Category Archives: News

CTI News News

CTI Open House 2017

We had a great turnout for our Charlotte Teachers Institute (CTI) Open House 2017! Over 100 teachers from more than 50 different Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools were able to meet with our 2017 Seminar Leaders and learn more about the different seminars that we are offering this year.

Applications are now open and available through March 9th.

2016 CTI News Vol 8: Exploring Memoir - From Picture Book to Digital Story

Exploring Science through Memoir

Kassie Woodard, High School Science, William A Hough High School

Curriculum Unit (pdf)

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CTI News News

Fellows’ Finale 2016

Fellows’ Finale 2016 was a success! We had an awesome time celebrating our 93 Fellows and their accomplishments in completing their seminars and Curriculum Units this year! A fun filled night jam-packed with laughter and shared memories over the year that united the Fellows together with CTI.

CTI News News

2017 CTI Seminars Announced

Six of the 2017 CTI seminars have been announced.  The Teacher Steering Committee plans to add two more before January 2017.  Interested CMS teachers should read the seminar descriptions and reach out with any questions.  Also, please check the 2017 seminar schedule so you know the full commitment.  Additionally, please review the admissions review policies.  Check back often to learn more about the final two seminars.

Press Releases

Evening for Educators 2016: Teachers Present Their Science Research and Original Art

October 4th, 2016–  Local teachers will present their ideas and research about science, art and the humanities and what they’ve learned about themselves as teachers at Evening for Educators on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Discovery Place Education Studio. Presented by Charlotte Teachers Institute and Discovery Place Education Studio, Evening for Educators focuses on Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools teachers’ summer learning experiences as CTI Fellows. Fellows contributed to chemistry and physics research projects in UNC Charlotte research laboratories, and explored teacher identity through art at the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art.

The teachers, from a wide variety of subject areas and grade levels K-12, will discuss their experiences and share poster presentations and art work in a variety of media during Evening for Educators. The event includes refreshments and is free and open to the public. The Discovery Place Education Studio is located at 300 N. Poplar Street in uptown Charlotte. Registration is recommended at www.charlotteteachers.org.

The spotlighted teachers are all Fellows in CTI seminars. Twelve CTI Fellows participated in summer research in UNC Charlotte science laboratories with Dr. Susan Trammell, associate professor of physics and optical science, and Dr. Marcus Jones, associate professor of chemistry, and several of the professors’ graduate and undergraduate students. CTI Director Scott Gartlan said this Summer Science Research Experience for Teachers was a powerful intersection of teaching and learning at all levels, involving collaboration among teachers, professors, graduate students and undergraduate students.

“Our teachers contributed in hands-on, meaningful ways to critical, cutting-edge research with real-life applications. They are excited and empowered to take these experiences back to their own classrooms to share with their students in CMS,” Gartlan said.

Eighteen CTI Fellows also participated in a summer workshop at the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art where they explored teacher identity as portrayed in the media as well as their own understanding of themselves as teachers. “Teacher Identity: Pop Culture’s Influences, Images and Narratives” was led by Dr. Adriana Medina, associate professor of reading and elementary education at UNC Charlotte, and Christopher Lawing, vice president of programming and research at the Bechtler Museum.

“Teachers had an extended, very personal opportunity to draw upon the Bechtler’s amazing art collection and then create their own artistic representations of what it means to be a teacher,” Gartlan said. The teachers’ art is currently housed at the Bechtler and will be displayed at the Discovery Place Education Studio during this Evening for Educators event Oct. 18.

Other CTI Fellows from grades K-12 will also share innovative new curricula for a wide variety of subject areas that they developed for their own classrooms through CTI seminars.

About Charlotte Teachers Institute

Charlotte Teachers Institute is an educational partnership among Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, Davidson College and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte that works to improve teaching in Charlotte-Mecklenburg public schools. CTI cultivates content-knowledge, creativity, leadership skills and collaboration within and among Charlotte’s public school teachers. Programs include long-term seminars and special events for teachers, as well as community presentations.

Currently, 92 CMS teachers in grades K-12 are enrolled in eight, multidisciplinary seminars that began in the spring and continue until December, where teachers are creating new curriculum units for their students. These curriculum units generate learning beyond each teacher’s classroom, as the final units are shared with teachers’ school colleagues and are also published on the CTI website, providing access to teachers worldwide.

CTI is made possible by a joint commitment of resources from all three Institute partners and through the generosity of private funding institutions such as Wells Fargo and PriceWaterhouseCoopers. The Institute is housed at UNC Charlotte within the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.

