I have a student with nut allergies, so Charlie put a grape in the nutcracker's mouth. He is holding a small cone cup that resembles the cups we have at the drinking fountain. They all decided he must be making grape juice. The day after, they asked if he had left some juice on the shelf.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Revisiting Elf on The Shelf
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A look back at our classroom elf on the shelf and all the fun he had!
He found a boat that the students built in our lego bin and had some fun!
He thought that Mocha's dog treats were cookies!
We made snowflakes for Polar Express Day and he caught a tiny one on his tongue!
He was getting "fit" after the cookies with marshmallow bar bells!
He played dreidel!
He fished with a little pole made from a paper clip.
Check out our Elf On The Shelf Journal:
Select the elf for the journal pages |
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Thursday, October 24, 2013
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I taught the hula at the conclusion of the Music unit! Fortunately, the day was beautiful- just like the children. I love my job:)
Kindness is Cooler!
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We read the book, Kindness is Cooler Mrs. Ruler by Margary Cuyer. I sent hearts home for the children to write the good deeds that they performed at home, I wrote the good deeds they did in school on hearts, and now we are working on doing good deeds in our community! Mrs. Ruler came by to reward them with a sweet treat for all their hard work!
Select For Letter and Hearts |
Monday, September 23, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Thank You
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Thanks to my new friends from Montessori and Elliott City for joining me yesterday for my workshop!
I hope to see you all again. Your nice comments were very much appreciated!
Please check out my Phonics section from time to time for goodies. I am always working on new things!
Take care and happy teaching:)
I hope to see you all again. Your nice comments were very much appreciated!
Please check out my Phonics section from time to time for goodies. I am always working on new things!
Take care and happy teaching:)
Monday, September 2, 2013
Walking in the Hall
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The cute little poem, Marshmallow Toes, can be a fun activity to start the year off with quiet students walking in the hall. Don't forget to count the words in each line. Read it together. Bring in mini-marshmallows and have the children drop them on the floor listening for sound. I asked them to listen to the marshmallow as I threw it down on the floor. We discussed how and why they needed to be quiet in the hallways. They can either trace their feet (this is what I do-it encourages them to work together) and add marshamallows or you can use a printed version. Have fun!
Select for Poem and Activity |
Wonder Jar
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The Goal: To create enthusiasm for learning new things.
The Solution: The Wonder Jar
The students write questions that they have and place them into the wonder jar. Each week, we pick a question and research the answer.
http://wonderopolis.org/
The Solution: The Wonder Jar
The students write questions that they have and place them into the wonder jar. Each week, we pick a question and research the answer.
http://wonderopolis.org/
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
http://mindfulnessinschools.org/
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Mindfulness is a life skill that can strengthen ATTENTION.
If someone texts you a simple .b, STOP and take a breath! I learned this today. It is a way of focusing on what our bodies and breath are doing. Take the thinking and over-thinking away and be more present. I am so excited about this new journey. I am being trained in Mindfulness and hope to bring a .b program to my students.
They are developing a program for students 6-11 years old as we speak!!!
If you are at all curious, check this video out:
Mindfulness in Schools Project
Select the above to take you to a YouTube Video
If someone texts you a simple .b, STOP and take a breath! I learned this today. It is a way of focusing on what our bodies and breath are doing. Take the thinking and over-thinking away and be more present. I am so excited about this new journey. I am being trained in Mindfulness and hope to bring a .b program to my students.
They are developing a program for students 6-11 years old as we speak!!!
If you are at all curious, check this video out:
Mindfulness in Schools Project
Select the above to take you to a YouTube Video
A Thought
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Critical Thinking...solving problems, filtering opinion versus fact, seeing things through other's eyes. How do we teach our students to do this? We need to model how to listen and how to have discussions.
It goes back to my days in Clinical Psychology...
"The stronger person is not the one making the most noise but the one who can quietly direct the conversation toward defining and solving problems."
“Founder” of Cognitive Behavior Therapy: Aaron T Beck (1921 - )
It goes back to my days in Clinical Psychology...
"The stronger person is not the one making the most noise but the one who can quietly direct the conversation toward defining and solving problems."
