In the Middle

A career changer and former high school teacher, Hanne Denney is starting a new position this fall as a special education teacher—and department chairperson—at Southern Middle School in Anne Arundel County, Md. In this blog, she'll share her thoughts on middle school pedagogy, career change, and the teaching life.

Main | August 2007 »

July 23, 2007

How to Learn

I am having an intense learning experience.

I live in Maryland, but I'm currently in St. Louis with my sister and family. My sister Eva is an artist, and her husband Paul is director of a museum. It was open studio weekend, and I visited galleries and studio space with them, meeting lots of artists and supporters of artists. I asked everyone lots of questions. I learned a lot that I did not know before. I saw much that was beautiful, and much that led to more questions.

I also visited the Cahokia Mounds in Illinois -- the remains of a Mississipian tribal city. There is a great learning center on-site for visitors, and a fantastic hike up to the top of the mound. I learned a lot about American early history that I did not know before. I had to work my body hard to climb up the mound. From the top I could see the other mounds left by the Indians. I could see vast acres that had been farmed for decades. In the distance I could see the city of St. Louis with its trademark Arch. I was walking in the footsteps of thousand of others over a thousand years of history -- and seeing it all at once in panoramic view.

This week I also read several books about middle school. I gained experience through other people's eyes and their interpretations of experience. That has given me a lot to think about as I prepare to enter the Middle School educational program. I read a great novel The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig. I had to look up some of the words using a dictionary. I used the computer to find other books by this author so I can read more. I learned something from his words and ideas. I was inspired enough to create a collage using one of the passages from his book. I am not an artist, but it pleases me to see it finished. I have experienced success.

My intense learning experience has incorporated travelling to new places, talking with strangers who are experts, reading books, imagining the lives of other people, walking uphill on a summer's afternoon, searching the internet, using my eyes to see art and my hands to create art. I asked questions and thought about things. I used my imagination, and the expertise of others to add to my previous knowledge and create new ideas. I experienced learning success.

There is less than a month until we're all back in school. I have to think about the required curriculum and tests, and plan out lessons according to schedule. But right now I'm just thinking about how to learn. I know how to learn. I'm doing it. That's the key. I am experiencing learning, even when I am not seeking it out or being told to learn. Learning can't be turned on when the figurative school bell rings. Or can it? After that, that is our job, right?

Hope I can bring it home in my suitcase. Hope I can bring it back to my students.

July 17, 2007

The Middle Road Now Taken

I am in the middle. I’m in between schools. I am no longer a high school English teacher at Arundel High. I am not yet a middle school Science and Social Studies teacher, but I will be this fall. I’m changing positions – instead of being a three-period-a-day teacher, I’ll co-teach one class and serve as Special Education Department Chair at Southern Middle School in Lothian, Maryland. So I’ll be in the middle of the administration and the faculty, the parents and the students.

It’s the middle of summer, and I’m in the middle of my month of travel. I’ve been to West Virginia, now I’m heading to St. Louis, then it will be a road trip south with my daughter to the Carolinas and Georgia. All fun trips. The only work is the reading I’m bringing along for the car ride.

I’ve just celebrated a family event – my parents’ 60th wedding anniversary. I’m the third of four children; basically a middle child. I enjoyed being right in the middle of my family – brother, two sisters, and their spouses and children. It was a blessing to celebrate my parents’ lives by honoring their love.

I’m in the middle between elderly parents and young adult children. I worry about my parents’ financial wellbeing and their health. I worry about my children’s college education bills and whether or not they are taking care of themselves. I want to make sure all four of them, parents and children, are happy and fulfilled. I want them to know I love them, I’m proud of them, and I’m motivated by them.

I’m in the middle of my life (or so I like to think). I’m 48 years old, an older “new” teacher. I just finished my third year of teaching special education at a High School. I am a career-changer. For more on that experience, check the archives of my previous blog “Ready or Not”. I’ve been in the middle between older experienced teachers and young new teachers. I don’t quite fit either group.

Now I’m taking on a new challenge at the middle school. I’m so excited about this change. I’ve been reading about middle school students, and school reform efforts, and even the history of the middle school movement. I myself went to a new middle school in Montgomery County Maryland in 1968. It was a bold experiment in open classrooms, experiential learning with lots of interdisciplinary projects, and cool young teachers who believed they could reach students. For me, it was a very successful experiment, with good results. It did not work for all students, though. I know schools have changed a lot since 1968, but I also know our schools still don’t work for all students.

In this blog I’ll be writing about what I’m learning, and what I’m doing, as I move into middle school. For the next month it’s all about getting ready. I’m on a self-directed learning project to become informed of current research. I’m reading pedagogical essays and teacher memoirs and ethnographic studies of middle schools. I am studying pacing curriculum guides and lesson plans. Most importantly, I’m talking to as many people as possible. I have a lot to learn.

So join me “in the middle” and help me get ready. Tell me what I need to know.

Hanne Denney

Hanne Denney

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