10+1 – Ten Good Ways to Evaluate a Teacher (and one misguided one)

Normally, this blog is a place where I talk about books and writing and research…and other things that I think are important. But today, I’m going to talk about something that I think is incredibly and dangerously wrong.

The NYS Board of Regents this week voted to ignore its earlier discussions with educators and instead base up to 40% of teacher evaluations in the state on state standardized tests, starting next year. That means teachers can be given tenure or not, dismissed or not, based on how well their students fill in bubbles on a state test that is written by people who may never have spent a day in a classroom in their lives.

For the record, I’m in favor of good teachers. In 2006, I obtained National Board Certification– a rigorous and reflective process that took hundreds of hours and was the best thing I’ve ever done for my teaching.  I recommend this evaluation process to anyone who will listen, and I think everyone working in classrooms with kids should be held to the highest standards.

But relying on standardized test scores isn’t the way to do it. In fact, it’s a way to make the profession intolerable for many people who care about kids too much to be part of a system so broken. 

So what’s the alternative? How can we make sure the people teaching our students are competent, capable, committed, enthusiastic, and caring?

Ten Good Ways to Evaluate a Teacher

1. Have teachers create portfolios that include student work samples throughout the year. One or two case studies not only allow teachers to demonstrate student growth but also to reflect on their own classroom practices.

2. Have teachers submit video evidence of best practices in the classroom. When I completed my work for National Board Certification, I sent two such videos – one showing my work with a full classroom group and one showing my facilitation of small group learning.

3. Have teachers write reflective essays or journal entries on their practice. This provides evidence not only of good teaching but also of ongoing growth.

4. Ask teachers to provide evidence (emails, phone logs) of interaction with students’ families to demonstrate collaboration to promote learning and a home-school connection.

5. Have teachers keep a log of their personal professional development activities (conferences attended, books read, online seminars, etc.) to show ongoing growth.

6. Give teachers written content-area tests so they can demonstrate mastery of subject areas and best practices in teaching. This too was part of the National Board Certification process I went through. It was rigorous and led me to read – and grow – more than I would have otherwise.

7. Ask a teacher’s students in June, “How many books did you read this year?”  There’s plenty of research to support this one, including direct correlations between SAT scores and number of pages read per year.

8. Ask teachers to provide evidence of collaboration with colleagues (help sessions, study groups, book clubs, team projects, etc.) All of these are documented ways to increase learning.

9. Invite teachers to set measurable, quarterly goals for their students and for their own professional development. Set aside time for teachers to meet in small groups with one another and/or administration to discuss these goals, problem-solve, and collaborate on new ideas.

10. Invite principals, superintendents, other administrators, school board members, and families into the classroom on a regular basis – not just for special occasions. People need to see – and spend enough time to understand – the real work being done in classrooms.  It doesn’t take long to recognize a place where students are excited to learn – and teachers are, too.  Really. Just come on in.

One misguided way to evaluate teachers?

1.  Place a large emphasis on student standardized test scores, which were never designed or intended as teacher evaluation tools, are deemed by testing experts to be invalid measures, lead to generally poor, uninspired, test-directed teaching,  are inequitable in terms of subject areas (Art? Music?), often show socioeconomic and racial biases,  may lead to some groups of students getting disproportionately more teacher attention than others, require teachers to be out of the classroom to administer and grade, and cost states millions of dollars a year (but have great financial benefits for testing & test prep companies).

Pretty easy math…if you’re still able to step back from the bubbles and think for yourself.

NYS Board of Regents member Roger Tilles also spoke out against the vote this week.  His ideas are here .

Please note: This ideas I’ve expressed here are my thoughts on this topic and my thoughts only; they do not represent the opinions of my employer or anybody else.

Having said that,  I might as well link to this poem I wrote a while ago, too… “Revolution for the Tested.” It fits today.

St. James Cathedral School Visit & #IRAOrlando Part II

I was really excited about the Wednesday morning workshop I presented at IRA — talented authors Lindsey Leavitt, Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich, and Cynthea Liu invited me to join them on a panel called “Plugged In,” all about using Web 2.0 tools to promote literacy.  I love panel presentations like this because in addition to sharing what I know as a teacher and author, I always end up with great ideas to take back to my classroom.

