HAVERHILL PUBLIC SCHOOLS
HAVERHILL, MASSACHUSETTS 01830
ANTICIPATED OPENING
ANNOUNCEMENT OF POSITION
HAVERHILL PUBLIC SCHOOLS IS A DIVERSE ENVIRONMENT AND IS PROUD TO BE AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. ALL QUALIFIED CANDIDATES WILL RECEIVE CONSIDERATION
Title of Position: TEACHER OF TECHNOLOGY
Middle School
BILINGUAL PREFERRED
ANTICIPATED OPENING
Work Year: September - June
Effective Date of
Employment: 2024-2025 School Year
Salary: In accordance with the Teachers’ Salary Scale according to education and experience.
- Competitive Salary
- Eight GIC Health Plan Options
- Dental Insurance
- Flexible Spending Accounts
- Life Insurance Options
- Auto and Home Insurance Options
- Wellness Programs and Discounts
- Employee Assistance Programs
- Credit Union with Competitive Rates
- 403 (b) Retirement
- Personal and Sick Days
- Teacher Tuition Reimbursement
Organizational Relationship
or Line of Authority:
Directly responsible to the Principal in matters
related to the building and the Superintendent of
Schools and/or his/her designees.
Statement of Duties:
- The Technology Teacher is responsible for teaching computer skills, information technology, and digital citizenship to students in grades 5 - 8.
- The Technology Teacher will plan and implement curriculum and activities, and will work with classroom teachers to assist in the integration of Technology Literacy Standards into classroom curricula.
- The Technology Teacher must excel at preparing the relevant curriculum and taking shared responsibility for creating and maintaining an orderly, safe, and developmentally appropriate learning environment for children.
Creates a classroom environment that is conducive to learning and appropriate to the maturity and interests of students.
- Guides the learning process toward the achievement of curriculum goals and in harmony with the goals establishes clear objectives for all lessons, units, projects, and the like to communicate these objectives to students.
Curriculum and Planning:
· Possesses sound knowledge and understanding of the subject matter and the pedagogy it requires by consistently engaging students in learning experiences that enable them to acquire complex knowledge and skills in the subject.
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· Possesses knowledge of the developmental levels of students in the classroom and the different ways these students learn by providing differentiated learning experiences that enable all students to progress toward meeting intended outcomes.
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· Ability to design units of instruction with measurable outcomes and challenging tasks requiring higher-order thinking skills that enable students to learn the knowledge and skills defined in state standards/local curricula.
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· Ability to design well-structured lessons with challenging, measurable objectives and appropriate student engagement strategies, pacing, sequence, activities, materials, resources, technologies, and grouping.
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Assessment:
· Ability to design and administer a variety of informal and formal methods and assessments, including common interim assessments, to measure each student’s learning, growth, and progress toward achieving state/local standards.
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· Ability to design and analyze results from a variety of assessments to determine progress toward intended outcomes and uses these findings to adjust practice and identify and/or implement appropriate differentiated interventions and enhancements for students.
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Analysis:
· Individually and with colleagues, draw appropriate conclusions from a thorough analysis of a wide range of assessment data to improve student learning.
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· Regularly share with appropriate colleagues (e.g., general education, special education, and English learner staff) conclusions about student progress and seek feedback from them about instructional or assessment practices that will support improved student learning.
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· Based on assessment results, provide descriptive feedback and engage students and families in constructive conversation that focuses on how students can improve their performance.
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Instruction:
· Consistently define high expectations for the quality of student work and the perseverance and effort required to produce it; often provide exemplars, rubrics, and guided practice.
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· Ability to consistently use instructional practices that are likely to motivate and engage most students during the lesson.
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· Use appropriate practices, including tiered instruction and scaffolds, to accommodate differences in learning styles, needs, interests, and levels of readiness, including those of students with disabilities and English learners.
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Learning Environment:
· Use rituals, routines, and appropriate responses that create and maintain a safe physical and intellectual environment where students take academic risks and most behaviors that interfere with learning are prevented.
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· Develop students’ interpersonal, group, and communication skills and provides opportunities for students to learn in groups with diverse peers.
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· Consistently create learning experiences that guide students to identify their strengths, interests, and needs; ask for support when appropriate; take academic risks; and challenge themselves to learn.
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Cultural Proficiency:
· Consistently use strategies and practices that are likely to enable students to demonstrate respect for and affirm their own and others’ differences related to background, identity, language, strengths, and challenges.
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· Anticipate and respond appropriately to conflicts or misunderstandings arising from differences in backgrounds, languages, and identities.
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Expectations:
· Clearly communicate and consistently enforce specific standards for student work, effort, and behavior.
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· Effectively model and reinforce ways that students can master challenging material through effective effort, rather than having to depend on innate ability.
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· Consistently adapt instruction, materials, and assessments to make challenging material accessible to all students, including English learners and students with disabilities.
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Family and Community Engagement:
- Use a variety of strategies to support every family to participate actively and appropriately in the classroom and school community.
Collaboration with Students:
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· Regularly update parents on curriculum throughout the year and suggest strategies for supporting learning at school and home, including appropriate adaptation for students with disabilities or limited English proficiency.
· Consistently provide parents with clear, user-friendly expectations for student learning and behavior.
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Communication:
· Regularly use two-way communication with families about student performance and learning and responds promptly and carefully to communications from families.
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· Always communicate respectfully with families and demonstrates understanding of and sensitivity to different families’ home language, culture, and values.
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Reflection:
· Regularly reflect on the effectiveness of lessons, units, and interactions with students, both individually and with colleagues, and uses insights gained to improve practice and student learning.
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· Propose challenging, measurable professional practice, team, and student learning goals that are based on thorough self-assessment and analysis of student learning data.
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Professional Growth:
- Consistently seek out and apply, when appropriate, ideas for improving practice from supervisors, colleagues, professional development activities, and other resources to gain expertise and/or assume different instruction and leadership responsibilities.
Collaboration with Colleagues:
- Consistently and effectively collaborate with colleagues in such work as developing standards-based units, examining student work, analyzing student performance, and planning appropriate intervention.
Decision-Making:
- Consistently contribute relevant ideas and expertise to planning and decision making at the school, department, and/or grade level.
Shared Responsibility:
- Within and beyond the classroom, consistently reinforce schoolwide behavior and learning expectations for all students, and contributes to their learning by sharing responsibility for meeting their needs.
Additional Responsibilities:
- Responsible for instructional and general duties as indicated by the Building Principal, directives of the Superintendent of Schools or his/her designees, and policies of the Haverhill School Committee.
Qualifications:
- Licensed by the Massachusetts Department of Elementary & Secondary Education – Instructional Technology Specialist, All Levels or Technology/Engineering 5-12– Required, SEI Endorsement Preferred.
- Proficiency as evidenced through transcripts of undergraduate and/or graduate work in the fields in which candidates apply. Preference will be given to candidates who furnish evidence of academic accomplishment and strength in the content areas.
- Successful experience or practice teaching in the secondary grades.
- Such alternatives to the above qualifications as the Superintendent of Schools may find appropriate and acceptable.
Closing Date for Receipt
of Application: November 15, 2024
Applicant Tracking Posting #:
Address all Applications and
Letter of Intent to: Haverhill Public Schools
Human Resource Department
4 Summer Street - Room 104
Haverhill, MA 01830
An Equal Opportunity Employer
The Haverhill Public Schools is an Equal Opportunity Employer and is in compliance with Federal regulations prohibiting discrimination in employment on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, age, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, or disability.