|
Two roads diverged in the wood,
and I took the one less traveled by,
and that has made all the difference.
--Robert Frost
Please feel free to review my
Vitae. I also have a
mini-bio and photo available for your use.
I began my curriculum journey in the early 1980s,
before I knew of Dr. Heidi Hayes Jacobs or her concept of
Curriculum Mapping. Since then, I have had the honor of getting to
know Dr. Jacobs personally and am included in her list of
Curriculum Mapping Consultants.
I have had the pleasure of consulting, training,
coaching, and mentoring teachers, support staff, and
administrators, nationally and internationally, since the
mid-1980s. I am told that I am caring and motivating, while
at the same time practical and to the point.
If you would like to learn more about Curriculum
Mapping and what my website has to offer you, please choose from the links listed on the left sidebar. If you would
like to learn more about my personal educational odyssey, please
read on.
The Early Years
I actually started teaching when I was 12 years old. I was living
in Seoul, Korea, at the time (my father was in the Army). My first
job title was Summertime Volunteer and I was responsible for
teaching mentally challenged students to swim.
During the next school year, I took on the role of
Library Tutor for the early elementary students. On Saturday
mornings I enjoyed helping Korean children who were blind learn
English at the Korean Lighthouse for the Blind. Needless to say, I
was hooked!
I continued my newfound love by working with
severely mentally challenged young adults during my high school
years. Those years proved priceless. My responsibilities enabled
me to learn how to break down tasks and concepts so that they are
easily understood--an important attribute for Curriculum Mapping
consulting, training, and coaching.
I'm Official
I attended Northern Arizona University in
Flagstaff, Arizona, and earned a Bachelor's Degree in Education with
dual majors in Elementary Education and Special Education. My
first certified teaching position was at Sunnyside High School in
Tucson, Arizona. I surfed through a few grade levels due to
the Low-teacher-on-the-totem-pole Syndrome, which proved
priceless as it taught me to adapt quickly to my students' needs.
Changing grade levels also provided insight and understanding into
the pains, frustrations, and joys of teaching within a variety of
grade-level and school-site cultures.
I went on to receive my Masters, with Honors,
in Curriculum Development and Educational Leadership from Northern
Arizona University. My course instructors were actively "in the field,"
including superintendents, principals, curriculum coordinators,
and even district lawyers. The stories I heard! This truly opened
my eyes to the role that all levels of administration play in
creating harmony, or disharmony, in a school or district's life.
I was active on committee after committee after
committee, both at school and district levels. I was also a member of
many site-based teams and enjoyed being involved in these collaborative models. I
conducted a variety of intra-district workshops and trainings,
which eventually led me to search beyond my district borders to
investigate various educational opportunities.

Write On!
In the mid-1980s, I decided to try my hand at
writing an educational-resource book. I submitted my manuscript to
a relatively young company at that time: Teacher Created
Materials. My manuscript was accepted and I began a wonderful
writing experience that has lasted many years. My published titles
with this company exceeds three dozen.
I am currently working on a
Curriculum Mapping book that will be published by Corwin Press in
the spring of 2007.
Speak Up!
Due to my connection with Teacher Created
Materials, I began conducting Make It and Take It workshops around
the United States in the late 1980s. I approached the company with
the concept of presenting one-day seminars and they say, "The
rest is history!"
I have developed and presented a myriad of
seminars, workshops, and trainings, both nationally and
internationally, for over 20 years. Due to a personal desire and
need to stay current concerning educational methods, models,
frameworks, and philosophies, my role as a school-improvement
consultant blossomed during this time.
A Curriculum Mapping Focus
My extensive consulting and training work has
been in literacy, math, and science with an emphasis on aligning
curriculum and articulating learning. I heard about Dr.
Heidi Hayes Jacobs through a series of conversations with cohorts
and clients. I began attending trainings conducted by Dr. Jacobs.
For awhile, I stayed in the shadows, studying the model and
beginning my work with school and districts. Much personal
learning and growth came from those days! I am thankful for my
earlier school and districts' willingness to grow and learn along side me. Even
now, years later, I love experiencing new viewpoints or
variations that facilitate moving the
Curriculum Mapping model forward.
In 2001, I made the decision to work full-time
assisting learning organizations in their curriculum mapping
implementation and ongoing processes. Therefore, I am on the road
a lot. Thankfully I have a wonderful, loving husband, Johnny, and
great friends that support me in my work and my desire to
positively affect curriculum and educational reform on behalf of
our next generations, the children that have been entrusted to our
care.

A Book From My Heart
I have written a 328-page professional book, A Guide to Curriculum
Mapping: Planning, Implementing, and Sustaining the Process,
dedicated to understanding the complexities of curriculum mapping.
It is published by
Corwin Press. I am happy
that it is helping those new to mapping, as well as those looking
for ways to advance their curriculum mapping journeys.
|