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Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

Sitting in Scott Holcomb’s FETC session on using video tutorials for professional development for teachers (great session by the way!), the inevitable question was asked.  I was holding my breath hoping it wouldn’t happen, but Scott handled it with grace.

The session was about the efficacy of using video as a means for professional development with staff, especially in a system as large as Memphis City Schools.  Face-to-face training is great, but it is hugely limiting when you can only reach 5, 10, or even 50 people at one sitting.  By creating video tutorials (flipping professional development), teachers can log in at their convenience from any Internet-connected device and receive the information as many times as they need.

And so, the question…

When we do in-house training, we know the teachers are there.  We have them sign-in (and sometimes sign-out) as a way to verify their attendance.  But, online, they could start the video in the living room and then go to the kitchen to fix dinner.  (You know the question, don’t you….)  How do we really know they watched the video?

Now, I have to admit, I had a totally different answer in mind than Scott’s brilliance.  I would have answered with another question.  OK, so you know they were in attendance at the face-to-face training, but how do you know they were really, truly present?

Scott went an entirely different direction.  He talked about a paradigm shift in the way we view these things.  It is a paradigm shift from “training” to true “professional development.”

We offer training on a variety of subjects at our schools, and we require attendance in order to demonstrate both accountability and in order to only have to do the training once.  It is a fairly good model for principals and district administrators.  We can have a county-wide training and cover all 800 or so teachers in one, well-planned, thought-provoking hour, or half-day.  We have a box we can check off that says, “Been there.  Done that.”

But Scott wasn’t talking about video tutorials online for training.  He was talking about using them for professional development.  Professional development doesn’t come from the top down.  It comes from within.

Did you catch that?  It comes from within.

As a teacher, I am supposed to know what I don’t know.  Teaching is a never-ending quest of learning.  We use professional development for ourselves to make us better teachers.  Better learners.  Better team-mates.  Better advocates.  And, in general, just… better.

There is a place for training.  Hey! Its my job!  I provide “training” for teachers on how to use Web 2.0 tools, district-purchased software, and, of course, iPads.

But, it seems to me, there is a much larger arena for professional development.

Thank you, Scott, for helping me draw a line between the two on my to-do list.

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Jan-23-2012

Once You Commit…Commit

Posted by Tim under Leadership, Personal

When I made the decision to come to Orlando for Edmodocon and FETC, I knew I would be traveling to the west coast to try to get some pictures of an ocean sunset.  I had tried a few times before, but I had the wrong camera equipment.  Or the clouds were bad.  Or maybe I just didn’t know what I was doing.

Regardless, I was committed to going.  I knew what time I needed to leave the hotel in Orlando to get there with plenty of time to get my camera set up where I wanted it.  I knew where I wanted to be.  I even knew something about the angle from which I wanted to take these pictures.

And so I did.  I left on time.  Early even.  I had time to snap a few other pictures (none of which I liked, all of which went into my Trash file).  I got to where I wanted to go, walked down the beach, found the jetty I wanted in my shot, scouted around to find the angle I wanted, and then set up to wait.  I was committed to the shot.

As the sun started to get into range, I knew I had the right equipment.  The cloud cover was cooperating.   Even the people standing out on the jetty fishing seemed to stand still for my camera.  I knew I had it.

And then it happened.

A bird off to the right of me dive bombed the water for fish.  I wanted that shot.  Then dolphins started rolling just out of camera range.  And I wanted that shot.  And then a sailboat….

You get the idea.

A friend of mine is fond of saying to me (repeatedly I might add), that life is all about choices.  And I had to quickly make some.  Taking these really cool pictures would have required changing lenses.  Changing ISO speeds.  Changing aperture settings.  Getting rid of the tripod.  And doing it all uber fast.

I might get the shots.  I might not.  One thing was certain: I would not be getting a sunset shot.  It was a painful ordeal.  For about 1/2 a second I struggled.  Then I saw this blog post forming in my head.  I had committed to a sunset shot.  I stayed the course and got what I came to get.  (You can see my photos here)

Life for me is a series of these choices on a daily (sometimes hourly) basis.  It is my nature to try to help people.  To try to help everyone.  Even at the expense of my own priorities.  I rationalize I can always do my work later, but this needs to be done right now.  As a result, it seems to friends that I am always working.  Always online.  And I guess I am.

I am constantly trying to catch up.

In life, like in photography, I really need to learn to commit.  Stop chasing shiny objects.  Stop putting my priorities on a shelf for another day.  Learn to say a simple “no” from time to time.  As Yoda says, “There is no try.  There is only do or do not.”

