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Terry Booth

Registration for All Teacher Training - Multiple Locations - Sept. 25/26/27, 2012 - 0 views

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    Click here to register for a session What:
    The Division of Special Education has scheduled an All Teacher Training on the dates and locations below. The training will review the special education process and forms. All trainings will be from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. PLEASE NOTE: THIS TRAINING WILL NOT INCLUDE INFORMATION ON COMPLETING THE AIM SPECIAL EDUCATION FORMS. Contact your special education director about training in the AIM special education forms. Where/When:
    Glendive - September 25, 2012
    Dawson Community College
    300 College Dr. Kalispell - September 25,2012
    Red Lion Hotel
    20 North Main Street Billings - September 26,2012
    Hilton Garden Inn
    2465 Grant Road Hamilton - September 26, 2012
    Bitterroot River Inn
    139 Bitterroot Place  Fort Benton - September 27, 2012
    Grand Hotel
    1 Grand Union Square Helena - September 27, 2012
    Holiday Inn Downtown
    22 N. Last Chance
danny hagfeldt

Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling (LETRS) for Early Childhood Ed... - 0 views

  • Click here to download flyer (PDF)What:Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling (LETRS) for Early Childhood Educators is a supplemental LETRS module based on a growing body of research that says the more children know about language and literacy before they begin formal schooling, the better equipped they are to succeed in reading. This two session presentation describes the scope and sequence of the module, helping preschool and kindergarten teachers to deepen their understanding of early literacy and enhance their strategies to help young children develop the foundation skills needed for learning to read and write.$75.00 Registration Fee - includes copy of LETRS for Early Childhood Educators (non-refundable payable to: Montana Center on Disabilities).You can register online here!When:Registration is from 8:00 am to 8:30 am January 13, 2012 and March 2, 20128:30 AM - 4:00 PMWhere:MSU-Billings College of Education Building Room 122Billings, MT1500 University DriveContact:Debra Miller Email: dmiler@msubillings.eduPhone: 406-657-2072
Roger Holt

Personalized Learning Requires Effective Teaching First..Technology, Second.... - Leadi... - 0 views

  • On Tuesday, July 10, the US Department of Education (ED) hosted "What Teachers Need to Know about Personalized Learning" as part of their Teacher Summer Seminars. Richard Culatta, Deputy Director of the Office of Educational Technology, Matthew McCrea, Science Instructional Lead Teacher at G. James Gholson Middle School in Maryland, and I discussed our perspectives on promoting personalized learning in schools from the policy, classroom, and staff development perspective.
Roger Holt

Teaching Ahead: A Roundtable - What Should Teachers Tell Parents About the Common Core?... - 0 views

  • In your view, what role should teachers play in informing parents about the common standards? How can they effectively help parents and other stakeholders understand why and how instruction is changing? Have competing viewpoints about the standards affected your approach to talking to parents about them?
Terry Booth

Empowering Educators to Implement Effective Mathematics Instruction Practices for All L... - 0 views

  • When/Where: October 4, 2010 Fifth Avenue Christian Church Havre, MT October 5, 2010 Hampton Inn Great Falls, MT Free Training For: Elementary and middle school teachers Special education teachers Therapists Administrators Reading teachers Paraprofessionals Parents. The purpose of this Level II professional development is to: Focus on specifics in instructional practices for mathematics; evaluating and enhancing mathematics curricula to meet the needs of learners; progress monitoring (National Council of Teachers of Math Big Ideas Probe). Advice for diagnostic throughout the school year using Curriculum Based Measurements and Mathematics Diagnostic Assessment. Differentiating math for students with diverse levels of mathematical competency by using data and key ideas for differentiated instruction. Action goals/plans for follow up using Video-Conference Sessions.
Roger Holt

Many teachers have little or no experience - Education Nation - msnbc.com - 0 views

  • As children around the country settle in for the new school year, millions of them are sharing more than desks, sandwiches and sniffles. Chances are good that they are being taught by teachers with little or no experience. The odds that a child will be taught by a new teacher have increased dramatically over the past two decades. In 1987-'88, the most common level of experience among the nation's 3 million K-12 public school teachers was 14 years in the classroom.  By 2007-'08, students were most likely to encounter a teacher with just one or two years of experience.
Meliah Bell

