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Welcome to ECTI 2025! You will be able to register for individual workshop sessions on Monday during our intention setting session.

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Monday, March 10
 

8:45am MDT

Teachers as Policy Agents
Monday March 10, 2025 8:45am - 10:15am MDT
As professionals, teachers should be at the center of creating the policies that affect their daily decisions in the classroom and beyond. Join educational policy scholars from Wisconsin Education Policy Outreach and Practice (“WEPOP”) at UW-Madison in an introductory session called “Teachers as Policy Agents”. We will engage in interactive discussions and activities designed to change the way teachers think of themselves as policy experts, policy makers, and policy advocates. Participants will leave with policy action ideas for an issue important to them and their classroom, as well as tools for building coalitions with others around education policy.

Learning Goals
  • Understand the tenets of educational policy and policymaking 
  • Understand one's role as a policy agent 
  • Develop a next steps related to a policy issue important to your work
Speakers
avatar for Molly Garner Carroll

Molly Garner Carroll

Researcher & Evaluator, Wisconsin Evaluation Collaborative | Wisconsin Center for Education Research Mary T. Kellner Teacher Education Center
DI

Deonte Iverson

Doctoral Candidate, ELPA, UW-Madison
avatar for Shahanna McKinney-Baldon

Shahanna McKinney-Baldon

Wisconsin Center for Education Research

Monday March 10, 2025 8:45am - 10:15am MDT
Room 213 702 Langdon St, Madison, WI 53706

10:30am MDT

Outdoor Learning
Monday March 10, 2025 10:30am - 12:00pm MDT
Come join this experienced elementary teacher who does powerful outdoor education with her students each week from September through June. With years of experience to draw from, she will share stories, advice, curriculum ideas, and examples of how to do this work in addition to and integrated into regular academic/curriculum responsibilities, what the challenges are, and how to get school leadership on board. She has also conducted action research on this work, worked with community organizations to build an outdoor learning lab on site, and with colleagues across the area has advocated with school and district leadership about the importance of outdoor education especially in schools serving minoritized and marginalized student populations.

Learning Goals
  • Practical advice on how to organize and facilitate outdoor learning program as a regular component of the weekly schedule
  • How to turn any outdoor ed concept into an engaging game for your students
  • Tips for advocating for integrating outdoor learning as a critical component of elementary curriculum.
  • Resource sharing and network building: guiding and supporting texts and websites; year-long plan examples; opportunities to network and collaborate with other teachers who integrate outdoor education
Speakers
JG

Josie Guiney

Teacher, Lincoln Elementary School, MMSD
Monday March 10, 2025 10:30am - 12:00pm MDT
Room 213 702 Langdon St, Madison, WI 53706

1:15pm MDT

Teaching the 3 M's of the 2024 Election: Media, Money and Political Messaging
Monday March 10, 2025 1:15pm - 2:45pm MDT
“All politics is local” is an often refrain within the world of political campaigns. However, in today's media saturated environment, all politics are local/national/global. This session will focus on strategies and tools for helping young people start with local examples of political messaging via mediums such as local news, their social media feeds, or political advertising. Using this starting point, they will critically analyze the messages constructed in these sources and inquire into why and how they came to see them. This inquiry, for example, includes using available FEC and social media network tools for identifying groups purchasing advertising, who they are targeting, and how effective these ads are. Similarly, they will look at how issues are framed across the state and how they relate to their local context and target audience. Sample versions of these tasks will be modeled in the session and resources will be provided for use in your own classrooms. The goal is to develop informed citizens who can engage critically with a range of political messaging and employ information seeking strategies to understand how policy issues or candidates may impact them locally. Students can also use these skills to employ political messaging to reach others on issues they care about. Implications for this session include a more relevant approach to examining politics authentically, understanding how global/national/state issues impact local contexts, how and why outside groups attempt to influence local politics, and to counter the effects of partisan political rhetoric and the affective polarization it fuels.

Learning Goals
  • Model activities that participants can adapt and implement to foster their students' media literacy and inquiry skills while analyzing how political messaging is occurring in their local areas.
  • Help teachers develop their own skills and knowledge in the areas of political messaging strategies, affective polarization, and the role of special interest groups in political campaigns.
Speakers
JS

Jeremy Stoddard

Professor, UW-Madison
Monday March 10, 2025 1:15pm - 2:45pm MDT
Room 213 702 Langdon St, Madison, WI 53706
 
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