From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis
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This summer, educators need to get some rest so that we can be our best. However, our professional accreditation requirements are still on track and need to be renewed, as we have to learn and up our abilities for the fall. As I look ahead to this summer and listen to educators, here are 21 hot topics that I think we should consider including in our summer PD. They fit into the categories of SEL, digital instruction, engagement/management, and leadership.
Plan Professional Development with Intentionality
Recently, while discussing the next steps for schools this fall with two instructional designers in the webinar “10 Ways to Move Learning Forward”, we identified ten considerations for school. (I’ve embedded the webinar below for you to review.) Many of the topics below were part of that conversation, including Social Emotional Learning (SEL).
As a result of this webinar and some research of my own, I compiled this list which I hope will serve as a quick menu for you and the teachers at your school to select summer professional development that will help you grow and learn. I’ve also included courses from this blog post sponsor, Advancement Courses that meet the criteria for each topic.
Social-Emotional Learning
Social-emotional learning (SEL) is right at the top of the list for many of us. We have to relate to educate. To better relate, we have to understand where students are emotionally so that we can connect with them, get them any extra help they might need, and move them forward.
SEL isn’t about manipulation it’s about human connection; and of all the things we need to do, connecting with one another and regulating ourselves emotionally is right at the top of the list. Let’s look at some areas we can all improve.
SEL isn’t about manipulation, it’s about human connection; and of all the things we need to do, connecting with one another and regulating ourselves emotionally is right at the top of the list.
1. Student Mental Health (Including Anxiety and Depression)
Understanding mental health is more important than ever. Recently, I had to educate myself on the current trends in helping students who are anxious, depressed, worried, or just need guidance about the future.
Understanding student mental health can also help us with others who we meet in our world today. Students need us to understand them so we can teach them. These courses will give you a start.
Courses about Student Mental Health
Strategies for Addressing Student Anxiety
With the strategies and interventions you learn in this course, you will be able to create a classroom environment where students can successfully cope with stressors and instead focus on learning.
Helping Children Overcome Depression
Using the resources and strategies from this course, you will be able to support your students struggling with depression to help them redirect their thinking and pursue academic success in spite of the challenges they’re facing.
2. How to Reach Students Who Have Experienced Trauma
You nor I can know or understand what children have experienced in this time of challenge and upheaval. So, we have to learn how to reach and teach students who have experienced trauma. We don’t need to know what it is, but we do need to recognize that the trauma is there. In my experience, I’ve found that assuming that students have experienced trauma of some kind is more likely than assuming that they haven’t.
Helping Students Overcome Trauma
In this course, you will explore the different types of trauma and how they affect students’ behavior and academic performance. You’ll learn how to identify conditions such as PTSD and how to help students through natural and healthy grieving processes. In addition, you’ll explore strategies for proactively coping with trauma, including creating student-led support groups and peer counseling programs, getting students involved with community outreach programs, and partnering with local and national organizations focused on processing trauma.
With the resources and techniques from this course, you will be equipped to create a program that helps your students heal and thrive in spite of life’s hardest griefs and tragedies.
3. How to Connect to Students and Understand Their Emotions (SEL)
Teachers around the world are using mood check-ins, emotional temp checks, and other methods for connecting. Even when connecting at a distance instead of in person, we can all benefit from learning some skills to connect with students on an emotional level, even while delivering classroom instruction.
SEL Courses
Assessment Strategies for SEL
In this course, you’ll get up to speed on current practices in SEL, including the history and legislation that has propelled it to the forefront of our educational focus. You’ll explore emotional intelligence models and various methods for collecting data, so you’ll be equipped to decide which instruments are right for your school or district to measure SEL growth. In addition, you’ll create practical tools such as rubrics for teacher observation, surveys for self-assessment reports, and data collection checklists and notes for interviews. Finally, you’ll choose your last lesson to either explore the long-term economic and social value of SEL instruction so you can encourage your school or district to invest in this important movement or discover the ways you can easily implement SEL instruction and assessment into your current routine.
Creating Meaningful Relationships and Setting Boundaries with your Students
In this course, you will examine the fundamental strategies involved in building meaningful relationships and setting boundaries with your students. You’ll learn foundational concepts of interpersonal relationships, learner-centered instruction, the role of the teacher as a facilitator and advisor, the impact of the learning environment on the development of meaningful relationships, authentic learning, and inquiry-based teaching. In addition, you’ll cultivate techniques for establishing good rapport while maintaining healthy boundaries, even with hard-to-reach students.
4. Engaging Students Online Who Are Experiencing Anxiety
Some students are not yet ready or cannot return to in-person learning. It can be more challenging to engage these students online. Skills for online engagement with students who are experiencing anxiety (and trauma) can be especially helpful for educators struggling with student disengagement in online classrooms.
