Making May Marvelous

Well, 10 days into May and teachers are counting down the days until the buses leave campus for a well deserved summer hiatus of sorts. At the beginning of the school year, students walked patiently in straight lines are now trying to run, shout, scream, giggle, and jump like they are wild.  Some blame it on the rising sap, I think they are also ready for a change.

Folks, we must focus some of this raw energy on preparing for those wonderful end of grade tests. Trying to be politically correct, these tests are an opportunity to show how well our students have mastered the curriculum.

For my fellow teachers that are overwhelmed by all the end of year events, and celebrations and such, here is a wonderful gem that folks at Discovery have shared, at no cost, with educators, students, and parents. Homework Helper has resources to help students master the basics of mathematics of numbers and number operations. Videos and tutorials explain basic operations and help with the mastery of math skills in addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division–essential building blocks for success in mathematics. I like this site too- Webmath.com Then for science review earth, physical, and life science resources are excellent for viewing at home or in the classroom.  For English, they have video chapters and web resources to assist students with their written and verbal communication skills. Content areas included are grammar, composition, and mechanics from Kindergarten to Grade 1 - high school. Hold on, there are social studies recources too! The section keys in on chapters and web resources will assist students with understanding the election process, as well as the powers of and people behind the U.S. presidency.

Marvelous? Yeah right.

Please, don’t let your middle schoolers run over you on their way out the door. All I can say is that I am bad of backing into my parking space everyday this time of the year.

Mediashare

This is an entertaining for schools using Discovery Streaming. The reporters show how to use Mediashare. I wish we had this tool to use with our One to One learning program. We try to use the teacher wiki and we have iWeb, but this is really slick. I read in the Den Spring Training 2009 post that DEN members have a contest running through May 22nd. Lance and Steve do a great job explaining how to upload. So, with this in mind, why not share?  I need to dig through my videos and see if I can earn some “Resources Shared” points. If I can get around to it.

Interactive Web Samples for North Carolina’s End of Grade Tests

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It’s that time of year again…Testing Time!

 Have you checked out the interactive EOG web samples (for grades 3-8 and Algebra I and II)…here’s the site - http://cuacs8.mck.ncsu.edu/mathsampleitems/main.html

Happy EOG-ing!!!

April Shower Bring May Flowers, then EOGs!

Spring Breaks marks the coming of the end of the school year. The number of school days between now and the end of grade tests in middle school means it’s time to focus on resources for review. As a teacher, high stakes testing preparations is serious business. It is like Tax Day deadline for CPAs and due dates for expectant mothers. Schools have their favorite strategies designed to remediate, reteach, and reinforce. Hopefully, this blog will help readers share some of their secret strategies or best practices (let’s post the legal ones only folks–please).

Personnel

Reading coaches. As a classroom teacher, I have always argued that if Johnny can not read the question, then he can not show proficiency. Designing a program within a school is not for the faint of heart. Pulling Johnny out of his art or computer skills class for reading coaching requires buy in. Again, data driven decision making is crucial for a focus intervention.

Printed Materials

Our middle school math teachers are fond of their textbook ancillary materials. These materials are correlated with the North Carolina Standards. Another publishing companies sell books and if your schools has the funds, buy them and try them. In my personal opinion, just passing out the EOG books and having them work through the pages is a poor use of instructional time. Worksheet do not build dendrites. Creative uses of this material can engage students. This spring break, our middle school students were provided with a packet of review materials as a graded assignment. The completed packet if due the Monday we return from break. On my way to my vehicle, the day we dismissed for spring break, I passed a parent talking with our principal at 3:35 PM. All I could here was her talking about her son’s packet. She was not trying to assault our principal, so I dashed to my vehicle and speed out of the teacher’s parking lot with dust flying!  Our teachers are trying to do all we can. Providing every affordable opportunity to learn. I am not trying to be negative here, but everyone has responsibilities. Ok, here’s the question- what printed materials do you use in your classroom? Leave a comment.

Online resourses

Our district has Compass, StudyIsland, Accelerated Math, and Streaming Discovery (in one school). I created lessons for my students using the Teacher Center section. There are lessons available in the Teacher Center. The links below was copied from our school’s front page. Teachers have already received positive feedback from parents.

