At the beginning of this school year, ¹ÏÉñapp ran an experiment. We asked teachers a simple question: "Give us a snapshot of your life, in words or pictures."
By the end of the month we had 1,400 responses, mostly on Twitter.
Teachers talked about their pay, their frustrations, their surprising moments, their working weekends, their plugged up classroom toilets. They took photos of t-shirts kids wore and . We saw a remarkable number of ways teachers are using technology. In short, we received just what we asked for, a window into the teaching profession in North Carolina today.
>> Look at the archive of responses . Look at how educational leaders across the state responded to the project .
Nancy Gardner is one of the teachers who contributed to the project. Gardner is National Board Certified Teacher with over 26 years of experience in grades 7-12. She currently teaches senior English at Mooresville High School in Mooresville, N.C. where she chairs the English Department. We asked Nancy to review the tweets and Instagram contributions and tell us what she saw:
"I am inspired, and yes, a little weepy, when I read and view all of these at one time," writes Gardner. "Although some of these mention the salaries and frustrations with all of the issues facing NC teachers, the 'narrative' continues to reinforce the dedication our teachers have to helping all students become successful, in spite of the challenges."
Gardner then provided this list, something she calls "broad takeaways":
the look of the classrooms
"No longer do we have rows of traditional teaching with the teacher in the front of the room," writes Gardner. "All levels, K-12 are in small groups-and the lessons are teacher facilitated or coached."
Some of my students read in the most interesting places
— Ms Armentrout (@SciencewithMsA)
Searching for details in a nonfiction text to support the main idea.
— Shanise Mark (@shanisemark)
drawing pictures and using textual evidence for WS's Sonnet 130
— Nancy Gardner (@GranciNancy)
Collaboration, critical thinking, &Hard work in science. @WakeNCStateECHS
— Bill Burgess (@stemburgess)
the tools
"So many different uses of technology," notes Gardner, "so we need to make sure all schools and districts have this opportunity."
Your students probably eat the fruit they bring for lunch. We use them to play Tetris. °ªâ€¦
— Greg Garner (@greggarner87)
Instructional Tech in a High Poverty School helps negate the
— FieldGoals DontWin (@JolietJake20)
A UPHS student in Mr Moore's Bio class captures images from a wifi microscope camera on his Chromebook
— Willow Alston-Socha (@Willow_STEM)
K students, learn how to scan QR CODE for read aloud session.
— Sherri Ausbon (@sherriausbon)
RT : Cell Phone Docks
— ¹ÏÉñapp (@wunc)
the standards
"These projects and activities are aligned to the [Common Core State Standards]," asserts Gardner. "Students are researching, writing, problem solving, analyzing,creating, designing, experimenting ... the teaching to the [Common Core] requires this kind of student engagement so that students are learning to think."
Practicing our skills with shaving cream.
— Ashley Zatt (@ALZatt13)
First lab of the year!!!
— Ms Armentrout (@SciencewithMsA)
Students learn how muscle and adipose tissue can determine identity.
— Ms.Berge (she/her) (@ms_berge)
the key players
"The students are involved in their own learning, well coached by the teachers," says Gardner. "There is so much evidence of the planning, grading, preparation, shopping, setting up for effective lessons that help students master the skills in the standards. Teachers spend time outside of their teaching days to make sure this happens. Their collegiality and collaboration with other teachers is important to this process."
It's Sat at 8pm. I just made a new batch of play dough for the week. ,
— Christy Mullen (@mchristymullen)
Helping a co-worker celebrate the big 22! We love each other in Section 51!
— Amy Ward (@MsAmyWardMHS)
After church, grading senior & AP essays on my back porch.Another part of this teacher's weekend.
— Donna Howard (@donnaehoward)
the diversity of our students
"The NC population is changing," says Gardner. "Teachers have embraced that and are making sure all students can learn. The students look engaged and full of joy - while teachers also celebrate their students' successes."
RT Looks like fun! : Students discover how ambient temp determines time of death.
— CTQ (@teachingquality)
Productive morn in HS class. Test review using & later reflected on
— Anabel Gonzalez (@amgonza)
Third graders love reading to their PreK buddies!
— Jennifer Baccus (@JenBaccus)
At HS ESL we speak no evil, hear no evil, see no evil. It's all good!
— Anabel Gonzalez (@amgonza)
Thanks to Nancy Gardner for reviewing the #TeachingInNC project for us. Nancy is a teacher, and a 2014-2015 . Her workweek is divided between teaching students and designing systems-level solutions for public education. She works closely with the .
>> Browse the complete archive of #TeachingInNC responses .
>> Look at how educational leaders across the state responded to the project .