Sunday, September 27, 2020

September 28 - October 2

 D.C. Everest Senior High School Staff Update

Weekly Happenings

I have been so impressed with our students throughout this year. It was great to see many of them competing and performing in many of their passions over the last week. Thank you to everyone who has a hand in providing these awesome memories for our students.


Curriculum and Instruction


Think Self-Management, Not Time Management
PJ Caposey

By changing your behavior and reframing your tasks, you can find time to do the important work you love.

There is no shortage of tips, tricks, techniques, and hacks to help people from all walks of life, including educators, manage their time. However, the massive amount of information on the topic seems to have little impact, as our lives continue to get busier and more connected. Moreover, the very tools (email, phones, etc.) that we once thought would help us become more efficient and manage our time are now part of the problem. What educator is not continually bombarded by emails and texts at all hours of the day and night?

But there is a path forward—if you're willing to be uncomfortable.

First, you have to embrace the fact that there is no such thing as time management. We all have the same 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, 24 hours in a day, 52 weeks in a year to get things done. Time is fixed. Time is not malleable. Time is not manageable.

But you are. So, you have to think of it not as time management, but as self-management. As humans, we control our behavior and choices when it comes to work completion, prioritization, and efficiency. This has nothing to do with attempting to control the uncontrollable construct that is time.

Shift Your Mindset

Time-management tips and techniques tend to treat the symptom and not the disease. They are essentially like "diets"—if you use them, they work, but they are often just temporary solutions to deeper problems.

Instead, you must fight a few mindset battles to increase your personal efficiency.

Your first mindset shift is to be honest with yourself. Are you working toward the life you imagined? If you are in a state of perpetual dread and not getting done the requisite work to be successful both in your classroom and at home, I encourage you to ask yourself if you are doing the work you really want to be doing. Is being a teacher, counselor, or principal your calling? I know this is a big question. But if you don't answer this question honestly, you might get stuck in a perpetual cycle of feeling overwhelmed and not being able to find enough time in the day.

When I am working as hard as I can at what I am most passionate about, it seems that everything that needs to get done finds its way to completion. This is not true for just me. Work of passion and purpose ignites us, and we seldom struggle completing this work. Passion and purpose allow self-management to occur naturally without the need of outside tips, tricks, and techniques.

Teaching is hard work. Being an educational leader is also extremely hard work. On top of that, the compensation associated with the job will almost never match the true value you bring. So, if you are committed to this job, there must be a deep, internal realization that this is a profession chosen out of passion and purpose. Anything less than that, and you will never find yourself maximizing your use of time.

Your next mindset shift is to be deeply honest with the ones you love, and expect honesty in return. Are you burdened by enormous and unnecessary guilt? Through radical candor, you can move forward and eliminate the monkey on your back. When my oldest boys were 10- and 11-years old, I asked them what it would take for me to be a good dad. I was shrouded in guilt over traveling the country to speak, consult, and follow my professional dreams, and I worried about what they might say.

They thought about it, and a few weeks later they came back to me with their wish list. They wanted me to coach their sports when possible, take them to breakfast once a week, and play more video games with them. I double checked. I asked about the times I was gone for multiple nights in a row. They indicated they were so busy and so loved by the other adults in their lives that it had no impact on their happiness or their thoughts on my parenting. This lifted a 1,000-pound weight from my shoulders. It was exponentially simpler than I was making it.

I then had a similar, but different, talk with my wife, articulating what it was that I cared about as her partner. To her surprise, what I wanted from her was considerably less than what she had assigned herself. The same unassigned guilt I had been burdened with was weighing down my wife. It was not until I had the mindset shift to embrace radical honesty that we were able to identify and address these issues.

I share these two personal stories to articulate the point that most likely you have assigned yourself tasks, responsibilities, and, most important, guilt in areas that nobody else has. This guilt pulls in multiple directions, kills our joy, and creates a logjam of priorities that need not exist.

When I was a principal, I assigned myself some of that unnecessary guilt. I did a lot of things that did not bring me joy or increase my effectiveness and robbed others of the opportunity to grow. I spent countless hours creating agendas, leading every meeting, and doing all of the following up. Did stuff get done? Yes. Did I feel like I was making a difference? I did. But this was shortsighted.

Two things ultimately became very clear to me over time. I was running myself into the ground with 70-hour work weeks, and I was not intentionally growing other leaders in my stead. When I took every possible leadership role, how could I expect others to flourish and grow? I thought I was doing them a favor by being a "work horse," but what I was doing was stealing their opportunities for growth.

The third mind shift I'd encourage you to try is to remember that everything is a choice. When I coach people, I fight vehemently to remove "I have to" from their vernacular and change it to "I get to." It makes an immediate difference.

You do not have to do those lesson plans. You get to.

You do not have to provide feedback on all 130 essays. You get to.

You do not have to complete one more observation. You get to.

When you begin to think of everything as a choice, you start to realize that the goals you aren't meeting, or the priorities you set that don't get completed, are not always getting sidetracked because of lack of time. They are often placed on the back burner because of choice.

Let me give you an example. I was working with someone who was on a fitness kick but swore one week that she did not have time to work out. I knew exercise was important to her, so I coached and prodded her to find time, but eventually let it be. That same week her dishwasher broke, causing a mess in her house and forcing her to spend time shopping for a dishwasher and taking a half-day off work to have the new one installed. At our coaching meeting the next week she told me the story. I replied by asking how many things on her to-do list did not get done because of this crisis. She admitted that they all got done. When I asked her how long the whole dishwasher catastrophe took for her to rectify, she estimated eight hours.

