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Showing posts from March, 2026

Final Blog Reflection

     Looking back over my PME 811 blog, I feel it demonstrates a thoughtful and authentic engagement with existing knowledge. Before this course, I had never written a blog, and I was surprised by how much this experience encouraged deeper reflection. I entered the term with what I thought was a solid understanding of innovation, creativity, teaching, and learning. However, the readings, assignments, and reading my peers’ perspectives encouraged me to revisit and refine those assumptions. As I continued to post, I realized how  much learning took place over the term. The biggest knowledge takeaway for me is the realization that consistent reflection is essential for growth. If I want to keep learning, I must keep reflecting.      My blog also demonstrates clear and consistent connections to course content. Throughout my posts, I explored tools, frameworks, and ideas that either innovated my practice or strengthened what I was already doing as an educat...

Introducing Magic School

 If you’ve ever wished you could get a few hours of your life back each week, or just have someone sit beside you and help with the parts of teaching that pile up, Magic School feels like that friend. It’s an educator‑built AI platform created specifically for K–12 teachers and students and more than 5–6 million people in schools around the world are already using it. At its core, Magic School is designed to give teachers breathing room. It helps with the tasks that quietly eat away at your evenings: lesson plans, rubrics, assessments, IEPs, parent emails, you name it. Teacher’s report saving 7–10 hours every week, which is wild when you think about what you could do with that time back. But what makes Magic School more than “just another AI tool” is the way it supports creativity and innovation. Need materials differentiated for English learners or students with IEPs? It can generate and scaffold content instantly. Want to adjust a reading level, design a formative assessment,...

Final Glossary

  Innovation Original Definition: Innovation stems from the Latin innovare , meaning “to renew” or “to make changes.” I think innovation is the process of improving or updating something that already exists. Innovation does not mean than creating something entirely new, rather, it is about enhancing a product, system, or practice to make it more effective. Revised Definition: Innovation is the purposeful transformation of teaching and learning through reflective change. This is often informed or influenced by historical, cultural, and relational contexts and can cultivate hope, build community, and prepare learners for a better future in response to evolving societal and global needs. Reflection: When I first defined innovation, I viewed it as improving something that already existed to make it more effective. At its core, I still believe this is true, however, my definition lacked elements to make a complete and holistic. Throughout this course, my perspective of innov...

Professional Development

                    AI Tools in the Classroom: School‑Based Pro‑D, January 23 rd 2026, 8:30–11:30 a.m. Event Description This school wide professional development session was held at W.L. Seaton Secondary which introduced teachers to practical applications of AI. The foundation of the session was a hand held guide named “Educational AI tools.” The workshop focused on how teachers can use AI to streamline everyday tasks, improve learning supports, organize materials, differentiate readings for diverse learners (including ELL), generate rubrics, create writing samples and strengthen report‑card comments. This session was designed for all the staff at Seaton Secondary and emphasized how AI is a tool that can innovate our practice by saving time on the laptop so we can spend more time interacting with our students and helping them one on one. Personal Reaction I felt apprehensive about AI and unsure whether it had a meanin...

Personal Learning Network

  Part 1: Initial Reflection When I think about how I learn best, face to face interactions or human connection is the first idea to come to mind. I know many educators who rely on digital platforms to stay current with new ideas however, my professional growth has developed differently. I have intentionally stepped away from social media as I have found it to be a big distraction to what’s important in my life. Instead, I have learned to depend on the people around me such as my colleagues, mentors or other professionals in the district. I have taught at 4 schools in 5 years and have had the privilege to build relationships with educators across the district who offer unique strengths, experiences, and perspectives. Whether it’s observing what others are trying in their classrooms, asking questions or co‑teaching lessons, my growth as a professional has stemmed from my relationships which has shaped the teacher I am today. In addition, I tend to share my own ideas through face...