ISY Elementary School Faculty Blog
Expertise is Overrated
Mike Simpson
March 19, 2021
When I left school, I was not sure what I wanted to do but I was very sure that I was not going to be a teacher.
The main reason for this was a teacher’s comment to my mother in a parent teacher conference:
‘Michael would make a good teacher. He can do many things but he is not particularly expert at any one thing.’
Looking back I think this teacher was trying to say that those who have had to work a bit harder to learn something are often better equipped to teach it.
At the time I took it as a challenge to become an expert at something other than teaching.
Now I consider it to be a pretty accurate reflection of how I think many of us are feeling at the moment. It is hard to feel like an expert at any one thing when you are learning multiple new things each day.
We might not feel like experts but today’s assembly was a chance to remind ourselves that we are now good at many things that we did not know how to do at all just a matter of months or weeks or days ago. We could have chosen to stop learning new things so we could feel like experts in the things that we knew how to do a year ago when we first went online. Instead, we continue to choose to learn new things for the sake of our students even if we constantly feel like beginners.
We live in a world that seems to value specialisation and expertise in one area above a more general understanding of many different things. There will always be a need for specialists but we must not forget that generalists will always play a major role in solving complex problems. Generalists are the ones who will make connections between different disciplines that specialists in one discipline are unable to make.
It is good to strive for expertise in everything we do and to encourage that in our children. However, we cannot be an expert in everything and it is actually good if some of us are not experts in anything which, according to my High School English teacher, works out very well for someone like me.
Epstein, David. RANGE: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World. Riverhead Books, 2021.
QUARTER 4 PLANNING
Quarter 4 will begin on Monday, April 5.
This quarter’s interdisciplinary theme is PARTNERSHIPS.
We have purposefully chosen EUs and EQs that allow teachers in all subjects to focus on whatever skills and knowledge that you feel the students need to either learn or revise before the year ends.
In all grade levels we are basically focusing on partnerships and how we work together and this interdisciplinary focus can be maintained while teaching anything. This will minimize the need for interdisciplinary planning meetings and detailed scope and sequences.
Next week we will provide more guidance on how we can record our planning. For now, just think about how you can incorporate a partnership theme into your subject over this last quarter.
PUTTING YOUR IDEAS ON THE TABLE
While you are in the middle of reimagining teaching and learning, I was wondering if you would like to share your thoughts or experiences. No pressure but if you have any videos or articles that have caught your attention, I’d love to include them in this faculty blog. And if any of you like to write or want to give it a go, I’d love to help you get your ideas out to people who would appreciate them. Just let me know if you would like to share anything.
Here is an article about how a ‘beginner’s mindset’ can help you learn anything.
Students Leaving Yangon
As you will no doubt know from this week, we are having more students planning to leave Yangon in the next week or so.
If you become aware of a student who is planning to leave, please email Patty, Nimmi, and I and we will follow up with the parents. Please email us even if you have just heard this from the student and you are unsure if this is true.
Students continuing with synchronous learning:
Some of these students will continue with synchronous learning. In these cases, the students will obviously remain enrolled in all school programs and platforms and will Zoom into synchronous classrooms. I will talk directly with any families who think they might want an asynchronous option. Please direct any parents to me if they would like to talk to you about this option.
These students will be asked to return their Chromebook or iPads and library books before they leave Yangon.
Students withdrawing from ISY:
Students who are withdrawing from ISY are obviously no longer our responsibility from their date of withdrawal. These students will no longer be attending Zoom classes and teachers will no longer be providing feedback on their learning. These students will be removed from Powerschool.
However, given the extraordinary circumstances under which these families are leaving, we will keep them enrolled in our Seesaw and Google Classroom platforms until the end of the year. We will also keep them on other platforms such as RazKids. This will allow them to access learning should they wish to. This work is not for teachers to give feedback on and assess. We are unable to disable the chat and messaging functions of Seesaw and Google Classroom for individual students. We hope that this is not a distraction and if this becomes an issue with a withdrawn student, please let me know and I will reach out to the parents.
These students will be asked to return their Chromebook or iPads and library books before they leave Yangon.
NO MORE TRANSITIONAL DAYS THIS YEAR
QUARTER 3 PROGRESS REPORTS
PK-KG Report Writing Instructions
Grade 1-5 Report Writing Instructions
Spreadsheet for individualized ISY Learner Attributes comments (due 8am, Friday, April 2)
Common Grade Level Subject Comments (due 8am, Friday, April 2) :
Enter all comments and grades into Powerschool by 4pm, Wednesday, April 7.
Reports will go live on Powerschool on Friday, April 9
INCLUSION SHARE OUT
Rewordify – An Online Tool that Makes an Easier Version of Text
We all know that an important differentiation strategy is having the “same” text for different levels of English comprehension.
What about those times when you have the perfect article to share with your students but you know that it is too difficult for some students to access? Check out http://rewordify.com/; a free site where students can copy and paste text into a text box and it instantly produces an easier version for fast understanding. The reworded words are highlighted and the students can even change how the words are highlighted to best match how they learn!
PRIDE OF THE PRINCIPAL
If you have any student (or students) that you would like me to recognise for living the ISY Attributes send me an email with a sentence about why they are to be recognised and a time that I could come on Zoom and say hi. Any time or day is OK – If I have a meeting I’ll suggest another time until we get one that works. I will jump on your Zoom and then I’ll get you to put the student or student(s) into a break out room with me. I’ll have a chat with them and take a screenshot that I will send to their parents.
Previous Elementary School Posts
Elementary School Faculty Blog – November 13, 2020
Childish wisdom mixed with a global perspective and some ‘grown up’ expertise and experience will go a long way in finding the answers to many of the problems that our children will need to solve.
Elementary School Faculty Blog – November 6, 2020
Hello Quarter 2!
Elementary School Faculty Blog – October 23, 2020
In case you are wondering why you are tired, we went online 219 days ago. This is the first chance we have had to rest for a very long time. Your work up until this point has set us up for the rest of the year and the rest of the year can wait for week!
Elementary School Faculty Blog – October 16, 2020
Chinthes Show Their Colors
Elementary School Faculty Blog – October 9, 2020
As expected, we have retained our fully accredited status as a WASC school and this extends to our ISY Nay Pyi Taw campus.
Elementary School Faculty Blog – October 2, 2020
Just be yourselves – positive, proud, and humble.