And once you’ve made the choice to commit…commit.

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Jan-17-2012

Just Me and the Mountain (Part 2)

Posted by Tim under Hiking, Personal, Spiritual

As I mentioned in my last post, I took some time to walk up a mountain over the long weekend.  It was cold and bright and brisk and challenging and… fantastic.

On the walk up, I was challenged with being short of breath from the climb (did I mention the 20 pounds of backpack and camera equipment I was lugging around on my back?).  It is interesting that going uphill is difficult on your quads, but going downhill is just as difficult on your knees.  Marathon runners tell me they have to train just as hard learning to run downhill safely as they do trying to breathe on the way up.  I get it.

The trip up helped me get in touch with myself a little better.  My mind was beginning to be uncluttered for the first time in months.  I saw a family of four at the top of Benton Falls for about 30 seconds.  I passed two mountain bikers on my way down as they were ascending the toughest parts of the trail.   Other than that, it was just me and the mountain for five hours.

I decided to take one of the Slick Rock Loops as a diversion as I was returning from the Falls.  It added about a mile and a half to the journey.  While Clemmer Trail is fairly wide and open, the beginning part of the Loop was just a single foot path in the middle of undergrowth.  I listened carefully for sounds of bears or dueling banjos.  Thankfully, I heard neither.

And then, unexpectedly, the trail burst out into an open field somewhere on the side of this mountain.  It was brief.  But it jarred my mind into a new thought process.

I began to retrace my literary journey through Henri Nouwen and found my mind wrestling with The Jesus Prayer.  In monastic life, The Jesus Prayer is used to concentrate one’s mind on the singularity of one’s faith.  The form I use is, “Lord Jesus, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”

In the writings of Nouwen, he talks about this prayer becoming the very “breath” of life to those who pray it.  It takes a shortened path with part of the prayer used to breathe in, and another part for breathing out.

(While breathing in) Lord Jesus

While breathing out) have mercy

This prayer is meant to occupy the mind so that all other thoughts are crowded out.

And so, for the first time in a long time, I allowed my mind to rest totally on God for about 30 minutes as I walked through trails, logging roads, and open fields on the side of a mountain in the brisk, bright, bold winter’s day.

I didn’t think about work.  I didn’t think about my Mac.  I didn’t think about taking pictures.  I didn’t think.

I breathed.  In.  Out.  In.  Out.  Lord Jesus.  Have mercy.

Somewhere along the path I noticed that both my backpack and my soul seemed a little lighter.  I stopped to pull a bottle of water out of my pack, and I took a look around.  I mean really looked around.

Just me and the mountain.

And my heart smiled.

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Jan-16-2012

Just Me and the Mountain (Part 1)

Posted by Tim under Hiking, Personal, Photography

Yesterday I did something I wouldn’t have dreamed of doing just a few short years ago.  I blame two people, of course.  First, I blame Lance with the Discovery Educator Network because he put the DEN SI in one of the climbingest places known to man two years ago.  Second, I blame Tom with…well, Tom… for inviting me up to Pigeon Forge to “hike” a trail.

And what did I do you ask?  I parked my car at the bottom of Chilhowee and hiked the 4.3 miles up the slope to Benton Falls just to take a few pictures.  Of course, I took a small extra loop on the way up and another larger one on the way down.  I walked a little over 10 miles.  It took me 5 hours (to the minute).  And it was uphill both ways.  Or at least it felt like it.

All joking aside, it was a beautiful, gorgeous day.  The first thirty minutes of the hike was a pretty good uphill trek.  All of it.  I was afraid to stop for fear of talking myself into going back to the car.  I kept going by paying attention to three things.

First, I began to listen…really listen…to the crunching of my hiking shoes as they plodded through fallen leaves and small gravel.  Each surface had its own unique sound.  And they changed slightly when the trail finally leveled off.

Second, I started to notice the cacophonous sound of my own labored breathing.  There were parts of the trail where these two sounds were all there was to hear.  Occasionally a squirrel would rustle through some leaves or a bird would chirp, but for the most part I was the only animal dumb enough to be moving around in this cold.

Third, I began to notice the crashing sounds of waterfalls.  Suddenly, they were everywhere.  They faded slightly as the trail bent in toward the mountain, but came back even greater as the trail edged its way over the valleys.

