Looking for Montessori trained teachers for all levels (0- 3,3-6,6-9) to teach at an international Montessori school in Beijing, China. Immediate openings. We offer competitive salary and benefits.
Nahidah ShaikI have a montessori deploma and a years exxperience and would very much like to teach in your school.Thank you,Nahidah > Looking for Montessori trained teachers for all levels (0- > 3,3-6,6-9) to teach at an international Montessori school > in Beijing, China. Immediate openings. We offer > competitive salary and benefits.
If you are a K-12 teacher in the United States, you are invited to participate in a study titled “Teacher Perception of Technology Integration in the Workplace: A National Study.” If you teach in a teacher education program, please feel free to forward this invitation to any graduates that you think might be interested in participating in this study. If you already filled out the survey, thanks for your assistance and please dismiss this message.
Purpose of the Study: The purpose of the study is to investigate teachers’ perceptions of technology integration in the workplace as it relates to their self-confidence in computer use, their preparation in formal and informal technology courses in teacher education programs from which they have graduated, and administrative and technical support in their workplace.
Benefits: The findings could be used by teacher educators to revise technology courses and by K-12 school administrators to reconsider necessary support of technology integration for teachers’ practices. The benefits to you in participating in the study are receiving a copy of a summary of the study results.
Procedures to be Followed: You as a teacher are invited to participate in the study by completing a web-based survey. You will also be asked about your willingness to participate in a possible telephone interview. You do not have to agree to being interviewed in order to complete the survey.
If interviewed, you will be asked more detailed questions about your opinion on the type of experiences you had regarding technology integration during your teacher preparation program, whether you feel that you were adequately prepared, how you have used technology in your classroom, and your perception of the administrative and technical support that you have at your school.
Duration: The survey will take approximately 20 minutes of your time. The interview, if conducted, will take approximately 30 minutes.
Risks: There are no risks in participating in this study beyond those experienced in everyday life.
Compensation: There is no compensation for participating in this study.
Voluntary Participation/Alternative: Your participation in this project is voluntary. You have the right to withdraw at any time. You do not have to answer any questions you do not want to answer. The alternative is not to participate.
Statement of Confidentiality: Your responses will be confidential to ensure that they cannot be linked to you personally. Any personal information you provide that is linked to your name will be held in strict confidence when the data are presented in a written report.
Right to Ask Questions: If you have any questions, now or later, you may contact us at the numbers below. If you have any questions about your rights as a human subject, please contact the University of South Dakota Institutional Review Board at 605-677-6184.
Please assist us in our research and complete the survey by going to [link removed].
Thank you for considering participation in our survey.
Tzu-Yi Hsu Co-Project Director Technology for Education & Training University of South Dakota Phone: 605-677-8889 Email: [email removed]
Susan Santo Co-Project Director Technology for Education & Training University of South Dakota Phone: 605-677-5489 Email: [email removed]
THE 2005 JOINT ASSEMBLY, a partnership between AGU, SEG, NABS and SPD/AAS, is being held 23—27 May 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Program Committee is developing a Union-wide science program that will cover topics in all areas of geophysical sciences. With a reputation as one of the country's hottest spots for music, food, and nightlife, New Orleans is an exciting venue for the Joint Assembly.
Session Call for Abstracts ED06 : An Analysis of the Impact of Education Reform from "A Nation at Risk" to "No Child Left Behind" on science education
Abstract Submission Guidelines. $ Full submission guidelines can be found on the AGU Web site on the 2005 Joint Assembly page, [link removed]
$ It is the responsibility of the author to make certain the abstract is received at AGU headquarters by the abstract deadline, February 10, 2005. Authors must not rely on conveners to submit abstracts on their behalf.
$ Abstracts must be submitted in English.
$ Abstracts should be proofread carefully prior to submission. No changes or corrections will be made to abstracts by AGU Staff, including the order of authors. Abstracts received are considered final copy.
$ Authors must preview electronic abstracts before submitting to AGU.
$ Abstracts submitted by mail can only contain text. Graphics or figures may only be included in electronic submissions, as part of the URL option.
$ Abstracts must be accompanied by submission fees. The abstract submission fee is nonrefundable, even if the paper is later withdrawn.
$ Abstracts will not be accepted by fax or email. You must mail your abstract or submit it electronically through the website submission according to the appropriate deadline.