Student Anxiety in Online Learning
In this course, you’ll analyze anxiety brought about by technology immersion as an overactive fight–flight–freeze survival response. Based on information systems research, you’ll explore the concept of “technostress” and its triggers, how to spot it in your students, and how it impacts learning. You’ll examine common mistakes in addressing anxiety, as well as how to work with parents to help students through technostress and when to reach out for additional help. Finally, you’ll learn traditional best practices and digital solutions available to students to offset some of the anxiety they’re experiencing.
5. Better Relating to Parents
Now more than ever, parents and teachers need closer partnerships if we’re going to help children. However, how do educators relate to parents, as many parents have also experienced trauma? Developing and improving parent communication plans and understanding how to better connect with parents will help educators help students even more, particularly if those students are learning from home.
Courses About Improving
Parent Relationships
Partnering with Parents for Student Success
According to Dr. Susan M. Sheridan (n.d.), “Research shows that when a partnership approach between parents and teachers is evident, children’s work habits, attitudes about school and grades improve. They demonstrate better social skills, fewer behavioral problems and a greater ability to adapt to situations and get along.” As educators, we want what’s best for our students! It is our job to establish, foster, and maintain productive relationships with parents so that our students can be successful.
Forming Community Partnerships to Access Educational Resources
In this course for school leaders, you will explore methods for seeking out and partnering with community members to gain a variety of resources for your school. You’ll learn from other school leaders who have successfully built a network of contacts and resources, and develop strategies to help you do the same in your community. In addition, you’ll learn how to create a well-balanced presentation of your schools’ current needs to energize community members to get involved.
By the end of the course, you’ll have a practical plan to drive more educational opportunities for your students through the power of community partnerships.
6. Self-Care for Educators
Teachers have to rest to be their best. Additionally, educators have to be healthy and whole in order to rise to the monumental tasks laid upon them in classrooms today. We must learn to have good health and wellness so we can be better classroom teachers tomorrow. If your school lets you take such a course, I think most of us would benefit.
Achieving Work-Life Harmony in Teaching
During the course, you will develop strategies and practices to apply immediately in your practices as you assess your stress and its causes, as well as implementing new rituals and routines that ease distress through understanding the concept of resilience.
Self-Care Strategies for Teachers
You will learn techniques for how to stop absorbing stressors, manage challenging situations, build long-term self-care strategies for all areas of your life, and track your progress through a series of somatic and emotional self-evaluations. This course gives you the opportunity to invest in yourself so you can build a more grounded, inspired, and sustainable career in education.
7. Home/School Life Balance Strategies
When school and online learning follow you everywhere, teachers and students need to learn balance. Additionally, as students are completing instruction and asking questions 24/7, educators need to know how to balance and set healthy boundaries to continue teaching effectively in the long term. If more educators cannot establish firm home/school life balance strategies, then I sadly predict that we will see many more incredible educators leave the profession.
Creating Work-Life Harmony in Teaching
Using the techniques from this course, you’ll be able to create a personalized set of practices that will help you maximize what’s most important in your personal and professional life.
Becoming a Calm, Happy Teacher
The techniques will help you create more life balance so that you can cultivate more well-being for yourself and your classroom. The strategies will not only help you be more engaged, present, and fulfilled as a teacher, but you’ll also apply your learning to your classroom and your students.
Online and Digital Instruction
As we work to instruct students in blended learning and online classrooms, we should continue to update our abilities to instruct students in digital spaces.
8. Online Instructional Engagement
Students are ghosting. In fact, sometimes students who turn on their cameras are the exception. How can teachers engage students when they cannot require students to turn on their camera? How can teachers in classrooms engage students in the digital platforms used to supplement and personalize learning? These are the questions of the hour right now for educators everywhere.
Engaging Students in Online Learning
ONLINE ENGAGEMENT
Using the tools from this course, you’ll be able to plan fun and interesting online instruction that meets a variety of learning needs.
Fostering Student Interaction in Online Learning
THE VERSATILE BLOCK
Using the best practices from this course, you will be able to help increase student-to-student engagement and foster a greater love of learning.
9. Online Assessment
Assessment must respect learners, provide actionable feedback, and motivate. Sometimes this feels like a Herculean task, but there are best practices to help all of us get better at assessment. When you take time to improve assessment, students can improve their learning.
Courses about Online Assessment
Jumpstarting Online Assessments
By incorporating dynamic, engaging online assessment into your class, you will be able to help your students navigate the online learning space and achieve the same standards as a face-to-face classroom.
