Saturday, January 11, 2014

Random endorsement: mobile bike-lane light

A completely random endorsement - bought this bike light for my dad for Christmas (and then one for myself as well). It uses lasers to make a bike lane around the sides of the bike so even when you are riding on a road without lanes it provides a bit more buffer. Also, it only requires 2 AAA batteries. And that it was only $11.

Rode my bike around today feeling much safer (or at a minimum, much more visible).

Check out ->  5 LED Bicycle Rear Tail Red Bike Torch Laser Beam Lamp Light

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Are you tweeting during the school day??

Short answer: no, of course not.

But the reality is much of the world is active and engaging on twitter during the school day, so how do you (as a teacher) take advantage of what Twitter has to offer without compromising professionally?

A few things that have been useful for me:

1. Use Flipboard to keep track of Twitter users you follow and hashtags

Flipboard is a great app for iOS or Android which acts as equal parts RSS feed reader and social media cultivator. When you get home you can easily flip through the day's top tweets from those you follow (as ranked by retweets and your engagement with those users). This way you won't miss out on that new resource from #sschat or #edtech, and at the same time you don't need to use up some of your prep scrolling through to find something useful.

Hashtags especially can be a huge resource for lessons, links, best practices - you name it. A few I recommend: #sschat, #wrldchat, #edtech. Flip board does a nice job of displaying things graphically so you don't get into the mind-numbing scrolling rut. (Feel free to share other useful hashtags in the comments)



2. Use Buffer to stay engaged even when you can't.

Ruining the magic here, I rarely tweet during the week. Almost all of the link sharing I do on Twitter is done via reading on Feedly/Flipboard and scheduling with the awesome free app Buffer. I do most of my reading (no surprises here) when I have time on the weekends or before I head into school each day from 6-7am.

Installing the app in my browser allows me to easily peg something to be shared on an automatic schedule when I know more of my followers will be online.

3. Use Followerwonk to schedule Buffer posts at the perfect times

Speaking of which - Followerwonk is a neat app which analyzes your followers and predicts the best times to share based on their activity.   This takes a bit of the guess work out of deciding when to post.

4. Use IFTTT to automatically Tweet and Buffer posts from your blog

If This Then That is an extremely simple online optimization tool that allows you to make if-then statements for basically anything online. So for example, I have two IFTTT "recipes" as they call them for when I post a new entry to this blog. The first posts a link to Twitter immediately saying: "New post: " and the second Buffers a link for later in that day or the next day with the prefix: "ICYMI: " (In case you missed it, for the uninitiated).

This is certainly not an end-all-be-all list of social media tips, but they have helped for me!

Fellow teachers - you have any tips to share? Best ways to engage in social media? Share 'em in the comments or feel free to tweet at me @mmccabe.

Sunday, December 08, 2013

A primer on Chicago politics?

I'm currently reading American Pharaoh: Mayor Richard J Daley - his battle for Chicago and the nation by Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor right now and it is absolutely incredible.

I am only 280 pages in (a few months into Daley's second term), and already well-worth the purchase.

I've pulled out a few quotes that I think are interesting or thought provoking (and will continue to do so) here.  A few of the most interesting:

“Look at the Lord’s Disciples,” Daley would later say in response to a charge of corruption in City Hall. “One denied Him, one doubted Him, one betrayed Him. If our Lord couldn’t have perfection, how are you going to have it in city government?”

In April 1917, the Chicago Real Estate Board met and — concerned about what officials described as the “invasion of white residence districts by the Negroes” — appointed a Special Committee on Negro Housing to make recommendations. On this committee’s recommendation, the board adopted a policy of block-by-block racial segregation, carefully controlled so that “each block shall be filled solidly and . . . further expansion shall be confined to contiguous blocks.” Three years later, the board took the further step of voting unanimously to punish by “immediate expulsion” any member...

“Make no little plans,” Burnham, a prominent architect and principal designer of the 1893 Columbian Exposition, advised. “They have no magic to stir men’s blood.”

Anyone else already read this? Anyone else currently reading?

Monday, November 25, 2013

ICYMI: Short blurb in Pitt Magazine

A few weeks ago Pitt Magazine published a short blurb about my work with the Corporation for National and Community Service.