$ Abstracts can be submitted only when the first author is an AGU member in good standing or a nonmember whose abstract submission is sponsored by an AGU member in good standing OR a member of a co-sponsoring society. The appropriate AGU or cosponsor membership number (self or sponsor) must be provided with the abstract submission.
$ Submission of an abstract carries with it the obligation to present the paper in the mode of presentation and on the day and time assigned by the Program Committee. You are NOT guaranteed an oral talk, nor are you guaranteed a specific day of the week. The Program Committee makes all final scheduling decisions. Once scheduled, presentations may not be rescheduled.
$ All accepted abstracts will be published in a supplement to Eos. Submission of an abstract for the meeting is presumed to carry with it permission for AGU to reproduce the abstract in a supplement to Eos, on the CD-ROM, on the AGU Web site, in meeting programs, and in reports related to the meeting. It is also presumed to permit the free copying of the abstract. Although Eos is a copyrighted publication, authors are not required to transfer copyrights for abstracts submitted to meetings. Copyright, where it exists, will be reserved by the authors.
Deadlines and schedule: 3 February Postal Mail Abstract Deadline 10 February Abstract Deadline Electronic Submissions; No later than 2359 UT. 26 March Program Summary Available on AGU Website
1 April Acceptance letters and session chair letters mailed.
20 April Pre-Registration Deadline Housing deadline 26 April Abstract volume mails with Eos 23-27-May Joint Assembly 05 in New Orleans
Please feel free to forward this message to your colleagues [faculty, staff, administrators], doctoral students, and others, who may have an interest in submitting an abstract for the consideration of conference presentation.
. meth mouth . Try to warn your students about the effects of drugs, even "legal" drugs, on the body, especially meth nowadays. . Grisly Effect of One Drug: 'Meth Mouth'; By MONICA DAVEY Published: June 11, 2005 , NY Times; From the moment on Thursday when the young man sat down in Dr. Richard Stein's dental chair in southwestern Kansas and opened his mouth, Dr. Stein was certain he recognized the enemy. This had to be the work, he concluded, of methamphetamine, a drug that is leaving its mark, especially in the rural regions of the Midwest and the South, on families, crime rates, economies, legislatures - and teeth. Quite distinct from the oral damage done by other drugs, sugar and smoking, methamphetamine seems to be taking a unique, and horrific, toll inside its users' mouths. In short stretches of time, sometimes just months, a perfectly healthy set of teeth can turn a grayish-brown, twist and begin to fall out, and take on a peculiar texture less like that of hard enamel and more like that of a piece of ripened fruit. The condition, known to some as meth mouth, has been studied little in dentistry's academic circles and is unknown to many dentists, whose patients are increasingly focused on cosmetic issues: the bleaching and perfect veneers of television's makeover shows. But other dentists, especially those in the open, empty swaths of land where methamphetamine is being manufactured in homemade laboratories, say they are seeing a growing number of such cases. . These are the same towns, in some cases, that have wrestled in recent years with shortages of dentists. They are places where dentists have struggled to sell their practices as populations shrink; where new dentists have been reluctant to settle, out of fear that they will not get enough business to make ends meet; and where political leaders have offered financial incentives to lure young dentists to town. For good or ill, meth mouth is creating more business. East of Dr. Stein's Dodge City office, in Independence, Kan., Dr. Cynthia E. Sherwood said she too had seen such patients lately, including a woman whose teeth had been transformed into "little black stubs" too painful to brush and who wound up losing all her top teeth and six of her lower ones. Among similar patients Dr. Charles Tatlock has seen in his New Mexico office, he said, was one who, though only 17, needed dentures to replace his suddenly decayed teeth. And in Tennessee, Dr. Daniel D. Roberts gave up his ordinary practice not long ago to handle a growing workload at 10 jails across the state, nearly a third of whose prisoners, he estimates, have ravaged teeth owing to methamphetamine. "This is the worst thing to come along in a long time," Dr. Roberts said the other day. "At this point, I'm digging for tooth roots. That's how I make my living." Some dentists have their own hypotheses about precisely what causes the condition. Dr. John W. Shaner, an associate professor at the Creighton University Medical Center School of Dentistry, in Omaha, said he believed that a combination of factors tied to the use of methamphetamine led to such enormous damage. The drug itself, a synthetic stimulant that can be manufactured just about anywhere, causes dry mouth, Dr. Shaner said, and that in turn allows decay to start, since saliva is unavailable to help control bacteria in the mouth. The drug also tends to leave users thirsty and craving a constant supply of soda pop and other sugary drinks, which spur the decay; Mountain Dew, he said, has become the preferred drink of