This summer I have been re-watching the classroom management videos that are available on Whole Brain Teaching. If you have never heard of WBT, you have got to try Chris Biffle's methods! Everything whole brain teaching is totally revolutionary and free! He started out with great classroom managment tools. Recently he has added more academic content. I want to start some of his methods on day one.
One of my favorites is Oral Writing. Chris maintains that students cannot improve in writing without first having good oral communication. This is especially important for English Language Learners, students of poverty, and students with poor receptive and expressive language skills. I assessed my class on the skill of oral writing on Step-Up Day when students had to use 7-Up sentences (sentences with a minimum of 7 words) to describe themselves and their hobbies (see my blogpost). I found that many students had difficulties doing this.
When I reviewed the video on Oral Writing, I noticed how Chris taught specific "adders" to help students extend their sentence length and improve their critical thinking. I felt that I wanted to post these "adders" at the beginning of the year, so I made these adder strips.
Each adder has a picture and a gesture. That way, if a child gets stuck, their peers can non-verbally suggest an adder by doing its gesture.
In the spirit of Chris Biffle, this is a FREEBIE. Just click the picture to get your own adders!
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Multiple Uses of Name Badge Holders
This summer one of my professional reading books was Word Nerds by Overturf, Montgomery, and Holmes-Smith. In the book they suggested the use of inexpensive badge holders to assign each student a vocabulary word to practice activities throughout the day. As I purchased the badge holders, I got to thinking how I could make this tool work in other areas. Here's my plans for next year:
1. Attendance and Lunch Count
I glued a magnet to the back of the holder. Students will move their badge from the absent section to their lunch choice each day as an easy way to take attendance and take lunch count.
2. Peer Editing Based on Writing Goals and Levels of Proficiency
Writing is right after recess in my classroom. When they come in, they will take their badge holder off the attendance board and clip it on with their name showing. Below their name, each child has the Six Traits of writing. Their personal goals are boxed in red. Nick's goals are in Ideas, Organization, and Sentence Fluency. Their present level of proficiency is represented by a shape: triangle for level 1, circle for level 2, square for level 3, and heart for level 4. Seeing these shapes will give students daily reminders of their goal areas. If students move up a proficiency level during the year, I will change the foam sticker.
In my classroom, students can only be a peer editor in an area where they are at a higher profiency level than the peer they are editing with. So, for example, Nick has a level 2 in Sentence Fluency. He can be a peer editor for a student with level 1 in Sentence Fluency. The badge will let all students know where they stand visually.
But, you might say, Nick has a goal to improve in that area. All the better. As Nick helps other students, he will become stronger and practice that skill. As teachers, we all know how much we learn when we have to teach others.
Below is the start of a poster that explains the four levels. This will go on my "Writer's Block" bulletin board and goes with my classroom colors of chalkboard green, black, and ladybug red.
3. Vocabulary Practice
Right after Writing is ELA, which consists of English grammar, spelling, and vocabulary. Students will turn their names around to become vocabulary words for this instruction. In the picture you can see the magnets I attached to the back for attendance. I think I will make a nice and quick, but meaningful, transition from Writing to ELA, which occurs back-to-back in the same literacy block.
Students will use the vocabulary words in many hands-on and creative ways. They can line up by definition, in alphabetical order, group themselves by parts of speech, roots, or affixes. Throughout the week, students will be adding synonyms and antonyms to the 5 core words for the week. Students can pair with their synonym or antonym and decide which is "stronger" and why. They can us the vocabulary cards for charades and creating oral sentences, which the authors of Word Nerds call 7-Up sentences because they need to have seven words or more. Students can create or find on the Web images to illustrate their word. For an even greater challenge, students can find a single color that represents the word.
1. Attendance and Lunch Count
I glued a magnet to the back of the holder. Students will move their badge from the absent section to their lunch choice each day as an easy way to take attendance and take lunch count.
2. Peer Editing Based on Writing Goals and Levels of Proficiency
Writing is right after recess in my classroom. When they come in, they will take their badge holder off the attendance board and clip it on with their name showing. Below their name, each child has the Six Traits of writing. Their personal goals are boxed in red. Nick's goals are in Ideas, Organization, and Sentence Fluency. Their present level of proficiency is represented by a shape: triangle for level 1, circle for level 2, square for level 3, and heart for level 4. Seeing these shapes will give students daily reminders of their goal areas. If students move up a proficiency level during the year, I will change the foam sticker.
In my classroom, students can only be a peer editor in an area where they are at a higher profiency level than the peer they are editing with. So, for example, Nick has a level 2 in Sentence Fluency. He can be a peer editor for a student with level 1 in Sentence Fluency. The badge will let all students know where they stand visually.