CMS Student’s Busting the EOG



Written by Donna McElveen
Tuesday, 24 March 2009 14:14

Communication Skills Flashcards grades 6-8testbuster.jpg

Communications Skills Online Games grades 6-8

Math Resources grades 6-8

note: we are adding additional links.

Parent Night

Everyone knows that parent involvement is the key to academic success.  Our school is planning a night for parents to come out and view the various strategies our teachers are implementing. One idea I have heard them discussing is a timed mock test (shortened version) formatted like our North Carolina EOG. Also, there are plans to distribute materials for parents on test-taking strategies and proper nutrition for test days.

Earth Day

April 22, Earth Day

Remember to mark your calendar for Earth Day.  http://streaming.discoveryeducation.com/ Streaming Discovery Education has a bundle of resources ready to roll out to participating schools.

Description of Earth Day:
Former Senator Gaylord Nelson’s concern about the environment led him to organize the first Earth Day “teach in” demonstration in April 1970. Twenty million Americans participated in environmental rallies, demonstrations and other activities to raise environmental awareness, to celebrate Earth’s life and beauty, and to alert people to the need for preserving and renewing the threatened ecological balances upon which all life on Earth depends. Later that year, on December 2nd, President Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to address pollution problems in America. The agency focuses on cleaning up our nation’s water, air, and soil. It conducts research, sets standards, monitors activities, and helps enforce environmental laws. Celebrated on April 22nd, Earth Day is a reminder to learn more about environmental protection through educational programs and activities. It has been observed on that date every year since its first celebration in 1970.

More Assessment Tools

In Debra Bolinger’s Januray blog post, “Assessment Sites”, she pointed 5th grade teachers to games to play in class. Well, our middle school teachers will like Internet4classrooms.com’s 6th, 7th, and 8th grade skills builders interactive sites in math, reading, and language mechanics.

 

Assessing Projects helps teachers create assessments that address 21st century skills and provides strategies to make assessment an integral part of their teaching and help students understand content more deeply, think at higher levels, and become self-directed learners. The folks at Intel Education have a site I have been exploring this weekend. On this site, teachers can develop checklists, rubrics, and open-text assessments from scratch. The site has a database of hundreds of high-quality, ready-made assessments on products and performances, processes, and thinking skills. Teacher can modify them to meet their needs. Their teacher workspace feature provides a place to share assessment products. Links are provided to facilitate more about the research and theory behind successful assessment. I have already shared a this site with our teacher and encouraged them to investigate the assessment strategies included on the site.

 


Top 8 Educational Uses of Laptops

With budgets as tight as Ebenezer’s purse string these days, I can think of no better topic to reflect on. Questions filled my head and I find it hard to turn off. In this post, I have pulled together my favorite educational uses of laptops in the classroom.

8. Graphic organizers.

Our laptops have an organizer application installed. I will not mention the name. There are several solutions available for schools. They let students know what they are about to learn or experience. Graphic organizers help students focus on the learning. They can also be used for review or summary tools. However, my personal favorite graphic organizer is not created on the laptop. Cheap paper plates, markers, poster board, and some paste works like a charm. However, to make enhance the use of graphic organizers, try this tip: Export the graphic organizer files your class creates as images. Our students upload them to our student’s password protected wiki. On their wiki page, students in the class are encouraged to provide positive feedback, or co-edit the wiki page containing a specific graphic organizer.

7. Wikis.

Since these are web based, browsers and Internet access are ultimately required. Like most 1 to 1 schools, not all kids have Internet access. One of my students shared that when her mom took their dog to the veterinarian, she sat in the truck and composed her wiki posts. She did not have wireless access at the vet’s office. She used her text editor app on her laptop to type her book report. Then, when her mom went to Walmart to buy groceries, she accessed their free wifi and copied and pasted to update her wiki post. Most of my students seem to have cell phones, but they only use them as a Pager. They only text each other much like old pagers. Currently, our student’s wiki does not support cellular device access. We are still a few steps away from convergence of these technologies.

