Listen. Attending professional conferences can be a professionally
rewarding experience because we get to hear and participate in sessions as well
as hallway or lunch table conversations.
Listening to presentations informs us of what other educators are doing
beyond our own school/district/state walls.
In turn, this can inspire our own research, reflection, and refinement. Just as we know “shutting our doors and
teaching” leaves us feeling isolated, at conferences we should make it a point to
talk and listen with others.
Learn. We learn from talking with others about our
work because we can see what confuses people, articulate what’s working or not
working in our own practice and acquire new ideas to try in our own schools and
districts. When the sessions we attend
at professional conferences set clear learning objectives, we can evaluate our
own attainment of those learning goals as we participate in the session. Just as we want students to self-assess
themselves in our classrooms, so should we assess ourselves when we attend
professional conferences.
Network. Seeing people in our field excited about
their work is a benefit. By networking
and socializing with others, it’s amazing how many opportunities to collaborate
with others come our way. In an increasingly
globally connected society, we expect our students to learn and collaborate with
others within and beyond our school walls.
As professionals, so should we collaborate with others at professional
conferences before we attend, while we’re there and afterwards as
well. Building new and effective
relationships with other professionals increases our ability to continue providing
learning opportunities for our students.
When we listen, learn, and network, we return home from
professional conferences feeling refreshed, invigorated,
and ready to move learning forward in our local communities. This is exactly the way I feel right now upon my return from the Kentucky Council of Teachers of English Annual Conference.