Isn't it amazing how when something unexpected happens, like a dishwasher breaking, we can find eight hours to address the situation, but we feel like we cannot find 20 minutes to do what we believe is most important to us, such as working out? To me, this clearly articulates that we too often let the day do us instead of us attacking the day. We let the tyranny of the urgent direct our schedule, instead of the meaningful goals we set.

Efficiency Tips

While I believe the path forward to more efficient and effective use of your time happens mainly at the cognitive level, there is also something to be said for tips and techniques that can help. That said, simply adopting these tips without deep mental strategy and work is the same as adopting a fad diet without any other changes. The diet may work in the short term (same as the tip or technique), but long-term mental work is necessary to enjoy lasting success.

Eat the big frog first. The concept is simple. If you are forced to eat two frogs, a huge frog and a tiny frog, always eat the big frog first. If you eat the big frog, and it is the worst experience of your life, you can power through the little frog. If you eat the little frog and it is horrific, there is no way you can get through the big frog.

Attack life by eating the big frog first. That is, tackle the most difficult, stressful, mentally demanding task at the start of your day. You will be more productive and efficient the rest of the day. Each morning, I check our district's complaint-management platform and address any new issues that have arisen. That is my big frog. On Fridays, I have my weekly report due to the board of education. I take care of that as soon as I walk into my office every Friday.

As educators, you have limited discretionary time. So, when that one email or one phone call is looming out there—face it head on. Learn to love eating those big frogs.

Find time for work of significance. Almost everything we do at work can fall into one of these three categories: responsive work, productive work, or real work of significance. Unfortunately, most educators spend their time being responsive to other people's needs instead of getting their work done. Their work takes a backseat until it eats into their personal time, and that is when they are productive. This leaves little time for true work of significance.

For teachers, this often looks like responding to emails at the end of the day (responsiveness), followed by grading papers (productivity), and then never getting to long-term planning or alignment of curriculum to more rigorous standards (work of significance). Principals often spend all day solving other people's problems and work on their tasks from 4 to 6 p.m. They go home exhausted and without the opportunity to think, create, and lead (work of significance) because they have been in the cycle of responsiveness and productivity all day.

There are two core issues here. Without doing work of significance, it is hard to grow as a professional and it's difficult to further the work of our schools. Second, when we deprive ourselves of doing real work of significance, we find ourselves stressed and without reward. Work of significance is usually difficult, mentally complex work. However, this is not the work that creates stress and burnout for educators. Stress and burnout tend to arise when we are stuck responding to the needs and demands of others.

We must give ourselves permission to do work of significance. We must give ourselves space and autonomy to prioritize our lives and work toward our true goals. We must give ourselves permission to not be all things to all people and, as author and speaker Greg McKeown says, to "do less, better."

Toss it, tell it, teach it, today or tomorrow. I have saved the most important technique for last. This is a process that you can invoke for everything that comes across your desk, arrives through your email, or is added to your to-do list.

The first thing you should ask yourself is: Do I absolutely have to do this? Is it possible to do less, better? For instance, is it necessary to read the 13th listserv email of the day discussing differentiation?

If you don't toss it away (and most people starting out with this process do not throw many things away—old habits are hard to break), ask yourself if you can tell somebody else or something else to do it for you without additional guidance. This isn't delegation, it is efficiency. An example of this would be asking your office assistant to scan something and send it to whomever requested it or having a parent make copies or organize supplies for you.

If you cannot toss it or tell it, then figure out if you can teach it. I like to use the term teach instead of delegate because it reminds us that delegation, at first, may well take more time than just doing it ourselves. Part of being an efficient and effective person is figuring out what we can spend time on today so we will not have to spend time tomorrow.

Now, before you start with the excuses on why you can't delegate (I know how you think), let me counter the two arguments people most commonly give.

1. I was delegated to my entire career, and I am not going to do that to other people.

Stop thinking of delegation as giving work away and start thinking of it as capacity building. I encourage you to look at each item you are thinking about in the "teach it" phase with a very particular lens. I think about who in my organization could most grow from this opportunity, and that is how I choose who to delegate to and when. In our organization, for example, grant applications used to be something only completed at the district office level, but we have now found ways to both build the capacity of teachers who complete them and also supplement their income.

2. I do not delegate because it will turn out worse than if I just did it myself.

Fair. You are amazing. But if you are looking for strategies to better utilize your time and prioritize your work, then something has to give. If you can help someone else grow while simultaneously increasing the amount of time you are able to spend on work of significance, then what is usually a temporary decrease in performance is well worth it.

If you cannot toss it, tell it, or teach it, you must decide if you need to do it today or tomorrow. If you need to do the work today, get after it. If it can wait until tomorrow, the cycle must start over again with you asking yourself if you can toss it, tell it, or teach it. What happens is that many of the things we keep putting in the tomorrow pile eventually get tossed, as the person employing this framework realizes they were planning to complete unnecessary work.

Take Back Control

As you can see, time management is not about managing time. It is just a matter of us managing ourselves. We must come to the realization that if we want to become the best version of ourselves and be more efficient and effective, we need to change both the way we think and the way we behave. We have choice in all we do, and we control our own lives. If we want better self-management, we must lean into this. If we do, we have a tremendous opportunity to learn, grow, and become the best possible version of ourselves.

Week Ahead


National Food Service Day - Friday was national food service worker day. We all have had our lives flipped upside down during this pandemic and it is no different for our food service workers. Our ladies do a fantastic job running breakfast and multiple lunches every day, cleaning and disinfecting between them, and building positive relationships with students. Thank you to our entire food service team - Thank you for your efforts!!!!

Canvas Coach - We are still looking for an internal Canvas Coach to work in the Senior High building. This is a stipend position. If interested, please reach out to Tammy Trezbiatowski SOON!