Supposedly you can view the article from the link below, but it looks like the Zinio tech is having issues. The link to the article is here: http://www.zinio.com/pages/PittMagazine/Fall-13/416279352/pg-40

 

Friday, November 15, 2013

TEDx Talk: Connecting communities and classrooms

A few weeks ago I gave a TEDx talk on the writing program we started at Pritzker with 826 Chicago to connect students digitally with writing tutors one on one through GoogleDocs.

Check it out below:



I am happy to answer as many questions as I can in the comments about our work or its impact.

If you are able to, please support the work of 826 Chi financially, or volunteer your time! They are a fantastic organization and have been instrumental in our students' collective success.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Recent press: NCTQ Report

I did some interviews with the National Council on Teacher Quality regarding teacher preparation and education schools (through Teach Plus).

It is all part of a campaign with the release of this study: http://www.nctq.org/dmsStage/Teacher_Prep_Review_2013_Report

Two YouTube videos here:
http://www.nctq.org/commentary/viewStory.do?id=33672 - discussing academic requirements for teacher prep programs 
http://www.nctq.org/commentary/viewStory.do?id=33655 - talking about the need for classroom management preparation

At some point soon I hope to post some bigger picture thoughts regarding the study, the implications for teacher prep and the current state of ed schools.

Monday, January 14, 2013

We must do more to recognize best teachers


Washington, D.C. has the right idea tonight.

If you want to turn around a school system you can not only focus on the worst - you must seek out, recognize and retain the best teachers. Tonight the DC Public Education fund will recognize some of the best teachers in the city. Seven teachers will each receive an award of $10,000 during a reception at the Kennedy Center. Further, to their credit the front page of the DC Public Schools website publicizes the event (to which every teacher rated "Highly Effective" by the IMPACT system is invited as a guest of honor).

This is just the latest in a series of right steps DC is taking.

Over the last two years with a new collective bargaining agreement taking effect DC's best teachers have seen substantial pay bumps - some collecting bonuses over $10,000. As a side note, teachers opt-in to this system. Otherwise educators follow the routine raises that come with years of service and tenure like most cities current contracts.

Do I point to DC as a perfect model? No. But they have the right idea here: recognize the best teachers. Pay them more.

There have been other small steps forward recently - the Fishman Prize from the New Teacher Project  awards $25,000 for some of the best teachers nationally. The Fund for Teachers gives recognition through competitive grants for teachers seeking out professional development. Here in Illinois the Golden Apple seeks to recognize great teaching. The White House's Champions of Change - Educators event was as good a use of the bully pulpit as I have seen. But it is not enough.

Other professions have lists like, "Top 100 Super Lawyers of Pennsylvania", or "best doctors in Chicago", or "best dentists in Chicago" or "best lawyers of Chicago" and on and on.

Nationally we are losing great urban teachers at alarming rates. Locally, here in Chicago we are losing all teachers at staggering rates as well (fewer than 50% of teachers remain at their current school more than 4 years).

This, regrettably is not a new topic of discussion; here is Nick Kristof in March 2011:
Moreover, part of compensation is public esteem. When governors mock teachers as lazy, avaricious incompetents, they demean the profession and make it harder to attract the best and brightest. We should be elevating teachers, not throwing darts at them. (link)
That advice was evidently not taken by most.

Take a cursory glance at the web sites for a few major urban school districts - ChicagoPhiladelphiaNew York City. Not only is it difficult to find information about or announcements of celebrations of the best teachers - it is difficult to find information about any teachers. How does that make sense?


CPS central office, further, is not the only culprit in this failure to recognize the best teachers. The Chicago Teacher's Union website is similarly lacking information about the organization's finest teachers. Large and leading charter management organizations in Chicago are in the same boat - the only information about teachers are on bio pages or in the context of recruiting teachers to apply. This doesn't have to be so.


Every district in America should have regular, genuine and very public efforts to recognize the best teachers in their system. Events like DC's Standing Ovation for Teachers tonight need to be institutionalized and widespread. I hope that Chicago can take a page from DC before this school year is out.

We can, and will, and should haggle over how best to determine which teachers are the finest. But, perfect should not be the enemy of good here.

There are many things in education and ed reform that are contentious to discuss and difficult to do. This is not one of them - that the best teachers deserve our recognition.

I have been disheartened lately that the entirety of the ed reform conversation in Chicago seems centered around the worst schools, the worst teachers, the worst districts. I can't help but think that if we  continue to seek the worst, we will find the worst.  Chicago Public Schools needs to start looking for its best.