Designing Online Assessments for Students
Using the techniques from this course, you’ll be able to incorporate online assessments in your class in a way that makes sense for your context and that will help your students learn and grow on a deeper level.
10. Student Accountability in Online Learning
How can educators hold students accountable while still respecting individual family situations? Student accountability is a hot topic this year, but it’s not a new topic. Best practices already exist for holding students accountable in a way that motivates them. We can all improve in this area.
Student Accountability in Online Learning
In this course, you’ll learn to harness the power of authentic learning experiences to help students see how their learning is meaningful and connected to the real world. You’ll learn the importance of developing students’ executive functioning skills to foster independent learning and investigate ways to create classroom spaces and curricula that are inviting and engaging. In addition, you’ll explore ways to get families involved and build support systems that empower students to learn.
Finally, you’ll assess your school and classroom practices to ensure they are equitable for all learners, and that they motivate students to achieve their highest potential. Using the techniques from this course, you’ll be able to put students in the driver’s seat by teaching them to manage, measure, and be excited about their own learning.
11. Education Technology Accessibility for All Students
Many technology tools require teacher customization in order for all students to access the content. Additionally, other tools limit the accessability for those who learn differently or have physical challenges. Accessibility is another hot topic that also relates to equity and inclusion in the digital classroom. We all must improve the accessibility of our digital content.
Courses About How to
Make EdTech Accessible
Accessibility in the Digital Classroom
In this course, you’ll explore both the foundational elements of online accessibility and the nitty-gritty technical knowledge you need to create an accessible digital classroom. Through the principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL), you’ll learn how to better represent content, create a more engaging experience, and improve outcomes for all learners. In addition, you’ll look at design principles and technical tools that will help you make online learning a reality for learners with a variety of different needs.
By the end of this course, you’ll have the knowledge and tools you need to create or modify digital learning materials to be more accessible to all students
Equity in the Digital Classroom
In this course, you’ll take a deep dive into the “digital divide” that can develop when education moves online. Not every student experiences online learning in the same way or with the same supports in place, so we’ll examine the challenges for different student populations, including low-income and homeless students, struggling learners, English language learners, and students who experience mental health challenges such as depression, anxiety, or ADHD. Most importantly, you’ll learn how to address these issues of inequity, including targeted strategies to help you bridge the digital divide and create an even playing field for all students.
By the end of this course, you’ll have a roadmap for how to avoid the pitfalls of online learning and plan an equitable learning experience for all your students.
12. Fun Learning Strategies for Engaging Students Who Have Been Disengaged (Game-based Learning)
We can play games and learn with digital games and activities that engage learners in the face-to-face and online classrooms. Level up and have fun while learning with courses that help you improve your ability to play games, learn, and teach at the same time.
Game-Based
Learning
Let’s Play! Creating a Playful Classroom
Throughout the course, you’ll learn how to create playful instructional experiences for your unique classroom community. You’ll be able to make the case for play in your classroom, explore the connection between play and creativity, understand the role of trust and relationships in play, and get to know the playful mindset.
Using techniques from this course, you will transform your classroom into one that is meaningful, relevant, and most of all, fun!
Level Up! Student Achievement Through Gamification and Game-Based Learning
In this course, you will take an in-depth look at games, gaming culture, and game design to identify the characteristics of gameplay that make it such a powerful learning tool.
By the end of this course, you will be equipped with strategies for creating and selecting educational games that are best suited for your content, your grade level, and your students’ unique interests and needs.
Topics for Every Classroom: Online and Face-to-Face
13. How to Help Students Who Have Been Disengaged by Learning Gaps
Learning gaps are the hot topic of the moment as schools and teachers wrestle with the reality that some students will return to school behind by a whole grade level — or more. What does a teacher do when a student isn’t even on the first page of this year’s textbook? The traditional problems of helping students who are behind is magnified by the struggles with student engagement during the pandemic. Helping students progress quickly is the challenge facing schools everywhere.
14. Reaching Every Student Through Differentiation.
If teachers continue to use the same approach for every student, some learners will disengage. Differentiated instruction is one of my favorite methods to help students learn and engage with content as I use technology. This topic will benefit teachers in face-to-face and online classrooms everywhere.
Differentiated Instruction
In this course, you will master the skills necessary to effectively differentiate instruction for optimal achievement by all students. You will learn how to identify individual students’ needs and learning styles, and create activities and tiered lessons that will meet those needs. You will cultivate different strategies for grouping students, arranging your classroom, and using cognitive approaches that help students take ownership of their learning.
15. Equity and Inclusion
Including and engaging all students is vital to helping every child thrive. Courses in cultural sensitivity and inclusion can help educators everywhere bring everyone into the learning.
