Monday, September 30, 2013

Close Reading

Last week I presented a professional development session on Close Reading to my own staff. Though I've presented dozens of times before, I was nervous this time. I like to have some knowledge of my audience and their needs, and I felt pretty uninformed. Because I started at my school at the very last minute, I hadn't even met all the teachers! And I was presenting to all teachers, K-5.

I was provided with a partner, who would present with me. That made me even more nervous, because I hadn't met her until two days before the presentation, either! It can be challenging to present as a team, especially the first time.

As it turned out, I needn't have worried at all. It was a great day, great presentation, great audience! I was amazed that my partner and I worked together fabulously, as if we'd done it many times before.

So have you had a chance to learn about Close Reading? Not even sure exactly what it is?

Watch this: VIDEO of Douglas Fisher

Read this: ARTICLE by Douglas Fisher and Nancy Frey

Read this: ARTICLE from ASCD

And if you're hungry for more, order this book:

Notice and Note

 

It's a great resource!

Close reading is just what it sounds like: Reading something closely. Of course, there is a lot more to it than that, but a name that matches the strategy is a great start!

When teaching a Close Reading lesson, there are a few components to keep in mind.

1. The lesson should use short passages. Of course the definition of "short" varies, depending on the age of the students. For my kindergartners and first graders, a few sentences can be appropriate, but for older students, it might be a few paragraphs. The text can be something that stands alone, or it can be an excerpt from a longer piece.

2. The text should be complex. The whole point is to help students learn skills and strategies for deep understanding, so the text should be challenging.

3. The teacher should provide limited frontloading. In recent years, there have been times when teachers have been encouraged to spend a lot of time helping students get ready to read. But in a Close Reading, students are expected to do more of the work. There may be texts that require a bit of frontloading, but there shouldn't be too much. Students are learning how to understand text on their own.

4. There should be opportunities for repeated readings. Students should read and re-read and re-read. Each time they read, students will have gained a little more background knowledge from the previous reading, and they will understand more.

5. The teacher should be asking students text-dependent questions. This is all about providing evidence from the text to support their answers, which is what the Common Core Standards are all about.

6. The students should be annotating what they read: highlighters, Post-It notes, circled words, and notes in the margin are all appropriate! This is one piece of the Close Reading lesson that requires some guidelines ahead of time! If students don't know what to highlight, they might highlight everything! I began my close reading lessons with a mini-lesson on how to highlight, especially the idea of one line, not "coloring." If older students will be numbering paragraphs to aid in discussion of a text, they'll need to know how to number paragraphs (in our presentation, a few teachers didn't number the paragraphs correctly, which led to confusion!)

One part of all of this that some teachers expressed a little anxiety about: asking text-dependent questions. I created this handy bookmark/guide that teachers can use to help them generate text-dependent questions. It's perfect for the Common Core!

Text-Dependent Questions

You can download a copy HERE.

Have a great Monday!

Sunday, September 29, 2013

I Hate to Even Mention This...

I saw this on Facebook a few days ago.

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I looked twice to see if was actually a photo of me! I've been exhausted for weeks. First, I had the crazy start-of-the-year school change, and all the recovery and unpacking and time-consuming work that went along with it. I'm absolutely still glad I did it, but I've not yet recovered in the sleep department.

Next, I've gotten seven new students since the first day of school. Seven. SEVEN. Did you hear me?!  They are lovely children, but they all have above-average needs. And they have nearly all been kindergartners. It has been very challenging. And disruptive. And time-consuming.

And a few other additions to my sleep deficit: professional development I was asked to provide for my staff last week (I was happy to do it, just not thrilled with the timing!), some parenting challenges, a two-week virus that wiped me out, too many meetings after school... you get the idea.

But now... I get a week off. How beautiful is that?

My district has a Fall Break.

Have you ever even heard of such a thing?! I never had. But I'm totally on board with the idea now!

I've worked every day since the start of school. Most weekend mornings, I've grabbed my laptop first thing, and spent at least a few hours planning, prepping, creating... Until this weekend, that is. I didn't do a shred of work yesterday! Omiword, it felt so good. I slept as late as I could, had a leisurely cup of coffee, went to my son's swim meet, lunch, errands... I bought new running shoes (I had been putting that one off due to lack of time!) and looked for a geocache with my daughter and watched some TV and truly enjoyed spending time with my family. OH. SO. GOOD.

