COLORADO CONFERENCE OF FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHERS Affiliated with the Southwest Conference on Language Teaching and the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages Thank you CCFLT members! In This Issue CCFLT members made an impressive showing at the 2015 SWCOLT conference; more than 300 members were in attendance. That’s nearly 100% of our current membership! As well, 39 of you shared the great work we are doing in world language education in Colorado by presenting at the conference. We thank you for your continued financial support. It has allowed us to expand our support of all Colorado World Language teachers through the new additions of professional development webinars accessible to all and workshops for teachers working outside of the Front Range area. Visit www.ccflt.org to find announcement for all that we are doing to support World Language Education in Colorado. If you were unable to renew your membership, you can do so at any time at www.regonline.com/ccflt. Be sure to click on “Join Now”. If you have colleagues who have not joined yet, they may do so at this same site. Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Volume 34 Issue 2 Spring 2015 Spring 2015 Page 2 President’s Letter Page 3 Job Openings Page 4 Fall Conference Flyer Page 6 Be an EPIC Teacher Page 7 Project-Based Learning Page 8 Colorado German Day Page 10 We’re all Magicians! Page 11 Professional Development Page 12 Spring Conference Award Winners Page 13 Advocacy Update Page 15 Board of Directors Page 16 Why Serve? Page 1 Dear Friends and Colleagues, President’s Letter Happy Spring! Where did this last year go? I can’t believe that this is my last welcome letter as CCFLT President! It has truly been a remarkable year in which I was fortunate to meet and work with so many wonderful and amazing educators. As your president and president-elect, I have been honored and humbled to represent CCFLT at numerous conferences and meetings: Central States in St. Louis, SWCOLT in Las Vegas and Snowbird, Utah, ACTFL in Orlando and San Antonio. In meetings with leaders from other states as well as ACTFL leadership, I’m proud to say that CCFLT as the reputation as one of the strongest state organizations. This past year, in addition to ‘hobnobbing’ with the ‘fancy’ ACTFL people :) a highlight for me was advocating for world languages in Washington D.C. at the JNCL-NCLIS conference. Janine Erickson, CCFLT Advocacy liaison, and I spent an exciting day last May advocating for world languages with Colorado senators and members of congress and we are looking forward to repeating this experience this May. My last conference as your president was the SWCOLT-CCFLT joint conference in February. The ‘worker bees’ for this conference were the CCFLT board members and we received numerous compliments for how smoothly everything went. The SWCOLT board members reported that this conference was one of the largest and most successful in recent years! There were over 340 Colorado teachers in attendance. I would like to thank all of the amazing presenters, exhibitors, student volunteers, sponsors, award and grant recipients, essay writers, video makers, past presidents, and general attendees for coming together to participate in our continuing efforts to provide such a positive professional opportunity in the area of world language education. Most of all, however, I would like to thank the CCFLT Board of Directors -- you are amazing! Without you and your hard work, there would not have been a conference. Without your passion and dedication there would not be our new CLEAR Awards, Google Hangouts, Webinars, miniconferences, a new and improved website and digital newsletter! Two of our board members, Matthew Webster and Jenny Beltman, are finishing their terms in May. To Matthew and Jenny: Thank you for your passion, enthusiasm and commitment. We will miss you! I am thrilled to be able to pass the presidential torch to such a strong leader as our next president, Becky Loftus. She has already begun planning all the traditional CCFLT events and activities, as well as some new ideas of her own. You will be hearing about all of these in the upcoming year. Have a wonderful end of the school year, and a restful and restorative summer vacation. I have really enjoyed serving as president this year and have greatly appreciated your enthusiastic support. Thanks for a wonderful year! Diana Noonan CCFLT President 2014-2015 [email protected] Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 2 SWCOLT Student Volunteers ROCK! by Nina Barber Student volunteers from our local universities helped out at the SWCOLT / CCFLT conference in February. Their tasks included stuffing bags, working at the CCFLT Garage Sale, and distributing and collecting evaluations. In their free time, volunteers processed the evaluations and attended sessions that interested them. Several of the student volunteers presented at a Friday morning session, and then immediately after began their volunteer labors. Many thanks to Casey Vavrina; Rob Osborne; Anabela Vanesa Valerioti; Jacquelyn Moody; Jake Wedgeworth; Iris Guo; Dulci M-G; Bridget McFadden; Wendy-Anne Hamrick; Jessica Guindon; Nicole Pranger; Jacob Budde and Danny Taylor. Many of the volunteers showed up to work extra hours. CCFLT would like to thank these fine World Language students for their effort and energy! CCFLT is now posting jobs for world language teachers on our webpage! To