Friday, October 28, 2011

Professional Development Conference

The professional development conference in Nicaragua was a huge success! I never expected the conference to be as incredible as it was. It exceeded any prior expectations.  

During Professor Kerison’s session on the first day of conference, I was introduced to all of the Nicaraguan teachers. I felt lucky to meet these amazing educators I had heard so much about in stories from team members who had already traveled to Nicaragua. It seemed as though I had been waiting a lifetime to meet them.


I felt incredibly impressed and inspired by the Nicaraguan educators I met while my translator and I moved from table to table around the room to greet them. By talking to the teachers, I learned about their experiences of teaching in rural underprivileged schools. They told me more information on where they taught, what it was like to work in those schools, what their students are like, and how they coped with daily challenges like simply commuting to the school each day. They also shared some of their strategies for dealing with as many as sixty students in a classroom or how to deal with teaching multiple grades at the same time. Some classrooms were outside because there is not enough room for all the students inside the school.



These educators demonstrated their enormous passion, resourcefulness and ingenuity when working with students using limited resources. Each group of teachers from a different school district had the opportunity to present lessons they developed to the audience. The groups of teachers created all sorts of elaborate charts, colorful posters, and graphic organizers as part of their instructional strategies to teach various subjects. One group of teachers even constructed a cardboard TV as a method for teaching story telling. Another group shared a questioning technique of crumbling different pieces of paper into a ball. Each student could take a layer off of the ball and answer that question on the topic of the lesson.
Mathematics lessons


Language Arts lessons

Notice the TV they created on the table top

My individual breakout sessions at the Conference were the most powerful and influential part of whole experience for me. Each day I presented, I grew more confident in my teaching ability and comfortable presenting in front of a group of colleagues. The teachers responded enthusiastically to our language arts unit and lesson plans. It made the hard work Therese and I put into developing our unit all the more meaningful. 


I got the impression that each teacher in my sessions felt grateful to learn new instructional strategies and eager to incorporate them into their classrooms. I found it particularly touching seeing their eyes light up with “ah ha” moments and pure excitement for getting their hands on some of the materials we brought down. They were thrilled with the felt boards we created for story telling using felt pieces.  



After my individual breakout sessions were over, I felt an intense, overwhelming, indescribable rush. My eyes filled with tears at the overpowering sense of fulfilling my life’s purpose. I knew that this is what I was meant to do for the rest of my life. 

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