And somewhere along the trail, in the midst of these sounds, I noticed my mind was less cluttered.  Less busy.  Less… techie.  The competition I thought I would feel with this trail became a partnership of sorts.  We worked together on this goal of mine.  Step for step.  Breath for breath.

And I realized that far too much of my life is a competition.  There are not near enough partnerships.  And somehow, I need to find a way to flip the two.

The mountain showed me that.

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Recently I had the privilege of visiting with my friend, Rob, and his family while I was Memphis for the Mid-South Technology Conference.  It had been nearly 20 years since we had worshiped together at the Christian Serviceman’s Center at RAF Mildenhall, England.  It didn’t matter where we were, I always knew Rob was the smartest man in the room.  And that was no small feat at Mildenhall.

During the course of the evening our discussions turned to education and technology and Internet and…filtering.  Rob’s wife is an educator.  Rob is an IT guy running his own company.  It was a natural progression.

Rob is also a church historian and theologian.  So it was no surprise in the conversation that he divided the Internet filtering groups into two camps: John Calvin and John Knox.

Calvin believed strongly that pretty much everything was sinful except those things expressly stated in Scripture as being “acceptable.”  Knox, on the other hand, believed that pretty much everything was acceptable except for those things expressly stated in Scripture as being “forbidden.”

Theologically, I was raised Calvinist to a degree.  Don’t do this.  Don’t do that. Don’t go here.  Don’t say that.  In my later years I have found myself more and more in the camp of Knox.

Educationally, I am very much in the Knox camp with regard to technology.  I don’t like the fact that we have to filter sites like YouTube and Flickr and others.  And yet I understand its necessity at times.

Recently, I’ve had some pretty spirited discussions with some of our IT people.  They like to rag on me, and I like to rag on them.  We have a lot of fun while debating our positions.  I absolutely love those conversations!  (Others see me as always wanting to argue a point.  Their loss, huh.)

I would venture a guess to say that most IT Departments in school systems across the country are Calvinistic.  They say, “We will block everything unless you can demonstrate the site is both necessary and safe.”  They have to be this way, I suppose.  They have thousands of computers being run by teachers and children in dozens of locations across hundreds of miles.  It is a huge investment, and they have to protect it.  I know how I feel when I walk into a room and find another student has taken it upon himself to update a file, but left the box checked that installs some other unwanted program that ties up memory, slows down performance, and keeps popping up asking if you want to buy something.  I can only imagine how they feel when malware hits dozens or hundreds of computers across the system.

Most educators would probably fall into the Knox camp.  We want access to information.  The Internet is the teaching tool of our generation (not Interactive White Boards or iPads).  How we get there doesn’t matter.  We just want it open.  Even if it is only open for us (or more open for us) and not for our students.

Like theology, technology is probably best handled somewhere in the middle.  To get there requires a dialogue between Calvinists and Knoxists.  A give and take.  A mutual understanding of each others’ goals, aspirations, and needs.

I am indeed fortunate that I can have that discussion with the IT Department of my district.

 

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Jan-2-2012

Get Out There

Posted by Tim under Personal

In an attempt to be both pro-active and frugal, I am looking for ways to combine some of the 5 areas I mentioned in my last post as resolutions for 2012.  Like most people, I’ve started the year off with a bang regarding resolutions.  This is day two and I’m still going strong!

Yesterday, I joined 36 other people at Harrison Bay State Park for their New Year’s guided tour as part of the states’ First Hike series.  Every state park in Tennessee is hosting a guided tour either January 1st or 2nd to help people get out on the trails, learn about the area, and help celebrate the 75th anniversary of state parks in Tennessee (Harrison Bay was the first official state park in Tennesse).  It was a 4 1/2 mile hike that took just under 3 hours.

Today, I’m joining another group just north of Benton, TN, at the Hiwasee/Ocoee State Park for a guided hike to Gee Creek Falls.  I’m loaded for bear with gear to take pictures while there!

So, in one activity, I took my own food, got off the couch, lived life, learned something, and took some pictures.  As Charlie Sheen would say… Winning!

I’ve also stepped out of my comfort zone and joined some groups at Meetup.  I have joined a hiking group, but haven’t been able to coordinate my schedule with their hikes yet.  I’ve also joined a photography group located in the Cleveland/Chattanooga area and another in Knoxville.  I’m already handling my camera better, understanding what I’m doing (or what I’m doing wrong in most cases), and improving.

As part of my effort to simplify things and concentrate more on The Year of Tim (thanks for the title, Maryann!), I have resigned from the Discovery Educator Network Leadership Council.  That doesn’t mean I wont participate in DEN activities, but it frees up more time to explore things outside of technology and moves me from teacher to learner.

