Friday, August 9, 2013
Perspectives on a new year at PCHS
Monday, August 5, 2013
The First Day
By: Julie Morris, Eighth Grade Teacher
No matter what our age, the anticipation of the first day of school is very similar. At bedtime the night before that new day, we visualize the perfect day with our closest friends gathered around us. Our teacher of course is funny, sweet and very helpful to bring us all the knowledge we need to obtain. Our students are all well behaved, prepared, and ready to learn. We picture ourselves looking our best and we want to make a good first impression. Student or teacher, we are much more conscious of how we dress and look because we want to be accepted by everyone. Inside of the excitement, sleep does not come easy.
The silence of the first day is deceiving and known by teachers to be a temporary utopia but a nice beginning. Students sit watching their teachers and waiting to see what word of direction they are given. The honeymoon period will be brief and eventually the discovery of one another’s deepest darkest secrets and personality traits will come forth. The new shiny shoes and neatly pressed clothes will tarnish and stain with time but as in the past will become as accepted and understood as the bond of trust between one another.
Students are prepared with their “bouquets of sharpened pencils.” Notebook and supplies in hand are ready to be used. No one complains when they are told to get to work. We are ready to get back in the saddle to complete the task before us. Children are eager to help one another find where to go and what to do. Kindness and consideration are dominant traits on this fresh day.
Just as the morning was anticipated, the end of the day is just as desired. Our brains become mush and we cannot discuss one more procedure or rule because the cup is overflowing and the warmth of the “new school year” has cooled. We are ready to go home, refresh and return tomorrow.
We have survived the first day of school and the next day will not look the same. So the journey begins for our bonding, growing, and learning together. Like the days and years which have passed, the excitement will wane as the relationships – good and not so good – begin.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
What should schooling look like?
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Budget: Beyond the Numbers
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
What is the Common Core?
by Kevin Huffstetler, Pike Elementary School Principal
Friday, March 15, 2013
The Technology Dilemma
My IPhone and I are in a relationship, rarely apart and mutually dependent. I was thinking the other day how it all began. Simply enough, it all started so I could be reached anywhere and anytime by telephone in case of an emergency; then, it was a way to organize my calendar on the go; soon, it was my primary professional and social tool-a 24/7 connection blurring the lines between work and play, an ever-present reminder that someone needed something right now all the time.
Digital devices such as, IPhones, Androids, IPads, Tablets, IPods, Netbooks, laptops, desktops (anyone have these anymore?), and E-Readers, are the pen and paper of our time. In a recent survey at Pike High, Over 65% of students had a device that was capable of accessing the World Wide Web and 80% used a digital device for social media. This is a game changer for education. Students have, at their finger-tips, access to the library of human knowledge. As one Florida High School student stated in an article on how technology is impacting education, "The need to know the capital of Florida died when my cell phone knew the answer."
The concept of educators pouring knowledge into the open minds of our youth is an outdated metaphor. Digital devices allow students to consume vast amounts of information relatively easy. But the new economy doesn't want a digital consumer, it wants a digital creator, a digital problem solver, a digital collaborator, a digital communicator.
Last week, a team of parents and educators visited Forysth County Public Schools in north metro Atlanta. They are widely considered to be one of the State's most forward thinking school districts with technology integration. We witnessed students in every classroom using digital devices in a variety of ways. Cell phones, tablets, and laptop computers were as ever-present as one would think a calculator and a textbook would be in an Algebra class. The level of engagement was amazing-students of all ages were using a variety of applications and websites collaboratively with classmates to work toward meeting the curriculum standards.
I left Forsyth County energized about the possibilities, but utterly demoralized when I thought about the competitive advantage the Forsyth students had on our students. I began to compartmentalize a couple of the issues: 1) Infrastructure-even after our million-dollar upgrade, Forsyth Central High School has ten times the bandwidth we do for our entire school system; 2) Support-each school in Forsyth has a dedicated Instructional Technology Specialist planning professional development and supporting technology integration in the classrooms. For us, the journey is indeed a long one, but as a famous Chinese philosopher said, "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step".
Thursday, February 28, 2013
District Announces Opening of Agriculture STEM Academy
The Pike County School System is dedicated to preparing students for 21st Century careers by providing high quality educational opportunities in STEM. STEM represents the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. STEM education encourages a curriculum that is driven by problem solving, discovery, exploratory learning, and student-centered development of ideas and solutions. The saturation of technology in most fields means that all students – not just those who plan to pursue a STEM profession – will require a solid foundation in STEM to be productive members of the workforce.
Pike County High School will welcome students to the first STEM Academy in the fall of 2013. The high school’s approach to STEM education will integrate Geometry and Biology with Agriculture. All three will be Gifted/Honors courses scheduled during first through third periods. Three sections of students in the STEM Academy will take these three courses to start each school day. This schedule will provide the opportunity for flexible grouping, multi-period labs, guest speakers, field trips, and common planning for STEM Academy teachers.
Agriculture is the vehicle providing technology and engineering to the STEM Academy. Agriculture is also the perfect subject matter to bring relevance to the STEM Academy in Pike County. The school system is located in the heart of Georgia’s agricultural economy, and it is within minutes of the University of Georgia’s Agriculture experiment station at the Griffin campus. These resources will provide outstanding resources for students to experience firsthand how science, technology, engineering, and mathematics impact agriculture and everyday life. This academy isn't just for students pursuing careers in agriculture, but for students wishing to engage in a rigorous course of study in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.