PRESS PHOTOS BY DEBBIE GALBRAITH

Similar documents
PENNSYLVANIA. A review of the. for the school year. Department of Education

Full text of O L O W Science As Inquiry conference. Science as Inquiry

Charity Cayton 3921A Granada Dr, Winterville, NC Phone: (336) ,

Lehigh Carbon Community College Magazine INSIDE 50TH ANNIVERSARY >>> HIGHLIGHTS OF PROGRAMS >>> GOLF TEAM GOES NATIONAL

Speak Up 2012 Grades 9 12

PIAA DISTRICT III POWER RANKINGS

Mathematics. Mathematics

WEBSITES TO ENHANCE LEARNING

Bloomsburg University Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. Department of Teaching and Learning

Results In. Planning Questions. Tony Frontier Five Levers to Improve Learning 1

In a Heartbeat Language level Learner type Time Activity Topic Language Materials

SMARTboard: The SMART Way To Engage Students

Gifted/Challenge Program Descriptions Summer 2016

Fashion Design Program Articulation

Higher Education. Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. November 3, 2017

Clackamas CC BI 231, 232, 233 BI 231,232, BI 234 BI 234 BI 234 BI 234 BI 234 BI 234 BIOL 234, 235, 323 or 244

Algebra 1, Quarter 3, Unit 3.1. Line of Best Fit. Overview

SUMMARY REPORT MONROE COUNTY, OH OFFICIAL RESULTS PRIMARY ELECTION MARCH 6, 2012 RUN DATE:03/20/12 11:03 AM STATISTICS REPORT-EL45 PAGE 001

A BOOK IN A SLIDESHOW. The Dragonfly Effect JENNIFER AAKER & ANDY SMITH

Graduate Program in Education

Area XIV Northampton, Monroe, Carbon, Lehigh, and Schuylkill County Residents Only

Embedding Diversity into Family Engagement Strategies

2007 B.A., Sociology, University of Pittsburgh Distinctions: Magna Cum Laude, Alpha Kappa Delta, Humanities Writing Award

STUDENT GOVERNMENT BOARD MINUTES September 27, The minutes of September 11, 2011 were approved.

Issue 1. 17th February Brooks High School Department of Education

PEDAGOGICAL LEARNING WALKS: MAKING THE THEORY; PRACTICE

CPD FOR A BUSY PHARMACIST

Chemistry 106 Chemistry for Health Professions Online Fall 2015

Math 098 Intermediate Algebra Spring 2018

MFL SPECIFICATION FOR JUNIOR CYCLE SHORT COURSE

Traveling Around the World

Snipes Academy of Arts & Design School Improvement Team Meeting Agenda and Minutes Monday, February 6, 2017, at 3:00 p.m.

Volunteer State Community College Budget and Planning Priorities

New Castle Area SD District Level Plan 07/01/ /30/2018

c o l l e g e o f Educ ation

Standardized Assessment & Data Overview December 21, 2015

Republican and Democratic Nominations are to be made for the following Federal, State, County and Municipal Offices:

Probability and Statistics Curriculum Pacing Guide

Strategies for Solving Fraction Tasks and Their Link to Algebraic Thinking

SURVIVING ON MARS WITH GEOGEBRA

Physical Versus Virtual Manipulatives Mathematics

NANCY L. STOKEY. Visiting Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, University of Chicago,

Space Travel: Lesson 2: Researching your Destination

Archives & Museum Informatics

Russell M. Rhine. Education

Mathematics subject curriculum

Best Practices in Internet Ministry Released November 7, 2008

STUDENT PACKET - CHEM 113 Fall 2010 and Spring 2011

GENERAL BUSINESS CONSENT AGENDA FOR INSTRUCTION & PROGRAM, OPERATIONS, FISCAL MANAGEMENT, PERSONNEL AND GOVERNANCE May 17, 2017

Ohio Journal of School MATHEMATICS Building an Energetic Community of Ohio Mathematics Educators

QLWG Skills for Life Acknowledgements

Teacher Loses Job After Commenting About Students, Parents on Facebook

Southern Union State Community College

2016 Leadership Program

Oregon NASA Space Grant

Foothill College Summer 2016

Education and Training Committee, 19 November Standards of conduct, performance and ethics communications plan