methamphetamine users. At the same time, the drug's highly addictive nature causes many users simply to stop doing what is needed to take care of themselves, including the brushing of teeth. Other dentists said they suspected that the caustic ingredients of the drug - whether smoked, injected, snorted or eaten - contributed to the damage, which tends to start near the gums and wander to the edges of teeth. Among ingredients that can be used to make meth are red phosphorus found in the strips on boxes of matches and lithium from car batteries. There are also dentists who point to methamphetamine users' tendency to grind and clench their teeth nervously, aggravating the frighteningly twisted and tangled look of meth mouth. If the man sitting in Dr. Stein's Kansas office on Thursday, who readily admitted having used methamphetamine, gets all the work done that he needs - X-rays, fillings and crowns, and implants for the teeth now missing from his mouth - he will require many visits, and the bill could run to as much as $7,000. [... and more in the near future. ] Most dentists, though, say this is hardly the growth industry any of them would wish for. The patients are grim, their teeth grimmer. Many of these young people, the dentists say, may end up with no teeth at all but with dentures, which some in dentistry had come to believe would soon be mostly relics of the past, even for the elderly, in an age of water fluoridation and other technology. "The real market for dentistry is in saving teeth, in helping people have dental health," said Dr. Stein, 57. "But I've seen a lot. I'm not a drug counselor, and I'm long past lecturing, but this is a sorry situation." . Dr. Shaner said meth mouth might be little recognized in many places - even as the drug has spread from one coast to the other and from rural areas into cities - because methamphetamine is a problem that has had a chance to sink in longer in places like Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri and because the effects to teeth are often most obvious in pockets like prison populations. He said he hoped to present information on the topic at a conference of the American Dental Association next year. With the exception of a few formal studies, including one now beginning in New Mexico, meth mouth has so far been less a topic of academic analysis in the dental profession than a matter for casual phone conversations and e-mail exchanges between dentists in small places. "The truth is, very little is known yet," said Dr. Stephen Wagner, who specializes in dentures and implants in his private practice and who in coming months will be studying 20 afflicted patients with Dr. Tatlock, an assistant professor at the University of New Mexico. "What I can tell you is what I have seen: It looks like someone has taken a hammer to these teeth and shattered them." One of the strangest truths of the condition, dentists said, is that despite the truly grisly look, many patients do not report suffering from as much pain as one would expect. Or at least, these dentists said, they do not report such pain while still using methamphetamine. Though the condition has begun turning up in private practices, particularly in cases of emergency care and among recovering addicts, it is far more prevalent in the dental offices of the nation's jails and prisons. Local sheriffs in Midwestern and Southern counties have complained of soaring dental costs in their jails. In North Dakota, more dentures have been needed in the state penitentiary in the last few years, a development that officials attribute at least in part to methamphetamine. In North Carolina, dental workers in the Department of Correction learned about meth mouth during a training session this month; starting in July, new prisoners there will be screened for signs of dental problems connected to the drug. In Minnesota's state corrections system, meanwhile, dentists' workloads are so full of gruesome methamphetamine- related matters that they are strained to get to other, less urgent cases: the routine cleanings and fillings of years past. "All of our time is getting eaten up," said Dr. Stephen Boesch, a dentist who works at a Minnesota prison and who said he had begun to see the problem in a juvenile corrections center as well. "We're seeing this week in and week out." Some dentists said they would never ask their patients about drug use; that is not their place, they said. Others said they would ask, but could not force the issue. "That's the thing: you can't beat a confession from someone," said Dr. Eric Curtis, who shares a practice with his father in Safford, Ariz., and began seeing meth mouth four years ago. "I suspect that many dentists are out there seeing this but don't know what they're seeing," said Dr. Curtis, a spokesman for the Academy of General Dentistry. "And most of them aren't going to know for sure." The new business, he said, is actually a gloomy one for dentists in rural places like Safford. "What dentists really make the money on is the happy stuff: the low-impact work with beautiful results," he said. "Nobody is happy when you pull a bunch of teeth and put in dentures." . ................................. instead of a "War on Drugs", how about if we legalize 'em and have a "War Paid for by Drugs"? The worst drugs, alcohol and tobacco, are already legal and kill 116,000 and 406,000 each according to [link removed]>.