But, you might say, Nick has a goal to improve in that area. All the better. As Nick helps other students, he will become stronger and practice that skill. As teachers, we all know how much we learn when we have to teach others.
Below is the start of a poster that explains the four levels. This will go on my "Writer's Block" bulletin board and goes with my classroom colors of chalkboard green, black, and ladybug red.
3. Vocabulary Practice
Right after Writing is ELA, which consists of English grammar, spelling, and vocabulary. Students will turn their names around to become vocabulary words for this instruction. In the picture you can see the magnets I attached to the back for attendance. I think I will make a nice and quick, but meaningful, transition from Writing to ELA, which occurs back-to-back in the same literacy block.
Students will use the vocabulary words in many hands-on and creative ways. They can line up by definition, in alphabetical order, group themselves by parts of speech, roots, or affixes. Throughout the week, students will be adding synonyms and antonyms to the 5 core words for the week. Students can pair with their synonym or antonym and decide which is "stronger" and why. They can us the vocabulary cards for charades and creating oral sentences, which the authors of Word Nerds call 7-Up sentences because they need to have seven words or more. Students can create or find on the Web images to illustrate their word. For an even greater challenge, students can find a single color that represents the word.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Assessment Data Binder
This week I have been very busy creating products for teachers. I have to confess that the hot and humid weather here in the Northeast has been behind it. The only comfortable spot is in front of the computers with two fans running! And the last place I want to go is the beach or lake because they are so crowded.
My latest product is a Youtube video titled: Assessment Data Binder.
Many people have asked about how I set up my binder. It certainly is a "hot topic" (no pun intended!). I am very lucky that us fourth grade teachers get a portfolio that includes both numeric assessment data, and samples of student work. I pour over these portfolios in early July to set up my Assessment Data Binder. Having plenty of time to look at the portfolios helps me "hit the ground running" when the school year begins. I definitely make tweaks once I get to know each child individually, but surprisingly I don't need to do that very often. The video has links to my former blogposts where I offer some of the forms for free. If you are interested in the assessment web, please leave a comment below. The writing rubric is part of one of my paid products on Teachers Pay Teachers.
What do you do to keep track of assessments?
My latest product is a Youtube video titled: Assessment Data Binder.
Many people have asked about how I set up my binder. It certainly is a "hot topic" (no pun intended!). I am very lucky that us fourth grade teachers get a portfolio that includes both numeric assessment data, and samples of student work. I pour over these portfolios in early July to set up my Assessment Data Binder. Having plenty of time to look at the portfolios helps me "hit the ground running" when the school year begins. I definitely make tweaks once I get to know each child individually, but surprisingly I don't need to do that very often. The video has links to my former blogposts where I offer some of the forms for free. If you are interested in the assessment web, please leave a comment below. The writing rubric is part of one of my paid products on Teachers Pay Teachers.
What do you do to keep track of assessments?
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Grade Four Dolch Activities
Looking at my students IEPs for the coming year, I noticed that several students had goals that they would be fluent on the grade 4 Dolch list. Since I have never had students with goals like that, I decided to find the list and create some activities. As I was researching activity ideas, I came across this youtube video from teacherstipster.com:
I loved the idea! Since the students who need this skill are boys, thought it was right up their alley. So I created the same thing only for the grade 4 Dolch list. While I was at it, I thought flashcards of all 279 words would come in handy for sorting and categorizing. As I was making those, I noticed that there were several homophones in the list, so I created some cloze sentences for these words. Voila! My next TpT product was born! The picture only show a few sample pages that you get in this 27 page resource. Click on the picture or here to check it out!
I loved the idea! Since the students who need this skill are boys, thought it was right up their alley. So I created the same thing only for the grade 4 Dolch list. While I was at it, I thought flashcards of all 279 words would come in handy for sorting and categorizing. As I was making those, I noticed that there were several homophones in the list, so I created some cloze sentences for these words. Voila! My next TpT product was born! The picture only show a few sample pages that you get in this 27 page resource. Click on the picture or here to check it out!
Sunday, July 14, 2013
A Common Core Pacing Guide
This summer I have embarked on a number of curriculum projects, mostly around the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). For Math I wanted to increase the amount of differentiation and technology as well as firmly ground my teaching in the Common Core. The first thing I noticed when I counted up the standards was that there was the same number of standards as full weeks in the school year. That means that my students will have to master one standard a week! At first that thought was quite daunting. My next thought was this is an opportunity to have a very organized curriculum based on a single standard each week. This is how I decided to organize and pace each week:
At the top of each week/page is the unit title, which part of the unit. vocabulary, skills, and the Common Core standard.
Monday will be a whole class, non-differentiated lesson straight from my Math program (Everyday Math). At the end of the Math lesson, I will give a short assessment on the standard of the week. For this part of the weekly plan I didn't reinvent the wheel. Teachers Pay Teachers has several short, one page per standard bundles that are specific to my grade level. I will use these to pre-test my students and put them in differentiated groups for the next three days of the week.
