Sunday, February 23, 2014

Keeping Students Happy During Testing Times

This week is filled with testing for my kids.  We have two more pieces of assessment and then we are done...for a little bit any way.  We are also beginning test prep twice a week to get ready for state exams in April, so I want to try and give my students as many breaks as possible during the day to keep them happy.  Here are a few things I've been trying to incorporate:

1.) Brain Breaks - we are using Whole Brain Teaching in our classroom, so when the students win for the day, their reward is a quick brain break.  We've done "skiing," "swimming," "yoga" - anything to get them out of their seats and moving.  For skiing, students stand and then sink into a chair pose, elbows bent and fists at the shoulders.  Students jump from side to side, as though they are skiing downhill.  For yoga, we practice warrior II and warrior III.


2.) Food!  We are allowed to give out treats (are we the only ones left???) and a handful of Jolly Ranchers can be a real motivator when we have to break out the test prep booklets.  I also keep small bags of goldfish in the classroom for the same purpose.   If you are not allowed to give out food, try smelly stickers!  Even the big kids love smelly stickers.  My kids love when I mark their work with Mr. Sketch markers.  It's so funny to see them pick up their books to smell the marker!

3.) "Fun" Practice  - anything that involves coloring feels like less work.  I love Kristine Nannini's Math Centers because they all have color by number practice.  I also found this great page on TpT that they ASKED to take home for homework.  What???  Link: Multiplying Decimals Freebie.
4.) New "toys"  - I bought each of my kiddos a smencil colored pencil (because I didn't read closely and thought I was buying pencils.  D'oh!) to use in their test prep books.  These are ONLY for underlining evidence or for checking their work.  I also plan to make these little answer sticks.  What a great idea to improve student participation!
Credit - this is from One Extra Degree
Do you have great ideas for keeping kids happy during the march towards testing?  Please share!

And check out my FB page for a Facebook Freebie!  I have a complete center for fractions to celebrate St. Patrick's Day!


Sunday, February 16, 2014

St. Patrick's Day Math Centers - giveaway!

Hi, friends!

Just a quick note to let you know that I just uploaded a set of 8 math centers for St. Patrick's Day.  There is a focus on basic fraction concepts, but students also practice converting measurements and evaluating expressions according to the order of operations.

You can take a look at the product, on sale now (!) HERE.

If you'd like a chance to win these centers, head over to my Facebook page and leave me a comment!  I'll choose two winners tonight at 9 pm!

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Studying Biography with Graphic Organizers (Freebie!)

This year is the first year I really REALLY taught biography.  In the past, I've read biographies with my class, but they've always been quite short or as a quick social studies lesson.  This year, we read Rachel Carson: Pioneer of Ecology and really had the opportunity to dig in deep to a few of the CCSS for Informational Text.


I posted these organizers on TpT.  You can check them out here: Biography Graphic Organizers

You can also grab a page from the set here: Historical Context Organizer



As always, these organizers are on sale since they are brand new!

Have a great Wednesday!  Cross your fingers for buckets and buckets of snow to fall on NYC tomorrow night!  :-D

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Mentor Text Linky: Integrating Social Studies into Language Arts


Happy Super Bowl Sunday!  I'm sure lots of you are so excited for this game tonight, but I'm not the biggest football fan in the world....so I'm just looking forward to some wings tonight!
Today I'm linking up with the Collaboration Cuties to share a Must Read Mentor Text.  I've blogged a bit about how our school adopted Pearson's ReadyGen literacy program this year. The BIG downside to this program is that I don't get to choose my own read aloud texts anymore.  The upside is that I've truly enjoyed the majority of texts we've read through this program!

We just finished Unit 2 Module A, which focused on understanding how people respond to injustice and inequality.  Our anchor text was Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans, written and illustrated by Kadir Nelson. {This text is available through Scholastic Book Clubs this month as well!}  The text is told from the perspective of an older African American woman who is sharing her family's history through pivotal points in American history.  Her grandfather, Pap, was kidnapped in Africa and brought to America as a slave.  The narrator describes Pap's experience as a slave and the reader is able to understand how many African Americans experienced slavery.  The story continues through the Civil War, Reconstruction, the Great Migration, World War I, the Jazz Age, the Great Depression, World War II and the Civil Rights Movement.

This is a powerful text, filled with dialect, figurative language and unmistakable voice.  Our shared reading prompted awesome conversation and excellent questioning from my students.  Even with a very limited understanding of American History, my students were able to build a tremendous amount of knowledge about slavery and the importance of the Civil Rights movement. Our timing helped as well: coincidentally, we concluded the text just before Martin Luther King Day.  To compliment the text, we viewed the full length "I Have a Dream Speech" and the biography channel's mini bio of Martin Luther King, Jr on YouTube.  I also have a small group of students working through I'm Lovin Lit's Martin Luther King Jr Timeline Packet (<- free for a limited time).

This book is amazing for teaching students how to identify the point of view of a narrator.  In her explanation of historic events, the reader hears the opinion of a narrator who has been impacted by her family's experience in America.  The author/illustrator helps the reader imagine life in the past through gorgeous images.  This was a major focus for our discussion of the text.  We analyzed images and made connections to the tone of the text (CCSS RL 5.7).

Image of a Sharecropping Family

Image of the Montgomery Bus Boycott

The text is quite dense, so it isn't a quick read.  We only read one chapter per day because there is so much in the text to discuss.  We read the book in 12 school days.