Its a New Year.  Get out there.  Make it the Year of YOU.

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Jan-1-2012

Happy New Year!

Posted by Tim under Personal

It is now officially the first day of 2012.  I have pondered whether or not to post my “resolutions” for this year.  I finally decided that posting them would somehow make me more accountable to them.  So, here they are in no particular order of importance:

1. Live life.  I am a workaholic.  And a loner.  And a geek.  A typical night for me is to surf the web, update Facebook, work on reports or training for my job, and watch either NCIS, Law and Order, Law and Order Criminal Intent, or The Big Bang Theory re-runs.  I am determined to get out more.  Walk.  Jog.  Hike.  Travel.  There has to be more to life than the four walls of my living room and wifi.

2. Photograph more.  I know, I know, many of you are thinking…more?  But my 365 Photos project (posting one picture every day for a year) turned into more like a 165 Photo Project this year.  And even at that, as I look back over the pictures I took this year, I can see a vivid difference between the early days and the latter days.  You can see those differences here.

3. Cook more.  The key to keeping this weight off includes exercise (see #1 above) and portion control on food.  I eat out all the time.  That has to change this year.  And, of course, the more I cook at home the more opportunities I have for more photography.

4. Learn more.  There are so many things that interest me: photography, history, theology, human relationships, and many, many more.  I want to set aside more time to read.  To explore.  To learn.  Anything.  Everything.

5. Set boundaries.  This has been an issue for me since very early.  I say yes far too often and no not nearly enough.  My needs and desires are often pushed to the background in order to help someone else.  Everybody else.  Sometimes there isn’t a “me” anymore.  And I desperately need a “me” to survive.  It is one of the reasons (and there are many) that I am separating my personal Facebook account from a new professional account.

That’s it.  I think they are doable.  From time to time I’ll let you know how I’m doing here on this blog.

What about you?  What have you resolved for 2012?

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Dec-19-2011

Approaching New Year Brings Changes

Posted by Tim under Personal

As a country we seem to be enthralled with the ending of one year and the beginning of another.  This “newness” leads us to make resolutions, regain hope, and generally take a big, deep breath as we embark on another year of life.  For me, this year will bring changes to how I do some things online.  Let’s just say it is due to “lessons learned.”

The biggest change is that I am establishing a new Facebook account for school only.  At one time I felt like one account should suffice for friends, relatives, co-workers, DEN members, and total strangers.  I thought following the general rule of “never friend a student” would stand me in good stead.

Fortunately, I have a few hundred people that have friended me on Facebook that “get” who I am.  Most of them laugh at my jokes.  More than a few are interested in the posts on education that crop up (although some have confessed they don’t understand a word of some of those).  Friends are constantly encouraging me in my growing photography hobby.

The only problem I have encountered to date seems to be local.  Evidently, there are a few who like to read my posts here on this blog, a couple of other blogs I write, and my Facebook page in order to make life difficult.  It has taken me a while, but I finally get it.  My local work and my “life” cannot co-exist any longer.

So, here are the changes I am making.  My goal is to be finished by the end of January 2012.

  1. Create a new “work” account.  That has been done.  You can friend me here.
  2. Delete and/or block all co-workers from my personal account.  That process will begin shortly.
  3. Enjoy life again.  (OK, that’s not really on the list, but I think it will be a great by-product).
  4. Go through  my original Facebook account and unfriend people who haven’t posted anything in the last six months.  It isn’t a numbers game.  Its about interaction.  Its a social networking site.
  5. Begin building the new work related site as a sharing place for things directly related to my job.  Some would call this re-branding.  I think its time.

If I had it to do over, I would have created my Facebook and Twitter presence this way from the beginning.  I have several friends who were smart enough to do this.  I understand why.

So, if you are reading this and are an employee of Bradley County Schools, you may see a friend request from me on my new page.  And if you look around and wonder why you don’t see the old stuff any longer, perhaps this can help explain it.

Unlike most of my resolutions in the past, I think I can get this one done.

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Dec-12-2011

Conference Junkie

Posted by Tim under Personal

I admit it.  I have a problem.  I love technology conferences.  Love them.  Love.  Them.

Whew.  I feel better to get that off my chest.  My problem is that there are just too many from which to choose!  Every year I tell myself I’m not going to this one or that one.  And then, before I know it, I’m back.

