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the full effect of alphabet soup
blog for LLED4120
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Monday, April 18, 2011
In Christ Alone
Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In His great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead...- 1 Peter 1:3
Through all the crazy busyness of these last few weeks of the semester, I almost forgot that Easter Sunday is this weekend! The Easter Egg hunts and the Easter bunny suit that my husband will wear for my precious nieces (see below), a bright, fresh Easter dress, pure white Easter lilies, a delicious family meal, and the Easter basket that, yes, my mom still gives me all come to mind. But like many originally Christian holidays that have turned secular, this is not the real point of Easter. Even in this seemingly stressful time (if college work is the most stressful thing in my life I must be really blessed :) it's important to attempt to wrap my brain around the fact that the creator of the universe died for my sins and then conquered death so that I, though completely undeserving, could have eternal life. ...wow
Now that's something worth celebrating.
Now that's something worth celebrating.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Comments4Kids
http://y6miriamlord.blogspot.com/2011/04/rehmans-egyptian-sacrifice.html#comment-form
http://avoca37.org/11samanthay/2011/04/10/evanston-pipe-bombing-suicide/comment-page-1/#comment-75
http://kidblog.org/MrsFowlers2ndGrade/michael717/thinking-stem/
http://avoca37.org/11samanthay/2011/04/10/evanston-pipe-bombing-suicide/comment-page-1/#comment-75
http://kidblog.org/MrsFowlers2ndGrade/michael717/thinking-stem/
Monday, March 28, 2011
Write About ANYTHING...really?!?!?
this is the way i felt when i found out i could blog about anything this week - shocked, excited, yet a bit apprehensive. now the day is here...anything, i thought. that's so....broad. does that mean i don't even have to capitalize?...looks like it :) my husband, rushing me to get my work done, has been throwing out random "anything" topics for the past five minutes - including a post about the dairy queen oreo blizzard we just devoured. between throwing out bright ideas, and truly for the past three hours, he's been singing ONE line of a song he started learning on the guitar today. the line consists of ten words and fifteen syllables. while i love him and his voice dearly, i'd honestly be better off if i never heard any one of those words or syllables ever again. as retaliation, i started singing the song i've had in my head all day - the wiggle song. "let's show everybody how we wiggle, wiggle. let's show everybody we wiggle, wiggle. wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, wiggle"...i'll leave the rest of the song to your imagination. yes, i've obviously been spending WAY too much time with first graders. ironically when we sing this song in the afternoons it's the only time the kids don't wiggle -- i'm an elementary ed major and the wiggle song is annoying to me - so imagine the effect it had on my husband. i'll tell you one thing - he hasn't sung one time since i started this post ;)
Monday, March 21, 2011
jaguars, toucans, and sloths - OH MY!
'We should use kids' positive states to draw them into learning in the domain where they can develop competencies. Flow is an internal state that signifies that a kid is engaged in a task that's right...you can learn best when you have something you care about and you can get pleasure from being engaged in' (Goleman 1995).
This quote from the Allen and Swistak article is something we talk a lot about in my classes. We are taught to carefully observe and listen to students, reflect on lessons, allow student choice within a democratic classroom, and plan thoughtfully to base lessons on student interests - in turn letting the students guide the learning, creating a more engaging classroom environment.
Hence, the reason for my "Save the Animals of The Great Kapok Tree" week-long writing workshop unit. This book had been read before in Mrs. McCreight's class in relation to the persuasive genre, followed by students firing out multiple questions about the location of the rainforest, destruction of the rainforest, and people and animals of the rainforest. At the time, teachers were ill-prepared for such questions and unable to take the time to address their curiosities. So, for my unit I chose to re-read the book and take the first day simply to strengthen student interest by answering all of their questions. I showed a slideshow of pictures of the tribes within the Amazon, animals that live there, and images of the deforestation of the Amazon. Students were pulled in, making the next 4 days of my unit so much easier. When students are engaged, behavior issues virtually disappear, creating more time to teach and learn.