Friday Scheduler - Below is the Friday scheduler link. At this time, students will receive the notification - parents will not. Bailey is working on it to see if we can add parent emails as well. Please share with students - they can sign themselves up for help using their universal login. https://signup.dce.k12.wi.us/apps/SRHLearning/login.cfm

Looking for Extra Everest Apparel - This year there are 35 new transfer students. Student Services is hosting a “check-in” with all of them this week. We would like to be able to offer DCE apparel from our clubs or teams as door prizes. Please let me know if a team or club you advise can make a donation of DCE apparel for this event. We would need the clothing by Tuesday, Sept. 29th. Thanks!

Sunshine Club taking donations Each year our Sunshine Club celebrates fun life events and provides encouragement and support during difficult life events. Please see the attached document for all the life events Sunshine supports. We currently have three new babies to celebrate so we’re eager to get our celebrations going. We are collecting monetary donations into next week to support Sunshine efforts. Contributions can be dropped off in the Student Services office with Melissa Barwick or placed in the Sunshine envelope in Jodi Devine or Melissa Barwick’s mailbox.

Important Dates, September:

30     BLT @ 2:50

Important Dates, October:

2       Flu Clinic at SH, 7:30 a.m., must have registered by 9/24
14     BLT @ 2:50
21     Staff meeting at 2:50
28     BLT @ 2:50



                                                      

Sunday, September 20, 2020

September 21 - September 25

 D.C. Everest Senior High School Staff Update

Weekly Happenings

Each and every week we get to see students is a fantastic gift for us. Thank you for pushing through the craziness of the first three weeks. I have been so impressed with how well everyone has handled this disruption.  Thank you for continuing to dig deep, work with your colleagues, and make it work. In a reflective conversation on Friday, the admin team was discussing just how amazing our staff have been. We are so fortunate to be able to work with all of you on a daily basis. Looking forward to the great things we can do - together!



Curriculum and Instruction

Teachers - Please see the message below from Kelly Thompson and the Department Chairs regarding Canvas issues:

Hello Teacher Leaders and Principals,

It has been brought to our attention that there have been some common issues with Canvas across buildings. The table below outlines the issue along with the solution. Please share this information with the teachers in your building immediately. Early next week, we will also be sharing the information for the opportunity for staff to apply for the paid Canvas Coaching opportunities at each building.

We appreciate your feedback to help us to continue to work together to find solutions. Thank you!

Canvas Issue 
Trying to send curricular attachments and videos to students via Canvas Inbox/Communications (otherwise known as Canvas Email). A concern brought up that students cannot access the attachments. 

Solution
Canvas Communications/Inbox (email) is designed to send messages, not attachments. Within your Canvas Course is where you would have students submit attachments in the form of assignments.

Issue
Students using up all their storage in Canvas.

Solution
Periodically have students delete items - we are finding students at all age levels storing personal videos and additional items in Canvas. Each Canvas user gets 100 MB in file storage to store any files in his/her own account. Files that are submitted to assignments, however are not counted towards this quota.
If students have exceeded their file storage quota, they can clean out unwanted files by accessing the “FILES” section within Account Settings or Course Navigation on Safari, not the app.

Issue
Students reporting that they upload assignments, but the teacher does not receive them.

Solution
  1. Make sure students know how to properly upload the assignment and how to double check they have done so correctly.
  2. If the student is uploading using the Canvas App, they need to refresh the App periodically to ensure it is syncing with the Canvas Interface.
Issue
Parents concerned they see an assignment showing up as unsubmitted, yet student claims he/she has submitted it.
  1. Using the Parent App to access Canvas results in a limited view for the parent. Parents should utilize the web to see live-time Canvas activity.
  2. This resource in Commons will help teachers and students with assignment set-up and submission processes.    
    1. https://lor.instructure.com/resources/16b147b508a64e9cb3abff97d8e5beb2?shared

Interesting Information

I wanted to share a possible PD opportunity with staff that they can find on the PD website. We know the stress that our current reality has placed upon us. We also know that our students are struggling as well. If you have some time, it would be worthwhile to attend. Registration is available on the PD site a:  http://staffdev.dce.k12.wi.us/index.cfm


FROM OUR STUDENT SERVICES TEAM:

Handle with Care - Email from Counselors

What is Handle with Care?

Handle with Care is a notification to make teachers aware of a traumatic event that occurred with one of their students outside of the school day. A traumatic event under the Handle with Care notification is defined as any situation in which the student had some sort of police interaction the prior evening or early morning. This may include a domestic violence call, late night traffic stop, car accident, a house fire, an eviction, a drug bust or juvenile justice problems for them or their siblings. 

How does Handle with Care work?

Local law enforcement will email Officer Frank with the name of the high school student(s) involved in a law enforcement situation as described above.  Officer Frank will then notify the student's counselor and social worker that the student was involved in a Handle with Care situation.  The school counselor will then notify all of the student's teachers with an email providing the student name and "Handle with Care." There will be no additional information other than the "handle with care."   Then the school counselor will meet with the student to see what kind of supports would be helpful given the situation. The school counselor will provide additional information if the student agrees it would be helpful but teachers may not receive any other information based on what the student feels comfortable sharing.

How should teachers respond to a Handle with Care notification?

Teachers should be observant and flexible with work and classroom expectations when they receive a Handle with Care notification. This is helpful as the student's behavior and thinking skills may be impaired as a result of the traumatic experience. Teachers should not directly address the student regarding the Handle with Care notification. It is not that goal for the teacher to inquire or engage the student in discussion about what occurred with the police. 

Classroom Example of Handle with Care in practice

A student might put his/her head down during the period, they might keep their hood up or hat on, they might ask to talk with their counselor, they might ask to use the restroom..............we would ask that you use your professional judgement in deciding what behaviors can be tolerated given the Handle with Care designation on that day, understanding that the manifested behavior may be stemming from the incident. If you observe these kinds of behaviors, you could say to the student, "Can I help with anything right now?" But then let the student take the lead in responding to the question and engaging in discussion or ending discussion.