check for job openings, go to www.ccflt.org and hover over the Resources tab. When the Resources menu opens, there is a link to the job postings. Are you on Twitter? Follow @CCFLT for current events and happenings. This is the great place to find links for professional development and resources Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 If your school has an opening you would like listed, please send the information to: [email protected]. Page 3 Chris Biffle CCFLT Fall Conference October 3 2015 “If a student’s whole brain is involved in learning, there isn't any mental area left over for challenging behavior.” WatchWhole Brain Teaching in action on YouTube Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 4 Përshëndetje! That’s Albanian for “Hello!” I am writing my last article for the CCFLT newsletter as I go through Pre-Service Training for the Peace Corps in Elbasan, Albania. I’ll be in this country for the next 27 months. I’ll be working for the Department of Education as a teacher trainer. I also talked with the president of the English Language Teachers Association (the Albanian equivalent of ACTFL) and am excited to work with him and his organization over the next two years. All the great resources I gained over my tenure on the Executive Board of CCFLT is going to help me greatly as I collaborate with this organization. I gained so much from my time with CCFLT and I am eternally grateful for everything that CCFLT has allowed me to learn and do. Above all, I am most thankful for the wonderful friendships I have made with so many incredible world language teachers from throughout Colorado. Two years ago I had no idea that I would now be living in Albania as a Peace Corps Volunteer and I have no idea where I’ll be after this adventure. However, I hope that we can stay connected and that maybe our paths will cross again in the future! Mirupafshim dhe falemnderit! (Good-bye and thank you!) Cristin Bleess Looking for some new ideas or inspiration? [email protected] CCFLT will be continuing a webinar series for 2015 that will focus on professional development. These webinars will be available for members and will include a variety of topics such as: technology in the classroom reading strategies using current events in the classroom connecting your classroom to the real world Check your inbox for invites to live webinars. Check the “members only” resource tab on the CCFLT website for archived webinars. Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 5 The TELL Project wants YOU to be an EPIC teacher! by Connie Navarro If you have ever been evaluated by someone who has no idea what actually happens in a World Language classroom, you know the frustration of feedback tools that don’t actually help you measure your effectiveness, or help you become a more effective language teacher. Thomas Sauer presented Thursday at SWCOLT about the TELL Project (Teacher Effectiveness for Language Learning), an organization that seeks to define what makes for an effective language teachers. Using an extensive body of research, TELL has identified seven areas that are integral to maximizing student language learning: Environment: How do you create a safe and supportive learning environment to prepare for student learning? The Learning Experience: How do you provide meaningful learning experiences that advance student learning? Collaboration: How does your collaboration with stakeholders support student learning? Planning: How does your planning of learning experiences prepare for student learning? Performance & Feedback: How do you and your students use performance and feedback to advance student learning? Professionalism: How does your continued growth as a professional support student learning? Learning Tools: How do you and your students capitalize on a variety of learning tools to maximize student learning? TELL has a framework to fully examine the areas above, as well reflective tools and resources, all designed specifically for World Language teachers by World Language teachers. Visit their website (www.tellproject.org) to access Self Assessments and Feedback Tools for observers –like your administrator (who may or may not speak your target language). And it is ALL FREE! TELL wants YOU to be an EPIC teacher! Head to the website (www.tellproject.org/tools/epic-growthplan/). Envision, Plan, Implement, Collect: a personal growth plan model. Download simple (or in depth) self reflection tools to help you Thomas Sauer is the Director of Design and Communication for Advance Learning and an independent consultant. He previously held positions as world language specialist in the Fayette County Public Schools and Jefferson County Public Schools for almost ten years and taught German at the University of Kentucky. Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 6 Project-Based Language Learning By Noah Geisel One of the most popular sessions at SWCOLT was Project-Based Language Learning by Don Doehla, California’s Language Teacher of the Year (TOY). The standing-room-only crowd laughed and even cried with Don as we learned about this powerful approach to teaching and learning. The key to Project-Based Learning (PBL) is that it isn’t about projects but rather inquiry. According to Don, PBL starts with a Driving Question that will hook learners. He stressed that it is distinct from an Essential Question in that it “pushes inquiry further and is open-ended (but with direction).” Another element of PBL that begs a shift in practice involves the roles of teachers and students. Students are charged with taking ownership over the learning driven by their own “need to know.” They investigate, explain and reflect upon the Driving Question, while challenging themselves to remain in the target language. Teachers meanwhile, are tasked to coach, guide and push students with reflective questions. “When a student asks ‘Why is ___?’ we teachers respond, “Good question. Why is that? What do you think?” explained Don. Teachers want to encourage students to exercise voice and choice in all aspects of their inquiry, including the platform they use to share their learning. PBL culminates with students producing a product at the end of the unit that is theirs. For additional resources, access Don’s presentation at https://drdmd.wordpress.com/swcolt15/ and visit Laura Sexton’s blog http://www.pblinthetl.com/ (Laura presented our Spring CCFLT webinar). 2015-2016 Teacher of the Year Call for Nomination! CCFLT is proud to recognize teachers who go above and beyond in the classroom for our world language students. Our Grants and Awards Committee is accepting applications for the 2015-2016 CCFLT Teacher of the Year. The application deadline is May 1. Please visit the Grants and Awards page at www.ccflt.org to access the Teacher of the Year application and rubric. Please also direct any questions to Kristy Swartwood at [email protected] Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 7 Colorado German Day by Amy Flynn The second annual Colorado German Day, an event that celebrates study of German with educational, cultural and competitive events, took place at Ponderosa High School on February 13, 2015. 93 students from 5 schools and 27 volunteers from took part in 26 separate competitions, including oral, written and visual events. We are already looking forward to next year’s event which will be on February 12, 2016, location TBA. Here is what some of our students had to say about the event: "Colorado German Day was a very educational experience. The activities were very fun, while also being informative." Seth S., Bear Creek HS “Es war gut. German Day is da bomb!” Connor A., Columbine HS “Not only was German Day a great cultural experience, it was a blast.” Jack S., Columbine HS “German Day was really fun. I really want to do it next year!” Jacob S., Ponderosa HS Entry, Original Art Competition Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Visit the Colorado German Day Website Page 8 Colorado German Day by Amy Flynn Nine years ago I joined CCFLT, and I have been active with this organization because of the benefit I have received from it. What I’ve learned from the workshops and conferences produced by CCFLT have helped make me a better teacher, but I also have to credit CCFLT for helping make one of my biggest dreams come true. When I moved to Colorado in 2005 and started teaching German, I immediately started looking for a German competition similar to what I had experienced with my students in Texas during the years I taught in there. The Texas State Co-Founder Jonathan Gigler and his Ponderosa HS German Contest is Team a state wide event wherein students can compete in over 30 oral, visual and written events. I knew that UNC offered an excellent world language day with a long and proud heritage, but I wanted my students to have an experience like I’d seen in Texas. However, my dream of establishing a state wide German contest was overwhelming enough to put it on the back burner… indefinitely. Pass auf! Trivia Bowl Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Then, in the summer Entry, T-Shirt Design of 2013, I was contacted by Jonathan Gigler, a new-to-Colorado teacher who also wanted to start a state German contest after his experience with Alabama German Day. He contacted CCFLT, and one of the board members put him in touch with me. And now, two years later, we are planning for our third event. The connection we both made through CCFLT helped us realize our vision for our students, one that we hope to continue to foster and grow for years to come. Spring 2015 Page 9 We're all Magicians! By Michele Sachs The best compliment I ever received during my career teaching French came from a 9th grader who out of the blue told me: "Madame Sachs, you're a real Mary Poppins!" Flattered as well as surprised, I asked the student to explain the correlation, to which she replied: "Because we never know what you'll be pulling out of your bag, it's like magic, and because in your class we get the chance to play and move around a lot." I often fondly recall this touching comment in recognizing that we language teachers are indeed fortunate by teaching a subject that lends itself so readily to organizing games and introducing kinetic activities, and in so doing we get to fill the shoes of our colleagues in physical education, art, music or even theater. When I joined the Peak-to-Peak Charter faculty in Lafayette ten years ago as a French instructor at the elementary levels, my mission consisted of exposing the school's K-5 students to the French language, along the same lines as my Spanish counterpart. Every day, I would enter the classroom with my tools of the trade, pulling from my Poppins' bag a variety of masks, puppets and beanbags for 30 minutes of "fun in French". These experiences required a good dose of energy on my part, but in exchange the responses were extremely gratifying, through the eagerness