Help! Our Students All Have iPads: Now What? - Webinar - Dec. 13, 2012 - 0 views

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    Click here to register for this webinar What:
    Have you done a school or district iPad implementation? Now that all the logistics are somewhat under control, are your teachers struggling with how to effectively utilize iPads in the classroom? Join this webinar to learn how to set your teachers up for success by providing them resources on:
    - 21st Century Student Assessment using Filmmaking
    - 21st Century Student Assessment using Animation
    - 21st Century Student Assessment using Podcasting workshop
    - Authentic Assessment using iPads When:
    Thursday, December 13, 2012
    12:00pm Mountain Standard Time Contact:
    Click here to submit any questions or concerns
Sierra Boehm

Indian Education for All: An Integrated Approach - Billings - Apr. 30, 2013 - 0 views

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    Click here to register for this workshop

    What:
    This workshop will employ the "Many Birds Approach" from the Framework for Implementation of Indian Education for All (IEfA) to support teachers as they develop understanding of IEfA contexts and content, while addressing the skills and concepts required to implement the Montana Common Core Standards. Teachers will leave with a dozen new strategies for close analytic reading practiced in the context of some of the highly developed, and Common Core aligned, IEfA Language Arts, Social Studies and Science lessons. Strategies practiced can be taken the next day into the classroom. Demonstrations will span multiple grade levels and content areas and will be debriefed through the lens of the MCCS and the Framework's approach to integration. If you are looking for a way to jump start your implementation of the Common Core Standards and IEfA, this is the workshop of YOU.  This workshop is available free for MSUB students.

    When:
    Tuesday, April 30, 2013
    8:30 am registration
    9:00 am - 4:00 pm Mountain (lunch is on your own) Where:
    Montana State University Billings, Room 122
    1500 University Dr.
    Billings, MT 59101 Cost:
    $50.00 - MSUB Students get in free. 6 OPI Renewal Credits Contact:
    John Keener, MRESA3 Project Coordinator
    (406)-657-1743 or mailto:%20john.keene
Sierra Boehm

Aligning Content Area Curriculum with the Montana Common Core - Hamilton, Missoula - Mu... - 0 views

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    Click here to register for this course - Course #2909 (Hamilton) or Course #2910 (Missoula)
    Click here to view the course report #2909
    Click here to view the course report #2910 What:
    This training will provide a cadre of secondary content area teachers with an opportunity to deepen understanding of the standards and how literacy instruction is currently being delivered in classrooms to meet the needs of diverse learners. Time will be devoted to developing units and assessments as well as researching resources. The structure of the training will allow teachers to implement new strategies in classrooms and bring back results to share with colleagues. When:
    Hamilton, MT - Tuesdays, April 9th, 23rd, and May 7th
    Missoula, MT - Wednesdays, April 10th, 24th, and May 15th
    All classes held 4:30 pm - 6:30 pm Mountain Where:
    Exact locations to be announced soon Cost:
    $85.00 per person or $60.00 each for two or more (group rate)

Sierra Boehm

Save The Date - All Teacher Training and Transition Guidelines - Sept. 17, 18, 19, 2013 - 1 views

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    What:
    The Division of Special Education has scheduled an All Teacher Training in the cities and on the dates below. Specific locations and registration information will follow in August. The training will review the special education process and forms.

    When:
    Glasgow, September 17, 2013
    Whitefish, September 17, 2013
    Conrad, September 18, 2013
    Billings, September 19, 2013
    Bozeman, September 20, 2013
    All trainings will be from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mountain
Sierra Boehm

Montana Common Core Standards and Indian Education for All: An Integrated Approach - Bi... - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event
    View the flyer for this event

    What:
    This workshop is an excellent opportunity to learn how to weave the English Language Arts Common Core Standards with Indian Education for All.  Presenter Dr. Tammy Elser will employ the "Many Birds Approach" from the Framework for Implementation of Indian Education for All (IEfA) to support teachers as they develop understanding of IEfA contexts and content, while addressing the skills and concepts required to implement the Montana Common Core Standards. Teachers will leave with a dozen new strategies for close analytic reading practiced in the context of some of the highly developed, and Common Core aligned, IEfA Language Arts, Social Studies and Science lessons. Strategies practiced can be taken the next day into the classroom. Demonstrations will span multiple grade levels and content areas and will be debriefed through the lens of the MCCS and the Framework's approach to integration.

