Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Goodbye to my students


As much as I love my job teaching at the Haines City IB School, I will not be teaching here during the 2009-2010 year. I was informed a few weeks ago that my teaching contract at this school is not being renewed. I had planned to avoid sharing this information, because my purpose here was never to make my job about me. My goal always has been, and always will be, to help my students. Unfortunately, as the school has needed to make various announcements about next year, such as assigning Extended Essay mentors to 11th grade students, it has been more and more difficult to keep the secret. For that reason, I decided to let you all know what is happening. Don’t worry about me, though; I’ve already interviewed at a couple other schools, and I will be fine.

As I’ve prepared for applying for other teaching jobs, I’ve been putting together a professional portfolio. Now, a standard portfolio contains materials such as a resume, a teaching philosophy and other personal details. But, the focus of my portfolio is not really what I have done. The focus is largely on what you have done. When I want to show school principals what I do as a teacher, I show them your accomplishments.

During this past year, you have done amazing things. You not only completed original science fair projects, but you wrote scientific papers in the same format used by professionals. More recently, you wrote 2,000 word scientific literature reviews. How many of you entered IB even imagining that by the end of this year, you could write 2,000 word papers?

Consider that one of the graduation requirements for the IB Diploma is to write an Extended Essay—a 3,600-4,000 word research paper. And IB students are allowed about six months to write those papers. You wrote your literature reviews in just a few weeks. As 9th graders, you’ve seen how you can accomplish the Extended Essay.

During this year, I’ve encouraged you to use advanced data analysis techniques, such as linear regression, 95% confidence intervals and t-tests. These are techniques that most of the 11th grade IB students are just encountering this year. And most students across this country will not encounter those research methods until well into their college years. Here you are, in 9th grade, doing college-level work.

You should all take pride in your work this year. Many of you struggled in the early part of the year as you adjusted to the IB program. But, you’ve made it through 9th grade and are now well-prepared to continue and succeed in the IB Diploma. Others of you came into IB ready to take on the world. But, I’d still like to think you’ve been challenged in new ways and given unique opportunities to do great things. In the end, no matter where you began, you have reached the end of your first year in IB and have no excuse for not seeing it through.

I wish you all success and hope you will continue to share your successes with me. You have my email address.

25 comments:

  1. Your cool dr sabin. Srry for always talking in ur class

    -Jacob Venne

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  2. Doctor Sabin,
    It has been a joy to be in your class. I admit your class has been challenging, and I am glad I stuck with it. Thanks for the encouragement. I only wish you the best, Dr. Sabin. I am sure your future students will appreciate your humor and dedication. God Bless.
    Taylor T.

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  3. Don't Leave!! We will miss you, at least I know I will!
    STAY!

    great..now I am going to fail IB... :/

    ~Virali

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  4. wow Dr. Sabin thanks for being our army general and leading us to greater heights!

    Stephanie S.

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  5. Dr. Sabin,
    thanks for preparing us for next year and beyond. its been kind of fun :] and i'm sure we're way ahead of the lame "normal" ninth graders so i'm happy.


    Julianna S.

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  6. This is Jacob R., from 4th period, (insert reminiscent face here) maybe for the last time.
    Thanks for being an awesome teacher and for a funny, enjoyable, and learning-packed year. We did indeed accomplish great things. We will certainly miss you, along with Kopel (Wow, what a change it'll be). Best of luck. I'll try to keep in touch - maybe keep a blog running so we all can cyber-connect?

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  7. Dr. Sabin,
    I thank you for preparing me for my future, and wish you the best, you are a great teacher, and i am sure you will do a fine job in the next school you work at.
    Thank you agian.:)
    -Alejandra S.

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  8. Wow I never saw it that way.
    thank you Dr. Sabin for preparing us for our futures.
    Better now than later to struggle
    -Chris v.

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  9. This really sucks, Sabin. And I was even considering taking World Religions, now I'm not sure if the new teacher will be as competent. Anyway, you should definitely give your next students the same amount of work as we got, so they can suffer and learn how to write good lit reviews.
    --Marcello M.