For the rest of the week, students researched an animal of their choice from The Great Kapok Tree- either sloths, jaguars, boa constrictors, or toucans. After several days of research and filling out a graphic organizer, students wrote a persuasive letter to encourage others to help save these endangered species. The class decided that one thing they could do in addition to writing these letters to help these animals would be to share with others the danger these animals are in and things they could do to help. So, on Friday we did a museum share inviting another 1st grade class and several people from around the school and the community. To end, here are some pictures from the final day:
For the rest of the week, students researched an animal of their choice from The Great Kapok Tree- either sloths, jaguars, boa constrictors, or toucans. After several days of research and filling out a graphic organizer, students wrote a persuasive letter to encourage others to help save these endangered species. The class decided that one thing they could do in addition to writing these letters to help these animals would be to share with others the danger these animals are in and things they could do to help. So, on Friday we did a museum share inviting another 1st grade class and several people from around the school and the community. To end, here are some pictures from the final day:
Monday, February 21, 2011
maybe chatter boxes can write too
First of all, I just got back from a wonderful vacation to Beaver Creek, Colorado. The skiing was AMAZING! We had such a blast!
Now onto writing workshop... I stand persuaded (not corrected of course!) by Katie Wood Ray. My last post admonished her ideas about allowing and even encouraging talking among students during the work time. I didn't understand how this could possibly work. Ray writes, "I believe it is best if we do not aim for a 'no-talking' workshop. FIrst of all, we will spend all out time trying to enforce it (GREAT POINT KATIE), and second of all, I don't really think it makes for a healthy working environment." After reading, I realized that although I find any type of noise terribly distracting while writing, doesn't mean all students should be held to such a silent standard.
In chapter 7, Ray gets specific about how a predictable distraction such as talking can be both managed and productive. Woods first suggestion to manage and effectively facilitate talking during writing workshop is a "strong teaching presence." Teachers need to strictly insist that students stay "on-task" during writing workshop...although being "on-task" can look different from student to student. These on-task behaviors may be freewriting, doing writing exercises, reading to support writing, drafting a project, having a peer conference, or even staring off into space. This "strong presence" means making students understand that choosing NOT to work is NOT an option. She also points out that the teacher must use discretion when deciding if a student is on or off-task. Writing workshop should not be an "oppressive place," but rather a place where a healthy working environment is created by human interaction.
Her next suggestion to productively manage talking is to use all of the classroom for the working portion of the workshop. In a crowded environment students might talk because there's 2-3 people sitting basically on top of them - it's natural to talk to someone right next to you! So, spread students around the classroom. If we use the space available in the room, the space itself will swallow up some of sounds of people working (whether it be clicking a pen, turning the pages of a book, or conferencing).
And for students like me, Ray points out that there can be designated quiet zones for those who prefer a more serene working environment.
So, Katie Wood Ray, chapter 7 served it's purpose and showed me the specifics in how this "talking while writing" deal really works. Thanks for saving me from turning into this:
Monday, February 14, 2011
"The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing." - Walt Disney
Oops, sorry! Just got distracted...started talking about puppies. Really. See what I mean??
My current distraction...doesn't he just look so fun to talk to :) |
I understand certain situations where talking could result in valuable sharing within a writing workshop. Maybe students could research together or test out ideas, but only for the first five minutes or so. Because the teacher is busy conferencing with 7-8 students throughout the supposed 45 min writing block, the teacher has no time to monitor the content of every conversation. I know if I had been given free choice to talk in elementary school, I would have, and I wouldn't have stopped. Why not put on some peaceful music and have some quiet writing time so students can focus on their, you guessed it, WRITING! I would be willing to negotiate with the rare elementary aged child who can both carry on a meaningful conversation and produce magnificent writing, but until I find this extraordinary child, I'll stick with my belief that the best writing occurs in a quiet classroom. No, this doesn't mean if a child talks I'm going to throw my clipboard and flip out. I have no problem with soft chatter accompanied by work...I'm just not so sure this tandem exists.
10:00 on the dot.
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