“Founder” of Cognitive Behavior Therapy: Aaron T Beck (1921 - )
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Monday, July 29, 2013
Project Based Learning
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10 Takeaway Tips for Project-Based Learning
At King Middle School and Casco Bay High School, in Portland, Maine, every student works in a widely hailed project-learning method called expeditionary learning. Discover what your school can learn.
BY KATHY BARON
Editor's Note: Special thanks to the Buck Institute for Education for its assistance with compiling this list.
Casco Bay students relax, work, play, and eat in the central lounge.
Credit: Michael Warren
It may be diminutive, but the state of Maine is hardly diffident. The Pine Tree State set a new standard for teaching 21st-century skills when lawmakers agreed to put laptop computers in the hands of every middle school student and teacher -- a program that's now being expanded into high schools. At its best, the program has transformed teaching and learning into collaborative expeditions and turned students into investigators and scientists.
It's not just about the technology. A key lesson from the profiles of the Schools That Work series is that technology by itself can't make these changes. It's really about changing the nature of teaching. Sure, the laptops did make it easier to conduct research and create multimedia projects, but there are many ways to engage students in compelling and challenging work using whatever technology you have. (Meet others in the Project Learning Community Group and the Technology Tools Community Group for more discussion on this.)
Begin with the End in Mind
Teachers at King Middle School and Casco Bay High School plan backwards. They look at the standards and skills they want their students to learn and then develop a project that meets those goals. Another benefit to this type of planning is that it lets you figure out what resources you'll need so you can gather them, including local experts.
One piece that must come first, however, is the driving question. This question focuses your project, and it should be compelling and open ended and appeal to your students' sense of social or environmental justice. (See Six Steps for Planning a Successful Project).
Make a Tough Topic Fun
"This proposal has been a matter of considerable controversy," writes the author of a 1980 article on a type of bacteria. So far, so good, but consider the sentence preceding it from the Archives of Microbiology: "Chlorobium limicola has been proposed to assimilate CO₂ autotrophically via a reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle rather than via the Calvin cycle." Ouch.
That's the kind of information that science teacher Ruth MacLean was up against when designing a unit on bacteria for her seventh-grade students, that is until the Internet came along with its vast resources and Web sites targeted to all ages and levels of understanding. MacLean turned the unit into a vibrant interdisciplinary expedition on "good" bacteria, taking students to a local college lab to grow and kill their own bacteria, to a farm to learn about soil nutrients, and into the classroom to learn comic-book art from a professional. The result was Soil Superheroes, a humorous look at an important ecological subject.
Focus on Standards -- But Not Too Many
Be sure your project is focused on important content standards, but don't try to include too many in one project. According to the project-based learning experts at the Buck Institute for Education, you shouldn't pile on more than you can teach and access well. Casco Bay High School humanities teacher Susan McCray created a rubric to help her determine the standards to include and how best to get her students to meet them.
Start Small When You're New
Project learning doesn't happen overnight or even over one school year. It's a process that veteran teachers say takes up to five years to fully implement. (See "What Works in 5 mins, 5 days. . ."). In the beginning, limit the scope of your projects. You can get more ambitious as you gain experience.
Diversity Comes to Town: As a resettlement region for Catholic Charities Maine, Portland is becoming an international city.
Credit: Michael Warren
You may also have to start this process alone or with one other gregarious teacher. Creating a cultural shift in a school from teachers working alone in their classrooms to a model of collaboration and interdisciplinary projects usually requires support from the top. (SeeTen Big Ideas of School Leadership).
Test-Drive the Final Product Before Starting the Project
What sounds great in the teacher meeting may not work out so well in practice. As part of the planning process at King Middle School, teachers produce the final product to check for snags. You don't want to find out half way through that the school's computers don't have the right software or the product is too complicated for students in your grade to complete on their own. (Take an interactive tour of afinished pamphlet on the benefits of bacteria).
Start Your Project with an "Entry Event"
This is the kickoff, so do something that grabs students' attention and launches the inquiry process. The event could be a guest speaker (make sure the person is an engaging storyteller), field trip, lively discussion, puzzling problem, interesting video, or thought-provoking activity or piece of reading.