Here you can grab a copy of an organizer to help your students analyze images in text:
I included some prompts for the organizer on a teacher's page.
 Also, click here to grab a copy of the Choice Boards I made for Black History Month.  My students are working on these at home and will present their projects at the end of the month.  You might notice that I left Martin Luther King, Jr off the list of influential African Americans; this was not an error.  I want my kiddos to branch out a bit and hopefully learn about a new figure or time period this month.

Just a quick note: Some of the reviews on Amazon state that the book is too sad and presents a negative view of America.  I have to disagree.  I didn't find that my students focused on the sadness in the text because our conversations focused on how the people in the text responded to the injustices they experienced (forming the Underground Railroad, fighting to end Jim Crow laws, nonviolent protests, speeches, exercising the right to vote).

Monday, January 27, 2014

Formal Observations and Student Led Teaching

Hi, all!  I am SO happy to tell you all that I had my (one and only!) formal observation for this year!  In NYC, we have two options for our evals: 1 formal and 3 informal or 6 informal.  Like my entire grade, I took the first option.  Our evaluations are based on the Danielson Framework, so for my formal obersvation, I needed to incorporate all 22 strands. Yikes!

Long, long, long agonizing story short, my observation went really well. I've been working with my class on having them take the lead all year and it really paid off during this observation.  My students were totally on point and engaged for the whole lesson (and my AP stayed for all of focused reading instruction and scaffolded instruction - two full periods!). In particular, my students sustained an awesome "Team Talk" conversation without me stepping in at all.  During this portion of the morning, the students discussed whether it was right for a character to eavesdrop on another character.  My student leader called on classmates who responded directly to claims made by other students. They were supporting with evidence, they were clarifying for each other (!) and they asking each other questions.  This conversation went so well that my AP asked if I could deliver some PD and have my class video taped for others to watch!  :-O

As part of my reflection for our post observation conference, I wanted to write a little bit about how I encouraged my students to really take ownership of class discussions this year.

1.) Establish a culture of respect early on. You may have students who need to see that disagreement can be civil and they need to understand that when someone disagrees with them it isn't personal.  I can't tell you how many times I had to repeat that phrase throughout September and October.  It isn't personal when someone sees another side of things. I'm fortunate to have a co-teacher in my room during the "Team Talk" portion of ReadyGen (our literacy program).  He and I modeled how to disagree but stay friendly.

2.) Respond directly to other students.  A few months ago I posted about how I gave my students prompts to help them direct the questioning.  Their favorite was "Who would like to agree or disagree?" but too often when they called on a classmate to agree or disagree the student would use the sentence stem but never actually respond directly to the idea they were agreeing with or disagreeing with!  Students need to understand they can take a minute to think about what's been said and then speak directly to that rather than sit, listen and wait their turn to say something new.

3.) Remind students frequently to speak to each other. I will interrupt students to remind them to speak to the previous speaker. This keeps the conversation focused and avoids the pattern of student speaks, teacher/student teacher speaks, new student speaks.

4.) Force yourself to step back.  Allow a little bit of silence in the room while students think and train student leaders to be able to identify students how have burning questions.  As much as we do not want our students to call out, sometimes a student may blurt out the exact questions you were about to pose to the class to keep the conversation rolling.  Student generated questions are essential to student led conversations!

5.) Debrief the class after they have a conversation. Take quick notes and highlight the things the class does well.  Do they look at each other when they speak? Did the student leader do a great job calling on many voices?  Was everyone using respectful body language?  Did you refer directly to text? Did anyone ask a great question?  Find those positives and praise the heck out of them!  Then determine the next course of action and tell them how they will improve their conversation for the next discussion.  You might do a mini lesson on what to do if a conversation seems to die out.  This lesson isn't just for the student leading the discussion but all students, because eventually you want all students to take turns leading the conversation.

My next step is to move these student led teaching strategies into math!

Tell me, how do you have your students take the lead in your classroom?

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Valentine's Day Freebie!


Hi all!  Just a quick note to let you know that I updated my Facebook Freebie.  You can head over there to grab a multiplying decimals activity that is a part of my Valentine's Day Math Centers that I just uploaded to TpT.

Here is the link to my FB Page: Facebook




To complete the activity, students multiply all 8 cards and then match the birds with the same product.  Gotta love self checking work!

If you are interested in the full set of Valentine's Day Math Centers, they are on sale on TpT for $3 right now.

This set is focused on decimals and order of operations.

Have a great week, all!

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Goal Setting in the New Year


Hi all!  Hope everyone adjusted well to be back in school after vacation!

Like most of you, we spent this week doing some reflection and goal setting for the new year.  At our school, we set goals three times a year.  In the beginning of the year, I try to use my baseline assessments to guide students to write their goals.  Now that we've been together for a while, I release the responsibility for goal setting to the students.



To set their goals, I held conferences with each student and reviewed their portfolios.  In math, the students complete their own item analysis after each topic test.  They use their data to write a compliment and a goal for the upcoming topic.


 Students looked at their work and selected a new goal for the middle of the school year. You can see that this student used his benchmark test to set his middle of year goal.  (After he set the goal, I helped him elaborate and create an action plan for the goal.)
These forms were created by my school.  All students have these forms in their portfolios.

In ELA, students reviewed a Unit Test and their two writing pieces to determine a goal for the middle of the year.

This student used the goal I noted after reading his narrative to set his goal for the middle of the year.

For myself, I'm not a big goal setter.  I set a few professional goals in September to assist myself in the new evaluation system, but most of my personal goals are fitness based.  I'm registered for a 10k and a triathlon.  Right now, I'm trying to clean up my diet!

Did your students set some new goals for the New Year?  And how about you?  Did you set any goals for 2014?