expressed by students, who always greeted their "magician" with the broadest of smiles. The host elementary teachers would explain how their classes looked forward to the change of pace offered by my brief interlude. As full-fledged participants to my sessions, these teachers left me free reign to reconfigure the room's tables and chairs in order to accommodate the given activity program. It was during these interventions that I realized the importance of spatial organization in the classroom and the need for a modular environment when engaged in language learning activities. So a few years later, when I transitioned to the Peak-to-Peak high school, I made every effort to transfer the valuable kinetic and spatial lessons learned while in contact with the younger-aged pupils. After six years of exclusive high school experience, I'm fully aware of the extent to which my pedagogy focuses on movement and an optimal utilization of space available inside the classroom. Whether teaching beginners or advanced levels, I ensure that each of my courses contains at least 10-15 minutes devoted to some type of kinetic learning. Among my activities that draw the most widespread enthusiasm, many involve marking up the floor (having cement flooring in the classroom simplifies the set-up). As an example, let's take what I call "My Personal Space". This activity is typically introduced at the beginning of the school year for beginners under the "Greetings" chapter. The objective here is to have the students build appreciation for what constitutes a comfortable personal space across different cultures. Students are paired and stand a good distance apart. One at a time, they'll approach their partner and mark off exactly where they feel the boundary of this comfort zone lies. These markings are then easily compared among pairs, and the results often lead to valuable insights and perspectives, helping set the stage for, in many cases, an initial exposure to "foreign" language. Another activity involving floor markings is what I call the Time Machine, with the aim here of having the student move along a timeline in sync with the verb tenses I'm announcing out loud to the entire class. A variant consists of asking each student to place three differently colored sheets of paper (e.g. pink for past tense, blue for present, green for future) and then jump on the appropriate sheet once I read off a verb conjugated in a particular tense. Examples of such kinetically-inspired activities flourish and while our high schoolers might not always be in an energetic mood, they're still kids at heart and get just as much benefit out of moving around the classroom as their younger schoolmates. Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 10 Professional Development Personalize it! By Joanne Russum Many times when we hear the words “Professional Development” we roll our eyes or cringe thinking about mind numbing in-service meetings where we discuss student data and instructional practices that frequently don’t relate to the World Language classroom. We approach these opportunities with a fixed mindset and a self-defeatist attitude. We (I) are sure that it’s going to be awful. After coming home from the SWCOLT/CCFLT conference on March 1st, I decided to reframe my thinking about PD. Professional development is just like the educational experience we ideally should be providing our students with; it needs to be personalized. My professional needs are not the same as another teacher’s needs. Therefore, just like my students, I need to take control of my own learning. At the SWCOLT conference, Thomas Sauer pointed out to us that we need to focus on what we really want our students to be able to do, to produce, to retain. Thinking about PD, what is it that I really want to know, improve, and implement in my classroom, and where can I learn more about it? It is my responsibility to take control of my own Professional Development. I’ve been an on again and off again #Langchat lurker and participant, and I’ve had some meaningful conversations based on #Langchat topics. I have several blogs I love to drop in on, such as The Creative Language Classroom. I was so excited that Kara Parker from The Creative Language Classroom presented at SWCOLT! I walked away with some great ideas on using stations in the classroom! For me that is the key part of PD, what can I walk away with and use right away? Up next on my personal PD schedule are some webinars and a graduate school program that will enable me to study abroad again! So, I challenge you, what’s up on your own PD calendar? There are CCFLT New teacher Google Hangouts, upcoming SWCOLT and CCFLT webinars, and the AATSP conference in Denver this summer for Spanish teachers, AP and IB workshops. Go out and take charge of your own PD and personalize your own experience! Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 11 Friend of Foreign Language Norbert Frueh 2015 CCFLT Spring Conference Award Winners The CCFLT Grants and Awards Committee received quite a few submissions for our student and teacher awards this spring. Congratulations to all of our award winners, and thanks very much to all individuals who submitted applications. Below are the 2015 Spring Student Award Winners: Elementary Student Essay: Teacher, Chin Chin Fan Middle School Student Essay: Teacher, Celsa Rutan Secondary Student Essay: Teacher, Linette Santiagonavas University Student Essay: Teacher, Maria Lopez Elementary Student Video – Teacher, Chin Chin Fan Middle School Student Video – Teacher, William Gonzalez Secondary Student Essay – Teacher, Linette Santiagonavas CCFLT is fortunate to have such a wonderful teacher community. Our winners of the teacher awards exemplify world language teaching and leading. New Teacher Scholarship Drew Legan Kris Wells’ Memorial Creativity Award Claudia Sandridge Friend of Foreign Language Genevieve Overman Memorial Service Lynn Sandstedt Program Leadership Award Anna Huffman Award Anna Crocker Dr. Ismenia DeSouza Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 12 TIE ONE ON AT SWCOLT By Nina Barber The most unusual session I attended this year at SWCOLT (or at any conference I have ever attended) was a presentation by “The Apron Lady”, EllynAnne Geisel. The Saturday afternoon session was fascinating and was a refreshing change from 2 days of frantic note-taking and snapping photos of PowerPoint slides with my phone. EllynAnne’s stories would make me laugh. It was an emotional hour of warmth and joy. We all left with our aprons, thinking of storytelling, and with the feeling of superiority that we had attended the best session of SWCOLT. Advocacy Update By Janine Erickson Every year at the annual conference of the Southwest Conference on Language Teaching leaders from each of the nine SWCOLT states meet for a Leadership Breakfast along with other luminaries of the profession. Entering the room, I was instructed to don an apron and take a seat. I looked around to see that the other session attendees wore aprons. The presenter wore an apron with her motto, “Tie One On...An Apron, of course!” We all sat sheepishly in our aprons, feeling a tiny bit uncomfortable. And then EllynAnne Geisel began to tell the first story. I sat down and listened, and began to relax. She held up apron after apron, telling us the story of each one: the grandmother who waitressed, the mother who put on her fancy apron when the husband got home, the little girl who drank Coca-Cola from a bottle that sported a tiny apron with a straw pocket. Each story took me back to another place and time. I thought about my own mother and her aprons. I got a little teary. And then another of Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers This year Colorado was again well represented at the breakfast with Diana Noonan, Becky Loftus, Noah Geisel, Toni Theisen, Judy Cale and Janine Erickson. Also attending this year were VIP guests Bill Rivers, Executive Director of the JNCLNCLIS in Washington D.C., Paul Sandrock, ACTFL Director of Education and Nicole Naditz, CA and ACTFL 2015 Teacher of the Year. Seal of Biliteracy State leaders reported on activities ongoing in their states. Common among many of those states is the effort being made to gather support for a Seal of Biliteracy. A biliteracy seal on a high school diploma is visible evidence to students, parents, administrators, college admissions officials, and employers of the importance of learning languages. At least five SWCOLT states, California, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah, have already enacted legislation to support this effort with Arizona, Oklahoma, and Texas currently working toward a biliteracy seal or similar Spring 2015 Page 13 Advocacy Report Cont’d... recognition of proficiency in a second language. Colorado is a local control state so individual districts can make efforts to garner support for adopting a seal with their school boards. For helpful information on how to go about getting a seal at the local level you can download talking points on the ACTFL website at actfl.org/advocacy/resources. America’s language lobbyist, Bill Rivers, Executive Director of the Joint National Committee for Languages and the National Council for Languages and International Studies (JNCL-NCLIS ) reported on a very important topic that we can act on now. As you may know, the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee of the United States Senate has released a draft of the new Elementary and Secondary Education Act, (formerly No Child Left Behind, NCLB) which you can read at http://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/AEG15033.pdf . Most important to us is that the draft bill does not contain any provisions for world languages, and drops the Foreign Language Assistance Act entirely. The Senate Committee is accepting public comment on the draft bill. Leadership at JNCL-NCLIS President Marty Abbott and Mr. Rivers urge you to write to [email protected]. They have provided us with a template, which you may use to send an email to the Committee. Click here for the template Making the Case for Language in 2015 Mr. Rivers shared sound advice in his session “Making the Case for Language in 2015” where he emphasized the importance of global skills as fundamental to responsible citizenship in the 21st Century. The need for global skills has never been as dynamic and challenging, while influencing the growth and fulfillment of our future workforce and carrying significant implications for global security, economic growth, and social justice, not only in the US but worldwide. ACTFL, JNCL-NCLIS, CAL, American Councils, CASL and others are collaborating to assess the impact of foreign languages on education, global security, economic growth, and social justice. JNCL-NCLIS is available to help and asks that you let them by getting and staying involved. Make your class and program the best it can be Engage in continual professional