---

A Post Script - DC's policies and climate seem to be not only aimed at retaining the current excellent teachers but also attracting some of the best from around the country:

  • Katie Lyons won the Fishman Prize this year. At a recent Teach+ event she announced she was moving to DC.
  • Julia King was a national Sue Lehman Award winner (recognizing the best teaching nationally for Teach For America corps members) when she taught in Gary, IN. She has since moved to DC and was named the DC Teacher of the Year.

I don't know either personally well enough to say that DC IMPACT or the sort of recognition above led directly to their decisions to move there, but I can't imagine it hurt.

I would love more anecdotal evidence about teacher experiences with the new DC contract, or moving to DC as a result of the contract.




Links:
- DC Teaching Excellence Award winners - http://www.standingovationfordcteachers.org/about-standing-ovation/2012-excellence-award-winners/
- DC teaching contract - http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/01/education/big-pay-days-in-washington-dc-schools-merit-system.html?pagewanted=all
- 2012 Fishman Prize - http://tntp.org/fishman-prize
- Kristof: Pay teachers more - http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/13/opinion/13kristof.html
- McKinsey study: http://www.mckinseyonsociety.com/downloads/reports/Education/Closing_the_talent_gap.pdf
- Whitehouse Champions of Change - http://www.whitehouse.gov/champions/educators


Sunday, December 30, 2012

CPS Teacher Mobility

I've been taking a look into this 2009 University of Chicago teacher mobility study over the last few days:

http://ccsr.uchicago.edu/sites/default/files/publications/CCSR_Teacher_Mobility.pdf

A few of the highlights (lowlights):

  • Only 9 high schools were characterized as "high stability" in '05-'07 (retaining 90%+ of teachers year over year)
  • Less than 50% of CPS teachers stay in their school for 4+ years.
  • In '98-'99 39% of teachers left their schools within 5 years
  • In '01-'02 a separate study found that 31% of teachers left within first two years.
  • The most unstable schools (highest amount of turnover) tend to be the lowest performing, with the highest minority populations.
Certainly some unfortunate statistics. It should come as no surprise then that other professional development efforts within CPS consistently fail so miserably. On a yearly basis most schools are trying to get a considerable portion of their staff adjusted/oriented, leaving little room/effort/time for improvement true professional development and craft improvement. Institutional knowledge, community relationships are consistently in turmoil. To be sure this problem is not isolated to traditional schools in the slightest, by some measures charter schools have even higher levels of turnover. Unfortunately the University of Chicago study doesn't have a breakout between charter and traditional.

Also, and very importantly the Chicago study above did not have access to teacher performance data (of any sort - observations, lesson plans, test scores, student surveys etc). So, not only are we losing a considerable number of teachers to a highly mobile and chaotic system, we don't know which teachers are leaving their classrooms: the best? the worst? the average?

Coupled with the findings of TNTP's The Irreplaceables, recognition and retention of Chicago's best teachers is a critical part of the education reform conversation moving forward. Interestingly though it is a topic that has received little or no comment from CPS or CTU. I hope that changes.

Hechinger Report Op-Ed

As part of my Teach+ Policy Fellowship I wrote the op-ed below for the Hechinger Report, I figured I would re-post here as it speaks to the purpose of starting this blog as a venue for discussion.

Improving education should be a common challenge—not a tug of war

By Matthew McCabe
CHICAGO — Luis* was struggling in his sophomore year. His grade-point average was dipping lower; he had missed multiple homework assignments in the past week. Luis said he didn’t have the resources—time, energy, materials—necessary to meet the academic performance I expected of him in my world history class.
So, we sat down side by side and faced the problem before us. We gathered as many data points as possible—grade reports and test scores, teacher feedback, information from his family and home life—and we started to look for solutions.
Every teacher knows this process. We understand that if we are to make an impact on the habits of and outcomes for a student, our tactics matter. Relationships matter. Tone matters. The data points on which you base your discussion matter.
And so it is with education policy writ large. In Chicago these past few months, negotiators for the Chicago Teachers Union and the Chicago Public Schools came to the table—an admirable first step. But, unfortunately, they sat facing each other rather than facing the challenges at hand. Each side argued from a mentality of winning and losing, thinking chiefly of gains and losses. Each side wrongly assumed a lack of common purpose. And so, despite the dust settling on a historic strike, major challenges remain for the Chicago public-school system as a whole.