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  10. Best wishes Dr. Sabin, God bless, and thanks

    Nicole M.
    4th period

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  11. We will all miss you Dr.Sabin. You have prepared us for the future stress that comes with IB. I wish you the best of luck wherever you may go. God bless
    Rebecca

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  12. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!!! You (and Mr. Kopel) totally ROCK!!!! Im going 2 miss ur amazing teaching and ur hilarious sarcasm and just smiling like a fool to you as i walk out the classroom 4 lunch. I REALLLY dont want u 2 leave, but if u must i hope u experience bigger and better(and taller lol) things. and ur next school better pay u like a gazillion dollars or they r ripping u off. WAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!! BYE DR. SABIN.
    -by the way this is andrea mendez

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  13. This is Jacob R., from 4th period.
    That's from Andrea M.? (insert shocked face here) Well, I guess she really loves your class, Dr. Sabin. Your fan club is growing.

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  14. AWWW. Dr. Sabin, I'm glad for being able to call you my teacher...even if I did call you a "lightbulb" head from time-to-time. But I realized that the only reason I called you that was becauseI didn't understand/wasn't used to you. SO...apologizing, and stuff. Thanks for the compliments as well. Really, we couldn't do it w/out you. :)

    Eddie from fourth period...again sorry for the name calling.

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  15. No,no,no,no,no! This is bad. I knew you were leaving Dr. Sabin, but I just realized, thanks Marcello, that you were teaching the World Religions class! And I was especially looking forward to that. Not only for the class, but the discussions we were going to have. I finally made the connection between the two, and I don't like it. You were a mega-mazing teacher! I learned so much that I actually remember in a science class. And that's a first. You made ninth-grade so memorable. And I will give credit to you in my future. Thanks bunches! I know you'll be fine, but why do we have to share your awesome teaching-sensei methods and humor with other people. I dissapprove. Don't forget us, although you most likely will. ^_^
    your kheratastical student: Khera Osbourne.
    Oh yeah, I agree with Jacob, keep a blog. But you might get too busy..or lazy. (:
    Au Revoir Dr. Sabin.

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  16. This is Jacob R., from 4th period.
    I just saw the part about the extended essay, and I'm a lot more confident about it now. (insert aptly confident face here)
    Kheratastical? Really?
    Anyway...yeah, it's a bummer we won't get to have amazing discussions in World Religions if we took it. Hopefully you'll get a job where you can have amazing intelligent conversations with your students (unlike at HCIB - insert joking face here), right, Dr. Sabin?

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  17. I dont want to be much trouble but do you think that you can leave a link for the biology book to download.

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  18. Rick G. 7th Period
    Aww, I was going to take Biology HL in 11th grade. Now who is going to teach it? I guess we'll never hear, "That's a great story," ever again. Awws. Now that's 3 nice teachers leaving HCHS IB for good. Wow, next year will be horrible...

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  19. This is Jacob R., from the now-complete 4th period.
    Oh, so that's who said it. I was wondering who the source of one of my new catchphrases was. Don't worry, Rick; I'm already practicing with, "Yeah, great story." Just ask almost anyone.
    Advanced data techniques - linear regression? I suppose it's somewhat not exactly...well, that is to say I guess the average person on the street doesn't know how to do it, but it seems fairly easy. Then again, a lot of things are easy or simple to IBans that seem more difficult to the everyday joe.

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  20. “The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” -Emerson

    Seemed Fitting.

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  21. "Whatever you do, do it enthusiastically, as something done for the Lord and not for men, knowing that you will receive the reward of an inheritance from the Lord--you serve the Lord Christ." ~ Colossians 3:23-24 (HCSB)

    "We know that all things work together for the good of those who love God: those who are called according to His purpose." ~ Romans 8:28 (HCSB)

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  22. Question: What is the chief end of man?

    Answer: Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever.

    ~ Westminster Shorter Catechism (1647)

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