Students/Families in Transitional housing situations 

New school year reminder that if you suspect a family or student is living in a temporary or transitional situation please email Erin Jacobson! We are required by law to identify and offer services and supports to families who are living in a temporary or transitional situation. 
  
What is a temporary or transitional situation?
Every situation is different and often required additional conversations. Some examples include: 

* Living with friends or relatives due to economic hardship or loss of housing 
* Living in an emergency or transitional shelter 
* Living in a motel, hotel, or camping.
*No electricity, gas, or running water in the home.
* Students living with someone who is not a legal guardian (this includes extended family i.e., Grandma, Uncle).

Please let me know if you have questions or situations you would like to discuss.
Erin Jacobson, Ext 4200, 715-846-2035, ejacobson@dce.k12.wi.us

Week Ahead/Announcements

Seating Charts - All teachers must keep an accurate copy of their seating charts located on top of their desk in a folder labeled seating charts. This is in case we need to quickly perform contact tracing for the MCHD and are unable to contact you at night or on the weekends. Additionally, please ensure an updated copy is placed in your Sub binder in the main office and have a copy accessible at your home for your own reference if we call.

Social Distancing - Our greatest defense continues to be social distancing and mask-wearing. A reminder, when MCHD is contact tracing a positive case of Covid-19, they are looking for people who were within 6 feet for 15 minutes or more. That includes student-student, student-adult, and adult-adult. Do everything you can to maintain 6 feet of distance and help your students maintain 6 feet of distance.  

September Third Friday Count - Due to our cohort schedules and most students not here on Fridays, the September Third Friday count needs to happen again Monday & Tuesday, 9/21 & 9/22. For more information, see the emails from Carla Kietlinski.

Virtual Faculty Meeting - The September virtual faculty meeting is Wednesday, September 16. The faculty will receive a Webex invite.

Please update your voicemail greeting:

Changing Voice Mail Greeting

1.  Press Applications  .

2.  Enter your pin followed by #

3.  Select 4

4.  Change Greetings 1

5.  Record Greeting

6.  Press 1 to rerecord your message

7.   Continue with following the directions while on phone

Announcements - Anyone wanting an announcement read to students, please send to srh-announcements.  The announcements read on Monday will also be read on Tuesday and then the announcements read on Wednesday will also be read on Thursday. There will be no announcements on Friday. They will also be saved on the senior high website.

Upcoming Academic and Career Planning (ACP) News - Beginning the week of September 21st, each student in grades 10-12 will have ACP Canvas Lessons located within the Student Services Canvas Course under Quick Access Links. Students will be expected to individually complete grade-level monthly lessons in Canvas to include Xello assessments, videos, reflections, and updating their career plan by the end of each month. The following will be included with this rollout: 
  • Communication to parents through Infinite Campus informing them of student expectations 
  • Introduction video within the ACP Canvas Lesson to guide students
  • Assignments posted with due dates within the Canvas Calendar
  • Class Question Board availability on Canvas to field questions (Rose Matthiae will be responding to posts in this section)
In the month of November (date to be determined) we will have a Homeroom Schedule, so Homeroom/ELT teachers can meet their students, check in on school year/ACP progress, and field questions...all good relationship building engagement. Homeroom/ELT Teachers will be added to student schedules before this date. Rose will be providing you with reports of students who have not completed their Xello assessments so you can follow up with them. In the months ahead we will use this platform of occasional homeroom schedules to deliver ACP materials and/or conference with your homeroom students about their ACP progress/plans. 

If you need a refresher on what ACP means for you, our students, our school, and district, visit the ACP DPI Site. 

Take Home Meal Distribution - Last Monday we began offering grab n go meals for our families who have students learning virtually AND any other kids in the community, through age 18. We are offering two different distribution avenues:
  1. The SRHS, JRHS and MS will begin offering to-go meals on site to their students, meant to be consumed on the days they are learning virtually. No pre-ordering is necessary. Students will simply pick up their food at the time they are exiting the building. They will be offered 1-2 days of breakfast and lunch, depending on how many upcoming virtual learning days they have ahead of them before they return to the building.
  2. A refrigerated truck will be distributing grab n go meal packs, available for all kids through age 18. This is similar to our community food distribution from March-August. The only differences are that we are distributing out of a truck, instead of a building, and the meal packs are only available for kids, not adults. The truck will distribute food out of the parking lots of six different sites, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
Food Truck Distribution
  • Middle School: 7:30-8:15 (at the main doors)
  • Hatley: 8:35-9:00
  • Weston: 9:20-10:05
  • Rothschild: 11:15-12:00
  • Evergreen: 12:15-1:00
  • Senior High: 1:15-2:00

Important Dates, September:

21   SH 3rd Friday Count during period 2
22   SH 3rd Friday Count during period 2
23   Faculty Meeting, Virtually, 2:50 p.m.
25   Senior College Application Bootcamp, Auditorium, 12:30-3pm



Sunday, September 13, 2020

September 14-18

  D.C. Everest Senior High School Staff Update

Weekly Happenings

I am really proud of our students for their acclimation to our new reality! Thank you to all staff for continuing to hold and model our expectations of mask-wearing, disinfecting, hand washing, and social distancing! 

Our first picture below captures Chad Pernsteiner's class beginning this year's house! With the increased flexibility on Friday's the students plan to pull longer shifts, if they are able, in an attempt to get the house weather proofed ASAP!


Here's a picture of Karen Huddleston teaching students proper technique when making wood-fired pizza in Foods 2!