    When:
    Tuesday, April 30, 2013
    9:00 am - 4:00 pm Mountain

    Where:
    MSUB College of Education, Room 122
    1500 University Dr.
    Billings, MT 59101

    Cost:
    $50.00 per person, MSUB students free.
Sierra Boehm

Paraeducators Academies - Columbus - Mar. 4, 2013 - 0 views

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    Click here to download the flier for this event

    What:
    Behavior Management Academy Overview: The purpose of this academy is to provide the paraprofessional with the information and skills needed to assist classroom teachers in meeting the behavior needs of a variety of students. It deals with rules, routines, and procedures for students. The paraprofessional will be able to identify behavior, the motivations for behavior, and be able to teach and reinforce behaviors. An understanding of the role of the paraprofessional in behavior support will be developed.
    Autism Spectrum Disorders Academy Overview: The purpose of this Academy is to provide the paraeducator with information and skills to be able to assist teachers in the instruction of students with autism. It gives factual information to dispel the many myths that abound in the field of autism, and emphasizes the relationship between communication and behavior. It prepares paraeducators to make and use visual supports, to structure tasks and the environment, and to provide appropriate supports for social skills instruction. When:
    Monday, March 4, 2013
    8:00 am - 4:00 pm Mountain Where:
    Columbus High School
    433 North Third St.
    Columbus, MT 59019 Cost:
    Free Registration:
    To Register Contact Monica Pugh
    Stillwater/Sweet Grass Coop.
    (406) 322-5298
    ssgpugh11@yahoo.com  
Sierra Boehm

Mapping Media to the Common Core - Webinar - Multiple Dates in March, April and May - 0 views

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    Click here to register for this course - Course #2876
    Click here to view the flier for this event

    What:
    The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) require both students and teachers to demonstrate digital literacy skills by publishing texts online and developing communication skills through the use of different technology tools. The Mapping Media to the Common Core course (part 1) introduces teachers to six different multimedia products which students can create to meet the CCSS requirements; These strategies can also be used to differentiate instruction to meet the  needs of students with disabilities or those with high abilities! Each participant will use an iPad to access the interactive course eBook, as well as, create and share a variety of media products during the course.   Participants will need access to an iPad for this course.

    When:
    March 7, 2013 - Introduction (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    March 14, 2013 - Interactive Writing (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    March 28, 2013 - Narrated Art (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    April 11, 2013 - Radio Show (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    April 25, 2013 - Five- Photo Story (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    May 9, 2013 - Visual Notetaking (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)
    May 23, 2013 - Narrated Slideshow/Screencast (4:30 pm - 5:30 pm Mountain)

    Where:
    Sessions will be offered electronically at Vision Net Sites.
    Contact Kay Fladstohl at kay.fladstol@vision.net  or 406-750-4379 to reserve a site near you.
         or
    https://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&gl=us&daddr=32+Campus+Dr,+Mis
Roger Holt

Coaching Self-Advocacy to Children With Disabilities - 0 views

  • Although there are a variety of school-based services available for children with learning, emotional, and social disabilities, one critical need often goes unfulfilled: providing guidance and strategies that instill self-advocacy.       Most students have only a superficial notion of the reasons they receive these special accommodations, and many children are completely uninformed. Resource teachers and specialists do not generally have the authority to label and enlighten students about their disabilities, the foundation for building self-advocacy. If children are to learn how to become better consumers of educational resources, especially as they grow older, someone must take the lead.      Parents of children with disabilities can fill this role by doing the following: Introduce children’s diagnoses to them in elementary school so that they can make sense out of their struggles Use a matter-of-fact tone of voice when explaining to children that they learn/behave/relate differently from other students and, therefore, need extra help to ensure that they can succeed just like their classmates Don’t leave out the disability label—such as writing disability, ADHD, or Aspergers Syndrome—since labels are a reality of their educational life Emphasize that the teachers and special staff at school who help them will be aware of this label and prepared to help in certain ways to make school a fairer place for them to learn and grow      It’s important to review with children the ways in which their school must provide special help and services. Emphasize that these accommodations are rules the school must follow. “You have the responsibility to do your best job, and teachers must follow the learning/behavior/friendship helping rules that make things fair for you,” is one way to put it. Explain how extra time on assessments, decreased homework, or social skills groups are examples of the helping rules that schools must follow. Discuss how there is a written promise called the individualized education plan (IEP), which includes all the helping rules and makes all of this clear.      Find child-friendly resources—such as books, websites, and videos—that explain in detail their specific disability and the ways other children have learned to cope and achieve despite these limitations. Use these materials as a springboard for deeper discussion about past times when their disability created significant stress or barriers to success. Reassure them that this was before their problem was known and that there is so much that can be done to build a plan for success now that it has been identified.      Point out that one of their most important responsibilities is to be able to discuss their disability with teachers and ask for extra help and accommodation when struggles are too great. Make sure that these discussions take place before middle school, when developmental factors make it harder to get such discussions started. Ensure that they know what practical steps are in their IEP at each grade so that they can respectfully remind teaching staff if necessary.      Having a disability is like having to wear glasses; students with glasses have accepted this fact as necessary to seeing clearly.
Roger Holt