See Gbemi way up there in front? She created a wiki for the presentation, showing how different tech-teachers are using tools like wikis, VoiceThread, & Glogster to engage students. Our audience also got to see a live Skype author visit, with John Schumacher’s students in Oak Brook, Illinois.  @MrSchuReads is a real leader in using technology to motivate readers in his school library, so it was great to connect with him. His enthusiastic students were a serious hit with our workshop audience – they’d read MARTY MCGUIRE and SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY before the visit had amazingly thoughtful questions about everything from my writing process to my reaction to Brian Floca’s illustrations.  (Question: Did the characters look the way you’d envisioned them?  My answer: Yes…but better. I can’t get over how well Brian Floca captured the spirit of Marty and her friends and brought more life to them than I’d even imagined!)

After our presentation, I made a quick trip to the Chronicle booth to hug my editor and pick up my suitcase, and then it was off to St. James Cathedral School in Orlando for an author visit with their K-6 students before I caught my plane home.

This was my first official school visit for MARTY MCGUIRE and SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY, and I couldn’t stop smiling.  The kids & teachers were amazing. Thanks, everyone, for making me feel so welcome!

Marty McGuire Contest Winners!

Thanks to all who shared your third grade memories to help me celebrate the launch of my new chapter book series, starring third grader Marty McGuire! You can check out the memory collection here on the contest post or here on the MARTY MCGUIRE Facebook page.  Contest winners who will receive a signed hardcover are:

Blog: Laura Pauling

Twitter: @MsHoughton

Facebook: Jen Petro-Roy

Congrats! Winners, please email me (kmessner at kate messner dot com) with your mailing address so I can send out your books!)

If you didn’t win but still want to get to know Marty, just ask at your favorite bookstore. MARTY MCGUIRE was just listed on the Summer 2011 Kids Indie Next List as a recommendation by indie booksellers (so please check at your locatl indie first!)

Hudson Children’s Book Festival & #IRAOrlando – Part I

I spent much of last week traveling, hitting the road to talk with readers, teachers, and librarians about a third grade scientist named Marty McGuire and an optimistic Sea Monster named Ernest on his first day of school.

First up was the Hudson Children’s Book Festival on Saturday. This is an amazing festival held each year in Hudson, NY, with thousands of readers and a hundred authors and illustrators. It was also the first event where I had a chance to sign my two newest books, MARTY MCGUIRE, the first in my new chapter book series with Scholastic, and SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY, which is a first for me, too…my first picture book with Chronicle Books.

And here was my first customer of the festival.

Chloe is five and will start kindergarten in September, so she’s the perfect reader for SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY.  Her parents gave me permissions to share her photo with her new book, since she’s the first to have a signed copy of this one!

I got to spend Sunday at home with my family for Mother’s Day, and then Monday morning, it was off to the International Reading Association Annual Convention in Orlando — simply an amazing place to be a reader.

When I checked into my hotel room, my Chronicle editor and publicist had left a surprise for me – a super-early hardcover of OVER AND UNDER THE SNOW, my Fall ’11 picture book illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal.

I sat in my room and paged through it three times before I packed up my bag for a signing at Scholastic and then an author/educator dinner with Chronicle.  The other author at the dinner was Lola Schafer, who was so much fun to spend time with because she’s kind and funny and smart, and is interested in all the same stuff I am!  We had a great time talking about picture book ideas (when they come and when they don’t!) and how much we loooove research. If you haven’t seen her awesome (and enormous!) NF picture book JUST ONE BITE, you’re missing out.

On Tuesday, I started the day recording a video interview for the Stenhouse Publishers website.  Nate, who was behind the camera, came up with some great questions that made the whole thing easy.  He had quite the impressive studio set up, with lights and reflectors and the whole nine yards – but  made me laugh out loud when we were getting ready to start and he looked around. “I kind of figured you’d have handlers.”  Umm…no.

Then it was off to the Stenhouse booth to chat with teachers who came by for a sneak preview of REAL REVISION (which will be out next month!)

I met some great teachers at the Stenhouse booth, including Benetta Caston…

Bennetta came by to tell me how she uses Gianna’s snowy-morning run in THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z. to teach her students about word choice. Talk about a story that makes an author-teacher’s day!

