*I will work smarter, not longer hours.
I
once took a survey that asked me to figure out how many hours I
actually work as a teacher, including planning, grading, and attending
meetings and training. It averaged 45-50 hours a week...FOR 50 WEEKS A
YEAR! I LOVE my school children, but I also LOVE my home children, who
happen to be growing up without me. For them, I WILL find a way to
assess English skills in many ways other than JUST essays. I will create
multiple choice tests and grade things in class and host writer
workshops. I will grade essays WITH students to make it happen DURING
class (and to make the feedback more meaningful for the writer). No longer do I want to say, "Oh my word! You've grown so much since the last time I saw you. How are you?" to my own sons. No more
I-didn't-see-the-sun-today-because-I-got-to-school-before-it-rose-and-didn't-leave-until-it-was-long-gone
days. Or, at least, a great reduction in the number of those days (of
which there were FOUR last week because I was behind in grading).
*I will plan for grading.
Despite tweaks to my assessment techniques, grading will still occur weekly on my own time. I will plan which assignments I'm taking, and
I will plan when I will grade and return them. I will not take a trunk-full of projects home on weekends or holidays. I will not grade work in the last week of the term. When I have more hectic personal weeks, I will take
less work (or send more back with a check mark). By planning for my students' assessment needs and balancing it with my family's personal needs, I will have enough of the right kind of grades to measure my
students' growth without going weeks without seeing my family. (I really, really hope.)
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*I will stop and allow a few minutes for closure before the
bell.
I always feel enormous--admittedly
self-derived--pressure to have kids actively engaged and LEARNING until a few
seconds AFTER the last bell. I panic when they start packing up as the bell approaches. I will do anything to get them to focus for another minute or two (or our last few seconds together). I will sing, dance, flip (or if I'm in a bad mood, yell, demand, hold after the bell) to keep them in the room mentally and physically. I have realized that we all need time to process and connect (and put
our books back in an organized fashion instead of leaving my room looking like a post-Katrina Louisiana, for which I have to form a nightly, heartfelt, contrite me a culpa for the poor facilities staff who must all hate me). Instead of a tension fraught battle of wills over the no-man's-land of the academic period, I will turn these final few minutes into a decompression chamber with assigned tasks that transition students from my class to the passing period. I will have them do things like stand-up, hand-up, pair-up to share things they learned during the lesson. I will have them put sticky notes on the various wall charts to track our learning. I will have them write reflections (that I will NOT grade).
Hopefully these three things will help me to improve my progress monitoring and data management while improving student learning without being arrested for child abandonment.
Have you tried any of these resolutions? Do you have any advice for me on how to manage these issues? What coping mechanisms do you use to balance home and school?
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