Course Goals


Word Wall from Emily Greenspan's Classroom.  Emily is teaching in East Harlem, NYC.


One professional hallmark of the accomplished teacher is the ability to strategically radiate more than one instructional environment in the classroom setting. This means that organizing and managing the classroom, including the disciplinary context of the room, results from intentional action with various classroom structures. Management by autobiography and doing to others what was done to you are the hallmarks of thoughtless practice.  Good management is comprised of an ongoing series of intentional decisions that fine tune the ecological system of the classroom.  Great management is the appearance of doing this effortlessly.

Goal One
This seminar experience will enable you to exercise those decisions with increasing sophistication by teaching you to view and effect classroom behavior by using psychological and sociological theory in your critical thinking process. You will learn how to understand and manipulate individual and group behavior as part of the same interrelated process. The first goal of this course is that you "manage" a variety of encouraging classroom environments by gaining control of yourself

Goal Two
A second professional hallmark of an accomplished teacher is the realization that relationship is at the heart of the teaching and learning enterprise. Relationship just doesn't happen. Accomplished teachers know how to exercise and teach a set of leadership and group processing skills so that learners feel membership in their learning community.  Communities can feel magical, but there is no magic to their construction.  Learning communities properly constructed can give each child a feeling of courage to step across the borders of their current learning zone.  Therefore, a second goal of this course is that you become a builder of community so that each child becomes en-couraged as a unique member of that community.

Goal Three
The third goal of this course is that you continue to be a reflective and critical problem solver.  More than any other time in this elementary education program, you will be asked to join theory to practice and practice to theory through the disposition of articulate critical reflectiveness.  Our theoretical perspectives will blend behavioral psychology (Positive Discipline) and the sociology of small groups (Complex Instruction, Expectation Theory).  You will advance your developing expertise as a become a competent, intentional problem solver.  Goal Three is manifested in your development of your professional portfolio, a task now achieved under the 188 umbrella.  

If these three goals are met, the fourth goal for this course is achieved. You will be well on your way to becoming a leader among peers, a teacher who will simultaneously know what it takes to advance equity, academic excellence, and social justice in America's schoolrooms.  This is not idle fantasy.  Each year we get letters - letters from our teaching graduates who let us know that what they know and can do in their school settings is quite extraordinary.  

It will be so with you.  Trust us on that one!

Charlie and Cindy