Lastly, you'll see a couple pictures of students. A big shout out to Ann Geier and all her efforts to capture students enjoying their days!

Curriculum and Instruction


5 Research-Backed Tips to Improve Your Online Teaching Presence


As the physical distance increases between you and your students, so can the psychological and emotional space. Here are some tips that can help.


By Youki Terada
September 4, 2020


In the 1960s—long before the advent of online learning—Michael G. Moore, an economist, pondered how he could help rural farmers in East Africa develop business management skills. He envisioned teaching in-person courses to help them learn modern farming techniques or set up a community-based credit union. But there was a major obstacle: The farmers he wanted to teach lived in remote villages with poor roads and no telephones. The idea wasn’t scalable.

So Moore came up with an innovative solution: Noticing that radios were relatively cheap and ubiquitous, he developed courses that could be broadcast from the local radio station. He quickly realized, though, that it wasn’t the same as giving a lecture in front of students. He could no longer chat informally with the farmers, answer their pressing questions, or walk around the farm with them looking for ways to improve productivity. Distance learning felt—at least initially—less personal and less effective to Moore, so much that he dedicated his career to understanding how it could be made more human.

“In all forms of distance teaching, the ability to humanize the relationship with distant learners is important,” Moore writes in Distance Education: A Systems View of Online Learning, echoing the conclusions of other visionaries in the field, like Khan Academy founder Salman Khan. While teachers new to online instruction may focus on delivering content—a sensible first step given the abrupt shift forced by the pandemic—it’s also important to get familiar with your tech tools so that you can connect with your students, build trust, organize your virtual classroom for ease of use, and ensure that your technology is serving human-centered ends.

Doing that will improve a key facet of your virtual classroom: your teaching presence. “With separation there is a psychological and communications space to be crossed,” Moore writes in a 1997 essay. To close that gap, it takes more than an engaging speaking style. In fact, some of the changes to your approach may be unexpected.

TIP #1: GO BEYOND SPEAKING PRESENCE

The sudden shift to online learning in the spring brought the need to establish strong connections with students into sharper focus. That’s hard to do in an online environment.

In a physical classroom, teachers can rely on nonverbal methods of communication, such as facial expressions and tone of voice, which “help guide facilitation of student learning,” explains Samford University professor Lisa Gurley in a 2018 study. But establishing a strong teaching presence for blended and online learning environments differs markedly from doing so in a face-to-face classroom, Gurley says.

According to Kathleen Sheridan and Melissa Kelly, researchers at National Louis University in Chicago, that may be because in online environments, students perceive teaching presence more broadly. In a study of online classrooms, they discovered that students viewed teaching presence through the lens of all interaction they had with their teacher—from emails to announcements and assignments to much subtler, background signals, like the way the course itself was organized. The digital tools that you use become extensions of your teaching, in other words, blurring the lines between your physical and virtual personae.

“While the students generally placed high value on communication and the instructor’s responsiveness, they did not place as much importance on synchronous or face-to-face communication,” write Sheridan and Kelly, adding that “being able to see or hear the instructor received surprisingly low ratings relative to some of the other indicators in the study.”

It’s not your real-time presence that matters as much in the world of online learning. So when teaching online, you should try to focus on asynchronous lessons and communications: Have you established clear channels and rules of online communication with your students? Have you considered a “hotline”—a quick way to reach you if there’s a crucial question? Are you getting back to students reasonably quickly when they have questions?

TIP #2: IT’S MORE THAN JUST FACE TIME


Your presence as a teacher doesn’t begin in the classroom—it begins long before, as you plan the flow and sequencing of your lessons for an upcoming class. “What we know from research is that effective online learning results from careful instructional design and planning,” Charles Hodges, professor of instructional technology at Georgia Southern University, and his colleagues write.

“Struggling to find files, links, or browser tabs can cause your stress level to rise, which students will feel and mirror. Close any programs that you won’t be using, and print out your agenda so that you don’t need to frantically search for it on your screen,” recommends Annie O'Shaughnessy, a community college teacher in Vermont.

Before you arrive in the classroom, practice moving through a lesson until you feel more familiar with the logistics of toggling between windows, for example, or changing the settings of your tools on the fly as circumstances require. You won’t be perfect, and you shouldn’t expect to be, but you’ll be more confident.

TIP #3: SIGNAL PRESENCE THROUGH CLARITY AND ORGANIZATION


In a 2015 analysis of nearly 50 studies on teacher clarity, researchers found that “higher levels of clarity are associated with higher levels of student learning.” Clarity wasn’t limited to a clear explanation of ideas: The researchers distinguish between content clarity—“My teacher is clear when presenting content”—and process clarity—“My teacher communicates clear expectations for the assignment.”

Communication, however, is more likely to break down in distance learning, particularly as classrooms become increasingly asynchronous and are mediated through a learning management system (LMS), online documents, email, and other digital forms of communication.

It’s easy to forget that online classrooms, like real ones, must also be navigable and easy to understand—and that your online teaching presence is often communicated not by posture and tone, for example, but by your virtual classroom's organization and clarity. Having a strong teaching presence online might mean, for example, that you spend time setting up your LMS so that there’s a central hub where the resources are gathered—students won’t get lost as frequently—or that you walk students through common tasks like how and where to submit assignments, where to ask questions, and how to use the suite of tech tools you’ve settled on.

TIP #4: GET STUDENT FEEDBACK—AND RESPOND TO IT

Your online teaching presence won’t arrive fully formed—it’ll be a work in progress. In a 2019 study, researchers found that successful online instructors frequently collected student feedback “to identify what was working or not.”

“An important element in the development of an award-winning course was the way in which instructors had collected data on the course or engaged with existing evaluation data, reflected on how to improve the course, and made improvements,” explain the authors of the study.