Today I'm going to shop a little. I want to go to Athleta and Loft, among other places, and I'll probably stop by Nordstrom for a fresh pair of Toms. I'm going to run, and bake some pumpkin cookies, and clean out my closet, and wash the mountain that our laundry hamper has become. I'm going to lounge on the couch and watch some more TV. (I heard there was a Modern Family season premiere this week, but I missed it, so Hulu Plus, here I come!)

I might even get out my laptop and do a little work. I have some projects to work on (requests from TpT followers) and I want to organize my data binder and transfer all the little Post-It note information onto my calendar.  But I don't have to, and that makes it seem all the more appealing!

And I'm sorry if you're working this week. Here are a couple ideas for you!

Last week we did lots of Apple-Themed activities:

We read books about Johnny Appleseed, talked about the different between fact and opinion, and then students wrote.

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Get that activity page HERE for free!

My kindergartners had a great time during math last week. They put number cards in order (1-12) and then build unifix cube towers to show each number. They worked in groups of two or three, and they loved doing this! I'll repeat this activity during math workshop time with different number cards and different manipulatives.

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And I really like using this book with beginning readers. There is a poem for each sight word. I never go in the order in the book. I choose based on theme.

Sight Word Poetry Pages

 

I started enlarging the pictures on each page, and letting student color them for our big, shared reading chart a couple of weeks ago. Six or eight students get that honor each week-- and they love it!  After we've practiced reading for a few days, I provide the students with their own copies. They trace the sight words, color, and add to their "Rhymes to Read" notebooks. But the chart stays up in the room.

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Happy Sunday, Friends!

Saturday, September 28, 2013

My Classroom Library

A year or two ago, my son was going through a difficult period and needed some activities to distract him from his own challenges. So I gave him a few jobs around the house and in my classroom. He fixed a couple of things, moved heavy furniture, ran some errands, cooked some meals ... and then I had him count the books in my classroom library. Haha! What a job!

My classroom library is organized into five sections. First, I have a lot of books that are sorted by level for guided reading instruction. I keep them in bins near my reading table, and I give them to students (and then students store them in bags inside their book boxes) when appropriate. Second, I have a collection of books that I use to teach lessons. I generally don't let students have access to those books. I know, selfish! But this set of books is very carefully organized and that's just how it is.

So two of my five sections? Really just for me. The students are exposed to all those books in some way, but they don't get full access. It's okay, though... there are plenty of books that the children have access to all the time! According to my son's calculations... there are nearly 4,000 of those books!

The third section of my library is organized by author. I have 19 book boxes, each one filled with books by the same author: Tomie DePaola, Kevin Henkes, Mo Willems, Audrey Penn, Patricia Polacco, Keiko Kasza, Steven Kellogg, Mercer Mayer, David Shannon, Dav Pilkey, Eric Carle... This picture only shows eighteen boxes, but I promise there are nineteen!

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The next part of my library is organized by character or series... Pete the Cat, Berenstain Bears, Clifford, Magic School Bus, Dr. Seuss, Angelina Ballerina, Arthur, Curious George, Jigsaw Jones, Nate the Great, Magic Tree House, Franklin...

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I store the coordinating stuffed animals in the boxes, and students are allowed to read to them at certain times.

The fifth and final section of my classroom library is organized by subject/genre/type. I have books about food, weather, friendship, families, frogs, mammals, reptiles, holidays, birthdays, math, inventions, bears, school... there is a Joke Book box and a Fairy Tale box and a Word Book box. One box is filled with Rhyming Books, and another holds all the ZooBooks.

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Each of the three sections for students is organized in alphabetical order, either by last name (authors), character name or topic.

There are a total of 96 book boxes. How ridiculous!

I started collecting the boxes about five years ago. They were $2.95 at Lakeshore, and I never bought even one without a coupon of some kind. Most of the time I had a buy one, get one 50% off coupon, so the boxes were around $2.25 each. Not as cheap as the dollar store, but they are unbelievably sturdy. After a year or so (I had purchased about 20 boxes), the price went up to $3.95, but by then I felt pretty committed. Luckily I had a very large PTA fund that year, and I bought most of the boxes then.  Now the boxes are $4.99 each, which I think is pretty outrageously expensive. I have no plans to add new boxes. And if I really feel the need, I will likely regroup and use a box I already have (I could put all the Magic School Bus books into the Science box, or move all the Halloween books into the Autumn box.) I never would have chosen these boxes if the price had been $4.99!  That said, however, these boxes will last forever! They are in perfect condition after five years.