Keep Students in the Loop
Students work best when they feel they're a part of the process and understand how it relates to school and their lives. Share the project goals and expectations with your students and let them know what they'll be learning and how it will come together in the end.
It's also important to be open to feedback. For instance, these days, it's common for students to know more about technology than their teachers. They may have some computer shortcuts or ideas for the final product that you didn't even know were possible.
However, there are some aspects of the project that you will need to control. For instance, it's better if teachers assign students to groups, otherwise students grab their buddies, and that can lead to trouble down the road. Kids have a hard time telling friends to do their share when it comes to group work. Some teachers say they've had to allow group leaders to "fire" their friends and make them find another work group willing to take in a slacker.
Set Clear Deadlines -- But Allow for Some Flexibility
This may be one of the most challenging tasks for teachers. We all know how easy it is to go off on a tangent or allow work to slip by for a day or two or even more. Teachers at King and Casco Bay create a schedule and review it with their students. They also have benchmarks throughout the project, such as having students keep a weekly planning brief to make sure they don't fall behind.
The teachers keep themselves on track during check-ins at their regular collaboration meetings. (SeeSample Teacher Schedule for Middle School.)
Create a Balanced Assessment Plan
Create rubrics for each major product in the project to provide students with specific guidance and to makegrading criteria clear. Consider the content standards and skills you want the students to learn and make sure the final products allow each student to demonstrate his or her knowledge and display an understanding of the subject matter, show competence in the essential skills, and understanding of the relationship between the broad concepts of the unit and the student's individual and group work.
Base project grades on a variety of criteria from a variety of sources instead of assigning one grade for the whole project. Include a mix of team-created and individual tasks so each student can show what he or she has learned.
Conclude Projects with a Bang
Include a culminating product or products that allow students to demonstrate the content standards and skills they've learned. It doesn't have to be huge but definitely should be an event that has a real audience and real-world connection. Build in time for a dress rehearsal where you'll assess standards. Give students as much leadership opportunity as possible. Invite parents and any relevant community members and experts. Casco Bay High School students who worked on Susan McCray's Give Me Shelter projectpresented their narrated slide shows of local homeless people before an audience that included the people they interviewed.
And don't forget to allow time for reflection and celebration when it's done!
Kenya Connect Making A Difference
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My friend, Tim Gregory, came to my school about 8 years ago to introduce the students to the life of a child in Kenya. He was part of an organization entitled, Kenya Connect. He is energetic and passionate about helping these students. Below you will find a excerpt from the summer newsletter:
Social Entrepreneurism Takes Root in Maryland
What do you get when you combine the energy of a forward thinking principal interested in global studies (Principal Sharon Stratton of Arundel High School in Maryland), two world-traveled teachers who are passionate about students' cross cultural connections (Sherri Billheimer and Barbara Dziedzic) and two students who represent the next generation of social entrepreneurs (Aashi Parikh and Jordan Luber) -- an exchange like no other!
The culminating gesture of this energetic bunch was a significant investment in the computer hardware at the Learning Resource Center in order to create live discussions among Kenyan secondary students and a community of students at Arundel High. The first discussion centered around the book The Number One Ladies' Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith. There was an emotional introduction as the groups finally succeeded in hearing and seeing each other through Skype after months of fundraising, old-fashioned letter writing, and anticipation. The students had remarkably similar responses to literature prompts making the distance between the two groups all that much smaller.
A Growing Team
For the past eight years a small but growing number of teachers has traveled to Wamunyu to meet and work with their Kenyan colleagues, on trips hosted by Kenya Connect. A free-flowing exchange of strategies, ideas, questions, and concerns naturally grew out of these experiences as teachers from opposite sides of the world found common ground in their shared passion for helping students succeed in the 21st century global community. The seeds were planted for an innovative teacher training program designed to meet the particular needs of our partner schools in Kenya. This past summer, that program blossomed in the new Learning Resource Center, as 38 Kenyan teachers gathered to attend Arts Integration workshops led by Maryland teachers Laura Groo and Tiffany Nichols.