If you want to improve your online teaching presence, you should communicate to students that their opinions matter. After surveying the literature, here are six questions we recommend that you ask your students:
  • On a scale from 1 to 5, how comfortable do you feel using technology in our virtual classroom?
  • Have you encountered any technical issues, such as not being able to hear me, or not being able to connect to the internet?
  • Are my lessons well-organized and my assignments clear?
  • Can you easily find what you need?⁣
  • Do you feel like your voice is heard?
  • What can I do to improve our online classroom?
TIP #5: FOCUS ON SURFACING CONNECTIONS AND BUILDING RELATIONSHIPS

“To offset the isolating effects of an online class, teachers can strive to communicate more regularly and more informally with students,” writes Jason Dockter, a professor of English at Lincoln Land Community College, in a 2016 study. The point here is not responsiveness to an academic issue, but the need to demonstrate to kids “that the teacher is personally interested and invested in each student.”

There are dozens of ways to create a sense of human connection in your online classroom. John Thomas, an elementary school teacher in New Hampshire, starts every day with an informal morning meeting. While it can be done synchronously—with all students participating at the same time—Thomas uses the digital app Seesaw to record and share a video greeting students can respond to on their own time.

“Every day in the classroom, we notice little details as our students come in—we keep a finger on the pulse of our learning community,” Thomas explains. “But from miles away it isn’t easy to know how students are truly doing.”

Simple yet effective strategies—like greeting students at the door; doing a rose and thorn check-in; or asking students to share an appreciation, apology, or aha!—can make the difference between students feeling alienated or welcomed into your virtual classroom.

Above all, teacher presence is about connecting with your students: If they know you, they are far more likely to trust you and to feel that you’re there for them. For Sarah Schroeder, a professor at the University of Cincinnati, it’s important for teachers to remember that during the pandemic, some students may struggle academically and emotionally. That can be isolating.

“A common concern is feeling disconnected in online learning. We don’t want learners to feel like they are engaging with a computer. They are engaging with each other. With you. With content,” writes Schroeder.

Week Ahead

Rigor vs Balance - As I talked with teachers on Friday I frequently heard the same question.  "How much work are you expecting of students on their remote days?" To be clear, I have not mandated an expected amount of time for homework or learning activities that all students should engage in. I believe those questions are best answered by teachers working with their PLCs to determine what's appropriate.  However, there is an expectation that school is five days a week. Students should be engaging in learning activities each and every day they are engaged in remote learning. What that looks like is up to you. I am happy to join a PLC or a department meeting to talk more.

September Third Friday Count - Due to our cohort schedules and most students not here on Fridays, the September, Third Friday count needs to be Wednesday & Thursday, 9/16 & 9/17, and again Monday & Tuesday, 9/21 & 9/22. More information and paperwork will come from Carla Kietlinski by Tuesday afternoon.

Virtual Faculty Meeting - Our meeting, originally scheduled for Wednesday, September 16, has been moved to the 23rd. Faculty should have received the invite in their calendars on Friday.

SH Phone listing - The senior high phone listing has been updated. Before making card stock copies, please check to make sure your extension is correct and the information following your name. Email all changes, adds, deletes to Dawn Seehafer by Wednesday, September 16th. Here is the link: SH Phone Listing 2020-2021 .

Phone Display Changes - Anyone with changes that need to be made so the display on your phone is correct, please fill out the form linked here. I will contact admin all at once to get them changed. Please complete this by Friday, September 18th.

Changing Voice Mail - Everyone should check their school voice mail and update if needed. Voice Mail Directions

Student Lockers - We are trying hard to complete the process of assigning student lockers.  Our process is reliant on Infinite Campus to enter data on their end for us. We are unfortunately waiting for their end to be complete before we can assign them. As we know more we will get you that information.

Announcements - Anyone wanting an announcement read to students, please send to srh-announcements. They will be read starting Monday, September 14, at the first part of period 3. The announcements read on Monday will also be read on Tuesday and then the announcements read on Wednesday will also be read on Thursday. There will be no announcements on Friday. They will also be saved on the website.

Upcoming Academic and Career Planning (ACP) News - Beginning the week of September 21st, each student in grades 10-12 will have ACP Canvas Lessons located within the Student Services Canvas Course under Quick Access Links. Students will be expected to individually complete grade-level monthly lessons in Canvas to include Xello assessments, videos, reflections, and updating their career plan by the end of each month. The following will be included with this rollout: 
  • Communication to parents through Infinite Campus informing them of student expectations 
  • Introduction video within the ACP Canvas Lesson to guide students
  • Assignments posted with due dates within the Canvas Calendar
  • Class Question Board availability on Canvas to field questions (Rose Matthiae will be responding to posts in this section)
In the month of November (date to be determined) we will have a Homeroom Schedule, so Homeroom/ELT teachers can meet their students, check in on school year/ACP progress, and field questions...all good relationship building engagement. Homeroom/ELT Teachers will be added to student schedules before this date. Rose will be providing you with reports of students who have not completed their Xello assessments so you can follow up with them. In the months ahead we will use this platform of occasional homeroom schedules to deliver ACP materials and/or conference with your homeroom students about their ACP progress/plans.

If you need a refresher on what ACP means for you, our students, our school, and district, visit the ACP DPI Site. 