Education Week: It's Time for New Ideas in Teacher Training - 0 views

  • There's been a lot of buzz lately about ventures such as High Tech High's Graduate School of Education in San Diego and Relay Graduate School of Education in New York City. These private schools of education, associated with charter schools and other reform efforts, are issuing master's degrees and promoting a clinical model of teacher education in which most learning occurs in the same place where teachers do their jobs—a classroom full of kids—rather than through traditional college coursework.
Terry Booth

All Teacher Training and Transition Guidelines - Multiple Locations - Multiple Dates in... - 0 views

  •  
    What:
    The Division of Special Education will be scheduling an All Teacher Training in the cities and on the dates below. Specific locations and registration information will follow in August. The training will review the special education process and forms. All trainings will be from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Where/When: Glendive - September 25, 2012 Kalispell - September 25, 2012 Billings - September 26, 2012 Hamilton - September 26,2012 Fort Benton - September 27, 2012 Helena - September 27, 2012
Terry Booth

Ready, Set, SCIENCE! - Billings - Sept. 29, 2012 - 0 views

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    Click here to learn more and to register What:
    This one-day workshop will give you a chance to experience some activity-based lessons, make connections to the current research on student learning, and think about how to teach science in ways that engage and excite both you and your students. This workshop will be based on Ready, Set, SCIENCE!: Putting Research to Work in K-8 Science Classrooms. What types of instructional experiences help K-8 students learn science with understanding? What do science educators, teachers, teacher leaders, science specialists, professional development staff, curriculum designers, and school administrators need to know to create and support such experiences? Ready, Set, Science! guides the way with an account of the groundbreaking and comprehensive synthesis of research into teaching and learning science in kindergarten through eighth grade. When:
    Saturday, September 29, 2012
    9:00am - 4:00pm Mountain Where:
    Montana State University Billings
    1500 University Drive
    Billings, MT 59101
Roger Holt

Some of Nation's Finest Talk About Teaching in Rural America | ED.gov Blog - 0 views

  • When the White House recently celebrated the latest class of National Board Certified teachers, several of the honorees traveled to Washington from some of America’s most remote and distant rural communities to receive the teaching profession’s highest credential. During their visit, we caught up with these rural teachers to hear their stories about what it’s like to teach in rural America.
  • When the White House recently celebrated the latest class of National Board Certified teachers, several of the honorees traveled to Washington from some of America’s most remote and distant rural communities to receive the teaching profession’s highest credential. During their visit, we caught up with these rural teachers to hear their stories about what it’s like to teach in rural America.
danny hagfeldt

Paraeducator Mid-Winter Conference: Instructional Strategies that Promote Student Succe... - 0 views

  • Click here for complete information and registration!What:Instruction in any classroom is a responsibility shared by all teachers and paraprofessionals regardless of level or content. Educators who accept this idea are already a step ahead - but for teachers and paraprofessionals who may have never had the opportunity to learn how to teach basic instructional support and engagement strategies, the task is daunting. This hands-on session will examine Before, During, and After reading strategies that can be applied in all classrooms and support increased comprehension of any content area text. Paraprofessionals will practice the strategies and receive tools to begin immediately applying the new learning when they return to their classrooms. When all teachers and paraprofessionals have students use common strategies, it leads to greater independence, more responsibility in the learning, and increased student outcomes for all students. When:February 20, 20129:00 am - 3:30 pmWhere:1325 N. 7th AvenueGranTree InnBozeman, MT  59715Contact:Denielle M. Miller, CoordinatorPhone: (406) 587-4970Email: dmiller@bridgeband.com
Roger Holt

New Teacher Academy: How to Work with Parents | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Today's guest contributor is Shelly Sanchez Terrell, a teacher trainer, author and international speaker. Shelly is an experienced educator with many years in the field. She'll share with us the importance of making parents our partners in their child's educational journey.
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