Actually, I have one more collection of books. They are organized by level, and they are for students to borrow and take home. I'll talk more about how I manage the take home books at another time.

Four. Thousand. Books.

Where did they come from? Many were acquired for free... public library giveaways, school library giveaways, the "free" section at garage sales, Scholastic bonus points, books my own children's friends grew out of. Most were very, very cheap... from RAFT or thrift stores or from clearance shelves. One nearby thrift store sells most of their books for 19 cents... and they frequently have 50% off sales. I've walked out of that store with 70 books for $7 plus tax on a number of occasions.  A few books I purchased from Scholastic (and then earned more free books), some are from Amazon, lots I cleaned off of my own kids' shelves.

One of my daughters organized all those boxes. Which was another job in itself! She sorted and alphabetized for a couple of hours and all it cost me was $30 in Think Geek t-shirts! What a deal!

 

 

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Where Did the Week Go? Rain, Math, Library Mouse, and Essential Questions for Kindergarten!

Last week flew by... I was so ridiculously busy that I barely had time to do anything! It was a "Jamba Juice for dinner one night, and Freebirds for dinner the next night" kind of week! I've got some delicious vegetarian curry simmering on the stove right now. I'm already planning meals so I won't be wandering the aisles of Whole Foods with the "Five O'Clock Crowd," wondering what's for dinner next week!

Yikes!

I had so many meetings last week! A few conferences with parents just to check in, a couple of district meetings regarding evaluations and Common Core Language Arts (one of my FAVORITE topics!) and a grade level planning session with my amazing kindergarten team! I got home so late every night it was nuts. And I was just getting over whatever cold/virus my sweet little students shared with me so it was exhausting.

But that's okay. I'm recovered and ready to go!

Today, I spent some time with my husband and two of my kids, took a drive across the new Bay Bridge...

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...had some quality time with Rose Kitty...

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... and ran three miles. Funny... I had decided not to run outside today. I love the beautiful streets and trails in my town, but I love the data that the treadmills at the gym provide, too! So I opted for the gym. Good thing...

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It started pouring! It just so happened that I was on the treadmill by the window, so I snapped a picture of the pouring rain while I ran. Silly, yes! It's been so long since it rained, I had forgotten what it looked like!

So last week... a few highlights...

Math journals... we have been working on shapes, and I created this little activity for my students to glue into their math journals. Specifically, we've focused on standard K.G.A.2 for the kinders and 1.G.A.1 for the first graders. For this journal page, I created a little "lift-the-flap" activity. Students listed defining attributes on the front, and then drew objects from the world that were the same shape underneath each flap. They loved those little flaps! Magical!

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This is a picture of the supplies that I keep handy when I'm working with small groups during guided reading. I also squeeze a little guided writing into that time, and sometimes we create a small book together. A friend had asked for a picture of my basket o'goodies, so I thought I'd share here, too!

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In that basket: scissors, glue, pencils, markers, highlighters, crayons, twistables, and paper. Also in there is a white board that I can use and some little handwriting "write and wipe" notebooks that I picked up at Target last year for a dollar each. Money well spent!

And a great moment from last week... my youngest daughter re-created the tissue box/meet the author box from Library Mouse by Daniel Kirk.

Library Mouse

 

Just like in the story, I put a sign on the door of the classroom that said, "Meet the Author Today," and I left out some tiny books, tiny pencils (golf pencils and a few short ones I had saved for this!) and the box.

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I tucked a little mirror inside the box, just like Sam did.

And when my students came in the door that morning? What happened, you want to know? Well, they went absolutely nuts! They peeked into the box over and over again all week long, and they never stopped looking for Sam. I just love that they feel so connected to a book!

And the last little thing today...

I created a set of Essential Questions for the Kindergarten Common Core Standards! They are pretty adorable, if I do say so myself! I spend a long time getting every little graphic just perfect!

Kindergarten Common Core EQ

The set has a question for every single standard, and the strands are color-coded. And to save space in our classrooms, the questions are just the right size for posting in pocket charts! A giant blank wall won't be necessary!