For more information, contact CTI Executive Director Scott Gartlan, 704-687-0078, info@charlotteteachers.org.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools media contact: Renee McCoy, 980-343-0954, renee.mccoy@cms.k12.nc.us

Davidson College Public Relations media contact: Jay Pfeiffer, 704-894-2920, japfeifer@davidson.edu

UNC Charlotte media contact: Buffie Stephens, 704-687-5830, BuffieStephens@uncc.edu

CTI News News

2012 CTI Seminar Leader Peter Tkacik Named Early-Career Professor

photo 3Peter Tkacik, associate professor of mechanical engineering and engineering science at UNC Charlotte, was named the Bonnie E. Cone Early-Career Professor in Teaching at the 2016 University Convocation.  Dr. Tkacik led the 2012 CTI Seminar, “The Science of NASCAR,” in the Motorsports Research Labs.  Teachers explored the nation’s fourth largest water channel, only Tomographic Particle Image Velocimetry system in the US, and lots of race cars.  Read more about Dr. Tkacik here.

CTI News News

104 New Fellows Begin 2016 Seminars

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Charlotte Teachers Institute (CTI) kicked off its 2016 Seminars at Discovery Place on April 21, 2016 with the Fellows Orientation.  104 Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools teachers representing kindergarten through 12th grade were selected as CTI Fellows and will participate in eight seminars led by Davidson College and UNC Charlotte professors.  Fellows met their Seminar Leaders (professors) during the orientation event, had a chance to dive into the seminar content  and networked with community partners from Charlotte Symphony, Discovery Place Education Studio, NASCAR Hall of Fame, and UNC Charlotte’s Writing Program.  Seminars take a break over the summer and pick up in September with weekly meetings through November.  Each Fellow writes a 20-page curriculum unit designed to motivate and challenge their students to new academic heights.  Read more.

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CTI News News

Thanks to PwC for Empowering Teachers!

PwC_logo_smallCharlotte Teachers Institute is grateful to PwC for their participation in CTI’s 2016 Fellows Orientation and their generous contribution of $5,000 to support this year’s CTI Fellows. PwC Carolinas Marketing and Community Relations Leader Carrie Reeder provided an enthusiastic welcome during our Orientation event April 21 at Discovery Place and shared PwC’s goals for advancing financial literacy and partnering with teachers to bridge the financial literacy gap and increase economic mobility in our community.

Read more about PwC’s commitment to Empowering Teachers to Set Up Students for Financial Success.

CTI News News

Charlotte Teachers Institute to Host Open House for CMS Teachers

New Seminars for 2016 Announced

CHARLOTTE – Feb. 19, 2015 – Charlotte Teachers Institute (CTI) will host an Open House for Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) teachers on Thursday, Feb. 25, 5:30-7:30 pm, at UNC Charlotte Center City in uptown Charlotte. Interested CMS teachers from all subject areas in grades preK-12 can register for the Open House at www.charlotteteachers.org.

CTI recently announced its new seminars for 2016, featuring a wide variety of engaging, interdisciplinary topics for teachers from all grade levels and subject areas. Interested CMS teachers can meet the seminar leaders (Davidson College and UNC Charlotte professors), learn more about the seminars and the application process at the Feb. 25 Open House. Full-time CMS teachers are eligible to apply. The online application deadline is March 10.

CTI’s 2016 seminars include:

  • Literacy and Literacies in the 21st Century led by Kyra Kietrys, Hispanic Studies, Davidson College

  • How Science Is Done: A Behind the Scenes Look at Scientific Research, Susan Trammell, Physics & Optical Science, UNC Charlotte

  • The Many Faces of Capitalism around the Globe – Past and Present, Jurgen Buchenau, History, UNC Charlotte

  • Writing with Power: No Fear Here, Brenda Flanagan, English, Davidson College

  • FUNdamental Ideas in Math for Grades PreK-12, Harold Reiter, Mathematics & Statistics, UNC Charlotte

  • It’s a Small World! Exploring Science at the Tiniest Scale, Marcus Jones, Chemistry, UNC Charlotte

  • Tracing the Legacy of Hispanic Cultures – 1492 to Today, Angela Willis, Hispanic Studies, Davidson College

  • Exploring Memoir – From Picture Book to Digital Story, Brian Kissel, Reading & Elementary Education, UNC Charlotte

CTI Fellows collaborate with higher education faculty in these long-term seminars to create innovative curricula for their own students. All eight seminars begin in April and continue through November, including a summer reading and research period. Each CTI Fellow receives a $1500 stipend and three continuing education credits for their curriculum development work.

CTI is in educational partnership among Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS), Davidson College and UNC Charlotte, designed to strengthen teaching in CMS by cultivating content knowledge, creativity, leadership skills and collaboration among local public school teachers.