I am organizing an elementary valentine exchange. We don't have anyone signed up for Nebraska!:( Surely there's someone out there!! If you would be interested in joining us, please email me ASAP! Here are the details: One class from each state is signing up to participate. I am compiling all mailing addresses. Your class (or a combination of classes or grade levels) will create a valentine card to send to each state in the US. You in return, will receive a valentine card from each state, possible marking the states on a map as you receive the cards. So many skills and so much fun!!
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION: Congress in the Classroom® 2005
DEADLINE: March 15, 2005
Congress in the Classroom® is a national, award-winning education program now in its 13th year. Sponsored by The Dirksen Congressional Center, the workshop is dedicated to the exchange of ideas and information on teaching about Congress.
Congress in the Classroom® is designed for high school teachers who teach U.S. history, government, civics, political science, or social studies. Forty teachers from throughout the country will be selected in 2005 to take part in the program.
You will gain experience with The Center's educational Web site, CongressLink - [link removed].
Throughout the program you will work with national experts as well as colleagues from across the nation. This combination of firsthand knowledge and peer-to-peer interaction will give you new ideas, materials, and a professionally enriching experience.
In sum, the workshop consists of two types of sessions: those that focus on recent research and scholarship about Congress (and don't always have an immediate application in the classroom) and those geared to specific ways to teach students about Congress.
The 2005 program theme will be "Our New Congress -- the 109th." Confirmed session titles are:
* A View from Capitol Hill * The Importance of Teaching Democracy Appreciation * George W. Bush's Second Term: What's in Store for Congress? * Congress Has a Humorous Side * How Congress Members Decide (Hint: It Looks Like a Game of Billiards) * Teaching Congress Through Visuals * The Struggle to Reform Congress and Its Consequences * The Civil Rights Act of 1964: Using Document Analysis to Tell the Story * How to Get Your Point Across to Congress Members * The Dirksen Center Web Suite as a Resource for Teachers * Congressional Insight: A Computer Simulation of a Member's First Term in the House of Representatives, and more.
The workshop will take place from Monday, July 25 through July 28, 2005, at the Radisson Hotel in Peoria, Illinois. Teachers who are selected for the program will be responsible for (1) a non-refundable $135 registration fee (required to confirm acceptance after notice of selection) and (2) transportation to and from Peoria, Illinois. Many school districts will pay all or a portion of these costs.
The Center pays for three nights lodging at the headquarters hotel (providing a single room for each participant), workshop materials, local transportation, all but three meals, and presenter honoraria and expenses. The Center spends between $25,000 and $30,000 to host the program each year
Those teachers who are not selected for the program will have an opportunity to register for the Web-based Congress in the Classroom course.
The deadline for applications is March 15, 2005. Enrollment is competitive and limited to forty. Selection will be determined by The Center. Individuals will be notified of their acceptance status by April 1, 2005.
Take a look at The Dirksen Center Web site - [link removed].
If you are interested in registering for the Congress in the Classroom® 2005 workshop, you can complete an online registration form found at: [link removed].
Learn About One of the Best-Kept Secrets of American History: The I&M Canal
Five-day teacher workshops exploring the themes of immigration, transportation, western expansion and city building through study of the U.S. Canal Era, using the Illinois & Michigan Canal as a case study for the canal experience. Made possible through a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the workshops are for K-12 teachers across the U.S.
Workshop highlights include • $500 stipend for each participant • Discounted graduate credit available • Presentations by noted canal historians, scholars and authors • Field visits to sites throughout the I&M Canal National Heritage Corridor • Access to I&M Canal Archives at Lewis University Library • A wealth of resources, including unpublished primary source documents • Development of a curriculum project for classroom use
The workshops will be held at the Gaylord Building Historic Site, 25 miles from downtown Chicago and on the I&M Canal.
Choose from one of three sessions: June 27-July 1, July 12- 16 or July 25-29, 2005.
Application deadline: March 15, 2005. Go to [link removed].