Click on the cover page above, or click here to get your copy!

Have a great week, friends! If all else fails... remember that a smoothie from Jamba makes a great, quick dinner!

 

Saturday, September 14, 2013

A Very Useful Organizational Idea

I didn't have one of those amazing student teaching experiences that some people rave about.

It's been years since I was a student teacher, but I still remember all the challenges pretty clearly. I am organized. I'm a "place for everything and everything in its place" kind of person. I worked at a Montessori school in college. But when I was placed for student teaching, I ended up in my polar opposite's classroom. This teacher was very kind, welcomed me, offered to let me hold the class rats and guinea pigs, and told me I could just put my stuff "anywhere." The disorganization in the room was unreal.

Throughout the few months I was there, I always felt pretty awkward. Our personalities and styles could not have been more different. My master teacher was a very nice person, and I do remember her fondly. She was always very encouraging and nice to me, but it just was not a great learning experience and we were not a good match. Thankfully, she encouraged me to spend some time observing other classes in the school, and I found lots of inspiration in other classrooms.

The one, fabulous tip that I did get during my time as a student teacher? Make a class list that's alphabetical by FIRST name. The teacher I worked with made her class list  on little strips of paper. And then she left them all over her room for handy reference. (or more likely, because she hadn't thought of a place to store them! Giggle!)

I've made these kinds of lists every single year since then. One year I made eight lists to a page, in portrait.

Class List 2011

The next year I had more students, so I made them in "landscape" setting, with four lists to a page.

Class List for Website

I chop those lists into individual strips, and store them in a few strategic places around my room. I keep a stack of them on my teaching easel. I put a pile of them in the baskets my parent helpers use. And I keep several in the wall pocket that is hanging right by the classroom door. I can grab them at any time!

I use the lists for lots of different things. Sometimes I will attach to a pile of papers that students have turned in. I can quickly check off the students who have completed an assignment. I use them for checking off students whose parents have returned forms, and I keep the list attached to the forms. When I have yard duty, I might take a list so I can jot down a few notes while I'm outside (like check off who can skip) and I've also used them for checking off who has had a turn on the computer. Endless possibilities!

I use one of my little class lists once a day at least. They are so convenient and useful! One fabulous idea from student teaching!

Happy weekend, friends!

 

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Nearly Everything Links to Literacy!

I love books. I love teaching reading, and reading to my students, and talking about books. I love the Scholastic book orders, and all the choices there. I love the stuffed animals I have that are characters from books.

And so, without even knowing it sometimes, I connect things to literature.

A few years ago, I saw the idea of making a caterpillar to count the days of school. A friend of mine added a new segment to a caterpillar each day, and had a gigantic pastel-colored caterpillar that wrapped around one side of her classroom. I made a mental note to do something similar the following year. But, me being me, the idea had morphed a bit by the time the start of the next school year came along.

I decided to make my caterpillar be The Hungry Caterpillar.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar

And I decided to change the color of the caterpillar segments for each set of ten.

And I ended up with something like this.

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Last year, the caterpillar wound up and down across two walls. The year before, it scurried straight and was on three walls. We'll just have to wait to see what happens this year...

My students this year have gotten onto the idea that that hungry caterpillar is gobbling up days of school!

Another way that I've incorporated literacy into areas of my classroom... my table groups.

This year, I have five table groups: Pigeon Table,  Lilly Table,  Pete the Cat Table, Rocket the Reading Dog Table, and Hungry Caterpillar Table.

Pete Table LabelRocket Table LabelPigeon Table LabelLily Table LabelCaterpillar Table Label

I will sometimes say, "Pigeons, you can go line up for lunch," or "Reading Dogs, it's your turn to go get your book boxes." I excuse them for recess or to get supplies by tables, frequently. And sometimes I get a bit casual.

Last week, I cracked my class up. I'm not even sure where it came from, but I said, "If you're a Very Thirsty Caterpillar you can go get a drink now." They loved it! Silliness!

I've also decorated the bathroom that's inside my classroom with book jackets. But I won't post a picture of that!

Literacy and literary references... gotta love it!

 

Monday, September 9, 2013

Three Ways to Read a Book ... with a Pete the Cat Bookmark!

