Polka Dot

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Student Teaching!

I should have announced this earlier, but I'm really excited about knowing my placement! I got to meet my 2nd graders at Pleasant Valley Elementary School!!  I already went for my field experience for 10 hours.  Soon, I'll be there every single day for a whole semester!  Can't wait!!


Similarities and Differences

In my curriculum class, we have been studying what research shows about various strategies to use so students learn better.   

Classroom Instruction that Works by Marzano, Pickering, and Pollock is given credit for this information presented here.

I'll start off with...

Identifying similarities and differences.

The percentile gain is 31-46%!

What it is?

There are four parts to this strategy:
Comparing:  what do the two objects/ideas have in common, what is different?

Classifying:  first identifying similarities and differences and then organizing into two or more categories based on similarities/differences.

Creating Metaphors:  identifying abstract similarities and differences between two elements.

Creating Analogies:  identifying how two pairs of elements are similar and different.



Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Thank You...

Ron Clark has inspired me to come up with my own by combing two of his rules.

I believe appreciation and saying thank is extremely important.  Therefore, every week, have your class write a thank you note for someone working hard in the school (but not always receiving the gratitude they deserve).

These people can be:
cafeteria workers, bus drivers, janitors, volunteers that come to the school, other teachers who come and help out in the classroom, etc.

Who doesn't like being thanked for what they do?!  Plus, it teaches your students to be more grateful!




Friday, October 14, 2011

Ask ?Questions?

Inquiry lessons take more time to plan and do BUT they are so important and beneficial to the classroom.  Wait, you might be asking a question...what is an inquiry lesson?  Perhaps, you do these all the time (I hope!). 

Inquiry lessons provide students the opportunity to ask questions AND find out answers for themselves...with you helping and guiding along the way of course!  It might hard to do lessons like these every single day, but once a week is quite manageable!  

An example of an inquiry lesson (combining science and math) is giving your students various sodas and scales and get them asking questions.  You can model a few questions to get them to start thinking:  does diet weigh less than regular; does carbonated weigh more than flat soda; etc.  They can use the scientific method to test the various questions they come up with; come up with a hypothesis, and so on.  Let them come up with the questions and be the curious beings that they are (or hopefully are)!



Monday, October 3, 2011

Positively Positive!

Notice when someone asks you to do something in a nice way, you're bound to do it more than if you were asked in a negative way?  Yeah, that's the idea with children.  They ARE human beings after all so when treated with respect, they'll treat you back respectfully (HOPEFULLY)!  However, I see way to many adults who treat children like someone less than them.  No, they deserve respect too!

Therefore, using positive statements when asking your students to do something can make quite a difference.

It's not "don't run"  it's "walk please".
It's not "don't talk while I'm talking" it's "please be quiet while I'm talking".

You get the drift!


Friday, September 30, 2011

Experience Social Studies

I am all about variety in the classroom!  Here are various ways to make social studies come alive for students:

*primary sources
*re-enacting
*current events (newspaper, magazines, etc)
*guest speakers
*field trips
*movies
*music
*art
*props/costumes
*timeline
*map
*children's literature (especially ones from various cultures so children have various perspectives on the same event)



Sunday, September 25, 2011

What Do You Think Of....

I like the introductory activity that goes something like this:

What do you think of when I say...penguin?!

Or what do you think of when I say...Greece?

Whatever the topic is for that day, you use the word instead and write their answers on the board, overhead, Smart Board, etc...

It gets your students thinking about the topic and you can assess them on what they already know and what connections they have already with the topic.  Not bad, eh?  Easy, fun, AND useful! :)



Thursday, September 22, 2011

Vocab Fun and Plus

Here's a few activities to learn vocab!

Cubing:  making paper cubes with questions such as:  1.  What does it look like?  2.  Where does it live?  3.  What does it feel like?  Etc.  Can be used as activity in the beginning to assess what students know already, in the middle to expand their knowledge, or at the end to assess what they have learned.  You can even use this for math problems as shown below!

Connect To:  giving students words or having them come up with 2 lists of words, and then have students connect one word from one list to another word in the other list.  They can be a stretch but it really makes them think.  The activity can show you if students have any misconceptions about any of the words and the level of comprehension the students are at. 

Manipulative Graphic Organizers:  give your students words that can be put into categories and straws and let them take it away!  This can be used for vocab in any subject:  math (real numbers, non real numbers, integers, etc); science (warm-blooded, cold-blooded, mammals, birds, etc) social studies (Northeastern states, Southern states, etc); word study (nouns, adjectives, etc)...you get idea!  I like that it's a hands-on graphic organizer!




Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Ron Clark

So I have been reading a book called The Essential 55 by Ron Clark, and it is SUCH a fabulous book!  I recommend everyone to check it out!  Ron Clark just inspires you to be a passionate teacher like no other!  Check out the website:  http://www.ronclarkacademy.com/!




Saturday, September 17, 2011

Koool Subjects

Math.  Science.  Social Studies.  Reading.  Writing.  Sound familiar?  Uh duh!

Well, why spin those names into something fun and creative?!  Writing can be Author Time!  Who says it can't?! Kids will be more excited about going to Author Time rather than to...Writing.

I'll be honest, I totally stole this idea from Educating Esme:  A Diary of a Teacher's First Year.  But then again, teachers don't steal ever...they borrow! :)

So be creative and come up with your own cool names for subjects!  If anything, you can always purchase the book.  When our professor read it to us, I absolutely loved it!  It's definitely worth having this in your library!