Sponsored by Canal Corridor Association and Lewis University. Made possible by a grant through the Landmarks of American History program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
My husband and I will be moving to Lincoln Nebraska. I have an elementary teaching license and reading recovery training. I have taught in another state for five years. Does anyone know what the job market is like for elementary teachers and/or reading teachers? I want to find a job!
Since I've never been...See MoreHello. I am looking for info regarding teaching jobs in NE and hope someone could help me. I have 15 years experience and am a male looking to teach in elementary or early middle. My credentials, resume, and experience speak positively for themselves. What are the chances of getting hired? I do prefer the rural areas.
Since I've never been there, how are the kids? the demographics? Also, are there many tornadoes there? I currently teach in Northern VA, where the pressures are extreme...how are they there? Don;t get me wrong, in that I know that teaching is demanding, but am looking to get away from the NoVA "atmosphere." Any help is appreciated, and have a great day!
On 3/02/08, to Kim-- wrote: > There is some competition for jobs in Lincoln, but many > smaller communities around the area and within commuting > distance have jobs available, or will by this fall. Also, you > could consider jobs in Omaha (it's a 45 minute commute down I- > 80), though Lincoln or a small town would be a better choice, > I think. > Nebraska tends to have a lot of teaching jobs available, but > often they are in rural or private schools. Keep your eyes > open and something will probably come up.
Proyecto Campanario Campanario, begun in 1990, is a conservation initiative in the Osa Peninsula dedicated to protecting what remains of the lowland tropical rain forests of the region. Campanario is actively involved in sustainable development efforts in the region and offers environmental education workshops, courses, and vacations to national and international students of all ages. Campanario will be overseeing the natural history and research component of the course. Please view the Campanario web site at: [link removed]
PROJECT CAMPANARIO focuses on conservation and community activities conducive to and promoting sustainable living and development. The founders of PROJECT CAMPANARIO know that the Osa Península's natural endowment is unique and worth conserving for present and future generations.
Proyecto Campanario's second mission is to promote environmental education to all who spend time at Campanario, both local and international visitors. Campanario offers 4 basic programs to accommodate different age levels, interests, and different lengths of stay. Please select the program best suited for you:
Ecological Tourism Expeditions for the adult or family group. Rainforest Conservation Camps for families and/or middle and high school students. Tropical Ecology Student Courses for university, high school, and middle school students. Tropical Ecology Teachers' Programs.
RAINFOREST CONSERVATION CAMP The Ultimate Field Trip for Teachers
New schedule for 2005: 19/June - 24/June 26/June - 1/July 7/August - 12/August 14/August - 19/August
Contact Us As Soon As Possible.
What Rainforest Conservation Camp is all about. . .
You will have a week of adventure exploring the tropical forests: highland páramo, mangrove, and lowland primary, secondary, and successional rainforests. You’ll also be visiting nearby protected areas, recording observations, exploring tide pools, participating in lectures and discussions, performing your own investigation, and learning about the pressures affecting this area. There will be time for swimming, snorkeling, and just relaxing. You can expect to be challenged in your treks through the rainforest, to get wet, dirty, and tired, to experience a corner of the world few people know, and to have a great time.
Where You’ll Stay. . .
The Campanario field station is rustic, but comfortable, with all the basic necessities: large kitchen & dining hall, screened-in bunkrooms, tiled bathrooms, clothes washing sinks, library, study / lab tables, and a large front porch looking out to the beach. Solar panels provide a bit of lighting in the evenings. Trails start at the front door and the secluded beach is just a stone’s throw away.
How You’ll Get There. . .
Getting to Campanario is an adventure in itself. You’ll travel by chartered bus south from San José, visiting various life zones, winding through banana and oil palm plantations to the river village of Sierpe. There you board a boat to travel down the Sierpe River, spending some time in the dense mangrove forest before heading out to the ocean at high tide and down the coast to Campanario. Once in the Campanario cove, everyone hops out into the warm water to carry the cargo to the field station
HABITATS AND CULTURE OF COSTA RICA 2-week session and 3-week session
New schedule for 2005: 14 Day / 13 Night Course: 3/July - 16/July 24/July - 6/August
21 Day / 20 Night Course: 26/June - 16/July
Contact Us As Soon As Possible.