Content Language Objectives (CLOs) August 2012, H. Butts & G. De Anda

Oklahoma History. The 1930s. Reconstructing Memory. How did the Great Depression define Oklahoma? Project Writers Donna Moore Dalton Savage

Honors Mathematics. Introduction and Definition of Honors Mathematics

District Planning Advisory Council

Common Core Standards Alignment Chart Grade 5

Shared Leadership in Schools On-line, Fall 2008 Michigan State University

Instructor: Matthew Wickes Kilgore Office: ES 310

Big Ideas Math Grade 6 Answer Key

Open Sharing, Global Benefits The OpenCourseWare Consortium

Heather Malin Center on Adolescence Stanford Graduate School of Education 505 Lasuen Mall Stanford, CA 94305

Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00-12:00. Course Description

Columbia High School

Inquiry Practice: Questions

Critical Thinking in the Workplace. for City of Tallahassee Gabrielle K. Gabrielli, Ph.D.

Let s Meet the Presidents

Lessons on American Presidents.com

Cooper Upper Elementary School

International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008

READTHEORY TEACHING STUDENTS TO READ AND THINK CRITICALLY

CALL TO ORDER. Mr. Phil Bova, President Mr. Craig Olson, Vice President Mr. Lee Frey Mrs. Nancy Lacich Mr. Barry Tancer SPECIAL RECOGNITION

The New Venture Business Plan BAEP 554

JUNE 15, :30 PM 9:15 PM

Albright College Reading, PA Tentative Syllabus

The context of using TESSA OERs in Egerton University s teacher education programmes

UNIT ONE Tools of Algebra

Testimony in front of the Assembly Committee on Jobs and the Economy Special Session Assembly Bill 1 Ray Cross, UW System President August 3, 2017

Executive Session Minutes Nineveh-Hensley-Jackson United School Corporation Administration Building Board Room Tuesday, July 8, :30 pm

1 Use complex features of a word processing application to a given brief. 2 Create a complex document. 3 Collaborate on a complex document.

CABE 2017 Planning Committee

Math 96: Intermediate Algebra in Context

SEPERAC MEE QUICK REVIEW OUTLINE

Georgetown University at TREC 2017 Dynamic Domain Track

Transfer of Training

BPS Information and Digital Literacy Goals

Credit Guidelines

Ministry of Education, Republic of Palau Executive Summary

Educational History. B. A., 1988, University Center at Tulsa, Sociology. Professional Experience. Principal Positions:

Superintendent s 100 Day Entry Plan Review

Writing Workshop Grade 4 Launching with Personal Narrative

The Communicator. Chamber Events. Boots and Blue Jeans Banquet 1/21 5:00PM. Del Francos Grand Reopening 1/26 11AM

Resumes & Cover Letters for Engineers Fall 2007

*Lesson will begin on Friday; Stations will begin on the following Wednesday*

Developing Regional Work-Based Learning

Transcription:

Published on Salisbury Press (http://salisbury.thelehighvalleypress.com) Home > SALISBURY TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT PRESS PHOTOS BY DEBBIE GALBRAITH Katrina Wehr, a graduate student at Kutztown University; Bud Runkle, Kutztown Area School District; and Mark Madson, Nazareth Area School District; observe students in Tanya Kennedy's American Cultures classroom. The students were working on a podcast of the election of 1912 and were working on a shared document in Google Apps as they discussed their project. Students in this small group included Naomi Kuhns, Julia Laudadio, Sophie Nesenbaum, Emily Batman and Daniel Bujcs. Students in Angela Xander's Honors PreCalculus class at the high school observe how the graph can be manipulated with the data while completing linear and quadratic functions. Karen Beerer, with Discovery Education asks questions of students Brittany Burda and Calvin Ng. Standing and observing from the background is Steve Smith, manager of education partnerships with Discovery Education. Student Peter Samy is also pictured in the background working on his data on the laptop.

PRESS PHOTO BY DEBBIE GALBRAITH Teacher Marc Snyder works with students Alex Borbor, Kyle Heflin, Honathan Hanna and Trent Stump in chemistry class, helping them understand how the program can assist in organizaing, analyzing and referencing data acquired. Snyder said the laptops also helps the students organize their notes as all information is saved on the hard drive. Emily Ascani, of Schnecksville, and Cathy Enders, of South Whitehall, both employees of Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit, are impressed with hearing how the students are using technology.

