But as you will

I first read this post in April, but after reading it again today, I wanted to share this author’s thoughts with my readers.

But as you will.

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Health, A Treasured Gift

From early last March through early May, I experienced an unwelcome disruption in my good health status.  Being an active and vibrant person normally, frustration enveloped me when I had no strength or will to get out of bed. I even stopped creating articles for this blog due to extreme weakness and fatigue! I spent half of each day in bed.

As a substitute teacher in public schools, exposure to many sicknesses is unavoidable. Thinking at first I just had a bad cold and cough, I continued to work. Soon I found myself getting weaker and the coughing increased. After two doctor visits my diagnosis changed.  I contracted several bacterial diseases that needed three antibiotics to rid my body of these attacks. Slowly my strength returned and my attitude improved.

Rarely do I face illnesses, but when I do, it reminds me of how precious a gift good health is. I thank the Lord for the doctors He provides and the medicine to enable my body to fight the germs and diseases. I thank Him as the Great Physician Who created the human body. I am grateful that He knows exactly how to restore it back to good health when it is according to His will. One of my privileges and responsibilities as a child of God is to pray for those who are ill and those who need their ravaged bodies repaired or healed through operations, therapy, hospital stays, or treatments through doctor visits.

How about you? Are you normally a healthy person? How do you react when disease attacks your body? Let me hear from you, please, and thanks for stopping by my blog.

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Streamline Your Photos With New Tiled Galleries

This advice is worth heeding.

Streamline Your Photos With New Tiled Galleries.

 

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Three Sites a Freelancer Can’t Do Without – And All Are FREE

Three Sites a Freelancer Can’t Do Without – And All Are FREE.

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Education Reform: Home-Based Online Classes

Education is under scrutiny today. My state, Iowa, seeks ways to improve both the student achievement levels and teacher pay.

Iowa’s scores flatlined this past decade. During a public forum at the capital, thee issue of technology surfaced as a concern. Iowa standards incorporated technology literacy into standards taught for the 21st Century skills.

Students in Iowa and the United States must compete with all students everywhere for jobs. Part of this competition includes technology skills and usage. Classrooms in our schools do not use new technology fully.

There are many reasons for this. There are teachers who fear new methods introduced in this newer venue, and others who would use more technology if teacher inservices included hands-on training of the devices available today. Classes exist for computer professional development, but not all teachers can afford the expense, or the time to attend these after school, or weekends due to family and other obligations that life outside of work includes.  Yet to compete with world-wide student populations in the job markets today, many companies and employers require technology skills as criteria for employment. Students need to use new devices proficiently and efficiently.

During one discussion at a forum, teachers suggested online classes would benefit both traditional and alternate education students due to all the updated information available through the Internet. Not only would this appeal to students, especially students at risk of dropping out of school because regular classroom routines hinder their learning, but it would offer students the relevance and application of using available technology.

Many students own computers at home, and schools now buy them for students to use at school. They could take them home and use the devices for online classes. Teachers could provide lesson content via computers while students remain in their homes, or attend at a  central location (satellite locations). Adult supervisors would monitor understanding and interaction activities in these central locations, especially during testing situations. Teachers and legislators agree online teaching be limited to 900 students the first pilot school year, if offered.

Last year a city in California built a “super school,” a huge superstructure that offered the most updated technology and instructional services. In my hometown in Iowa, school board and superintendents approved and constructed mausoleum-type structures to serve more students with fewer facilities despite the fact that Iowa’s student population dropped and keeps dropping.

I wonder if these school boards thought ahead to future venues of content delivery. With online education booming for colleges, would home-based online classes work for pre-college students, at least at the high school and possibly middle school levels? With the proper monitoring of student progress online and visits to a central location, or homes, is it possible students could  thrive through online education? What happens to all of those brick and motor schools paid for by tax payers dollars?

Iowa legislators already discussed reducing the number of superintendents to cover a county instead of a district. Some share duties at several schools now, especially if the districts are small ones. Will as many principals be needed, and what might their job descriptions entail, if online classes become a reality for elementary and secondary education?

There are details in question about how this venue would work, but I feel it bears consideration. What are your thoughts as educators, or parents? Should the 21st century educational process include online classes for students in the elementary, middle school, or secondary level? What are some ideas about monitoring student learning?

Thank you for your comments, and for visiting my site. I hope to hear your insights on this topic.

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Education Reform: Performance-Based Pay for Teachers

I wrote a blog on the topic of education reform proposed in my state of Iowa. One of the ideas called for teacher wages based on student performance. I want to comment on this idea in this blog.

Performance-based pay for teachers presents some concerns. In my twenty years of experience as an educator, I know some teachers benefit if the evaluator likes and respects them while others suffer at the hand of prejudice – not due to race, but due to teaching style. Some principals taught before, and if an educator’s teaching style differs from the principal’s, the evaluation reflects that. Criteria is subjective no matter how specific the standard reads. Some decisions still depend on the evaluator’s opinion on whether the person evaluated meets the criteria.

Another reason is the end result. In business all materials meet certain dimensions, style, shape, etc. In education, the student does not come standardized. Instead, each student brings different strengths and areas of need. In a classroom, students’ reading levels vary 4-6 or more levels. Some students perform at the top of the grade level, or even exceed it while others read below, and far below their current grade level.