Last week, I described how I get started with reading workshop HERE. Part of the plan with kindergarten and first grade students is giving them some options when they are not able to decode the words. So I teach students to 1- Read the pictures, 2- Read the words (any words they can find that they know including "a" and "I") and 3- Retell the story.

After several lessons to model, teach, outline and explain each way, my students are getting to be pros. I have some first graders who can decode pretty darn well. But I also have some kindergartners who are doing well with reading the pictures. And that's just fine.

Today, I taught my students how to use a bookmark. Wild, right?! ...Because using a bookmark isn't intuitive. Students don't know what to do with it unless they are explicitly taught.

And I gave my students these bookmarks to keep in their book boxes with the books they selected. I had them write names on the back to avoid confusion later.

Three Ways to Read a Book Bookmarks

 

Click HERE to get these bookmarks for your students!

Sunday, September 8, 2013

More on Classroom Management in Kindergarten and First Grade

I was once observing a very talented teacher and I was shocked to hear her say, "Michael! You're wiggling! Go change your card." Um. Michael was a kindergartner. Aren't they supposed to wiggle?

So, I don't use a clip chart or change your card or rating system or anything like that. I loathe those systems both as a teacher and as a parent. For whom do they really work? The "good" kids are already doing the right thing. The students who have challenges just face public humiliation when they have to change their card or move their clip. And often, a student the whole class watching when he (let's be really, it's mostly the boys) has to walk across the room to move is marker. The high achievers get completely stressed out and over-react if they ever make a mistake that requires moving their clip, and the same students end up in the same places day after day. I just think it's too public, too visible, too ineffective... Changing a card or moving a clip can make a child feel terrible all day. Is feeling terrible the goal? I don't think so. I want my students to learn, but not feel bad!

Right, wrong, or otherwise... those procedures just don't work for me.

So what do I do? Well, I constantly self-evaluate. I find things that work, and then I keep using them. I try new things. Some work, so I keep them... some don't, so I stop using them.

What I definitely do is create a classroom full of joy, acceptance, learning, understanding, high expectations, collaboration, communication, responsibility, respect and friendship. Yep. That's it. Simple. I do everything I can to help every child feel important, valued, capable, and included.

I have a few little things that I do to work toward that goal.

To take roll each morning, I say "Good morning,  __(child's name)__," to every child. Is that a big deal? Maybe not so much, except... it starts the day off right. I use my sweetest teacher voice and my cheeriest smile and I look right into the eyes of the person I'm talking to. I tell my students how important my "Good mornings" are, and I expect them to be respectful during that time.

At the end of the day, I stand by the classroom door and say, "See you tomorrow, __(child's name)__,"  to every child before he or she leaves the classroom.

Another big, important piece: communicating expectations. My students know exactly what is expected in our room as far as behaviors and procedures go... because I tell them what is expected! They wouldn't know otherwise, because they can't read my mind. This must be taught!

As far as classroom rules and procedures go, I model, teach, and practice everything with my students. I assume nothing. Well, that might not be true. If anything, I assume that my students do not know how to do something. I create entire lessons around how to use scissors, staplers, glue... how to wash hands and where to put the paper towel... how to neaten up a desk... how to put away a book... how to push in a chair, how to walk from desks to the carpet, how to sit during a story, how to ask to use the restroom, how to stand in line for a drink, how to walk in the hallway, how to push a chair under a desk...

It's true. At the beginning of the year, I take MUCH LONGER than most teachers to get to the academic meat. But it pays off. Because later in the year, I rarely have any behavioral interruptions, and students can move forward much faster.

My lessons for procedures include an explanation of why it's important that we do it my way. And I always demonstrate myself and then have students demonstrate the correct way for their peers. After each demo, I thank and praise the students extensively. I let them know how proud I am of them because they know how to do whatever-I've-just-taught the right way. I ask the class if anyone else could demonstrate, and everyone raises their hands! I allow a few students to demonstrate again, and while they do, I point out everything they are doing correctly.