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursdays are differentiated instruction days. Students will participate in rotational groups I call "I Love Math" groups. For more information on I Love Math Groups, listen to this podcast or watch this video (the first of 5 parts) on Youtube. Technology will help make differentiation easier. I will use the Ten Marks website on Tuesdays and the Manga High website on Thursday. Both websites allow me to assign lessons/activities and also have fun games and activities for students who finish early. Scoot Pad is a similar website (click the names for links).
Friday we are back to another whole class lesson from Everyday Math. One Friday I will give the post-test (a different "one-pager" from TpT) and this will be graded.
So that's my curriculum pacing guide for next year. I haven't offered this as a product on TpT because it is personal to my situation- a labor of love, if you will. However, if you would like a free digital copy to tweak for you own use, email me at cjones@sau61.org.
At the top of each week/page is the unit title, which part of the unit. vocabulary, skills, and the Common Core standard.
Monday will be a whole class, non-differentiated lesson straight from my Math program (Everyday Math). At the end of the Math lesson, I will give a short assessment on the standard of the week. For this part of the weekly plan I didn't reinvent the wheel. Teachers Pay Teachers has several short, one page per standard bundles that are specific to my grade level. I will use these to pre-test my students and put them in differentiated groups for the next three days of the week.
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursdays are differentiated instruction days. Students will participate in rotational groups I call "I Love Math" groups. For more information on I Love Math Groups, listen to this podcast or watch this video (the first of 5 parts) on Youtube. Technology will help make differentiation easier. I will use the Ten Marks website on Tuesdays and the Manga High website on Thursday. Both websites allow me to assign lessons/activities and also have fun games and activities for students who finish early. Scoot Pad is a similar website (click the names for links).
Friday we are back to another whole class lesson from Everyday Math. One Friday I will give the post-test (a different "one-pager" from TpT) and this will be graded.
So that's my curriculum pacing guide for next year. I haven't offered this as a product on TpT because it is personal to my situation- a labor of love, if you will. However, if you would like a free digital copy to tweak for you own use, email me at cjones@sau61.org.
Additional EDM/CCSS Alignment Resources:
First, the "official" CCSS alignment from EDM, then the more realistic version from New York.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
A Thing or Two I've Learned
This week I've been thinking and planning the next school year. These are the five things I've learned as I think about starting the new year:
1. Hit the Ground Running
You only have 180 days to make a difference. You don't have time to get to know your kids starting on Day 1. Get to know your students as much as possible through their assessment data, if you have access to it over the summer. If you don't, have a discussion with your administrator. What policies could your district have in order to give teachers the data they need before the start of school? In my school, we get administrative passwords for online assessments. This way we have access to all of the data, rather than just the kids we had last year. We also have portfolios that pass from grade level to grade level. If you don't have these, I strongly suggest they you try to start them.
Start forming plans before you meet your students so you can start addressing their needs as soon as possible. I allow seven days to teach routines and establish rules. By Day 8, we are up and running with a full curriculum.
2. Don't Wait To Try Something New
If a child is not making progress by the end of the first month, they are not going to make progress unless you change something. Monitor students weekly and document, document, document. Notice I did not say test or assess. Monitoring can be as simple as doing an individual running record or a weekly random math facts check.
3. Use a Team Approach
If your best efforts are not working, reach out. Share your documentation with others. Ideally, you should have some time as a grade-level team each week to do this. One of my favorite videos that illustrates the importance documentation and teamwork is from my digital mentor Jenn Jones of Hello Literacy. A link to the video and my blogpost in response, with modifications for intermediate level students, can be found here.
4. A Little for a Long Time is Better Than a Lot for a Short Time
Programs where students do a short skill every day, or every day for an entire term, yield much better results then spending an entire lesson on a given skill for several days. Examples of programs that do this effectively are the Math Boxes in Everyday Math, Shurley Language, and Saxon Math. If you use these programs, never skip the review part of the lesson. If you don't have programs like this, then make some. Teachers Pay Teachers is a great source of supplemental programs.
5. Small Increases in Student Accountability Yield Great Results
Students can't improve if they don't know the expectations and how they measure up. And don't expect them to pay a lot of attention to rubrics or your written comments. You will need to model this behavior and show students how these tools benefit them. Have students reflect on their growth at least once per term. Keeping a portfolio is great for this. Data Walls are also a nice way to encourage students. This is my video on data walls from Youtube.
