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LEF PROUDLY ANNOUNCES OUR 2007
SUMMER FELLOWS
Thirteen teachers from Lexington Public Schools have
received mini-grants of up to $4,000 to attend conferences
and workshops and participate in research programs. These
educational opportunities will enhance their teaching and
enliven their classrooms.
Here’s what LEF Summer Fellows will be studying:
Patricia Cascio, Jacqueline Kagey,
Mary Ellen LaCroix
Literacy Specialists
Hastings Elementary School
These Hastings Literacy Specialists will be spending time
this summer learning EmPOWER, a systematic approach to teach
expository writing. EmPOWER helps teachers mentor students
in all stages of the writing process using a specific
routine and set of strategies that build on one another. As
they work with teachers previously trained in the program,
these specialists have observed critical benefits: student
progress, a common vernacular, and broad applicability
across grades and content areas.
Susan
London
Music Specialist
Fiske Elementary School
Susan London’s students have benefited from her initial
training in 1993 in the Orff method, which teaches elements
of music that are less abstract when a child actively
engages in creating and performing music. London uses
hands-on methods to teach the concepts of steady beat,
rhythm, and melodic shape. To lead her students toward more
advanced skills, including harmony, improvising, and
composing, London will be attending an Orff Level II class
at Bridgewater State College. “The Orff technique will help
me structure lessons that are dynamic and multifaceted,
simultaneously including singing, instrument playing,
movement and improvisation,” explained London.
Martha
Rogers
Music Specialist
Bowman Elementary School
Exposing students to a diverse musical palette
broadens their own tastes, and Bowman Music Specialist
Martha Rogers sees her students become “empowered” when they
create jazz or blues when they play. To incorporate these
musical styles more fully into her teaching, Rogers will
enhance her keyboard, vocal and percussion skills through
lessons and a jazz workshop with Paul Barringer, a highly
regarded musician and educator. She will also conduct a
workshop for her fellow music colleagues and share her
experience and materials.
Suzanne
Melo
Fourth-Grade Teacher
Bowman Elementary School
To develop curriculum for a fourth-grade
Mesoamerica social studies unit, Suzanne Melo will be
attending a three-week study program in Mexico entitled
Mesoamerica in the Classroom. “Through my own experiential
learning and living with a Mexican host family,” says Melo,
“I will be able to create interdisciplinary lessons which
utilize multiple intelligences, moving beyond text-based
lessons.” In addition, Melo will gather artifacts from
Mexico such as papel picado, the traditional art of
decorative cut paper banners, to create a materials kit for
classrooms.
Douglas
Tran and John Hunt
Spanish Teachers
Clarke Middle School
While attending advanced conversational courses
at the Academia Hispano Americano in San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico this summer, John Hunt and Douglas Tran will improve
their Spanish fluency and gain knowledge on how to help
students speak more like natives and minimize their American
accents. In addition, Hunt will study Mexican art, music and
folklore, while Tran will attend a seminar on Mexican law,
religions, education and government. These experiences will
enhance the Clarke Spanish curriculum with units on Mexican
culture and the judicial system.
Anne
Chavez
Spanish Teacher
Lexington High School
For LHS students who have yet to study a foreign
language, an opportunity to learn Spanish language and
culture through social studies will now be available. This
summer, Anne Chavez will prepare to teach a pilot LHS course
through a month-long live-in experience and university
graduate course work at the Universidad de Costa Rica.
Chavez hopes “to gain insight into the daily life & culture
of my host family and develop a heightened appreciation of
the culture of this important region” through the classes,
History of Latin America and Teaching Spanish Language and
Culture.
Heidemarie
Floerke
German and English Teacher
Lexington High School
Watching films is just one component of the Film
in Instruction course that Heidemarie Floerke will be
attending at the Goethe Institute Berlin this summer. The
course also integrates the country’s cultural and political
history and offers the rare opportunity to learn from her
host family and fellow German teachers from around the
world. Floerke is confident she will “learn to use film not
as the focal point of instruction, but as a tool to support
the curriculum and to reach out to various visual learners
in the classroom.”
Annie
Zeybekoglu
Visual Arts Teacher
Lexington High School
As a visual arts instructor, Annie Zeybekoglu
uses the art and visual iconography of different cultures as
a resource and influence for design projects. This summer,
she will travel to Ghana on a Primary Source Art and Culture
Study Tour to help her create an interdisciplinary
curriculum unit on the West African/American slave trade.
Art and World History students will benefit from her
experiences and learn how aspects of Ghanaian culture
endured through the richly symbolic textile designs of the
African slave.
Karen
Girondel
French Teacher
Lexington High School
To prepare her students for the in-depth literary
analysis that is expected on the French AP exam and in
college courses, Karen Girondel will be attending the
Advanced Placement Summer Institute in French Literature at
LaSalle University in Philadelphia. The course will assist
Girondel in teaching three new literary works that the
College Board has added to the 2008 AP required reading
list. Said Girondel, “This fellowship will allow me to share
best practices with French Literature colleagues from around
the country during a week of intensive literary study.”
Nathan
Johnson
English Teacher
Lexington High School
For six weeks this summer, Nathan Johnson will
become a student at The Bread Loaf School of English at
Middlebury College. The graduate level course in playwriting
will help him discover the many ways to explore this
dramatic form. This experience will be particularly useful
in two classes he teaches at LHS Contemporary Literature and
Art of Film. "My work in the playwriting class will enable
me to construct better dialogue assignments and approach the
difficult task of creating believable dialogue with greater
confidence and skill," said Johnson.
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