
My favorite is the back wall by my desk, which is full of stuff kids have made me unrelated to class - there are poems, drawings, letter, thank yous, awards and all the real benefits of teaching. Then there are the posters that describe me - which I give to my seniors as they graduate.
I keep the rest of the walls covered with maps and projects - my favorite is the 1920s project, in which I have students recreate pop culture artifacts of the 1920s, from sports memorabilia to music, to celebrity. I love looking at it and I think the kids enjoy it.
We're starting some new stuff on my campus this year - PLC stuff, professional learning communities. I dig it, but we're still at the very beginning. I'm interested to know how other teachers, especially those who have been to a Dufours conference, have felt at starting this process. I'm excited, but it's a lot of pressure being a leader in that situation - to convince colleagues and such that change can be a good thing and that it doesn't come from somewhere else.
I did and activity at the beginning of the year where I had my students share what bothered them more than anything else in class (a norming activity) and that worked pretty well.
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