Google forms and Flubaroo are excellent tools in
helping a student identify their tricky spelling words! Here is a short
video that I created and presented at a staff professional development
meeting.
http://www.educreations.com/lesson/view/flubaroo/1782318/?s=c5IV0v&ref=link
My Kindergarten/First Grade Teaching and Learning Reflections!
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Empowering Self-Directed Learners
It is my firm belief that when children become responsible and take ownership for their own learning, learning becomes purposeful and engaging, and they will go further than I can imagine. My role as teacher is not the delivery of knowledge but as a facilitator of each child's learning. I follow the constructivist teaching approach (than the instructivist approach) where students are active and construct the meaning of their learning.
So..."How do I do it?" Hmmm...I think many, many factors play into it. I'm sure my 25 years of teaching experience play a major role but being of a growth mindset, I'm constantly reflecting and growing as a teacher. I plan, reflect and revise lessons constantly based on the students of the class and the moment of lesson. I scaffold lessons so each child is successful and continues to grow. I believe we are community of learners and that we can all learn from each other.
A couple of years ago, I created this presentation, on what makes me a 21st Century Teacher and Learner. I read Howard Gardner's "Five Minds of the Future", a great book! Here he is on youtube explaining this book! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRUN1F4rWAE In my presentation, I filmed myself explaining how I develop the "five minds" in the classroom.
Here are other powerful resources that have greatly influenced my teaching:
So..."How do I do it?" Hmmm...I think many, many factors play into it. I'm sure my 25 years of teaching experience play a major role but being of a growth mindset, I'm constantly reflecting and growing as a teacher. I plan, reflect and revise lessons constantly based on the students of the class and the moment of lesson. I scaffold lessons so each child is successful and continues to grow. I believe we are community of learners and that we can all learn from each other.
A couple of years ago, I created this presentation, on what makes me a 21st Century Teacher and Learner. I read Howard Gardner's "Five Minds of the Future", a great book! Here he is on youtube explaining this book! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRUN1F4rWAE In my presentation, I filmed myself explaining how I develop the "five minds" in the classroom.
Here are other powerful resources that have greatly influenced my teaching:
- The Element by Sir Ken Robinson
- Growth Mindset by Carol Dweck
- Whole New Mind by Daniel Pink
- Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
- Nurture Shock by Po Bronson & Ashley Merryman
- Habits of Mind by Art Costa
- Dispositions by Art Costa
- Who Owns the Learning? by Alan November
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Informational Writing
Kinders have a lot to think about when writing. From letter formation to
spelling to sentence structure to providing meaningful content, it can
easily overwhelm them. This year while working towards my goal, 4.3
Developing and sequencing long-term and short-term instructional plans
to support student learning, I am trying to develop lessons to support
student learning of informational writing by breaking up the learning
goals into smaller mini lessons. For example, I separated out letter
formation and spelling. We play games, add words to our dictionary, and
learn spelling patterns during guided reading.
We learned about sentence structure and sentence conventions by acting out, illustrating and writing silly sentences. See image below "A soft snowball runs!" Do you see the shoes and moving marks in the illustration. :)
To help with content for informational writing, I have been reading numerous arctic and antarctica animal books and viewing video segments from Discovery Education. Then, we have been reflecting and doing interactive writing:
Now, I'm taking it a step further. Together, we are making an Animoto movie from the interactive writing. The children decide on two images from Discovery Education and help me type their sentences. I explicitly point out all the different components of writing that we learned as I type. "Do you remember what goes between words?" "What makes the /k/ sound in rock and pack...what's the rule?" "How do you spell 'the'?" By doing this it ties together all the writing learning into this one piece of writing. This reinforces reading, sentence structure, sentence conventions, and informational content of animals.
Wow! The Animoto movie turned out great! The children helped make the final edits before publishing it. We even shared it immediately with our families in that day's tweet which provided a picture of the chart paper interactive writing and the link to the Animoto video!
A few days later, the children did their informational writing prompt and I think they did very well! I noticed everyone was able to think of a topic and had at least a couple of facts. This is an improvement from years past where I would always have a few write narratives or opinions about animals.