development Engage in activities of your state organization Engage in activities of your regional and national organization CCFLT President Diana Noonan and Colorado State Advocacy Team Leader Janine Erickson will attend JNCL-NCLIS Language Advocacy Days May 6-8 in Washington D.C. ACTFL’s Director of Education, Paul Sandrock, introduced the Leadership Initiative for Language Learning (LILL) that seeks to empower individuals to become agents for change, foster a growth mindset focused on effective teaching and learning, and purposefully nurture leadership skills, all in the service of learners. The first Summer Institute will take place July 21-23 at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. Congratulations to Colorado elementary teacher in Denver, Karen Carmean, who was selected to represent the SWCOLT at this inaugural training institute. Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 14 Colorado Conference of Foreign Language Teachers Published September, January and April www.ccflt.org Julie Doyle, Editor [email protected] Have a question about dues? Please email Kristen Boehm CCFLT Executive Treasurer: [email protected] Advertising rates and policies: You are invited to advertise in the CCFLT Newsletter. Commercial ads, which support the mission of CCFLT and are of interest to the profession, including tour and book ads, are accepted for the following rates: Size of ad Charge Size of Copy Full Page $250 (7¼” X 9”) Half Page $125 (7¼” X4½”) Half page $125 (3½” X 9”¼) Quarter Page $75 (3½” X 4½”) Prices indicate a one-time submission in the newsletter. If you have questions regarding appropriate software or design files for ads, contact Heather Witten at [email protected] Advance payment is appreciated. Make checks payable to CCFLT and send to CCFLT, P.O. Box 270065, Louisville, CO 80027-9998 If you would like to pay for your advertising using a credit card, use the following link and passcode http://www.regonline.com/ newsletteradvertfees CCFLT Board of Directors POSITION EDUCATIONAL ROLE Diana Noonan President (French) World Languages Coordinator, Denver Public Schools Cristin Bleess Past-President (Spanish) Becky Loftus President-Elect (Spanish) Oberon MS, Jefferson County Public Schools Nina Barber Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Thomas Jefferson High School, DPS Jenny Beltman Elementary/Secondary Representative (French/Spanish) Aspen Elementary School Karen Carmean Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Sabin World Elementary, DPS Noah Geisel Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) East High School Joanne Russum Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Grandview High School, Cherry Creek School District Kristy Swartwood Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Englewood Middle School, Englewood School District Matthew Webster Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Mountain Ridge Middle School, Colorado Springs Heather Witten Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Elizabeth High School, Elizabeth School District Bryce Hedstrom Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Roosevelt High School Connie Navarro Elementary/Secondary Representative (Spanish) Denver Public Schools Peer Observer Richard Dodge Post-secondary Representative (French) United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs Elaine Tendetnik Post-secondary Representative (French) United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs Kristen Boehm Executive Treasurer (Spanish) Virtual Academy, Jefferson County Public Schools Amy Flynn Executive Secretary (German) Jefferson County Public Schools, WL Coordinator Julie Doyle Newsletter Editor Evergreen Senior High Edwige Simon Webmaster University of Colorado, Boulder Janine Erickson Advocacy Liaison Denver Language School Toni Theisen CDE Liaison Thompson Valley High School Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Spring 2015 Page 15 Why Serve on the CCFLT Board? The Board of Directors positions, which last for two academic years, give members the opportunity to: Practice Communication skills in at least two languages Promote Connections at state, regional, and nation’s levels Make Friendships all over the state Gain Leadership and professional growth opportunities Share Teaching tips, experiences and concerns Do you know a colleague who might be? The responsibilities: Serve for two academic years (beginning the May after you are elected) Attend monthly meetings from August to May Attend fall retreat in August Work at the Spring Conference Serve on a minimum of two committees; one Standing and one Spring Conference committee Chair a committee in your second year Reimbursements and benefits include: Up to twelve hours CDE recertification credit Mileage at 25 cents per mile Spring Conference registration and two luncheon meals Fall Conference registration Certificates for volunteer hours Building statewide networking connections Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Are you interested in serving on the CCFLT Board of Directors? Serving on the Board provides great opportunities for networking, collegiality, giving back to your profession, and most of all, FUN. To express your interest in running in the next election, to nominate a colleague, or to get more information, please contact: Noah Geisel [email protected] I look forward to hearing from you. Winter 2015 Page 16
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