A New Approach
A typical classroom in Kenya finds 40-50 students crammed into a dirt-floor classroom, seated three to a desk, sharing a few textbooks, and feeling lucky to have a pencil. Their teachers live locally, walking miles to work after taking care of their own small farm or homestead. Educators receive little or no ongoing training and have very limited access to the resources needed to grow as teachers. Students strive to pass their yearly national exams, struggling to overcome the additional challenge of doing so in English, their third language. Arts Integration is a research-based, experiential teaching strategy that engages learners by exploring meaningful connections between core curriculum and the fine arts. This approach teaches critical thinking skills, creative problem solving, collaborative learning, communication, and leadership while capitalizing on multiple learning styles.
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Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Thinking About Critical Thinking
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This year my BIG goal is to plan every lesson to foster critical thinking. In my research, I know that the classroom needs to have these attributes:
Thinking must have a PURPOSE
It must raise QUESTIONS
It must use INFORMATION to make
INFERENCES
ASSUMPTIONS and
SOLUTIONS
and it must be someone's POINT OF VIEW
We need to work as a group and as individuals with RESPECT
This led me to look for a Class Management System that emphasizes respect and fairness to all.
Thinking must have a PURPOSE
It must raise QUESTIONS
It must use INFORMATION to make
INFERENCES
ASSUMPTIONS and
SOLUTIONS
and it must be someone's POINT OF VIEW
We need to work as a group and as individuals with RESPECT
This led me to look for a Class Management System that emphasizes respect and fairness to all.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Teaching Students About The Brain
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I just finished reading this article about how we can help students of all ages to make the connection between learning and their brain and how important it is to do just that.
I have always loved the study of the brain. The power of the mind is so amazing to me and the ability to scan a brain and actually get inside and see the workings is exciting.
In my study with Lindamood-Bell, the student would start every lesson making a picture of the brain and explaining, in a simplified manner, what areas were responsible for which functions and how we would strengthen specific areas with the work of the day.
In the article by Judy Willis, she explains that students need to see the brain and understand the idea that we are not born with a specific amount of intelligence. Students need to understand what helps the brain learn best and what helps the brain retain information the best. She explains that students need the following to make an optimal learning experience: visualization, connection to something enjoyable (connect the learning to something enjoyable), and rehearsal. The students work with models of brains and drawings to understand core principals of brain activity.
To read the entire article, please select this link:
http://www.teachthought.com/learning/the-simple-things-i-do-to-promote-brain-based-learning-in-my-classroom/
I can never resist a video....but who can?
How We Learn-What Happens In The Brain
I have always loved the study of the brain. The power of the mind is so amazing to me and the ability to scan a brain and actually get inside and see the workings is exciting.
In my study with Lindamood-Bell, the student would start every lesson making a picture of the brain and explaining, in a simplified manner, what areas were responsible for which functions and how we would strengthen specific areas with the work of the day.
In the article by Judy Willis, she explains that students need to see the brain and understand the idea that we are not born with a specific amount of intelligence. Students need to understand what helps the brain learn best and what helps the brain retain information the best. She explains that students need the following to make an optimal learning experience: visualization, connection to something enjoyable (connect the learning to something enjoyable), and rehearsal. The students work with models of brains and drawings to understand core principals of brain activity.
To read the entire article, please select this link:
http://www.teachthought.com/learning/the-simple-things-i-do-to-promote-brain-based-learning-in-my-classroom/
I can never resist a video....but who can?
How We Learn-What Happens In The Brain
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Visual Literacy
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Help children think critically by discussing illustrations. Ask questions and encourage them to ask questions. illustrations, graphs, charts, any visual drawing that conveys information deserves a second look.
Check out the website: Wonderopolis http://wonderopolis.org/ You won't be disappointed!
Check out the website: Wonderopolis http://wonderopolis.org/ You won't be disappointed!
Sunday, April 7, 2013
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Socrative! I'm going to attempt to use this for my next presentation in 2 weeks. Hopefully the teachers will be as excited as the students are to be actively engaged in answering questions:)
http://www.socrative.com/
http://www.socrative.com/
Fun Ways To Practice Spelling
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-Type your words into the box on this page -> hit Create mp3 -> listen and download the computer reading you your words! Even MORE fun if you type in silly sentences with your words!
-Spelling Bingo
-Now that the weather is warmer, use a paintbrush outside.