The other day, it was time to discuss how to sit on the carpet for Writing Workshop. I have a pretty specific procedure. Children get writing folders and pencils out, and set them on their desks (folders still closed), so that everything is ready to go. Then students sit on the carpet next to their writing buddies (writing buddies sit next to each other at desks.) First, I explained, the folders had to be ready, then writing buddies push in chairs and come to the carpet together, they sit as close to the easel as there is space, they do not talk on the way, and they always walk. I asked if there were any pairs of buddies who could demonstrate all those things. Lots of pairs raised their hands, and I chose two students. I asked students to watch, and as the demonstrators  followed the procedure, I narrated. "Well done, Matt and Gabby! Did everyone notice the way they remembered to push in their chairs? Look what a great job they are doing walking together and waiting for each other. I'm pleased to see that they remembered not to talk. And look! They sat up close to the easel, ready to learn! Thank you so much for showing the class what you know about getting ready for Writing Workshop, Gabby and Matt."

And then I had another pair demonstrate, and another, while I did the same thing. And then I had the rest of the class do it, while I praised as many students as possible for the correct behaviors. "Good job remembering to walk, Kim. Thanks for pushing in your chair, Alex. I really like the way you're waiting for your buddy, Daniel. How wonderful that you sat as close as your could, Annie. You are ready to learn!" When all my students were seated in front of the easel, I told the group how proud I was of them and talked about a few things I noticed that were well done!

During this entire demo/lesson, I was able to recognize the three pairs of students who demonstrated. Plus four more while the group was coming to the floor. Plus 5-6 more once the class was on the carpet. That's nearly half my class!

When I teach procedures, I do it in a similar way for everything, and I'm certain to recognize at least that many students every time.

Throughout the day, I use as many positives as I can. Over and over. Over and over. Sometimes I feel a little like Pollyanna. But it works! "Thank you for walking in our classroom. I like the way __(child's name)__ stood in line with her hands to herself. ___(child's name)___, I'm so pleased that you remembered how to hold scissors safely."

And even more powerful, I teach my students how to talk to each other that way. We discuss ways to thank and praise others, students demonstrate, we all praise them for a job well done, and it becomes a part of the culture. After a few weeks, and completely without prompting, children naturally complement each other all the time!

One of my easiest tricks to implement is the Superkid. I write each student's name on a popsicle stick. I keep the sticks in a little pail, and each morning, I pull out one name. That child gets to be the Superkid for the day. The Superkid gets to lead the line, help pass out materials, get a drink first, choose their Choice activity first, choose the pointer when we have our class "Read the Room" time, and whatever other little tasks I think of that day. I don't do class jobs, but instead use the Superkid for whatever we need (messenger, plant waterer, whatever.) The first few days of school, the students whose stick did not get chosen let out a collective moan of disappointment. But now, they cheer for whoever was chosen! The whole Superkid thing feels to me like it's not a big deal. It requires very little effort on my part. But it's THE WORLD to the student who is chosen that day! And the Superkid gets to have this sign on his/her desk all day! (Students get to be the Superkid about once a month.)

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I got the cute red from at IKEA (I think it was just one dollar!) and if you click here you can have the file.

Superkid-and-Happy-Birthday-Signs.pdf

The file also includes a Happy Birthday Sign that I put in a green frame from IKEA. Each student gets to have that sign on his/her desk when we celebrate his/her birthday!

Another simple thing I do is a marble jar. Old trick, I know. But I chose one specific procedure that I felt was important and I give marbles only for that. What I chose was the procedure for coming into the room after recess or lunch. When students walk in, I have the lights off, though there is some natural light from the windows and the open door. Students are to walk straight to their desks and put their heads down, without saying anything to me, talking to anyone, touching anything, going to get a drink/pencil... straight to desks silently. If there was a recess problem, students can raise their hands once they are sitting, but they may not tell me on their way into the room. If ALL students come in the right way, the class gets five marbles. If they do it especially quickly (first graders can dawdle, oh yes they can!), I'll give them a "bonus" of five more marbles.

It works like a dream. You know how normally everyone has something critical to tell you as they walk in? Before I did this, I was seriously overwhelmed with issues and stories after recess. Now, a student will occasionally raise his/her hand to tell me about a problem on the playground, and I do encourage them to speak up about problems. But it has helped to eliminate the stories of issues that were already taken care of during recess and the tattling for the sake of tattling.

When the marble jar is full (about two weeks worth of coming in the room correctly after every recess and lunch), students get to watch a movie (usually Reading Rainbow, or something equally educational and worthwhile) and I pop a ton of popcorn (air popper, no butter!)

And since I've very nearly written a novel today, just one more thing...

