What I’m learning, what I’m teaching, and what I’m learning about teaching
Yours Truly, Grade
Dear Student,
My name is “Grade.” You know me from that report card you received yesterday. I was sitting there glaring at you from the box next to the line for your History class. I fear that my presence there was a disappointment to you; in fact, I fear that my presence in your school life has been a source of frustration for many years. I wanted to write to you directly to clarify a few things. I want you to know who I am and what I truly stand for. I also want to express to you my frustration at being often misused by teachers, including teachers that you’ve had throughout your school life. I’m not what you think I am; I’m not that thing that causes you anxiety and keeps you awake at night. I’m not that thing that triggers a grounding from your parents, who take away your video game console each time a report card comes out. Rather, if I was better understood for who I really am, I could be meaningful to you, and I could even support your learning.
Well-Being: Should it be More Central In Schools?
There is a movement to consider happiness and well-being as measures of development instead of just traditional economic measures like GDP. Concern for human happiness and well-being is also the realm of the field of Positive Psychology. In this post, I explore the idea of making student happiness and well-being as central goals for K-12 schools.
Perspective: In Teaching History and in Current Events
Today -- Friday, May 21 -- here in Addis Ababa, state-aligned media and various political actors have called for protests around the city against, what they are calling, foreign interference in Ethiopia's domestic affairs and state sovereignty. This comes in response to a few different issues, including statements from the United States and the European Union on the upcoming national elections here, but it's primarily in response to the situation in northern Ethiopia in the region of Tigray. Weighing into the history and politics of this conflict is not my intent with this post. Instead, I'm reminded today of a class I had with my 9th grade Social Studies students back in November, where we were learning about the historical thinking concept of “Perspective.” That lesson seems pertinent today.
Student Well-being in Online Learning
Though there are exceptions, for most adolescents, full-time online learning during the Covid pandemic has been tough. It's not only been tough for learning, but also from the perspective of mental health and overall wellness. In this post, I have my students specifically in mind as I write. I want to outline a few scientific, research-based strategies for improving well-being. These are strategies that one can pick and choose from and implement pretty quickly and easily. Studies demonstrate that these strategies can provide a pretty immediate boost in one's sense of well-being, and, when put into regular practice, can provide long-term well-being benefits.
A Model of Service-Learning in IB Business Management
In this post, I set out a potential model for service-learning from the subject area classroom side of the service learning relationship with CAS within the IB Diploma Program. The model I present is specifically from the perspective of the IB Business Management course. As I touch on below, I also believe this model is about more than meeting an IBDP requirement; rather, I think it’s about improving teaching and learning more generally within the IB subject area classroom.
A Graduation Speech
I was privilege to be selected by the graduating class of 2021 as their speaker for their graduation ceremony. I was selected in part because I too was closing out my time at the International Community School of Addis Ababa. I've been doing a lot reading this semester related to the field of positive psychology for a PE class I've been teaching called "Personal Well-Being". This reading, together with my own experience of life-transition, mixed all together with the reflections that come from a year of a global pandemic, contributed to the below speech: Reflections on the Disney Pixar Movie, Soul.
Economics of Climate Change
In 2nd semester of the 2019-20 school-year, I was assigned to teach a one semester economics course. In the fall of 2019, youth-led action on climate change protests garnered a lot of attention globally. On my school's campus, students organized a class walk-out and march around the campus to draw attention to the need for more climate action. In the follow up of that, a group of students and teachers started meeting to explore ways in which the school could take more action, and a student and teacher committee was formed to explore the school's carbon footprint. In view of this student attention around climate action, I decided to focus the economics elective course on the economics of climate change.
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