-Use ImageChef
http://www.imagechef.com/
-Wordle
-I LOVE this one: Tagxedo
http://www.tagxedo.com/
-Now that the weather is warmer, use a paintbrush outside.
-Use ImageChef
http://www.imagechef.com/
-Wordle
-I LOVE this one: Tagxedo
http://www.tagxedo.com/
Saturday, April 6, 2013
My Study Bar
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I know I have blogged about this before, but I thought it needed another mention. I have been using Mystudybar with students working on the novel, Animal Farm. Everything is in one place so that the student soes not need to go between applications and there is a color filter which is beneficial to some of the students.
Take a look here:
http://eduapps.org/?page_id=7#Features+of+MyStudyBar
Take a look here:
http://eduapps.org/?page_id=7#Features+of+MyStudyBar
Thinglink
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Thinglink is a great way to help students of all ages study or review important content, demonstrate their knowledge, and use as a resource for homework.
Check out my friend, MathyCathy's, Thinklinks here:
http://www.thinglink.com/user/338526862676328448/scenes
Check out my friend, MathyCathy's, Thinklinks here:
http://www.thinglink.com/user/338526862676328448/scenes
Friday, March 22, 2013
Saturday, March 16, 2013
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Happy Saint Patrick's Day!
My kiddos had an amazing time this week trying to "catch" the class leprechaun! They formed three groups and constructed three traps. They caught a wee hammer and some green jacket fuzz. They followed QR codes that revealed pictures of different areas in the school where the leprechaun had been. Finally on Friday, the treasure was found.
My kiddos had an amazing time this week trying to "catch" the class leprechaun! They formed three groups and constructed three traps. They caught a wee hammer and some green jacket fuzz. They followed QR codes that revealed pictures of different areas in the school where the leprechaun had been. Finally on Friday, the treasure was found.
We are currently learning all sorts of wonderful facts about Ireland!
Thursday, February 28, 2013
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Dr. Seuss is Back! And so is my favorite story... Daisy Head Mayzie. I love this story because it tells the story of a little girl who is given a second chance. LOVE conquers all. Tomorrow I will dress as Daisy Head Mayzie again and we will work on these common core standards:
3. Describe how characters in a story respond to major events and challenges.
3. Describe how characters in a story respond to major events and challenges.
Corresponding College and Career Readiness (CCR) Anchor Standard
3. Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text.
I have made some discussion cards and a letter writing activity:
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Fishy 100 Days of School
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I had the BEST 100 Days of School with my kiddos!
I had a fish theme going on in the classroom. At the beginning of the week, the students brainstormed compliments and wrote them on this worksheet. or 100 Compliments (1) or 100 Compliments (2)
On the 100th Day I posted them on the wall outside our classroom:
I had a fish theme going on in the classroom. At the beginning of the week, the students brainstormed compliments and wrote them on this worksheet. or 100 Compliments (1) or 100 Compliments (2)
On the 100th Day I posted them on the wall outside our classroom:
Fishing for Compliments Sign:
My Shirt:
My Door- I used bubble wrap for streamers.
They watched the small segment about Nemo's first day of school. I made this worksheet with a Nemo theme. Nemo Movie Clip
They traced fish and put 100 dots or scales on their fish. Then they popped 100 bubbles. I thought I was going to pass out after blowing bubbles for 35 minutes straight! It was well worth the smiles on their faces!
Some of the art work out to dry:
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Michelle Nelson-Schmidt
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of the What if Monster came to visit our school today.
She told us to never give up on our dreams and to do something that we love. Time to start working on my books again. I have her contact information and I can't wait to get some more great advice.
She told us to never give up on our dreams and to do something that we love. Time to start working on my books again. I have her contact information and I can't wait to get some more great advice.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Finding Meaning in Your Job
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After listening to Daniel Pink talk about finding meaning in the workplace, I couldn't help but link it to the classroom. Daniel Pink states that it is important to get control over the tasks that you do, to have a sense that you are getting better at what you are doing, and having a sense of purpose. Goals: Give students choices, give them charts and visuals of their progress, connect their learning to jobs they will do in the future and projects they will do now to make a difference in the world.
Watch the video for yourself:
Daniel Pink on CBS News
Watch the video for yourself:
Daniel Pink on CBS News
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