on the teachers and students?
Additional Questions
- Teachers’ unions exert considerable influence on public education policies. Is it too much, not enough, or about right? What is the proper balance between the influence of business and that of teachers, administrators, parents and federal and state policy-makers?
- Should English be mandated as the official language of public schools? If so, what allowances, if any, should be made to give non-native English speakers the chance to learn the language before being expected to keep up with their native English-speaking peers?
- Many parents and teachers criticize the current emphasis on standardized testing, arguing that it forces teachers to “teach to the test” rather than the topic. But in the absence of such testing, how would we be able to measure and compare the relative progress of students and schools?
- Some parents, administrators and outside observers criticize the tenure system as allowing teachers who have lost interest in their jobs to continue teaching despite their poor performance. How should the issue of tenure be addressed to assure effective teaching throughout a teacher’s career?
- Is the poor performance of some schools most of all the consequence of inadequate resources, inefficient use of the resources available or some of both?
- Private school students consistently outscore their public school counterparts in reading, writing, math, science, U.S. history, geography and civics. Given these results, should parents be given vouchers that would enable them to enroll their children in private schools?
- If large numbers of students abandon public for private schools, what will be the impact on public education – and on the cohesiveness of a society in which we no longer share a public educational experience?
- Proposed legislation promises an annual $3,000 per child tax credit to parents to cover the costs of educating their children. This credit would apply regardless of whether children are home-schooled, attend a private or parochial school or a public school. What do you think of such a plan?
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