New Bellingham School District leader reads to schoolchildren at WWU Kids Camp
Greg Baker, on his first official day on the job as the Bellingham School District's new superintendent, visited the Western Washington University campus today to chat with elementary school students and attend a meeting of WWU leaders and local teachers.
Baker is a WWU alumnus, having earned his master's degree in secondary education from WWU's Woodring College of Education.
Baker read a couple of books to the schoolchildren, who were on campus as part of the WWU Kids Day Camp, and then attended a meeting as part of the Noyce Master Teachers program, an example of one partnership between the school district and WWU. Working under a 3-year National Science Foundation grant, those involved in the program are working to assemble and implement a K-5 science curriculum adoption plan that aligns with the earlier adoptions at the middle and high school. They are also designing and delivering professional development for all elementary teachers on one science kit at each level. The work is based on and incorporates the cognitive science research about how people learn science.
For more information on Gregory Baker, visit http://www.piersystem.com/go/doc/420/508659/. Information about the Western Kids Camp is at http://www.acadweb.wwu.edu/eesp/youth/kidscamp/kidshome.shtml.
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