The author speaking this fall at a parent night at Pritzker College Prep, where he teaches world history. (Photo courtesy of Matthew McCabe)
This cuts to the core challenges at the heart of the education reform debate, both here in Chicago and nationally. The debate’s current paradigm is not centered on the end goals that both sides share, as division rather than collaboration is the focus.
All parties—teachers, parents, policymakers, district and union leaders—share an interest in high-quality school facilities, getting greater numbers of social workers in the schools and the like. All sides want to recognize and retain good teachers and support those who are struggling. All sides want better outcomes for children. And yet despite this, the debates tend to be handled as tugs of war—at the end of which the rope has moved little and common interests remain neglected.
So, the question shouldn’t be, “Did Chicago provide an example of principled negotiation in the past few months?” It did not.
A more productive question is, “Can Chicago move forward and provide a model for nuanced, respectful dialogue among stakeholders?” On this point, there are glimmers of hope.
Here’s one.
In August, more than 1,200 Chicago teachers gathered for a professional development conference on the Common Core State Standards. The conference, called Collaborate Chicago, engaged educators from both the elementary and high-school levels in sessions geared toward seamlessly integrating the new standards into our classrooms. On the surface this doesn’t seem all that special—teachers, like all professionals, seek out ways to improve their practice. But in this case it was special, because the conference was jointly sponsored by the Chicago Teachers Union and the Chicago Public Schools.
There are lessons here. First, there’s common ground. CTU and CPS both acknowledged a need for further professional development around the Common Core. Both organizations, despite other tensions, wanted teachers to be able to implement the new standards as soon as possible and as effectively as possible. (Bear in mind that this conference took place at a time when negotiators for both CTU and CPS said they remained “far apart” in contract negotiations.)
The second lesson is that we can accomplish more together than we can separately. The CPS central office provided institutional backing for the event and got the word out to charter school teachers, too. And the union promoted the event at the grassroots level and mobilized its teachers to attend. Absent either party, the conference wouldn’t have been as successful.
Lastly—and unsurprisingly—the conference was effective because it was planned and led by teachers. Uniquely situated at the nexus of policy and practice, teachers were not only able to assess the need for further training on the Common Core, but also to develop solutions to the challenges and implement them effectively.
When it comes to systemic education reform, there are no doubt delicacies of implementation, and differences of opinion about the relative importance of various initiatives. But these differences are surmountable as long as there is a shared end goal: improved outcomes for children.
For true—and substantial—education reform to happen, stakeholders must embrace nuance and face the challenges at hand with a common purpose. Labeling sides as “money-grubbing,” “corporate reformers” or “lazy, ineffective union slackers” is counterproductive.
This moment of new leadership for the Chicago Public Schools should be treated like the opportunity it is—a chance for a fresh start, a chance to rekindle the idea that there’s common ground.
My goal with Luis wasn’t to “win.” It was to change the situation. I wanted to see increased performance. I had to engage in a discussion with Luis, not against him. I had to involve him in the process. I had to believe, before we even began our conversation, that he wanted to improve, too—otherwise we weren’t going anywhere.
Education leaders should follow the same model: assume good intentions, embrace nuance publicly and attack challenges collaboratively. Otherwise, we aren’t going anywhere.
*Luis is a pseudonym, used here to protect the student’s identity.
Matthew McCabe is a World History and AP World History teacher at Pritzker College Prep in Chicago. He was a 2012 Leadership of Educational Equity Policy Fellow and is a current Teach Plus Policy Fellow in Chicago. Formerly, McCabe was a third-grade teacher and Chicago Teachers Union member at George B. Swift Elementary.

Welcome

Thanks for visiting.

I've created this site out of a need felt recently to post more in-depth, longer thoughts on education and ed reform - both in Chicago and nationally. I have felt that while Twitter has been useful for disseminating information, discussion there on important and contentious topics often devolves to a point where nuance is lost, positions are misconstrued and valuable opportunities for consensus are squandered.

I won't pretend (at this point) that posts here will be regular or plentiful. However, I do hope that what I do write here will contribute to a respectful and important discussion on the future of our country's public schools and most importantly the future of the students within them.

For more about me as an individual you can check out my website - http://matthewfmccabe.com
(as a side note - Matt McCabe is apparently an incredibly popular name and so all related .com domains - mmccabe.com, mattmccabe.com, matthewmccabe.com - were already taken. Thus the middle initial here and elsewhere).

Thank you again for visiting!