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How to Be Heard Worldwide from Your Classroom

Practical ways busy teachers can share what they know with the world.

 Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons
Source: Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons

Education policies often reflect little to no teacher input. News (and thus public perception) about schools is shaped by stakeholders who don’t work in classrooms. Teachers make monumental discoveries every day, but researchers don’t study them because they never hear about them. Teacher preparation programs are often designed by those with little or no classroom teaching experience.

Do any of these facts bother you? If they do, you teachers can change them. You can share your powerful classroom discoveries with the world.

Maybe you’ve found a strategy that calms a “fight or flight” mode student in 30 seconds. Maybe you’ve developed a program that has dyslexic kids reading as proficiently as their peers. Maybe you have an idea that could revolutionize the way classrooms are arranged. Or maybe you like to blog about your journey as a teacher.

Whatever you know, sharing it outside school walls can inform policymakers, journalists, the public, other teachers, researchers, and professors who can use this knowledge to better serve students.

But you’re busy. Very, very busy.

So what are some quick, easy, practical ways you can share what you know with the world? There are many. Here are some, taken from my book Sharing Your Education Expertise with the World: Make Research Resonate and Widen Your Impact:

Ways to Be Heard (That Fit a Busy Teacher’s Schedule)

Register with free directories reporters use when finding education experts to book on television and radio. EWA has 3,000 reporter members, and they use SourceSearch to find experts like you for input. Public Insight Network (PIN) is used extensively by TV stations and networks (like PBS), public radio (including NPR), news organizations (like The Washington Post), and universities (Briggs, 2016).

Invite a local news station to film one of your special lessons or events. Involve your principal for logistics (e.g., if parent permission isn’t secured in advance, students will have to face forward so their faces are not captured on film). Local, regional, and state media outlets devote 7 percent of their coverage to education (national media outlets devote only 2 percent), and 80 percent of the public gets the majority of its news from local television, which it deems more trustworthy than national sources (Campanella, 2015).

Did you already write a blog post or article but want more people to know about it? Add #TellEWA to a tweet about it. This immediately lets the Education Writers Association (EWA) know about your post, and EWA will often then share your piece with its 3,000+ journalists in the field as an “EWA Story of the Week.” Also, share a link to your article or resource through social media with hashtags (e.g., #teaching) that will help others discover your work when they search by that hashtag. (Want to research hashtags? Try Hashtagify.)

 Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons
Source: Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons

Take that PowerPoint presentation you’re already using to teach your colleagues about something, and present it in an online education conference. You can typically pick any time slot (due to international audiences), present in your pajamas (attendees only see your slides), sound like a genius (no one can tell you’re looking at notes), and save time (the next time someone wants you to present, simply direct them to the recording that was automatically made of your talk).

Click the “eResources” tab here, where my book’s free online resources are housed, and click “List of Conferences” to download a list of 179 education conferences. Look for the ones that list “online” in the “Location” column (you can sort by that column to more easily spot them) and apply to present.

Submit short answers to publications. Venues like the “Tell Me About” column in ASCD’s Educational Leadership magazine, Quora, and Wikipedia accept short answers to education topics and are seen by many. For example, Wikipedia ranks the sixth most widely used website in the world, and users view 10 billion pages within merely the English version of the site every month (Simonite, 2013). Some educators deride the site, whereas you could instead add a sentence or two to remove inaccuracies and improve users’ understanding of a topic. Classroom Q&A by Larry Ferlazzo (~70k Twitter followers) is published at EdWeek Teacher (~270k followers) and asks new questions every week that any educator can respond to.

Join a Twitter chat. This is a conversation between Twitter users who follow and include the same hashtag (e.g., #edchat) in tweets to participate in a single discussion. Since tweets are short, you can quickly share ideas. When I guest moderated an @Edutopia Twitter chat, over 4,600 people participated, meaning our ideas were seen by thousands, and the Edutopia team picked insightful contributors (e.g., teachers who tweeted during the chat) to invite to write guest articles for their site.

 Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons
Source: Pixabay, CC0 Creative Commons

Get interviewed. Education radio shows, such as teacher (and highly public voice) Larry Ferlazzo’s Classroom Q and A on BAM! Education Radio, regularly feature teachers as guests. Since you are answering questions on the spot and within your area of expertise, there is no preparation needed, and such shows are often only 15 minutes in length. Click the “eResources” tab here to download “List of Broadcasting Opportunities” listing details on 109 podcasts, radio shows, and other opportunities to be interviewed. Approach those related to education.

Write a book…without the usual length. If you’re anxious to be an author but don’t have time for a full-length book, consider writing a short book, such as for ASCD’s Arias series of 10,000-word books (equivalent to just 2 chapters in length). Search around and you’ll find other education publishers offering shorter formats (100 pp. or less). Or, clean up an academic paper you are passionate about (that you wrote in a teacher preparation or masters course but never published) and submit it as a chapter in an academic book (e.g., visit IGI Global and change the “Display” field to “Call for Book Chapters”). When either your short book or book (with your chapter) is published, you'll be a published author, can likely set up an Amazon author page (among others), and get to enjoy other perks of sharing your ideas via publishing.

Write a book review for professional development materials you’re already reading. Words flow easily when writing your reaction to something, and reviews allow you to add your insight to publications peers consume. MiddleWeb and edCircuit are well-respected, widely-read venues for reviews related specifically to education.

Speak to policymakers. “When education decisions are made without teachers at the table, students suffer the consequences” (Coggins, 2017, p. 6). Though of critical importance, teacher voice is particularly underrepresented when legislation is made (Gozali, Claassen Thrush, Soto-Peña, Whang, & Luschei, 2017). State and local policies and spending have greater bearing on classrooms than those at the federal level. Fortunately, local policymakers are typically easy to get a hold of. Devote a few minutes to reach one of your elected officials by phone or email.

Put It on Your Resume

As you share your discoveries and ideas with the world, put your endeavors (interviews, presentations, etc.) on your resume and share them with colleagues. These accomplishments tell others you are open to sharing on the world stage. This brings more opportunities your way (e.g., now the Superintendent wants you to present at a professional development day), which you can accept or decline as your time allows.

“Every time you ‘step out’ in the field and share in some way, you increase the likelihood of more great things happening. In this case, it’s more chances to share your work and impact more student lives” (Rankin, 2018, p. 11).

Reprinted with permission from MiddleWeb, where this article was originally published.

References

Briggs, M. (2016). Journalism next: A practical guide to digital reporting and publishing. Lost Angeles, CA: Sage.

Campanella, A. (2015). Leading the news: 25 years of education coverage: How local, regional and state news sources cover education and schools. Campanella Media and Public Affairs, Inc. Retrieved from www.scribd.com/document/268980834/Leading-the-News-25-Years-of-Education-Coverage

Coggins, C. (2017). How to be heard: 10 lessons teachers need to advocate for their students and profession. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Rankin, J. G. (2018). Sharing your education expertise with the world: Make research resonate and widen your impact. New York, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.

Simonite, T. (2013, October 22). The decline of Wikipedia. MIT Technology Review. Retrieved from www.technologyreview.com/s/520446/the-decline-of-wikipedia

Gozali, C., Claassen Thrush, E., Soto-Peña, M., Whang, C., & Luschei, T. F. (2017). Teacher voice in global conversations around education access, equity, and quality. FIRE: Forum for International Research in Education, 4(1), 32-51.

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