31168637905A year or two ago I had the pleasure of teaching/learning with a group of very sharp graduate preservice teachers. Today I find this in my mailbox.
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Hi Sheryl!
It’s XXXXX. In case you can’t remember me, I
was in your technology class at William and Mary a
couple of years ago. But of course you remember me, your help with my
thesis was invaluable.

Something happened last week that made me think
of you so I decided to get in touch. Our TIS (Technology Integration
Specialist) declared me "Geek of the Week" and put my picture in the
hallway. Apparently, I can no longer remain the wallflower–my secret
is out. And I think I have you to thank for being declared a geek.

First,
I guess a little background is needed. I am beginning my third year
teaching Kindergarten. I teach half
day Kindergarten, so I have two classes and 42 students. We have three
SmartBoards at our school, one of which is permanently set up in a
classroom. We can sign up to take our students in whenever it is free.
I love the SmartBoard. I want one in my room. I was the first to take
my class down the hall and thus was declared "Geek of the Week."  Of
course, this led to much taunting, three requests from colleagues to
show them how to use the SmartBoard (I had to hold my own little
after-school tutoring session), and many comments that I used the
technology because I was young. I keep telling people that it does not
matter if you have been teaching 2 years or 20, everyone is capable of
using technology in their instruction, but they don’t seem to believe
me.

I think it was really your class and the way you thought
about technology that inspired me. It isn’t an add-on, it isn’t one
more thing they make us do, it is really an integral part of everyday
life and should be an integral part of education.

I get to present
information in a new way and it holds their attention like nothing
else. I was in the lab on Thursday with my afternoon class: 23 students,
15 boys! They are busy to say the least. Just sitting on the carpet in
a major hassle. But as we were interacting with the SmartBoard, I
turned and realized all 23 students were looking at me, sitting the
right way and really just being perfect angels. I wish more people
realized the power of technology to teach.

But I guess that is what you are up to. Out there in 9,000 different venues pushing what you believe in. I think it is awesome. I
am trying to follow in your footsteps in my own way. Our entire
Kindergarten program is based around thematic education and I have
tried to show people that a theme is more than what type of clip art is
on your math paper. I have established our presence in the SmartBoard
room as a regular weekly occurance and I am the first teacher at my
school to have a webpage. My principal even approached me about giving
a presentation to the staff about my webpage to see if others might be
interested.

So, Thanks. Thank you for inspiring me to use
technology in my classroom and forcing us to make webpages, so I
actually know how.

I hope all is well with you. I Googled you. You seem really busy. But I know that is just the way you like it.
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Well at least one student was listening.  :) This is what I love about 21st Century Teaching– if you empower/enable a preservice teacher and model how they should teach within your own higher education instruction– then when they set up their classroom two things will happen:

1. They will also use  21st Century strategies in their classroom and feel good about it.
2.  Even as a novice teacher they will operate in a leadership capacity by default because of the new strategies and concepts they bring with them to the school setting.

My goal is to create a change agent out of every preservice teacher I touch.   

5 Responses to “Making Change Happen”

  1. AllanahK September 30, 2007 at 3:29 pm #

    That letter must have made your day, week, month, year. Sometimes as teachers we don’t get a lot feedback after our students leave us but when you do it is just wonderful.

    Congratulations to the both of you.

  2. Christine Southard September 30, 2007 at 9:26 pm #

    Your heart must be smiling with that e-mail! You’ve inspired me to spend some more quality tech time teaching my student teacher to make friends with our SmartBoard. Becoming a 21st century teacher can sometimes be a little overwhelming, but it is worth it in the long run.

  3. Dennis Harter October 1, 2007 at 4:51 am #

    Go Tribe!

  4. Leslie October 1, 2007 at 10:20 pm #

    Not just perservice teachers but 30 yr veterans like me! I taking baby steps every day. Thanks

  5. Dana Huff December 9, 2007 at 1:35 pm #

    Sheryl, I have had this post bookmarked forever so I could respond to it. I am like your former student at my school. In some ways, I like being the innovative one, but in others, it is wearing and frustrating, particularly when I think of how much more the kids could be getting.