I’m teaching new curriculum this year. Actually, it’s a new-to-our-state course: Middle Grades World History. A course I haven’t had since freshman year in college. 24 years ago. One of my students figured it out right before Christmas. “Wait,” he said, ”You’ve never taught this before? Why are you teaching it to us?” (I would never accuse a seventh grader of mincing words.) We’re often called to new curriculum due to changes in grade level, change in location or district/state/national revamps. I’m not a fan of change – too stressful. (I once cried over changing vacuum cleaners.) I have found some essentials to a smooth and effective transition:
- Organization - This is the most difficult for me. I’ve learned to keep a copy of the state standards in a three-ring binder along with the unit plans my teammates and I are developing as we swim this broad sea. I take it to all my meetings, and most importantly, I review the standards and our work from time to time or I find myself adrift.
- Collaboration – Two other teachers in my grade teach the same course. I trust them and depend on them. Our principal set aside a planning period per week for official unit planning. During that time we have team norms and a note-taker. We leave the meeting with clear expectations for who is doing what until we meet again. But we plan far more than during the official professional learning community. We talk/email/text about learning targets, activities, resources, assessments, what worked and what didn’t work every day. I would drown without them.
- Internet Resources – I admit that I find the wealth of information on the web a bit overwhelming, but here are a few of my go-to sites that are applicable to all fields:
- Teachers Pay Teachers - An open marketplace for educators where teachers buy, sell and share original teaching resources. (Part free, more for a fee)
- Brain Pop - BrainPOP® creates animated, curricular content that engages students, supports educators, and bolsters achievement. (Part free, more for a fee)
- Quizlet - You can study anything. Find or create what you need to learn. (Free)
- PBworks - Online team collaboration to get work done. Capture knowledge, share files, and manage projects within a secure, reliable environment. (Free)
Surviving new curriculum does not have to lead to misery. I’m remembering why i teach – to discover and facilitate discovery. No, I don’t have to add misery to my plate – just stay organized, collaborate and allow myself time to wade the vast waters of internet resources.
So, how about you? When is the last time you changed curriculum? How do you best manage without misery?
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