During parent conferences, parents were telling me that their child was very interested in animals and making comparisons with new information. Yippee!!
We learned about sentence structure and sentence conventions by acting out, illustrating and writing silly sentences. See image below "A soft snowball runs!" Do you see the shoes and moving marks in the illustration. :)
To help with content for informational writing, I have been reading numerous arctic and antarctica animal books and viewing video segments from Discovery Education. Then, we have been reflecting and doing interactive writing:
Now, I'm taking it a step further. Together, we are making an Animoto movie from the interactive writing. The children decide on two images from Discovery Education and help me type their sentences. I explicitly point out all the different components of writing that we learned as I type. "Do you remember what goes between words?" "What makes the /k/ sound in rock and pack...what's the rule?" "How do you spell 'the'?" By doing this it ties together all the writing learning into this one piece of writing. This reinforces reading, sentence structure, sentence conventions, and informational content of animals.
A few days later, the children did their informational writing prompt and I think they did very well! I noticed everyone was able to think of a topic and had at least a couple of facts. This is an improvement from years past where I would always have a few write narratives or opinions about animals.
During parent conferences, parents were telling me that their child was very interested in animals and making comparisons with new information. Yippee!!
Schedules and Routines
I strongly believe that schedules and routines help students feel
safe and comfortable which allows them grow as a learner, build their
self confidence and take risks. They become successful learners. At the
BTS night talk, I emphasized the importance of schedules, routines, and
child responsibility. Here is a screen shot of my BTS flipchart:
On my website under "Child Development"is an outstanding link by Maci Elkins titled Routines and Schedules for Children. Her article, titled Ready, Set, Routine!, simply explains the importance of schedules and routines for children. She states, "Routines
involve repetition. Repetition involves predictability. Predictability
involves stability. Stability involves security. Kids crave routines
because routines make kids feel safe and secure. ... Routines also
provide opportunities for children to experience success in what they
are doing, which then promotes self-control and self-esteem."
In my classroom, I have established a weekly schedule and post/use various routines with the children. Here are some:
- My weekly schedule is on my website and posted in my classroom for parents.
- A daily schedule is read with the children every morning from the morning message on the interactive whiteboard and it's posted using icons. Children refer to this schedule often throughout the day:
- During Reading & Writing Activity Workshop (60 minutes, 4x a week), a "must do" activity for all is introduced with a short mini lesson. These "must do" activities are carefully and thoughtfully chosen to further the student's learning. I never look at it as copying a worksheet and assigning it so the children have something to do. Instead, it's developing and building upon a standards based skill. Sometimes the must do is partner reading a book from their book bin, helping others remember to use their inside voices, or choosing something new from Alphabet City or Writing City. During this time, I can do guided reading with small groups, children use the computers to build reading skills, & various choice activities are set up for children. I created this movie a few years ago that showcases the classroom environment during this Reading & Writing Activity Time. Children are allowed to choose activities that are of interest to them, which allows for the rotation of small homogeneous groups for guided reading and computers. Everyday during and at the end of this time, we pause and reflect on our choices and learning... I have found that this inspires others to make good choices, builds their independence, and prevents distraction to everyone's learning. The children know when and where to go by listening for the signal chime and looking at this schedule:
- Writing Time (30 minutes, 3x a week) is the area I'm eager to develop to be more in line with Lucy Calkins Units of Study. I'm currently beginning to make charts with the students as well as improve "Writing City" in the classroom.
- Learning Centers (90 minutes, 1x a week) is a time for students to work in heterogenous groups and rotate together to five Learners Centers. This is a time for direct instruction, introduction of a new game, and integration of their learning. Three parent helpers, my classroom assistant and myself each run a center. Students know where and when to go with the ringing of a bell and this chart:
Welcome to my new blog
New Year, new blog, new look! I'm changing to my blogger so I
can have full administration capabilities. My previous blog can still
be accessed at http://wilkes.discoveryeducation.com/silvia/
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