MCLA's Education Department Launches Professional Development Project for Paraeducators

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — For the annual county-wide professional development (PD) day this November, the Massachucetts Colleg of Liberal Arts (MCLA) Education Department will present a new series curated for paraprofessional educators in Berkshire County.  
 
According to a press release, the Professional Development for Paraprofessionals Project will seek to grow and strengthen the corps of educational professionals in Berkshire County through in-person and online training opportunities and through collaborative activities centered on the care of self, colleagues, students, and families as whole persons and as vital members of the pre-kindergarten through high school learning community.  
 
This project is spearheaded by Sharon Head, a faculty member in MCLA's Education Department, and Michelle Colvin, MS Ed.A, Director of Field Education and CAP Manager. During the Nov. 8 county-wide professional development day, Colvin and Head will deliver a presentation for the 2022-2023 program participants. It's sponsored by MCLA and is inclusive of 10 local schools and districts.  
 
The county-wide PD Day is sponsored by BERK-12 and consists of 54 workshops that occur in-person and online with something for every type of educator. 
 
"The intention of the PD Project is to make space for paras to be heard," said Head. "We wanted to create a dedicated space for paraprofessionals in this county-wide PD Day." 
 
The session will address the following objectives: 
 
1. Understand the importance of communication and identify specific strategies and tools to use for increasing effective communication and collaboration with team members.  
 
2. Understand and provide examples of individualized accommodations and modifications.  
 
3. Identify content-specific strategies that will benefit a particular student.  
 
4. Define natural supports and identify at least 10 natural support strategies to use with students. 5. Analyze student misbehavior as communication.  
 
6. Create potential supports to meet the student's communicated needs. 
 
Currently, 10 districts and 341 paraeducators are participating in the year-long course. The series is a combination of synchronous and asynchronous work spread over the course of the 2022-2023 school year. The online course consists of six modules with approximately 12-18 hours of content and learning activities. 
 
"This emerged as a critical need that the field brought to our attention," Colvin said. "We kept hearing that the role of paras had changed so much and that, as a result, they required additional training. Districts across the county have been enthusiastic about this project." 
 
Colvin and Head developed this project as a service of the Education Department at MCLA. The long-term intention is to hand off the online PD course for districts to use on their own systems and to "adapt it in support of the needs of their schools and districts," Colvin said. 
 
The only cost to districts is the textbook that is used in the course. Head received some grant money to cover some of the cost of swag bags that each participant will receive. The bags will contain materials that paraprofessionals will use during the PD session on Nov. 8 and throughout the year-long series.  
 
"We're just at the beginning here. This really is a pilot year with the modules and the training," Head said. "The ultimate goal is that this is self-perpetuating." 
 
This past summer, a small group of experienced paraeducators reviewed modules in development and suggested edits. Colvin said that was a crucial part of creating the series of modules and a great collaborative opportunity. 
 
"The PD Day is a really wonderful opportunity to get your training needs met as an educator in Berkshire County," Head said. 
 
"It feels really good when you know you have tapped into a critical need and you're providing a level of service to those districts that make it feel like a partnership," Colvin said. 
 
 
 
Learn more about the Nov. 8 Professional Development Day at berk12.org. 

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Thunderstorms Leave Downed Trees, Wires and Debris Across North County

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

A tree limb smashed in the cab on Mark Moulton's truck. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A severe thunderstorm hammered parts of North and Central County on Tuesday night, downing trees and limbs and leaving more than 8,000 customers without power. 
 
The Berkshires, Eastern New York and parts of Southern Vermont were under a severe thunderstorm watch until 9 p.m. on Tuesday. The storm came through shortly after 6 p.m. with thunder and lightning and torrential rain. 
 
Alerts and calls began streaming into dispatch and fire and police departments began calling in extra help. 
 
When the rain let, the full extent of the damage could be seen — from uprooted century-old trees to scatterings of debris across streets and lawns. 
 
As of 8:30, Brooklyn, Hoosac, Meadow, North Eagle just above Hospital Avenue were closed and the lower section of North Eagle was limited to one-way traffic. Trees were also down on Holbrook, Chestnut and Hall. 
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey had been getting a close-up look at the damage and speaking with residents. 
 
"I've been trying to hit as many streets as I can so I have couple more streets to hit before I call it a night," the mayor said just before 9 p.m.
 
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