Teachers Kelly Wetherhhold, Andrew Cerco, Jennifer Brinson, Laura DosSantos and Angela Xander participate in a panel discussion explaining how students and teachers are utilizing technology and sharing their vision for the future. Arthur Mitchell, of Lower Merion, a secondary STEM supervisor, describes Salisbury's TL2014 plan as, "a well-thought out plan coming together nicely." SALISBURY TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT Wednesday, May 8, 2013 [1] by DEBBIE GALBRAITH dgalbraith@tnonline.com [2] in Local News [3] Discovery Education leads Lehigh Valley Symposium in Salisbury Impressed with the Teaching and Learning 2014 plan Salisbury Township School District implemented, Discovery Education, based in Silver Spring, Md., brought a consortium of educational professionals to the high school May 2 to discuss technology in the classroom. Discovery Education is working toward transforming teaching and learning offering digital solutions that ignite students' natural curiosity and accelerate student achievement.

Participants came from Upper Perkiomen School District, Perkiomen Valley School District, Nazareth Area School District, Quakertown Community School District, Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit, Spring- Ford Area School District, Pennridge School District, Bethlehem Area School District, Whitehall-Coplay School District, Palisades School District, Southern Lehigh School District, Lehighton Area School District, Pen Argyl School District, Lehigh Career & Technical Institute, Jim Thorpe Area School District, Parkland School District, Hamburg Area School District, East Penn School District, Pittston Area School District, Allentown School District, Lewisburg Area School District, Manarah Islamic Academy, Harrington Education Associates, Kutztown Area School District, Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Pottsgrove School District, Hatboro-Horsham School District, Montgomery County Intermediate Unit and Boyertown Area School District. A welcome session was held at Salisbury High School. Superintendent Michael Roth explained Salisbury's TL2014 goals saying "the initiative accelerates the process of providing students with the knowledge and skills necessary for post-secondary success in the 21st century." Further goals include "increased learning opportunities for the development of critical 21st century skills: critical thinking and problem solving, effective oral and written communication, collaboration, creativity and curiosity, adaptability, organization, initiative and entrepreneurialism; increased opportunities for student engagement in a dynamic, technology-rich learning environment; increased opportunities for project-based and challenge-based learning, mirroring real-world work force and higher education environments; increased opportunities for differentiation and individualized instruction through the use of technology; and increased opportunities for reading and writing in new formats and modes common in the 21st century. Participants were then given a choice to stay at the high school or ride a bus to Harry S Truman Elementary School, Western Salisbury Elementary School or Salisbury Middle School for classroom visits to observe how students and teachers are using technology and asked questions of teachers and students on courses of study, implementation of technology into the curriculum, ability for students to master the programs and ease of use. Various break-out sessions were offered providing information on the importance of school board and community involvement, financial issues, support for teachers and students, implementation issues, utilization of social media and the shift to a digital classroom. Three sessions were also available involving a panel of teachers, a panel of parents and a panel of students where visitors could ask questions. Visitors were most impressed with the students and their answers to questions posed. Students explained how they use Google Apps to take notes during lectures which all in the group can share. If a student does not understand something, they can research the unknown and place comments in the margins for all classmates to see. Marrying traditional lesson plans with new technology, students said the teachers have found ways to engage them. One student said their project was taking MacBeth to Twitter and another said they created a movie trailor for Antigone using imovie. Knowing students learn differently, students said the teachers use the resources and programs available on the laptops to provide opportunities for them. Another student said in physics class they hook up sensors to the laptop to measure light while doing the labs and then type up the lab report.

Visitors to the district told The Press they were impressed with what they saw in the classrooms, sharing how the middle school students in Beth Prokesch's classroom were skyping their pen pals in different countries. They also said they were surprised at how articulate and open the students were. As one student said to the visitors during the panel discussion, "students are curious about learning again." Student Ian Carey ended the student panel by saying, "The biggest change in the role of the teacher is it shifts from a person who is simply instructing to more of a catalyst for personal growth, exploration and learning." Copyright Times News, LLC. Reproduction is prohibited without the express written consent of the Times News, LLC. Salisbury Press 1633 N. 26th Street Allentown, PA 18104