I very often use the idea of "we are all learners" whenever there is a problem. The other day, an argument erupted in the Lego area. Two boys both wanted a particular piece and one had taken it away from the other. I pulled the boys aside for privacy and we talked about it. I gave the students the language, "When you are done, can I have a turn with that?" and we had a quick talk about working together. Then I said to both, "There is so much to learn in kindergarten, and we are all still learning to share."

I use the same line for nearly everything. One student complains that another touched his leg? "We're all still learning to keep our hands to ourselves," I say publicly... and then I privately remind the offending student. The "we are still learning" idea works for nearly everything, and the understanding that goes along with it can make a big difference in students' acceptance of each other. That's not to say that I don't address serious concerns. I do. But most of the issues in kindergarten and first grade are things that students are still learning.

It's all in the attitude. My classroom is a happy place of learning!

What management ideas do you have to share?

 

Saturday, September 7, 2013

I Can't Possibly Choose a Best Part of Today! ...Library Mouse, Cameras, Books, Glue, Highlighting, Pinterest...

Wow. I love my job.

Having said that, probably the best part of my day was the minute I got home and sat on the couch. Bliss. Tired feet. Tired everything. Love my kids and husband. Totally time to relax!

But besides THAT...

Best parts of the day:

1. This morning we sang our "Good Morning" song, and for the first time, I broke out the transparent plastic pieces to highlight words. Omiword. It was love at first sight. My darling students LOVED using them to highlight high frequency words.

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2. During the first week of school, I read Library Mouse by Daniel Kirk, and my class really enjoyed it. Today, we re-read. I told students ahead of time that I wanted them to listen very carefully for important ideas and details, so they paid attention well. I stopped several times while reading to ask students what they noticed about the story. I gave them time to discuss with partners, share with the whole group, and we created this chart.

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My students noticed many other things. Each time a child raised a hand to share, I praised them for thinking and participating. But I actually only wrote down what I wanted to. I really wanted to highlight traits and events that made Sam a reader and a writer. My class loved hearing the story again!

3. Every Friday, my students choose new books to keep in their book boxes for the week. With some classes, book chooseing can be a little ... ahem... busy? I don't want to say "chaotic," because I am a teacher, and I pride myself on the order that I am able to maintain in my room.  But some classes I've had in the past have had some difficulty with choosing those new books, and honestly, that time of the week often felt like chaos. Shhh. Don't tell.

Man, this class has GOT IT. It was a total delight to watch them put last week's books back in the correct place, help each other find where books belong, choose new books... Unbelievably fun.

4. We had our group time. While three other groups were busy with various jobs, I worked with a small group. I always teach my students to use all the classroom tools at the beginning of the year. Last week, I taught them how to use scissors (lots of reminders about safety), staplers, and scotch tape. After my demo, some discussion, and some "guided practice," I put out a tub full of paper, and let them go wild with the staplers and tape. They loved it.

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This week, my lesson was on hole punches and "teeny tiny dots of glue." I showed the students how to use regular hole punches and craft punches, we had a serious discussion about "teeny tiny dots of glue," and then I let them experiment again. It was awesome...peaceful...endearing...adorable. Those little children punched and punched and punched and then glued everything to make pictures or designs of some kind. Some students did so much punching that there wasn't time for glue, so I just offered them Ziploc bags so they could save "the little holes" and take them home. How cute is that? Imagine a bunch of 4-5-6 year olds carrying little bags full of the stuff you usually clean out of the 3-hole punch and throw away! I swear, they are unbelievably cute, and they're not even trying!

5. Early last week, we interviewed the principal. Students thought of questions they wanted to ask, we walked to the principal's office, squeezed the whole group in and interviewed her. I sent two students with my "mini iPad minis" (older iPhone models, no longer in service) and they were our official photographers. It turns out that it was a good thing I took a couple of pictures while we were in the principal's office. My "photographers" got lots of pictures of each other, the carpet, some of the wall, etc.

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Ha ha ha! Classic! That's our principal in the red shirt!

But it was an important job, and each student did end up getting a few decent shots.

So out of that experience grew the idea for children to just play with the cameras during our Choice Time. I really want to use the cameras so that children can record their learning and share with others. And obviously some practice was in order. So I added "Cameras" as an option. WOW.  In three days this week, my class took a total of 671 pictures!