I was fortunate last year.  My district sent me to FETC in Orlando.  Great conference!  In fact, all of the technology coaches got to go, and everyone had a blast learning about new tools, new ways to use old tools, and  making new friends and connections that would help us long after the conference ended.

And that, in a nutshell, is why I’m a conference junkie.

I’ve been even more fortunate by being a DEN Guru.  There is no pay involved for being recognized in this prestigious manner.  But Discovery did commit to sending each of us to one conference each year just for our own professional development.  That’s how I made it to ISTE the last two years.

Other than those instances, over the past six years I have been solely responsible for paying my way to and from conferences.  Sometimes that can add up to hundreds of dollars out of pocket.  And every conference has been worth every single dime.

This past week was no exception.  Three years ago I attended my first Mid-South Technology Conference in Memphis, TN.  I had just finished with TETC in Nashville, and I was wondering why I had agreed to drive six hours for a day and a half.  But when I got there, I was blown away (and I haven’t been back to TETC).

Hosted by the Memphis City Schools’ technology group, this conference has been opened up to the public for three years.  Prior to that it was an event for local teachers.  It is held at the Cook Convention Center (a place with dear memories for me of nights listening to Southern Gospel music).  For two years every presentation room was equipped with a projector and portable Promethean board.  This year it was a SMART Board.

And for all of you who struggle with technology conferences that are not technology friendly, MSTC has had free wifi everywhere.

It is always a pleasure to go see my friends Scott Holcomb (who first invited me and keeps feeding my addiction each year), Jason Parrish, and Cindy McMillion.  This year I got to spend some extra time with a DEN LC member, Julene Reed, and also got to spend some time with Kyle Schutt from Discovery Education (thank you both for lunch and dinner recommendations!).  Clif Mims from the LC was there also.  And I would be remiss if I didn’t mention spending a little time with this year’s keynote speaker, Kathy Schrock.

Here’s the thing.  If I wanted to do what was comfortable and “fun,” I would go to TETC in Nashville.  Its 3 hours away.  Music Row is much bigger than Beale Street.  But I prefer to go where I get the most out of my time.  And that for me has been MSTC in Memphis.

It doesn’t help that I’m now addicted to FETC.  I told my boss I was going if I had to pay for it all out of my own pocket.  Yep, its worth it.  Now I’m working on my path to ISTE in San Diego.  And there is a new one (new to me anyway), that I will probably “try out” this summer – The Martin’s Institute in Memphis.

What can I say?  I’m a conference junkie.

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As you know by now, I’m on my 2nd round of HCG injections to help lose weight.  With the advice of the nurse at my clinic, I stopped taking HCG on the Friday before Thanksgiving.  I was told to eat sensibly leading up to Thanksgiving (OK, I forgot that part and ate everything I wanted).  Then, I started HCG injections again on Thanksgiving Day and used Thursday and Friday as new “load” days to stock up on calories and get ready for some final days of weight loss over the next 2 weeks.

I gained about 5 pounds in one week.  It wasn’t pretty.  I wasn’t happy.  I wasn’t proud of myself.  Don’t get me wrong, I loved the food!  I ate without guilt knowing I would be back on track in a few days.

I’ve been back on 500 calories a day now for 3 full days and I’ve lost the 5 pounds I gained plus another pound and a half.  I weigh less today than I have weighed in nearly 8 years.

Every day I wake up and weigh.  Every day I look at that small weight loss (I consider it a gain in the goal book).  Every day I commit to 500 calories that day.  A pound of weight loss overnight is enough to give me big motivation to keep going.  It is a little positive reinforcement in the midst of something that isn’t that fun or enjoyable (but necessary).

This morning as I thought about looking down at that scale and seeing 202 and the feeling of elation that came with it I was reminded of helping kids in our computer labs a couple of years ago as they struggled to write better essays in preparation for the 8th Grade Writing Assessment.

Most of them hated those practice essays.  But this year was different.  We were piloting some software that would automatically grade essays and offer feedback.  As students revised, scores changed and charts were produced.  We had them type their essays into Word and then copy and paste them into the program.  They looked at the results with sullen eyes.  Their score was uninspiring.

Then we told them to change one thing.  In some cases we had them add a quote.  In others, we asked them to add a simile (comparing two things using like or as).  They dutifully added one sentence, saved their work, and re-scored it.  In most cases, their scores went up a full point.  Suddenly their eyes got big.  Their mouths dropped open.  Over and over we heard the same question, “Is it really that simple?”

Yep.

Small changes.  Big motivation.

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