Take Home Meal Distribution - On Monday, Sept 14, we will begin offering grab n go meals for our families who have students learning virtually AND any other kids in the community, through age 18. We are offering two different distribution avenues:

  1. The SRHS, JRHS and MS will begin offering to-go meals on site to their students, meant to be consumed on the days they are learning virtually. No pre-ordering is necessary. Students will simply pick up their food at the time they are exiting the building. They will be offered 1-2 days of breakfast and lunch, depending on how many upcoming virtual learning days they have ahead of them before they return to the building.
  2. A refrigerated truck will be distributing grab n go meal packs, available for all kids through age 18. This is similar to our community food distribution from March-August. The only differences are that we are distributing out of a truck, instead of a building, and the meal packs are only available for kids, not adults. The truck will distribute food out of the parking lots of six different sites, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
Food Truck Distribution
  • Middle School: 7:30-8:15 (at the main doors)
  • Hatley: 8:35-9:00
  • Weston: 9:20-10:05
  • Rothschild: 11:15-12:00
  • Evergreen: 12:15-1:00
  • Senior High: 1:15-2:00
Important Dates, September:

16   SH 3rd Friday Count
16   BLT Meeting Virtually 2:50 pm
16   Phone listing updates should be completed in the link above
16   Board Meeting, 6:30 pm, SH Auditorium
17   SH 3rd Friday Count
18   Phone display corrections should be noted in the form linked above
21   SH 3rd Friday Count
22   SH 3rd Friday Count
23   Faculty Meeting, Virtually, 2:50 p.m.



Monday, September 7, 2020

September 8 - 11

D.C. Everest Senior High School Staff Update

Curriculum and Instruction

Student engagement on remote days - Please look for an email from Todd this week concerning steps we would like teachers to follow regarding students who are not engaged during remote learning. With the increased flexibility and freedom, we know we have to stay on top of students from the beginning.

8 Strategies to Improve Participation in Your Virtual Classroom

Educators share their best synchronous and asynchronous strategies to boost student participation during online learning.
By Emelina Minero
August 21, 2020


In every classroom, there are students who always have their hand raised to participate, and those who are hesitant to engage. Whether they’re introverted, tend to think awhile before they contribute, or are just having a bad day, it can be hard to bring kids into discussions who are reluctant to add their voices.

The challenges of getting students to participate have intensified during remote learning, we’ve heard from many teachers. Digital platforms can create added communication barriers by making it hard to know when to talk, for example, or how to read subtle but important elements of discourse like a person’s body language and facial expressions. Additionally, online discussions are often hindered by variability in students’ access to technology and by privacy concerns, and consequently many teachers have had to rely on students’ submitting work over isolated channels like email, which can leave back-and-forth between peers (and between students and the teacher) by the wayside.

Getting kids to contribute in virtual classrooms takes some work, it turns out. “We keep calling this generation digital natives as if they are simply whizzes at everything computerized. They aren’t,” wrote Tim O’Brien on Facebook. "They need personal support, scaffolding, and reassurance that technology does not provide. It is simply a tool, not a teacher.”

To find out how to improve student discussions and participation in online learning, we culled through hundreds of comments on social media and followed up with more than 20 educators to see how they tackled the challenge last spring. Teachers offered a range of smart strategies, both synchronous and asynchronous, to integrate the values and the voices of all kids—even the quietest or those with disrupted schedules—into their classes this fall.

SYNCHRONOUS STRATEGIES

For synchronous learning, some teachers said they translated traditional discussion strategies from the classroom to live video chats, while others found that digital tools helped boost classroom participation.

1. Spider web discussion: During remote learning this spring, students in Shai Klima’s high school class led their own discussions over Google Meet. Before the live class, students answered questions independently, and then shared their responses at the start of the meeting as a jumping-off point for a broader class discussion.

While students conversed on video, Klima listened and drew lines on a sheet of paper tracking the flow of the conversation, resulting in a spider web. At the end of the discussion, Klima shared the drawing over video, and then asked students to reflect on the experience and what they learned about who talked, who listened, and who built on the ideas of others.

“It has been successful as a means to get kids to credit their peers with helping them come up with new ideas, which helps build rapport,” said Klima, who let students struggling with bandwidth call in to the meetings.

2. Using chat to check for understanding: After giving lessons last spring, Paul France had his third-grade students use the Google Chat feature to ask and answer questions or type in emojis, like a thumbs-up or thumbs-down, to show whether they understood a concept. To create structure around the responses, he guided his students in creating norms around using the chat feature—they decided as a group to use only one emoji at a time, for example. France said the practice helped him check for student understanding and pushed students to engage more with the content.

Kindergarten teacher Ruth Calkins, meanwhile, used Zoom chat when holding live lessons with her kindergarten students. She said they enjoyed typing “T” or “F” for true and false questions while answering math problems in the chat box, and some even attempted to write sentences in response to her questions. Typing responses also provided a lot of keyboard practice for her young students.

3. Flip your classroom to stimulate deeper discussion: Forrest Hinton, a high school math teacher, says he found that a blend of asynchronous and synchronous instruction worked well to stimulate student discussion during remote learning.

First, he taught new content asynchronously through recorded videos and online activities. At the start of his live class, students briefly summarized the concepts they had learned together and then divided into breakout rooms to solve related problems in small groups. Flipping his classroom allowed Hinton to spend less class time in direct instruction—and listening to students at the start of class and in small groups helped him identify, and then address, where his students were struggling. “This has allowed me to clarify concepts in a more targeted way and better assist students,” said Hinton.

4. Adapting think-pair-share to Zoom: Ryan Tahmaseb, director of library services, says he found that giving more project-based learning activities to his elementary and middle school students—and allowing them more autonomy over assignments—naturally encouraged richer discussions in virtual learning. “If we give students as much freedom as possible to experiment, research, and pursue interests within our content area, then they inevitably have a lot more to say,” said Tahmaseb.

When it came to class discussions, Tahmaseb adapted think-pair-share to Zoom. Students were given a prompt, broken into groups, and then placed into breakout rooms to discuss and record their answers on a shared Google doc, which allowed students to share their thinking in writing or read aloud. Since Tahmaseb wasn’t in each breakout room to listen to the conversations, the Google doc kept students accountable. Once they returned to the whole class, volunteers from each group shared their answers with everyone.