OH YEAH! That's enthusiasm!

And though the pictures varied in quality, I observed the very beginnings of claymation ideas, movie-making, interviewing skills, storytelling, and documentation. Here's a sample:

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And there are hundreds of cool pictures that they took of each other. Yes, lots of stuck out tongues and goofy faces, and some silly "self-portraits." But we are on our way! One student switched to video mode, and walked around asking other students to explain what they were doing!

6. After school my new teacher friend, Gwen, came to my room to work on pairing up my students with her fifth graders for some buddy activities.  I met Gwen on my first day at my new school... the day I was moving and unpacking. She spotted me walking toward the staff room, jumped out of her chair and raced toward me. She threw her arms around me even before asking, "Are you the new K-1 teacher? Bless you!" When I asked her name, she said, "It doesn't matter! You don't have time! Go work on your room!" She popped her head into my room later that day to ask if I needed any copies made (Isn't she AWESOME?!), but hadn't been over to visit since, and my room has changed a lot! When she walked in the room, she looked around and said, "I want to pin everything in your room!" Totally made my day, because Gwen's a Pinterest pro and teaching champ herself! Thank you, Gwen!

And now it's the weekend! I really do love my job, just need a little recovery time! What was the best part of your day or week? Please share!

Monday, September 2, 2013

Our Class Chant and Hurray for the Long Weekend

At the end of every day, my students and I say our chant together. It's a lovely reminder of the hard work and positive interactions that occur each day in our classroom community.

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I wrote the chant out on chart paper, but it looked very plain. So I pulled out a few colors of paint and had the students make hand prints on white squares of paper. Then, we practiced our skills with scissors and cut out the hands! After that, each student chose a color for a background or frame. The students glued their hand prints to the colored papers, and then cut around the hands leaving borders of color. It brightened up our class chant chart, and it involved everyone. I made my own handprint when I was demonstrating, but in the busyness of the day, I threw it away. So my handprint is the only one that's missing. Ha!

I have LOVED this three day weekend! I really needed some extra sleep and a little downtime. Of course, school is never far from my mind, but it was great to just hang out with my family. I got a pedicure and a manicure, watched Star Trek Into Darkness with my husband and kids, met my friend Nina for tea, and walked the dog (so relaxing!) We had lunch one day with my dad and step mom, had some long workouts at the gym, caught up on some cleaning projects, and folded lots of laundry!

Yesterday, my husband and I took a couple of the kids and went for a long walk near the airport. There's a nice little park and trail, and we love to watch all the action! There are so many planes landing and taking off!

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And there were beautiful flowers along the trail.

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And as I was walking across a cute wooden bridge, I saw an egret standing in the water. It started to fly away, but I got a picture, at least.

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I'm feeling rested and ready for another (short!) week.

Hope you've had a great weekend, friends! What did you do to relax and rejuvenate?

 

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Bubble Day!

One of the fabulous teachers on my first grade team shared her idea of having a Bubble Day! I was thinking that a Bubble Day would be a good activity for the Spring. But she wanted to do it right at the beginning of the year. I gave it some thought... and I began to think of a fall bubble day as a "goodbye to summer" activity. One last fun, sunny fling before the cooler weather sets in. And really, bubbles are so much fun. What a great way to show my class how exciting school will be this year. So a Bubble Day during the third week of school?! Heck, yeah! The other first grade teachers and I hopped on board, set a date, and asked for parent volunteers.

At first it sounded like a lot of work, and that's one of the reasons I was initially hesitant about having a Bubble Day during the first few weeks of school. But then I realized all the amazing things that I could do with the theme "Bubbles." And I got right to work on creating a Bubble Unit! I ordered a few books, gathered scientific information about bubbles, reviewed the Common Core State Standards (for the bazillionth time!) and got into the bubble mood. Omg! I had so much fun, and my students loved the activities!

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I've included lots of ideas for centers, small group work, whole class work.. and a few things that even my new firsties can do independently! Some are appropriate for use on Bubble Day (or Bubble Week, as it might be!) while others are appropriate for centers that can be accessible to students for a longer period of time. I used some adorable graphics and made certain that everything will address Common Core State Standards. I included a book list, art project, science experiment, recipe for bubbles, writing activities, four original poems, cards for the pocket chart...

Click here to get more information!