Course Description:
Habitats and Culture of Costa Rica offers an environmental overview of present day Costa Rica that emphasizes the natural history of its diverse landscapes as well as the language and customs of the people. You as a student, journey across Costa Rica’s extraordinary geography: from coral lagoon to once-glaciated peaks of volcanic rock, experiencing cloud forests, lowland rainforests, and mangrove swamps. Along the way, you will learn about typical menus, rural schools, and the practices of tropical agriculture. You will receive instruction in the rudiments of conversational Spanish, participate in a service project, and investigate the flora and fauna of different eco-systems. Your goal is to gain an understanding of Costa Rica’s environment within a cultural context.
Several days of residence at the remote Campanario field station on the Osa Peninsula anchor the course and provide a setting for learning to conduct simple field investigations.
Course Formats: Two course formats are offered: a two week course and a 3 week course. Credit is offered at two levels (see below): (1) Professional Development and (2) Degree Applicable. Academic credit is given through Lewis and Clark College in Oregon.
Two week session: The 14 day session gives 2 semester hours of credit: 1 credit hour in science education and 1 credit hour in social studies education. The course is basically split between classes and trips with the San José area and the field experience in the Campanario Biological Station.
Three week session: The 21 day session gives 4 semester hours of credit: 2 credit hours in science education and 2 credit hours in social studies education. This longer session allows for a further study of the tropical dry forests of Guanacaste.
Note: 2 semester hours is the equivalent of 3 quarter hours of credit. Write to us for the course numbers and for instructions as to how to register.
(1) Graduate credit for Professional Development is designed to respond to the ongoing educational needs of practicing professionals. These credits are generally not applicable to a degree program but typically meet licensing requirements and staff development needs. A Credit/No Credit evaluation will be given.
(2) Degree Applicable graduate credit is offered through the Graduate School of Education at Lewis and Clark College. This option demands additional work during the course and high expectations for reading, writing, and presentation of work for evaluation. A letter grade for the course will be given.
Participating Organizations: Institute for Central American Studies (ICAS) ICAS was founded in San José, Costa Rica in 1982 and seeks to disseminate accurate and reliable information about political and socio-economic development in the region and to provide education about the language, history and politics of Central America. ICAS will be overseeing the Spanish language learning and San José cultural aspects of the course. Please view the ICAS web site: [link removed]
Lewis and Clark College Lewis and Clark Graduate School of Education is offering the course for academic credit under the approval of Dr. Charles Ault. For many years, Dr. Ault has offered “Ecoscapes: Costa Rica”, a similar course leading to a Masters in Education. He is now happy to offer the benefits of this course to non-degree and non-Lewis and Clark students through “Habitats and Culture of Costa Rica”. Please view the Lewis and Clark College web site at: [link removed]
Write – E-mail – Call us for an application and information on course outline, itinerary, fees, and instructions for obtaining academic credit.
Other Information You Should Know
Security and Safety. . .
There is a first aid kit at the field station, a boat is ready in case of emergencies, and a cellular phone is available for necessary communication with the outside world. The water is potable, and the dining hall & dormitories are completely screened. Meals, while not gourmet, are nutritous & plentiful, with lots of fruits & veggies. Each participant must have travel insurance which will be adequate for remote locations like Campanario. Insurance should cover med-evacuations, just in case.
How You Sign Up. . .
Sign-ups should be made as early as possible (space is limited) and at least 30 days prior to the trip. We need a 50% deposit to secure your reservation. The deposit can be made with your trip coordinator or directly to us. Payment may be made by cash, travelers’ checks or bank checks made out to Campanario S.A., The remainder is due during orientation in San José and should be paid in cash at that time.
Should cancellation be necessary, 50% of the deposit can be refunded if you advise us in writing at least 30 days before the initiation of the trip. Sorry, we are unable to offer refunds on deposits after that date because preparations for the camp session will have gone into effect.
Once you’ve made your reservations, we’ll send you a list of things to pack and how to get ready for your trip. Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions. Click here for updated costs.
Return to Home Proyecto Campanario Tel: +506 - 258-5778 * Fax: +506 - 256-0374 [link removed]
Hello, my name is Shelly Ellermeier, I am a teacher in Curtis NE. There will be some openings at my school for next fall. There will be at least one elementary upper grade position and a open position for a resource teacher. At the high school there will be a history opening, english opening and a FCS opening. And possibly a PE teacher, not sure as of yet. Please email me if you are interested and I can give you more information.