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ILAS 201 & 301. And so the journey begins…. Introductions. Melanie Bickley, mbickley@niu.edu Former teacher and school administrator Coordinator of Clinical Placements Assistant to the Director of School Partnerships and Clinical Experiences Coordinating Instructor for ILAS 201 and 301
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ILAS 201 & 301 And so the journey begins…
Introductions • Melanie Bickley, mbickley@niu.edu • Former teacher and school administrator • Coordinator of Clinical Placements • Assistant to the Director of School Partnerships and Clinical Experiences • Coordinating Instructor for ILAS 201 and 301 • 815.753.0325
Office support specialist • Jodi Long, jodilong@niu.edu • Office of School Partnerships and Clinical Experiences, Zulauf 215 • Open daily – 8:00-4:30
Discipline Coordinators • English – Judy Pokorny • Foreign Language – Peggy Batty • History – Dr. Andrea Smalley • Math – Bonnie Kersten • Science – Judy Boisen
201 Small Group Facilitators • English/Foreign Language – Rich Majerus, Sycamore High School • History – Frank Bell, NIU • Math – Sheryl Nakonechney, Clinton Rosette Middle School
301 Small Group Facilitators • English – James Horne, Kaneland High School • Foreign Lang. – Matt Hotopp, Jefferson High School • History – Ata Shakir, DeKalb High School • Math – Amanda Baum, Clinton Rosette Middle School • Science – James Browne, Amboy High School
301 to Small GroupsEnglish E106History E107Math E108Science E109Foreign Language E110Please return to Forum Room at 5:15pm
Establishing a Professional Internet Profile • All existing social media set to private – don’t forget about Pinterest, Instagram, your friend’s pages, your high school MySpace page… • Join professional social media sites – LinkedIn • Pinterest and Instagram CAN be used by teachers very effectively – make a separate account • Twitter!
Email Etiquette • Google • Read your email • Compose your reply • Read reply out loud before sending • Send reply
TAP Test • If you have not yet taken and passed the TAP test, start the process NOW! • Check out our website for links to places on campus that can assist you.
Coursepack Highlights • Contact information and website address • Attendance policy • School Contact information • Privacy of Student Data signature – to Melanie Bickley by February 3 • Dispositions • Assessments
Coursepack Highlights • What to do during observations • Assignments • Time Logs • Middle School • High School • Tutoring • Final Assessments • Privacy of Student Data – due February 3 Please, do NOT combine on one sheet!
AssignmentsLinks are on Tcert Website! • Mandated Reporter • Academic Integrity • Twitter • Tutoring Scenario Activity • Teacher Interviews Due by February 3 Active by January 27 Due January 27 Start scheduling after January 27
Tutoring Scheduling form • DUE BY JANUARY 20TH • NO CLASSES IN SESSION ON JANUARY 20TH • DO NOT MESS THESE UP!
It’s the Little Things Transitioning from a student to a pre-service teacher
Today’s Objectives • After this presentation you will be able to: • Identify the “little” things you can do to help you exhibit the qualities of a high caliber professional . • Identify the differences between “student” thinking and “pre-service teacher” thinking.
The Little Things: Clothing • Dress for the position you want, not for the position you have. • Professional dress expected every time you are in a school building (except for Monday seminars). • Jeans are NEVER ok. Not even on Fridays. Not even during Spirit Week. Not even if your teacher says it is ok. NEVER.
The Little Things: Writing • Proofread everything you write: • Personal Statements • Applications • E-mails • Tutoring forms • Attachments – Are they there? Are they complete? • Spelling errors, grammar errors, informal language – all could mean the difference between landing the interview and landing in the recycling bin! • Treat written work like an audition, not like an obligatory assignment.
The Little Things: Reading • Read all directions carefully and make sure that you follow them to the letter. • Re-read directions at least twice (if not more) before completing the task.
Reading – continued • Before contacting the school, cooperating teacher, small group facilitator, or Mrs. Bickley, make sure that the question you are asking isn’t already answered somewhere • Course syllabus • ILAS 201 Website • Google • School website • Classmate • Twitter • Previous E-mail
If you’ve done all of this and you’re still not sure, ask for help! “I’m so sorry to bother you” is an EXCELLENT stock phrase.
The Little Things: Communication • Communicate BEFORE the fact, not after. • 24 hour rule – for you, but don’t expect it from others. • If you say you are going to do something, do it. • If someone helps you, thank them. • You are dealing with humans. Mistakes happen. Teachers must be flexible. • It’s not what you say, it’s how you say it. • Try very, very hard to avoid assumptions. • Mr./Ms./Dr. ALWAYS
Sample Email Good Afternoon Mrs. Bickley, After attending the middle school orientation yesterday at XYZ Middle School, the cooperating teacher, Mrs. Soandso, and I discovered a dilemma. She only teaches science at XYZ, not social studies. Although I believe I could brush up on my science skills the best that I can, it does conflict with my concentration of history/social studies. I just wanted to bring this to your attention before moving any further with Mrs. Soandso. We thought it was best to figure this thing out before setting a schedule and proceeding with observations. Thank you for your time and effort. Best regards,
Email Template • Salutation – always use Mr. or Ms. (Dear Ms. Jones) • Introduce yourself – don’t assume they remember you or what you do (My name is Bob Smith, and I am a History teacher candidate at NIU) • Ask your question or state reason for email – KEEP IT SHORT AND TO THE POINT • Thank person (Thank you so much for your time.) • Closing (Sincerely, Bob Smith)
The Little Things: Chain of Command Most formal and least contact
The Little Things: Questions • Don’t be afraid to ask questions. • Make sure that: • Questions haven’t already been answered in class • Questions aren’t answered in the material you have • Questions aren’t easily answered by an internet search • Questions come before the assignment due date.
The Little Things: Organization • Due Dates • Due dates are important and should not be missed. Look through all of your materials and make a calendar to help stay organized. • Time Commitments • Schools are busy. You are guests. If you say you will be there on a specific day and time, be there. No excuses. • Emergencies do happen. If they happen to you, contact your cooperating teacher in advance (if possible) by phone and e-mail. C.C. Mrs. Bickley on the e-mail.
The Little Things: Organization • Paperwork • Teachers have to track thousands of pieces of paper a week. Pre-service teachers do too. Read all paperwork carefully, follow directions completely, and submit things on time. • Make copies • Make copies of ALL important forms before you submit them from this point forward
The Little Things: Doing MORE • To make yourself a truly exceptional candidate you need to do MORE, and you need to stand out. • We are helping you begin this process by having you tutor as part of your ILAS 201 experience. • Ways you can do more: • Offer to help out with additional things at your placement school • Look for volunteer opportunities in your community working with school-aged children • Get involved with something at NIU or your hometown. Interesting experiences make for interesting resumes!
Doing More • Start thinking about your marketability • ELL? • Second language? • Endorsement in another subject? • Reading coursework? • Unique opportunities • What will make you different from all of the other people who are applying for the same job for which you are applying?