top of page
Home: Welcome

Problem-Based Learning

Problem-based learning (PBL) is a student-centered pedagogy in which students learn about a subject through the experience of solving an open-ended problem.  Problem-based learning forms the basis of student learning in my classroom

ROBOWORKS@BMS

WHERE COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INTERSECT

STEM

STEM is a curriculum based on the idea of educating students in four specific disciplines — science, technology, engineering and mathematics — in an interdisciplinary and applied approach.  Burnet Middle School is poised to become a magnet for STEM as it becomes Austin ISD's premier Global Languages school.

girlscoding001 (1).jpg

GIRLS CODING CLUB

Every Monday after school, girls from Burnet Middle School come together to learn Swift, JavaScript, and Python coding from students at Westwood High School in Austin, TX. Funded by NCWIT.

IMG_2061.JPG

WeTeach_CS

Saturdays at Burnet Middle School will bring computer science to at-risk Hispanic and African-American young men with disabilities.  In conjunction with the National Science Foundation and the Changing Expectations initiative.

APPLE  CODING CAMP

From June 24th thru June 28th, over 80 Austin I.S.D. students gathered at Burnet Middle School to learn Apple Swift coding through real-world application.

boys-girls-clubs-of-america-logo-png-tra

After the school day is over, I facilitate BMS students in participating in STEM activities through the BOYS AND GIRLS CLUB of AUSTIN

IMG_1329.jpeg
COHORT WORK &
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

​

Apple Coding Academy

June 17th-21st, 2019

BURNET M.S.

MEDIA PITCH

Vertical Alignment

Burnet M.S. --> Navarro H.S.

TCEA CONFERENCE 2019

IMG_0703.JPEG

APPLE LEADERSHIP AND LEARNING ACADEMY 2019

November 7th - 10th, 2019

Phoenix, Arizona

​

59501518524__77E8994F-340E-43BC-8A7A-5B6

LEARNING MANIFESTO

 
I have long been an advocate for problem-based learning, with an emphasis on a student-centered, teacher-facilitated environment.  After many years teaching Social Studies I realized that in the direct-teach model there is no one that likes to hear my voice so much as myself; that nothing drives learning more than actually doing, so I modeled my classroom to mirror a cooperative learning environment where students work together to solve issues relevant to the world today. 
 
Collaborative.
Real world-driven.
Student-centered.
​
These are the tenets by which I try to run a blended, flipped classroom in the 21st century.  As our society has evolved, the classroom has largely stayed the same.  If I walk over to, say, the math wing at our school and observe one of the classes I will most likely see the same structure that has dominated post-World War 2 education: teacher-centered, direct teach, rowed desks, pencils and textbooks.  Very little has changed, yet our society has changed drastically.  Why hasn't the public education system evolved as well?  Is it out of custom?  Is it a result of drastically underfunded public education?  Or is it a simple case of the "That's how I learned" mentality? Whatever the reason, I strive to have a classroom that mirrors society as it changes.  
​
Blended learning is a key component to my classroom.  Being a member of a Verizon Innovation Campus, students have the fortune of having data-enabled devices wherever they go.  So while we are actually in class, we do the activities and learning that require hands-on, one-to-one instruction.  Everything else, the "paper and pencil" activities and such that permeate traditional education, is then converted to extension and supplemental activities through Blended Learning.  Building a robot in class?  At home, use your device to code a virtual model of the bot to navigate a maze.  Coming up with a new design?  Use in-class time to collaborate with your peers and innovate using online tools.  
​
In these days of uncertainty when it comes to traditional settings, it's now more than ever that our classroom instruction evolves to fit in with modern times.  I don't consider that "innovation" as much as plain ol' common sense.

 

LEARNING PHILOSOPHY

 
My learning philosophy has shifted significantly since I started teaching 13 years ago.  I started with a fixed mindset, determined to teach the students like I was taught.  I mean, if it worked for me then it should work for them, too, right?  Teacher-centered, direct teach, rote drill-and-skill, memorization and recall.  Looking back at my lesson plans from the mid part of last decade I saw none of the higher level Bloom's taxonomy verbs that I believed I was hitting.  There was no analyze or create; instead, it was filled with identify and describe.  Even knowing I did relatively well those first few years of my teaching career I still blanch at the mediocrity of what I was doing.
​
In the past, I have had observers and student teachers with me who have asked me to write down or succinctly tell them what my teaching philosophy was.  I could never do it.  I did not think of teaching in that way; I had no "philosophy".  Still today, I do not like to think of a teaching-learning relationship in that way.  My teaching is a collection of my growth as an educator coupled with my response to student need.  I did not set out with a "differentiation plan" in place for my classroom, even though differentiation is evident from the outset; it was just me responding to student need and doing what I always thought of as good teaching.
​
Having been in the Apple-Lamar initiative since the summer of 2019, I am starting to pull out aspects of my teaching that I believe begin to form the basis of my learning philosophy.  There are five tenets that comprise the framework of my instruction:
​
  • ​Social-emotional Learning
  • Student-Centered
  • Skill based
  • Real-world application
  • Growth mindset
​
I am still hesitant with that list and I expect it to change over time (which is ideal, considering my last tenet).  Quantifying something that I believe to be just good practice into list format still seems odd to me, but I am starting to see the importance of doing so.  Being self-aware of my own beliefs can only allow me further growth as an educator, and to whatever life has in store for me after.

GALLERY

IMG_3058.JPG
IMG_0897.HEIC
IMG_3244.JPG
20180523_100743.jpg
IMG_2358.JPG
IMG_2435.JPG
IMG_2405.JPG
IMG_2628.JPG
IMG_0295.heif
59501518524__77E8994F-340E-43BC-8A7A-5B6
IMG_3227.JPG

 ABOUT ME

My name is Jason Long.  I teach middle school technology classes in Austin, Texas.  

​

I spent years teaching English and Social Studies before transitioning to Technology.  The thought of being able to build a program from scratch was just too enticing for me to pass up.  Now I spend my days bringing new technologies and ways of learning to at-risk students who would normally not have the opportunity.

©2019 by CreatorOfThings. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page