Fostering Cultural Awareness and Inclusivity in the Classroom
After participating in this course, you’ll be able to approach instruction with an awareness of your own biases and will be more adept at fostering inclusion and better meeting the needs of your learners.
Implementing Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies
Whether you’re looking to make your classroom and lesson plans more culturally inclusive or start a schoolwide initiative, this course will give you the tools you need to be truly inclusive, culturally responsive, and capable of understanding and reaching all children.
Cultural Diversity in the Digital Classroom
By the end of this course, you’ll have practical, meaningful strategies and ideas to become more culturally responsive in a digital learning environment and help your students feel more included and motivated even when they’re physically far apart.
16. Helping Special Needs Students Succeed
Students who struggle to learn and have special accommodations require adjustments for teachers, particularly in online classrooms. However, there are methods to make it easier for educators to reach every child.
Communicating with Parents of Students with Special Needs
Using the tools and techniques from this course, you will be able to cultivate a positive, caring relationship with your students’ families and effectively share their progress so you can work together toward their child’s success.
The General Educator’s Guide to Special Education
With the strategies and best practices from this course, you will be equipped to better serve students with disabilities regardless of your grade, subject area, or teaching context.
Cultural Competency in Special Education
By the end of this course, you will have the self-reflection and pedagogical skills you need to continually grow and respond to the needs of your special education students.
17. Classroom Management
For me, the concepts I learned in Harry Wong’s The First Days of School changed my classroom for the better. If behavior is a problem, often learning better classroom management techniques can help teachers provide students with more opportunities for success. I know that better classroom management has helped me.
A Well-Managed Classroom for 21st-Century Educators
With the tools and techniques from this course, you’ll be able to build a thriving, positive learning environment for your students—and for you.
Curbing Disruptive Behavior
Using the proven, practical solutions from this course, you will be equipped to take back control of your classroom—starting today.
Classroom Management for Online Learning
By the end of this course, you’ll be able to confidently build and manage an online classroom to maximize learning for all students.
18. Digital Citizenship and Self-Control for Students Using Technology
Appropriate online behavior, online safety, and personal privacy are all topics for students to master as they move to learning that is strongly technology-enhanced. Self-control has also loomed as a vital issue. Digital citizenship topics can help students and teachers get on the same page and create a safer online space.
Respect, Educate, and Protect: Cultivating Digital Citizenship in 21st-Century Learners
Using the techniques from this course, you will be able to instill in your students important 21st-century skills and empower them to use technology in a safe and responsible manner throughout their lives.
Teaching Media Literacy in Post-Truth World
From the design of the learning environment to expectation setting and more, it’s critical to create an environment in which all students, regardless of their opinions or background, have an opportunity to fairly express their thoughts.
Teacher Leadership and School Health
19. How to Retain Excellent Teachers at Your School
Teachers (and substitute teachers) are becoming scarce. The best schools will retain and attract the best teachers. Administrators and teacher leaders need to understand the techniques to do this and help their school succeed.
Recruiting, Retaining, and Reengaging Excellent Teachers
By investing your time in this course, you will be able to proactively build and keep a great staff for years to come, saving yourself time and headaches down the road.
20. Effective Instructional Coaching Techniques
Whether online or face-to-face, all of us teachers (me included) can improve. However, instructional coaching can be done in a way that either fosters improvement or resentment. Learning effective instructional coaching techniques is essential for those empowered to help teachers level up their pedagogical approaches.
Creating an Effective Instructional Coaching Program for Your School
By investing your time in this course, you will be able to proactively build and keep a great staff for years to come, saving yourself time and headaches down the road.
21. Teacher Leadership and Helping Teacher Cohorts Progress Together
Teachers can create powerful learning communities as they band together to progress and learn with one another. Effective schools create nurturing Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) and use other techniques to help teachers level up and learn together. Learn the techniques and develop plans to help your school improve.
Teachers as Leaders
With the knowledge and techniques from this course, you will be able to sharpen your leadership skills so you can better serve your colleagues and improve your team, school, and district.
The Seven Domains of Teacher Leadership
By the end of this course, you’ll be equipped to make a meaningful impact on your school’s improvement efforts and create a more equitable learning environment for your students.
Maximizing Teacher Success Through Small-Group Collaboration
Using the techniques from this course, you will be able to form and manage productive, growth-oriented groups for better collaboration among your peers.
Pick A Course and Make Progress
I recently shared how I selected my summer professional development and which course I’ll begin taking in June. I like Advancement Courses because they have practical outcomes and give me six months to complete the work. Remember to use my offer code COOL20 to receive 20% off your course registration.
Let’s do this!
The post 21 Top Professional Development Topics For Teachers Now appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!
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