Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Rural Education SIG 2009 Program

The Rural Education Special Interest Group of the American Educational Research Association has put together a great program from their annual meeting. The program includes 5 paper sessions, 2 paper discussions, a symposium, and the SIG business meeting. Congratulations to the Rural SIG officers for a job well done. You can search the online program here.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Quality Program at a Reasonable Cost

A few weeks ago I blogged on the low turnout at rural conferences. There is some good news on that front from Missouri. Ray Patrick, Executive Director of the Missouri Association of Rural Education, reports that attendance at their 2009 conference was up a bit from last year and they had 10% more exhibits. Ray credits MARE's success to their ongoing goal of providing a quality program at a reasonable cost. He has some good advice for anyone organizing a conference.
Quality Program. Our program presentations suggestions go through a committee who select who will present. Our breakout sessions are divided between those presented by our Associate Members and those with educational programs backgrounds. The main thing we tell Associate members is that their program presentation can NOT be a "selling a product" program.

Reasonable Cost. Our registration rate for the conference is $115 for the first two and $100 for all additional attendees from the same district. This rate includes three meals at no additional charge. We also work with the hotel to make sure the rates are as reasonable as possbile. This year's rate was $76 per night double or single.

Value for Presenters & Exhibitors. For presenters, we do not charge the registration fee (unless they are attending the entire Conference as a participant) but there is a meal package for those wanting to have their meals on site. For the exhibitors, the registration rate is $200 per booth with the exception, if the exhibitor is a MARE Associate member whose annual dues ($275 yearly) is up to date, there is no additional charge for the booth.
Keeping these three things in mind when planning your conference will help maintain, and possibly even increase, attendance levels during a down economy.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Free Instructional Materials

With schools facing tighter budgets, a terrific resource for free instructional materials is the Federal Resources for Educational Excellence website. FREE has more than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources from dozens of federal agencies like the Library of Congress and the National Science Foundation. Topics include Arts & Music, Health & Physical Education, History & Social Science, Language Arts, Math, and Science.

One that caught my eye is American Journeys - Eyewitness Accounts of Early American Exploration and Settlement: A Digital Library and Learning Center.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 6.0

While rural districts may not have the resources to provide higher salaries or more lucrative benefit packages, they can create more positive work environments. A first step is finding out how teachers feel about their work environment. Teachers may be reluctant to provide honest responses to district personnel, so administrators should consider having an external person gather and analyze the data. That person should also be able to help administrators process that information for planning.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 5.0

A common strategy identified by experts for addressing the rural teacher shortages is to develop local teaching talent. Often referred to as growing you own teachers, developing local talent may reduce the likelihood that teachers will leave one district for another. Teachers with close community ties are less likely to accept a position in another. Paraprofessionals can be a good source for teacher candidates, but administrators have to be careful about creating unrealistic expectations about employment opportunities.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 4.0

Since the number one reason rural teachers change schools it to work closer to their home, helping teachers find a place to live close to their work improves the changes of retaining them. School boards can create savings programs that encourages teachers to save money for a down payment on a house. Boards might also create a matching fund to motivate teachers to buy a home in the district.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 3.0

Helping teachers integrate into the school and community increases satisfaction and effectiveness. It can be particularly important for teachers who have not lived in a rural area since they may not have experienced living in a small community. Mentor selection and training is key to success. A teacher who says, “I hate this district, I hate this community,” is not going to be a good mentor. Districts that neglect mentor training miss an opportunity to increase the skills and commitment of both new and experienced teachers.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 2.0

The earlier a district can hire, the better opportunity to find a good fit for a teaching position. To do so districts have to be proactive in identifying potential retirements and resignations. Financial inducements for early notification of an intent to leave encourages teachers to inform administrators of their plans earlier rather than later. Districts may have policies that unintentionally discourage early notification by teachers. For example, a teacher who faces a gap in their health insurance if they resign early may wait until the last minute to do so.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Rural Teacher Recruitment & Retention Strategy 1.0

The most important thing a district can do to reduce teacher turnover is to have a coherent teacher recruitment, hiring, and support system that aligns with district goals and priorities. Putting the time into attracting applicants, evaluating their fit with school and community needs, and providing ongoing support is far superior to a piece meal approach that may neglect critical aspects of the process. Doing an audit of the system will identify gaps in the process.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Striving for Excellence/Maintaining Balance

It's state basketball tournament time in Colorado so what's on the front page of the Denver Post sports page? The music program at Kit Carson High School (and the boys basketball team). With an enrollment of 113 students in grades pre-k through 12, Kit Carson placed 3 of its starters from the 21-1 basketball team on the all-state band and a fourth player player as an alternate. Center Joe Jolly earned first chair euphonium for the second consecutive year in the 112-member symphonic band, which is like winning the 100-meter dash two straight years against all the runners across the state, according to Ken Singleton coordinator of all-state bands.

My old college friend Jim Trahern is the basketball coach and athletic director:
"Perhaps it's because we're a smaller community, but we like the idea of our kids being well-rounded and taking part in a lot of different activities."
If having high expectations are important to student success, then Kit Carson can teach big and small districts a thing or two.
"The people here only expect the best from us," [Charles] Johnson said. "They probably wouldn't be too thrilled with being runners-up."

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Bad Economy Affects Rural School Conferences

The economic downturn being felt across the country is having an effect on rural schools and the organizations that support them. A case in point is that the Center for Rural Education and Small Schools at Kansas State University cancelled one day of their 28th Annual Rural and Small Schools Conference due to low registration. I've been to their conference several times and I know that attendance wasn't down because of the quality of the program. Bob Newhouse and Barbara Havlicek always put together a terrific event. It surely must be due to economic pressures being felt by school administrators.

One wonders how the economy will affect the National Rural Education Association Convention in October.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Rural Education Equality and Improvement Act of 2009

The title of House Resolution 825 introduced by Representative Jim Marshall (R-GA) caught my eye. What will the Rural Education Equality and Improvement Act of 2009 do for rural students?
If the Secretary of Education takes any action (whether by regulation, guidance, or otherwise) to authorize increased flexibility for any category of rural local educational agencies, the Secretary shall extend the same level of increased flexibility to all rural local educational agencies.
That means Secretary Arne Duncan can't authorize flexibility in implementing statutes for only certain types of rural districts, instead he has to give it to all rural districts as defined in the Rural Education Achievement Program. I guess that means that if Secretary Duncan wanted to give some flexibility to rural districts with fewer than 600 students to address a problem related to the interaction of small size and geographic isolation (e.g., highly qualified teachers), he'd also have to give it to "rural" districts with 5,000 students.

Monday, March 09, 2009

The Key Idea

Columnist Kathleen Parker visits a rural district in South Carolina. I'm not sure what to think of the concluding paragraph.
What happens in rural South Carolina may not be of paramount importance to people elsewhere, who are facing their own economic challenges. But what's true here is true in rural communities across America, and our choices are pretty simple. As Ferillo put it: "We either educate the child or we jail the adult."
While it may be true that we either educate the child or jail the adult, I'm confident that's not the key idea the majority of rural educators want to emphasize.