After my Stenhouse signing, I moderated an author panel on Engaging Readers K-5, along with Laurie Friedman, Gail Carson Levine, Ethan Long, and Kristin Clark Venuti.  We all shared a favorite classroom strategy for getting kids motivated to read and write. I talked about my Skype visit/writing workshops and three-column story brainstorming. Laurie talked about the lists & journals in her Mallory books.  Ethan shared the live sketching activity he does when he visits schools; he invites kids to list a person, a place, and a problem – and then he draws and talks the kids through the creation of a story.  The piece he drew on our Mac camera involved a Ninja in the shower who got locked in somehow. (Don’t worry…the Ninja was fully clothed in Ninja gear…)  Gail talked about the writing workshop she runs at her local library for kids in Brewster, NY, and I was immediately jealous of all those kids!  And Kristin wrapped things up for us with a song about onomatopoeia (she is a darn good ukelele player!)

Then it was time to sign SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY at the Chronicle Booth.  It was so much fun for me to hear about Addison and Mose and Alexander and all the other young readers who would be getting the books when someone got home from the conference!  Here’s my editor, Melissa Manlove, with our Sea Monster!

Another highlight… I finally got to meet Laurel Snyder and Christina Diaz Gonzalez, online author friends whose work I’ve admired for a long time.  They are even lovelier and nicer and funnier in real life than on Twitter. I love when that happens!

Christina (left) & Laurel (right) threatening to run off from the Chronicle Booth with the one copy of my fall book that was on display.

Then it was off to the Walker/Bloomsbury booth to sign SUGAR AND ICE, and finally one last hour at Anderson’s Bookshop. Tuesday evening’s dinner was with the Walker/Bloomsbury crew and some amazing teachers.  Here we are with our books, after consuming vast amounts of really pretty food.

Authors/Illustrators Eric Velasquez, Lindsey Leavitt, Martin Sandler, and me, and fantastic Chicago teacher Susan Bohman, who gave me a great idea about mapping out plot elements in tape on the classroom floor.

It seems impossible to me that all that fun and learning fit into two days, but it did. And there was still one more day of convention! Later on…IRA Part II.

PEARL by Jo Knowles

I finished reading an advance copy of this YA novel on an airplane heading home from IRA, quietly wiping tears from the corners of my eyes and hoping the lady next to me wouldn’t notice. If she did, though, it would have been okay… I’d just have to tell her about PEARL.

Its author, Jo Knowles, is someone I’m lucky enough to count as a friend. She’s one of the smartest, kindest people I’ve ever met, and I loved her first two books, so I wasn’t surprised when this one crept quietly up and swept me away, too.  This book keeps its secrets close to its heart, so I’m going to tell you only what I can without giving them away.

Pearl Collatti has lived a pretty mundane life with her mom and grandfather, Gus.  She hangs out with her best friend Henry and watches Days of Our Lives with his mom. But when Gus dies, family secrets fly like milkweed fluff in the wind, and everything is different – Pearl’s relationship with her mother, her friendship with Henry, and her image of the grandfather she thought she knew.

PEARL is so many things… it’s part family drama, part romance, and part mystery. It’s peopled with characters so rich, so beautifully imperfect, that it’s hard to believe they’re not real.   It’s a book about the cost of keeping secrets, trouble that turns beautiful, and painful truths that make room for love. It is a book that believes in love, too…even after years have passed.  This is one I’ll be thinking about for a long, long time – and a book that I think will be an amazing choice for teen book clubs and literature circles when it comes out this summer.

Where to Find Me (and my books!)

I have some appearances, talks, and signings this month. If you’re going to be in any of these same places, please stop by & say hello!

First stop, the Hudson Children’s Book Festival this Saturday from 10-4!

I’ll be signing copies of all of my books, including the newly released MARTY MCGUIRE chapter book and a special sneak-preview-release of my first picture book, SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY.

From Monday to Wednesday, I’ll be in Orlando for the International Reading Association Convention. Here’s my speaking/signing schedule:

Monday:   4-5 pm Signing MARTY MCGUIRE – Scholastic Booth #840

Tuesday:  9-10 am Stenhouse Publishers Booth #701 to sign bookplates for my first book for educators, REAL REVISION: AUTHORS’ STRATEGIES TO SHARE WITH STUDENT WRITERS.