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For more information, visit www.charlotteteachers.org or contact CTI Director Scott Gartlan at scott.gartlan@uncc.edu.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools media contact: Renee McCoy | 980-343-0954 | renee.mccoy@cms.k12.nc.us

Davidson College media contact: Jay Pfeifer | 704-894-2920 | japfeifer@davidson.edu

UNC Charlotte media contact: Buffie Stephens | 704-687-5830 | BuffieStephens@uncc.edu

CTI News News

CTI Celebrates 2015 Fellows and Their New Curricula

See their Engaging New Curricula Published on the CTI Website

Charlotte Teachers Institute recently recognized more than 80 Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools teachers as CTI Fellows for successfully completing CTI seminars and designing engaging new curricula for their students. CTI also announced publication of these CTI Fellows’ curriculum units on the CTI website where they are available for use by teachers worldwide.

CTI seminars are led by Davidson College and UNC Charlotte professors in the arts and sciences who challenge teachers to deepen their content knowledge and think in interdisciplinary ways. CTI Fellows in turn share their creative learning with their students and other teachers,

The 2015 CTI Fellows represent grade levels preK-12, and a wide range of subjects from language arts, world history, foreign languages and art, to math, sciences, technology, and more.

“Together, these teachers spent nearly 3,000 hours over seven months attending CTI seminars at Davidson College and UNC Charlotte,” said CTI Executive Director Scott Gartlan. “In addition, they read and researched extensively, and wrote original curriculum units designed for their own students. They plan to share their new curricula with nearly 500 other CMS teachers, and almost 7,500 CMS students will learn from the units our Fellows created this year.”

Each CTI Fellow received three continuing education units and a stipend for seminar completion. CTI celebrated these teachers’ achievements at its Fellows’ Finale Celebration at the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art in December.

CTI presents eight, concurrent seminars each year, running April to December. CTI Fellows have created over 500 curriculum units created by CTI Fellows since 2009.

See the full list of 2015 CTI Fellows and their seminars.

CTI News

2016 CTI Seminars Announced

Seminars poster 2016

 

 

CTI News Current Events Events News

2016 CTI Teachers As Scholars: The Global Energy Challenge

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Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) teachers will share bright new ideas for teaching and learning about energy, at a CTI event for the public on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016, from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at Discovery Place in Uptown Charlotte.

REGISTER HERE

This “Teachers As Scholars” program features CMS teachers who collaborated on the topic “The Global Energy Challenge,” and highlights innovative curricula they developed during a long-term CTI seminar. CTI Seminar Leader Durwin Striplin, professor of chemistry at Davidson College, will also share his energy expertise at the free Feb. 4 event.

Sponsored by Duke Energy, the program begins with a reception and viewing of the CTI-generated, energy-related curricula from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., followed by presentations and a panel discussion with Striplin and CTI Fellows until 8 p.m. Space is limited, so registration is recommended.

Featured topics and teachers include:

  • The Global Energy Challenge – Striplin
  • Energy Explorations – Lisa Lewis, First Grade, Mountain Island Lake Academy
  • Efficiency and Availability: Designing an Energy Self-Sufficient Community – Kory Trosclair, Science, Bailey Middle School
  • Creative Verve: The Merging of Metaphor and the Scientific Mind – Gloria Brinkman, Art, North Mecklenburg High School
  • A Good Planet is Hard to Find: Climate Change, Energy and Global Sustainability – Jeanne Cooper, Earth and Environmental Science, Mallard Creek High School

The event is an outgrowth of an intensive, seven-month-long CTI seminar Striplin led for CMS teachers in grades K-12, where they explored various forms of energy, the history and science behind its conservation, as well as what new technologies can address the global energy crisis. CTI Executive Director Scott Gartlan said, “We are so proud to showcase teacher-written curricula focused on energy sciences for K-12 students.  These CTI Fellows are on the front lines inspiring the next generation of scientists and engineers.”

Thirteen sets of extensive, energy-related curriculum units for grades K-12 were developed by teachers in Striplin’s seminar and designed specifically for their own students. All 13 are published on the CTI website, along with 500 other teacher-created curricula from CTI.  Currently CTI is offering another eight seminars for 2016.

2015 CTI News Vol 1: Exercise and the Brain

Algernon’s Exercise Regimen

Molly McCarthy, Language Arts, Piedmont IB Middle School

Final Unit(pdf)   Implementing Teaching Standards(pdf)

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2015 CTI News Vol 1: Exercise and the Brain

New Equation in Math Class: Movement=BRAIN BOOST

Leslie Paytes, Math, Crestdale Middle School

Final Unit(pdf)   Implementing Teaching Standards(pdf)

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2015 CTI News Vol 1: Exercise and the Brain

Your Brain on Exercise: Linking Healthy Brains to Solutions for Environmental Health

Dr. Jeanne L. Cooper, Science, Mallard Creek High School

Final Unit(pdf)   Implementing Teaching Standards(pdf)

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