5. A new twist on show-and-tell: To get students comfortable with online participation, Brittany Collins, the teaching and learning coordinator at Write the World, a global online writing community for middle and high school students, converted the familiar show-and-tell activity into “think, write, share.”

In one activity, Collins asked middle and high school students to find a photo, painting, or drawing that represented intergenerational connection and independently respond by writing to the following questions from the Making Thinking Visible Framework before discussing them over video as a class: What are we looking at? What makes you say that? What do you notice (see, feel, know)? What more can we uncover? What do you wonder? “It helps to break the ice in a virtual learning setting where unplanned participation can prove challenging for some students,” said Collins.
ASYNCHRONOUS STRATEGIES

Although some teachers—and students—said that synchronous discussions were more engaging because they resembled a traditional classroom, many educators found that asynchronous discussions were more equitable because they opened up participation to students with low bandwidth, who had schedule limitations, or who were uncomfortable engaging with the full class.

6. Online forums create back-and-forth dialogue: Angelina Murphy, a high school English teacher, said she used Google Classroom’s question feature to get her class to respond to readings and discussion prompts during remote learning this past spring. When each student commented, Murphy replied with clarifying questions to create a back-and-forth dialogue and also asked every student to respond to at least two of their peers’ comments to create a broader base of discussion.

Fifth-grade teacher Raquel Linares said she used Nearpod Collaborate (Apple, Android), a virtual collaboration board, to get students to share images or write a response to show what they had learned about an article they read. To inspire connection and reflection among classmates, Linares also used Flipgrid (Apple, Android), so that students could hear their peers’ voices even though they were remote.

7. Seeing and critiquing peer work through virtual gallery walks
: Virtual “gallery walks” give students an opportunity to view their classmates’ projects while learning from each other, according to Joe Marangell, a high school social studies teacher. After his students presented their own projects through five-minute screencasts, they were then required to give feedback to at least two other students on theirs.

Using Google Sheets, students provided feedback to their peers by answering the following prompts: What’s something new I learned about this topic?; What’s something that surprised me about this topic?; What’s something I liked about this presentation? The online format gave every student the opportunity to see their peers’ work and their assessment on theirs for deeper reflection, Marangell said.

8. Moving station brainstorming online: When carousel or station brainstorming activities are conducted in traditional classroom environments, small groups of students rotate around the room to different stations to answer prompts—and view and add to each groups’ responses.

To translate this online, Marangell divided his students into groups online and created shared Google docs—or a series of Google slides—for the prompts/questions. Each group left their thoughts under the questions by the assigned date and then followed up by commenting on the other groups’ responses the next day. “The strategy still allows them to maintain a sense of classroom community [in a virtual setting],” said Marangell.

Interesting Information

September 10th is World Suicide Prevention Day.  Suicide continues to be one of the leading causes of death among teenagers across the globe. Please check out many of the resources at https://www.iasp.info/wspd2020/

Also, take a moment and watch the attached video...

We have a senior who has done a great job bringing awareness in the past. Please be on the lookout for an email from her in the coming days.

Week Ahead/Announcements

Video shared with students through Canvas last week


Student health issues - If a student is presenting any symptoms consistent with cough, shortness of breath, new loss or sense of taste or smell, congestion or runny nose, fever or chills, nausea or vomiting, diarrhea, headache, fatigue, muscle or body aches, or sore throat - please send them to Turi Cebula, our new campus monitor, located outside the main office. Turi will quickly discuss the student's symptoms and, in coordination with our health room, make contact with his/her parents. The student will be sent home or to our Health Room B for isolation.

School is 5 days a week - I have received a number of questions about student workloads and remote learning. To be clear, there is an expectation that students will be engaging during remote workdays. What that looks like is up to individual PLCs (videos, homework, readings, online discussions, ongoing projects, etc.) If you would like to discuss individually, as a PLC or as a department please let Mike know.

Social Distancing - Please do your part to address social distancing outside of the classroom in the hallways when you can. Classrooms have been great - we just need to try and do a little more during passing periods and downtime. Please use gentle reminders!

Early dismissal - Reminder there are no end bells for class. If you finish the class one or two minutes early feel free to let students go - please instruct them to be respectful of other classes and to get to their next classroom quickly!

Hats - Please take care of your own classroom to ensure students do not wear their hats during class

Seating Charts - I am asking that everyone maintain an accurate seating chart for each cohort on each day. This may be requested in the event of a contact tracing scenario.

Masks - GREAT job week one!!!  As a reminder - masks must be worn at ALL times while in school regardless of social distancing. Exceptions include eating in the lunchroom and if teachers are ALONE in their classrooms. At all other times - including if meeting with a PLC -  teachers and students must wear masks.

Student Everest Masks - Please see Dawn this week in the main office to pick up a zip lock bag with student masks, a first-period roster, and info to be handed out to all students in the first period.  We only have a certain amount of student masks so please use the roster to check off those who received one.  Extras with the roster should be given back to Dawn when you are done handing them out.

Crisis Management Books - Please bring your booklet to Carla Kietlinski in the attendance office.  Make sure your room number is listed on the front cover.  They will be updated and returned.

Important Dates, September:

8        B Cohort, Hand out student masks during period 1 only
9        A Cohort, Hand out student masks during period 1 only
9        BLT Meeting Virtually 2:50 pm
10      B Cohort
16      Faculty Meeting, Virtually, 2:50 p.m.




April 29 - May 3

     Weekly Happenings Congratulations to the March Senior High Students of the Month:  Jayden Kesselring, Ava Kumar, Nick Sloan, Duaja Yang...