In many classrooms, there are students who receive Title I support for reading or math, and others attend special education classroom instruction. Some students bring abuse issues, hunger and shelter concerns, negligent parenting experiences, and various behavior problems to each classroom setting. Since the students’ abilities carry such disparities for a plethora of reasons in each classroom, what standard of student achievement might be used to determine if the teacher reached the goal for each student in the classroom?

For example, must they all read at grade level by the end of the nine months? If a third grade student begins the year reading at the primer (below 1st grade level), should we penalize the teacher through her wages if this student improves to 2nd grade reading level, but not third grade level? That’s three grade level increase. Some students increase from 2nd grade reading level to 3rd grade reading level in their nine months of school. This is the expected increase. What might be fair to expect from a teacher with a class full of students to receive a pay raise?

Teachers now must give interventions to those students not performing at grade level through 15-20 minute specialized lessons daily, or at least several times weekly in addition to the regular grade level required instruction through whole class and small group instruction. Imagine the time this requires and the in-depth knowledge of each students’ abilities in each subject taught.

Some classes include 5-8 special education students while others contain 1-2, or none at all. How fair is it to compare teacher performance on student achievement projections with disparity between classroom sections within the same grade level? Should each grade level have the same achievement level expectation?

There are teachers with 15, 20, 30 years experience as well as new first and second and third year teachers. Students are not “products” all built with the same materials with the same specifications, processed through an assembly line with each student receiving the same level of expertise and skill instruction. Performance-based compensation is not so cut and dried in education as it might be in business production.

I do agree teachers need to graduate with higher grade point levels. I worked with many who could not spell, compute math at sixth grade level, or read well. The college from which I graduated required at least a B grade point level in all subjects, and really pushed for ‘A’s.” The required teacher competency test included reading, writing, and math competency assessments. I had to pass all three at a high standard, or I could not receive my teaching degree. When I taught in Arizona, I had to take their competency test. It was easy compared to my Iowa test.

In graduate school for a master’s degree, I had to earn all A’s for the certification as a Specialist in Reading, K-12, and to earn the Iowa Specialist certification, it required two additional courses to have this on my Iowa teaching license.

I taught weekend courses for a university and frankly, some teachers complained about their assignments, yet I had to modify the content a lot to fit in three weekends instead of a full semester. Compared to what learned in a semester for course credits, I felt the grades and degrees earned from these weekend courses fell short. Yet, these graduate students received the same degrees and credits as those who took a course throughout a semester. Not all classes are equal. Therefore, not all educators are equal, and there are some teaching only because the unions protect them from being fired. How do the students benefit from this?

What are your thoughts about performance pay for teachers? Are there other factors to consider on this topic? I hope you comment below. Thank you for stopping by my site.

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As Easter Approaches …

For Me He DiedSoon Easter arrives! As this time of celebration approaches, a deep sadness hovers over me. Yet, greater than that sadness is an incredible excitement filled with hope that consumes my spirit.

I weep because of the pain I caused Jesus, the Messiah. It was my sin that sent Him to the cross. His blood spilled for me, for without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sin. He paid my sin debt in full and blotted out each one of them. God remembers my sin no more and separates them as far as the east is from the west. Praise God for His mercy and faithfulness!

Even though my unrighteousness was Christ’s motive to hang on the cross and die to offer a way for restoration in fellowship with the Father, it is His resurrection that renews  and restores me inside and out. Permeating through that guilt of His death because of me, is the joy that Christ arose and lives to intercede for me before the throne of His Father. I am fully forgiven as His sacrifice paid the debt in full and through His resurrection, I see that His Father accepted His Son’s sacrifice completely!  It is Christ’s resurrection that distinguishes Christianity from all other faiths. The perfect, sinless Lamb of God fulfilled the required sacrifice to allow a way for people to have fellowship with a Holy God across the chasm of sin.

Christ’s Holy Spirit consoles me as He dwells within me and guides me daily to walk in Christ’s ways. He molds me more and more into the likeness of Jesus as He helps me comprehend and apply God’s Word through daily meditation of prayer and reading the Bible. Knowing that I am a vessel that Christ uses daily to carry out His will and purposes on earth inspires and humbles me. Why would He use a failure and sinner like me?

Yet, He makes me fit for my Master’s use, a vessel to bring Him honor and glory. Man’s primary purpose for life is to glorify God, the Bible teaches. God works through weak people to accomplish His will because His strength is sufficient. He calls me His ambassador. In this honored position, I serve to reconcile others to Himself. I can think of no higher office than to serve Him in this way. 

The world is in darkness, yet Christ is the Light of the World. He stands as a Lighthouse, drawing people toward Himself through the storms of life to safety. May I be a beacon of light and hope to encourage and persuade people to follow the Light of Christ.

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The Emerald Isle

The Emerald Isle. I’d love to visit Ireland someday. I hope you enjoy this post as much as I do.

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Let’s meet up!

Let’s meet up!.

Anyone interested in deepening your faith, this is a website that provides you with that opportunity.

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About

About.

This is an interesting website I found.

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