I have to say…this book was just SO much fun to write. It’s about teaching the revision process using tested author strategies, and it includes revision stories, tips, and tricks from more than three dozen of my favorite authors. (In all honestly, I learned so much doing interviews for this book; I’m hoping it’ll be a great resource for writers as well as teachers!)  REAL REVISION is due out at the end of May, and Stenhouse is offering both signed book plates and a 20% discount for conference pre-orders.

Tuesday: 11 – 12 Engaging Readers K-5 Author Panel with Gail Carson Levine, Ethan Long, Laurie Friedman, and Kristin Venuti Clark. Room W312

Tuesday: 12-15-1:15 Signing SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY – Chronicle Books Booth #815

Tuesday: 2-3 Signing SUGAR AND ICE at Walker/Bloomsbury Booth #1127

Tuesday: 3-4 Signing at Anderson’s Bookstore Booth

Wednesday: 9-11:45 am – Author Workshop: Get Plugged into Reading! Innovative Web 2.0 Strategies You Can Use to Connect Readers to Literature Online with Lindsey Leavitt, Cynthea Liu, and Gbemi Rhuday-Perkovich. Convention Center – West Building, Room 206B.

(I’m excited about this one… it’ll include a LIVE Skype author visit with third graders at librarian John Schu’s school in Naperville, Illinois. If you love kids’ books and you don’t know Mr. Schu, you’re missing out. He’s @MrSchuReads on Twitter, and he’s a great promoter of reading not only for his own students but online, too. Mr. Schu was just named one of Library Journal’s “Movers & Shakers” and was on the cover of this month’s SLJ.

Go, Mr. Schu!

After the technology & literacy workshop, it’s off to an afternoon school visit, on to the airport…and then home to finish up the school year…and think about summer events!

Share your 3rd Grade Memory! (and win a signed copy of MARTY McGUIRE!)

MARTY MCGUIRE, the first title in my new chapter book series with Scholastic, came out last weekend…and to celebrate, I thought I’d hold a fun little contest. Marty is a third grader who loves catching frogs and crayfish and getting muddy, so when they make her be the princess in the school play, she must learn to improvise to make the part her own.  You can learn more about Marty here.

So… isn’t that at the heart of third grade? Improvising? Trying out new things (and winging it when something unexpected happens?)  I’d love it if some of you would share a memory of third grade — it can be happy or funny, embarrassing or traumatic…something vivid that you remember as part of that year. I’ll be giving away THREE signed hardcovers — one here on my blog (you can comment on WordPress or LJ – either is fine), one on Twitter, and one on Facebook.  To enter, just do any or all of the following (and YES…you can enter more than once!)

  • Share your third grade story on your own blog or Facebook wall, along with the MARTY MCGUIRE cover if you’d like. (Then come back here and leave a link in the comments to let me know where to find it!)
  • Click here to find and “Like” MARTY MCGUIRE on Facebook and share your third grade memory on the book page wall.
  • Share your third grade memory on Twitter with the hashtag #martymcguire
  • I’d also love it if you’d suggest the MARTY MCGUIRE Facebook page to any of your FB friends who are teachers, librarians, or parents who might want to hear about a new chapter book series for fans of Clementine and Ramona.  If you do that, just come back here to leave a comment and let me know and I’ll toss your name in the hat again!
  • Tell your favorite librarian about Marty. (Again…just come back & leave a comment to let me know – honor system!)

On May 15th (let’s say 9pm EST is the deadline) I’ll draw the winners & announce on my blog.  And don’t worry…if you already have a copy of MARTY MCGUIRE by then, you can choose any one of my other books for your prize (including REAL REVISION, my new revision book for teachers, or SEA MONSTER’S FIRST DAY, which doesn’t come out until later on!)

Can’t wait to hear those third grade memories!

And the rain came down…

It’s been a remarkable spring for weather, not only in the tornado-ravaged South, but also here in Northern New York, where Lake Champlain is at its highest level ever…and expected to rise more as the rain continues tonight and tomorrow.

