Lessons Taught, Lessons Learned Vol. II
"My Goodness, People Come and Go So Quickly Around Here"
by Lance C. Blackwood
Lake and Peninsula School District
Maybe the Land of Oz isn't the only place where Dorothy's statement would apply. The attrition rate of teachers in rural Alaska (although down noticeably over the past decade) is still a serious concern forrural school districts, village schools, and ultimately the parents and students who place their trust in them.
After twelve years of living and teaching within the boundaries of Lake and Peninsula School District (located around Iliamna Lake and south along the Alaska Peninsula, in the Bristol Bay Region), I sat down one day to try to list all the teachers and administrators who have come and gone through our system. I say "try," because after compiling a list of names and/or faces of the individuals I could remember, I heard a colleague make a comment about another person who had taught with us, whom I'd completely forgotten. So after approximately 135 or so names or faces, I abandoned the effort. There were simply too many, too many years removed, or they were with the district for too short a time to be recalled. Needless to say, the number of "visiting" educators was quite long.
Trying to identify the reasons why so many individuals have come and gone is also difficult, since only they know the real reasons. However, some of those reasons include, but are not limited to, the following:
Other rural teachers could offer additional valid reasons why educators have come and gone through our rural districts around the state. But I strongly feel the prime reason is lack of preparation for positions for which new teachers are hired. In other words, they may have felt "isolated," placed into a different teaching situation with no, or inadequate, orientation to living and teaching in rural Alaska.
In many instances, newly hired educators are contracted at ajob fair or other place of recruiting, never having set foot within the territory of the school district, let alone the village school they were hired for, until they report for work. Granted, most school districts take their staff through a three or four day inservice, but little is presented at these meetings regarding the specific site and the environment of the village and school where they will be living and teaching for the next 9 months. With little preparation and great expectations, newly hired educators are placed in our rural Alaskan schools.
Rural Alaska Mentor Teaching Project
A new program, begun in 1988 by the Staff Development Network of the Alaska Department of Education, entitled The Rural Alaska Mentor Teaching Project, may have taken a giant step towards alleviating much of the frustrations, fears, and concerns first year teachers have regarding living and teaching in the rural isolated communities. It is an attempt to help make the transition for first time educators to rural Alaska smooth, more successful and enjoyable; hopefully, this transition will result in educators providing more effective teaching and ultimately more effective learning for students in village schools. It is also intended to promote and encourage educators to remain an active force in rural education for years to come.
The Team Approach
Ideally, the Project is designed to send a team of three school district members -a site administrator, an experienced rural teacher, and a newly hired teacher -to an intensive week-long training session with other team members from around the state. At the training session, a variety of activities, experiences, and concerns are addressed. Team leaders and expert trainers are brought in to run and instruct the sessions.
Initial tentative plans are made during the session as to how each team will proceed with the mentoring" process back at their sites. Ideally, the administrator, the mentor, and the protégé are assigned to the same village school, whereby daily contact, conferences and assistance can be provided to the protégé to make his/her teaching assignment as successful and stress-free as possible. The mentor is to be given release time to work directly with the protégé on those concerns identified during the training session, or as concerns come up during the school year. Hopefully, as the school year progresses, the principal, the mentor, and the protégé will meet less formally as only minimal contact is deemed necessary and as the protégé develops confidence and competence needed to teach effectively.
Drawbacks of the Mentor Project
The only significant problem with the mentor project is the vast diversity within each of the rural school districts. With this diversity come the following problems:
Benefits of the Mentor Project
In order for the mentor project to continue effectively helping new teachers adapt to teaching in rural schools, there are certain conditions that must exist:
Obviously, if a protégé is not willing to cooperate with the mentor project, it will not have a chance of succeeding. But these are some of the benefits that can be expected from an effective Rural Mentor Teaching Project:
The Choice Is Ours...
Ray Barnhardt
"My Goodness, People Come and Go So Quickly Around Here"
Lance C. BlackwoodParental Involvement in a Cross-Cultural Environment
Monte BostonTeachers and Administrators for Rural Alaska
Claudia CaffeeThe Mentor Teacher Program
Judy CharlesBuilding Networks
Helen EckelmanIdeal Curriculum and Teaching Approaches for a School in Rural Alaska
Teresa McConnellSome Observations Concerning Excellent Rural Alaskan Schools
Bob MooreThe Ideal Rural Alaska Village School
Samuel MosesFrom Then To Now: The Value of Experiential Learning
Clara Carol PottervilleThe Ideal School
Jane SeatonToward an Integrated, Nonlinear, Community-Oriented Curriculum Unit
Mary ShortA Letter from Idealogak, Alaska
Timothy StathisPreparing Rural Students for the Future
Michael StockburgerThe Ideal Rural School
Dawn WeyiouannaAlternative Approaches to the High School Curriculum
Mark J. Zintek
Part II * Rural Curriculum Ideas
"Masking" the Curriculum
Irene BowieOn Punks and Culture
Louise J. BrittonLiterature to Meet the Needs of Rural Students
Debra BuchananReaching the Gifted Student Via the Regular Classroom
Patricia S. CaldwellEarly Childhood Special Education in Rural Alaska
Colleen ChinnTechnically Speaking
Wayne DayProcess Learning Through the School Newspaper
Marilyn HarmonGlacier Bay History: A Unit in Cultural Education
David JaynesPrincipals of Technology
Brian MarshHere's Looking at You and Whole Language
Susan NugentInside, Outside and all-Around: Learning to Read and Write
Mary L. OlsenScience Across the Curriculum
Alice PorterHere's Looking at You 2000 Workshop
Cheryl SevernsSchool-Based Enterprises
Gerald SheehanKing Island Christmas: A Language Arts Unit
Christine Pearsall VillanoUsing Student-Produced Dialogues
Michael A. WilsonWe-Search and Curriculum Integration in the Community
Sally Young
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