Tuesday, March 10, 2015

I am lucky. My Students are Lucky.


The following was written by French teacher, Stephanie Carbonneau. Stephanie is one of the most dedicated and reflective teachers I've worked with. Each time I visit her classroom I'm impressed with the level of rigor and engagement that defines her students' experience. Stephanie exemplifies the term "professional educator". She reads and applies current literature to her practice and she places the needs of her students above all else.  

In this blog post Stephanie reflects on her experience with our transition to proficiency-based learning. The piece is sincere, heartfelt, and indicative of how this work, when done well, can have a profound impact on teachers and students.


I am lucky. My students are lucky.


I am lucky to work in a school with such passionate and creative teachers. I am lucky to work for an administration that empowers it's staff, gives us time to grow, and at the same time holds us accountable. I am lucky to work with students who truly strive to be the best versions of themselves, and I am lucky to work in a community whose parents care about education and support what I do.


I am also lucky to have the opportunity to work with my students for two consecutive years. Thus, I have time to get to know them, and to get them where they need to be.  I am lucky that language learning and instruction, since I began my teaching career 17 years ago, has always been taught with standards.  It is hard to put a number or letter on what a student has learned. For example, you can ask and answer simple questions in French well, do this with help, or with errors that may or may not hinder communication. And if you aren’t there yet, what are we; teachers, students, parents, going to do to make sure you can? Students now know more than ever what they need to do to be successful.   My favorite part of this initiative is students must now reflect on current progress. What did they do to meet or exceed? Why didn’t they meet? What are THEY going to do to prepare to re-assess? How can they demonstrate to me or the target audience they have met the standard?


I am lucky that with PBL I can clearly see who understands what, who doesn’t, who is ready to move on, who isn’t and who is ready for level 2 French at the high school. It was difficult in the past to justify to a parent that a student was ready or not ready for high school French based on a number. Numbers aren't always accurate. It has never been clearer where students stand in terms of what they do and do not know, what they are still working on, and what they excel at.  I can identify with confidence what individual students exceed at, have mastered, are still working on, and where they are insufficient. Students now show me what they know and have the ability to prove it.


My students are lucky that learning is not a “one and done” deal anymore. I assess my students more than once on a content standard to determine if they truly understand and have reached mastery. It may seem like a lot of assessment or “testing,” but really, we are assessing students in more authentic and meaningful ways then we could have with traditional “one and done” assessments.   My students are being asked to do real-world tasks and solve real-world problems using real-world language. Traditional language goals were related to grammatical structures, vocabulary lists, and textbook chapters. Now, goals are related to communication objectives and students showing what they can do with the language. They are doing so in very creative, real life ways.  Each day I grow more and more impressed with what they are able to do. Yes, my students learn the French specific content such as the alphabet, but more importantly, they show me what they can do with it. No one is ever going to stop them in a French speaking country and ask them to say or sing the alphabet, but people are going to expect them to be able to order a meal in a restaurant or ask for directions while traveling. Students are lucky that we are now learning and addressing language expectations that they can actually use.


I am lucky that my students are indeed stretching themselves and pushing themselves in the PBL model.  I am asking students to look at more examples of authentic language than I ever have.  The work I'm giving them is very challenging, yet they are doing it and being successful, even if it takes extra practice, extra help, or teacher/peer guidance.  I would like to argue that although it may be challenging, they are still having fun. Students are seeing more value in what they are learning and thus, are retaining more content.  I'm certain my colleagues at the high school are happy with the level of knowledge owned by the students that they are receiving since our transition work began. I can truly say it is a direct result of our change in instruction and assessment practices.


Perhaps a bit boastful, my students are lucky to be in my classroom of “today,” as I have never worked harder as a teacher. I am enjoying teaching once again because, I too, am feeling challenged. I feel challenged to improve my teaching and to find ways for my students to exceed the standards in a way that is beyond simply assigning “extra” work. I am no longer assessing who is good at playing school. I am assessing what my students know and finding ways to get them there.  My students have never worked harder.  If you were to ask them, they would agree my assessments are not easy nor are my “REDOs.”

Yes, my class, my instruction, my assessments, and my students are different. I have never been more proud and excited to be a teacher than I am right now.  PBL makes me want to be a better and more effective teacher. I am lucky to be teaching in an era of such educational transformation. My students are lucky to be part of the new paradigm.  The workforce is lucky to soon receive workers who understand standards based evaluation, how it applies to their work, and know how to set growth goals based on this type of feedback. Together we are lucky to be leading the way in what is to be the future of a nation of self reflecting, life long learners.

- Stephanie Carbonneau

2 comments:

  1. It would be helpful to link to her original post and thus enable the reader to search her other posts. Thank you for being such a perceptive school leader and sharing M. Carbonneau´s reflections on PBL.

    ReplyDelete