Sunday was May 1st, release day for MARTY MCGUIRE, the first in my new chapter book series with Scholastic, so we took a drive to visit a couple bookstores (there are signed copies of MARTY at Flying Pig Books in Shelburne and the South Burlington Barnes & Noble now) and take a look at some of the worst flooding from the high lake level.  It was higher than I’d imagined.

This is what Burlington’s King Street Ferry Dock looked like on Sunday.

For a little perspective…here’s a photo of me with the statue of Champ, our legendary lake monster two summers ago.

Here’s what the same sculpture looked like on Sunday…

Sending good thoughts (and dry wishes) to all those who are fighting flood waters & wet basements tonight – and especially to those trying to rebuild their lives after the tornado outbreak in the South.

Thank you, SCBWI Writers & Illustrators!

I got an exciting email late yesterday afternoon from the Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators. “We’ve been trying to call you for several hours, but you’re not answering your home phone,” it said. “So we’re resorting to email to tell you that SUGAR AND ICE won the 2011 Crystal Kite Award!”

(I was out picking up kids from school & playing tennis with my daughter yesterday… and when my agent called last May to tell me that THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z. had won the E.B. White Read Aloud Award, I almost didn’t answer my cell phone because I was in the kitchen in my swimsuit, making dinner and dripping all over the floor because I’d just gotten in from a swim in the lake. I’m pretty sure this officially makes me the worst award-news recipient ever.)

All kidding aside, I want to say a HUGE thank you to SCBWI and its amazing members, especially in NY.  I feel incredibly honored because this award comes from my fellow writers & illustrators, and I’m truly overwhelmed to be  in such great company with winners & finalists from all the regions. You can see the full list of Crystal Kite Awards here. Congrats to all!

When Life Imitates Art: Tornado Outbreak & EYE OF THE STORM

My heart is aching this week for people who have been affected by the devastating outbreak of tornadoes. They’ve hit hardest in the South, but other parts of the country have seen tornado warnings as well — New York and New England…where tornadoes aren’t often an issue.

I’ve gotten more than one email this week from writer friends who have read EYE OF THE STORM, my Spring 2012 novel with Walker/Bloomsbury that deals with a future world where tornadoes are stronger and more widespread than they are now. “Did you know this was going to happen?” they want to know.  I didn’t… but this spring weather has been more than a little eerie to me, given the research I did for EYE OF THE STORM and all that I learned about the power these storms can unleash.

Last September, I traveled to Norman, Oklahoma to research this book at the National Severe Storms Laboratory and to interview notable meteorologist and storm photographer Dr. Howard Bluestein.

We talked about what might cause the kind of upswing in severe storms that happens in my novel, which is even much worse than what we’ve been seeing this week. His thoughts will be part of the discussion guide in the book’s back matter.  Here’s a sampling, where Bluestein discusses how scientists try to predict what changes in climate might mean for our future in terms of severe storms:

If we know what the environmental conditions are that can lead to tornadic thunderstorms, then what people have done is you can take a climate model and integrate it into the future to see whether or not those conditions will be more prevalent than they are right now.  So we know what the conditions are. We know that they happen frequently here in this part of the country in the springtime.  If you look at a climate model, it may turn out that these conditions are prevalent over a greater part of the country – maybe a smaller part of the country – maybe a slightly different time of year… these things are all possible.

Advance reader galleys of EYE OF THE STORM should be available before too long, and I’ve already been in touch with my editor about making some available to help raise funds for Red Cross disaster relief in Alabama.  For now…here are some tornado links that might be helpful in your classrooms or just interesting to read.

Why Suddenly So Many Tornadoes? An explanation from AccuWeather

A collection of last week’s storm photos from storm chaser and photographer Steve Miller

Latest on the outbreak from MSNBC

More tornado websites from the EYE OF THE STORM Discussion Guide.

How Tornadoes Work: A nice overview from “How Stuff Works”

Tornadoes: From the Weather Channel’s Storm Encyclopedia

National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center: See the storms the NWS is watching today!

National Geographic – Nature’s Fury feature on tornadoes

FEMA for Kids: The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s tornado site

Tornadoes…Nature’s Most Violent Storms from the NOAA Severe Storms Laboratory

If you know of other great online resources about tornadoes, I’d love to hear about them in comments. I’ll share more about a possible fund raiser/ARC giveaway when I have news.