1. Hit the Ground Running
You only have 180 days to make a difference. You don't have time to get to know your kids starting on Day 1. Get to know your students as much as possible through their assessment data, if you have access to it over the summer. If you don't, have a discussion with your administrator. What policies could your district have in order to give teachers the data they need before the start of school? In my school, we get administrative passwords for online assessments. This way we have access to all of the data, rather than just the kids we had last year. We also have portfolios that pass from grade level to grade level. If you don't have these, I strongly suggest they you try to start them.
Start forming plans before you meet your students so you can start addressing their needs as soon as possible. I allow seven days to teach routines and establish rules. By Day 8, we are up and running with a full curriculum.
2. Don't Wait To Try Something New
If a child is not making progress by the end of the first month, they are not going to make progress unless you change something. Monitor students weekly and document, document, document. Notice I did not say test or assess. Monitoring can be as simple as doing an individual running record or a weekly random math facts check.
3. Use a Team Approach
If your best efforts are not working, reach out. Share your documentation with others. Ideally, you should have some time as a grade-level team each week to do this. One of my favorite videos that illustrates the importance documentation and teamwork is from my digital mentor Jenn Jones of Hello Literacy. A link to the video and my blogpost in response, with modifications for intermediate level students, can be found here.
4. A Little for a Long Time is Better Than a Lot for a Short Time
Programs where students do a short skill every day, or every day for an entire term, yield much better results then spending an entire lesson on a given skill for several days. Examples of programs that do this effectively are the Math Boxes in Everyday Math, Shurley Language, and Saxon Math. If you use these programs, never skip the review part of the lesson. If you don't have programs like this, then make some. Teachers Pay Teachers is a great source of supplemental programs.
5. Small Increases in Student Accountability Yield Great Results
Students can't improve if they don't know the expectations and how they measure up. And don't expect them to pay a lot of attention to rubrics or your written comments. You will need to model this behavior and show students how these tools benefit them. Have students reflect on their growth at least once per term. Keeping a portfolio is great for this. Data Walls are also a nice way to encourage students. This is my video on data walls from Youtube.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Working On Writing
My "Triple Threat"
A rubric that shows the child's baseline level (black circle), and their goal (green box).
When I score a piece of writing, I copy this rubric and circle the level that they obtained
in the assignment with a colored marker.
So when any assignment is scored, the child can see where they were (black circle),
where they should be (gray box), and where they are now (colored circle).
I just got back from a wonderful workshop sponsored by my school. The training was a continuation on our work with professional learning groups (PLGs). We had complained that we had too little time to really delve into the PLG process that was new to us during the school year. Although we have a common planning time of 45 minutes, most of the protocols we were given were designed for 60 minutes or more. There was a little bit of extra money in our Race to the Top grant, so we used it to work out some unresolved dilemmas using the PLG format.
Our grade level team discussed Writing. Both this year and next, budget cuts have forced us to make do with less paraprofessional support. Paraprofessionals are assigned, not to classrooms or teachers, but to individuals or groups of students. So if none of your students had a goal in a certain subject area, such as Science or Social Studies, you would not have a paraprofessional support during that time. We felt this most impacted our instruction in the area of Writing. It is very rare for any fourth grader in our school to have an IEP goal in Writing because very little writing is done in grades K-3, due to Reading First. Yet many of our learning disabled, language disabled, and ADHD students struggle with the writing demands of fourth grade. In our PLG we discussed methods to refine our instruction in the Writing Workshop to meet the needs of these students, who often need a lot of our time, and yet be fair to other students. To boil down the essence of our discussion, we came up with ways to target our instruction based on goals, increase the amount of differentiation, and empower our writers with a growth mind-set.
And thus my latest TpT product was born! I have worked long and hard the part week on this massive 25-page resource for writing. It is designed for grades 3-8 and draws on the work of Gail Boushey and Joan Moser ("The Sisters", authors of The Daily Five and The CAFE Book) and the work of Lucy Calkins (known for her Units of Study) but it is my own "take" on the work of these fine master teachers. Just some of the things it contains are:
- a detailed, 12-page Launching Guide for the Writing Workshop. All of your instruction for the first seven days is included. You don't have to plan anything. The first seven days are the most important so that you set the tone and standards for the year.
- creative activities like Writing collages, and editing necklaces
- a kid-friendly, baseball-themed Writing rubric
- 6 Trait Super Grouper Form (for creating small groups based on assessment data
- a letter to parents on how to read their child's assessment rubric
The best part is that this product is ON SALE right now for HALF OFF! That's right, followers! If you purchase this product before July 11th you get the sale price. Buy it on July 11th and it goes back to the regular (but still a bargain) price. So why not treat yourself today?
By the way, I'm not done creating new products this summer. by a long shot. Right now I'm working on a daily multi-digit numbers and operations review called "4 in 5". There will eventually be a third, fourth, and fifth grade version. Right now I'm working on the fourth grade version. Click here for a sneak peek!
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