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LEF PROUDLY ANNOUNCES OUR 2004
SUMMER FELLOWS
Now in its second year, the LEF Summer Fellowship Program
provides mini-grants up to $3,000 for Lexington Public
School teachers with professional status to attend courses,
seminars, or workshops; engage in research, curriculum
planning, or independent study— essentially, to pursue
activities that promise to enhance their professional life
and increase their experience and knowledge.
LEF has awarded a total of $17,000 toward the 2004 Summer
Fellowship program. Ten teachers have been named our 2004
LEF Summer Fellows—more than double the number who received
Summer Fellowships last year. We are grateful for the
generous financial support of so many members of the
Lexington community. We also thank our very first corporate
Summer Fellowship Sponsors, including Medford Cooperative
Bank, a community-oriented bank, and Atlas Venture, an
international early-stage venture capital firm.
The initiatives of the 2004 LEF Summer Fellows illustrate
their dedication to being the best and most effective
educators they can be. The professional development
activities they will engage in will not only enhance their
teaching practices and professional expertise, but will
enrich their students in years to come.
Meet the 2004 LEF Summer Fellows!
Jennifer
Burgin
6th Grade Science Teacher
Diamond Middle School
Jennifer Burgin will spend five days at the Association for
the Cooperative Advancement of Science and Education (ACASE)
in upstate New York. There, she will work with educators and
specialists to adapt a high school level science curriculum
unit, Suns and Shadows, for use with sixth graders. Ms.
Burgin expects to build her abilities to develop curriculum
related to her students’ needs, design experiential learning
activities and instructional materials, develop performance
assessments, and use an online information system to track
student performance aimed at improving student learning,
curriculum, and instruction. When she returns to Lexington,
Ms. Burgin will offer a professional development workshop to
her colleagues, focusing on practical ways to incorporate
performance assessments into teaching strategies.
Karen
Girondel
French Teacher
Lexington High School
Karen Girondel, creator of the LHS Advanced Placement French
Literature course, will spend July 18-20 attending the
Advanced Placement National Conference (APNC) in Florida.
With her conference colleagues, Ms. Girondel will discuss
new literary works added to the AP curriculum this year,
share approaches to teaching, learn creative ways to stretch
students’ minds, and offer feedback to the College Board
regarding curriculum. She will also offer her services as a
reader of AP exams, which will help her better understand
the rigorous expectations of the College Board, and improve
her ability to evaluate her own students’ writing. Ms.
Girondel will share her experiences with her department in
Lexington.
Shelley
Chamberlain
Coordinator of Educational Technology
K-12
Deborah Perry
Department Head
English
Lexington High School
Shelley and Deborah will attend the Project Zero
Summer Institute at Harvard University. Ms. Chamberlain and
Ms. Perry will focus on the Teaching for Understanding
framework, which is intended to improve students’ ability to
understand, use their multiple intellectual strengths, think
critically and creatively, and assess their own work. Ms.
Chamberlain and Ms. Perry will use their knowledge of this
framework to help Lexington teachers design lessons for
classroom instruction, and to evaluate the uses of
technology to deepen understanding for students.
John
Hunt
7th and 8th Grade Spanish Teacher
Clarke Middle School
John will attend the Malaga Plus Language
Institute in Malaga, Spain for two weeks for intensive study
of grammar, Spanish culture, and education. He will also
spend some time learning the cuisine of Andalucia as well as
other regional dishes of Spain. Both courses will offer
ideas, projects, and hands-on activities Mr. Hunt plans to
incorporate into his lessons when he returns to Lexington.
Mr. Hunt will live with a Spanish family and achieve total
immersion, speaking no English throughout his two-week
fellowship. Mr. Hunt will also use his IMAC film-making
skills to make a movie for his students about Spanish
culture.
Whitney
Hagins
Biology Teacher
Lexington High School
Whitney will spend two weeks at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison working with Dr. Paul Williams and his
staff, originators of the renowned biology programs
Wisconsin Fast Plant™, Bottle Biology, NASA’s Brassica and
Butterfly, and Saturday Science. Ms. Hagins will investigate
new ideas for an LHS Level Two biology curriculum and refine
activities that have already been developed. The curriculum,
“Roots and Wings,” emphasizes scientific literacy through
biological concepts around the central theme of two
interrelated living systems: Brassica plants and the cabbage
white butterfly. Ms. Hagins will work with her colleagues in
Lexington to help challenged learners develop skills through
the implementation of the “Roots and Wings” curriculum.
Geraldine
O’Neill
1st Grade
Harrington Elementary School
Geraldine will spend two weeks at the University
of New Hampshire studying Picturing Writing: Fostering
Literacy through Art and Image Making within the Writing
Process Summer Institute. The Picturing Writing approach
helps elementary school children develop a sense of setting,
mood, sequence, beginning, middle, end, plot development,
and use of descriptive language. Children first “picture”
their writing by creating evocative crayon-resist watercolor
paintings. Then, inspired by their paintings and guided by
deliberately chosen writing prompts from the teacher, they
write text to accompany their art. The approach appeals to a
variety of student learning styles. LEF has previously
funded a grant for Picturing Writing at Bridge Elementary
School, where it has been incorporated into the regular
curriculum. Ms. O’Neill will use Picturing Writing methods
with her first graders, share the approach with her
colleagues, and collaborate on lessons with the Harrington
art teacher.
Mary
Park Oussayef
French Teacher
Lexington High School
Mary will study French for fluent French speakers
at the Stages pour Professeurs workshop at the Accord
Language School in Paris from July 19-30. She will also
spend five days behind-the-scenes at the Vaour Theater
Festival near Toulouse. Ms. Oussayef, who uses theater in
her teaching—her students have produced and acted in
full-length French plays—will study cross-curricular
approaches to introducing theater arts into the French
classroom. Through her fellowship, Ms. Oussayef will improve
her ability to select appropriate plays and stage them with
some expertise. When Ms. Oussayef returns to Lexington, she
expects to integrate theater more effectively in her
classes.
Martha
Rogers
Music Specialist
Bowman Elementary School
Martha will spend five days with Music for People
at SUNY, Fredonia, studying the “Art of Improvisation” with
David Darling, a world-class cellist, improviser, recording
artist, and Grammy nominee. This in-depth workshop is
intended for advanced and professional musicians across the
spectrum, from classical to jazz, theater, rock, ethnic,
avant garde, and more; and for all instruments. Ms. Rogers,
who uses her musical improvisation skills daily with her
students, will develop her skills further, and learn
techniques for helping her children improvise as well. Ms.
Rogers intends to design music improvisation lessons for her
students, and to provide a workshop for her Lexington
elementary music colleagues where they can experiment and
discuss the possibilities for application with different age
levels.
Sharyn
Walczewski
Mathematics Teacher
Lexington High School
Sharyn will attend a workshop at the National
Council of Teachers of Mathematics Conference in Braintree,
MA, July 12-14. The workshop is a professional development
opportunity for teachers to explore math content,
research-based ideas, and teaching strategies. The focus
will be on Data Analysis and Probability, a course Ms.
Walczewski teaches and developed for level one high school
students two years ago. As a result of her fellowship, Ms.
Walczewski will incorporate new student projects and
teaching methods into her lessons, and will share what she
learned with her department colleagues. |
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