6. Rubrics.

Providing ongoing feedback to students as to the status of their learning is essential. The more specific the better, and the more criterion-referenced the better. What is the best rubric maker? I do not have a “dog in this fight”. Some of my teachers prefer one over the other. I have tried all of them in the past. I know lots of teachers that prefer to create their own. However, sometimes it is nice to have a model to follow.

5. Digital Storytelling.

Non-linguistic representations are fun and effective uses of instructional time. Providing mental pictures along with language works. Representations can also include images and concrete representations. Students use their built in digital cameras, or cameras teachers check out from the media center in our school. Still images and video clips that students generate help students hook what they are learning with prior knowledge. Our students are learning to use iMovie to tell digital stories. One resource I have used is Discovery Education: Streaming. The AFI resources fit well with high school students. Students viewed the online tutorials and created their own storyboards, scripts, and shot the videos. Editing and finally presenting their movies to parents at a school function highlighted the learning activity.

4. Homework.

Not all our laptop users have elected to pay our user fee and qualify to take the laptops home. We call these users “24/7 Users”. IMHO, homework is a necessary evil. However, it must be relevant and aligned to the course of study. The practice moves a student to mastery of learning. Homework is one way to extend the practice. A key to retention of the learning is practice. In our 1 to 1 program, teachers can assign homework, but they must offer an alternative assignment for non-24/7 users, also known as– “day users”. This complicates homework assessment. As a teacher, I would consider it a challenge to modify homework assignments for an additional subset of learners. However, that is what separates master teachers from the rest. However, technology is not really worth the investment if it is just replacing what teachers want students to do on paper. Our district has invested in a blog and email-hosting product. We are hosting it on our servers. This January, we will be introducing this tool to our 6th graders in our 1 to 1 program.

3.  Pat on the Back.

Sharing instructional slide shows, movies, and posters reinforces effort and helps give praise to learners. Walking through our school, I have noticed how teachers are constantly posting student work. Some teachers call it cutesy and not important. However, using laptops to help share student work is important in the larger scheme of making learning relevant to learners. It is their “5 seconds of fame”. Some parents post their children’s work on the refrigerator. I try to post photos of groups of students, without names, on our school web page. Athletic teams, and such give a quick pat on the back for students. Our student wikis host movie clips from students. They have learned how to export slide shows as movies. One skill we need to focus on is how to include voice annotations with the slide shows. They have mastered adding music and nauseating transitions. Maybe I need to share this clip of presentation designer and internationally acclaimed communications expert Garr Reynolds, creator of a popular Web site on presentation design and delivery on the net — presentationzen.com

2. Notetaking and Summarizing.

Do students even know how to summarize and take notes? Such skills allow students to organize a lot of information.  They can then figure out the most important information to use. Synthesizing information is an essential skill for high student achievement. All I see students doing is copy and paste. They Google the question provided in the handout, and copy and paste whatever comes up first. They do not evaluate its validity. Speaking of Google, one of their apps is Notebook. They even have a mobile app. Some email/blog applications offer a “digital locker”. Students can post notes and summary documents on their student wiki. Teachers like this strategy because these files can be opened and contents can be checked. Teachers can save the work on their desktop and while students are working on individual or group assignments, a face-to-face conference can held.

1. Comparing, contrasting, classifying, analogies and metaphors.

Blending these skills into a lesson is a challenge. However, old school thematic units can help with this process. Projects that are well planned and executed engage learners and build those brains one dendrite at a time.

The laptop does not magically fix any of these problems or challenges. With all the money issues- the best magic is leadership.

My hope for all the readers of this blog is for Peace on Earth.

One more thing…Why 8 instead of 10 or even 12 Educational uses of Laptops? We could only “afford” 8. wink, wink!

Snapshot from Fall Science Supervisors Meeting in Charlotte

The Fall Science Supervisors Meeting was held in Charlotte, NC, October 29, 2008, in conjunction with the North Carolina Science Leadership Association (NCSLA) meeting and the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) regional meeting.  The purpose of these meetings were to update districts on current North Carolina issues and national initiatives in science education.

  • Elementary, Middle and High School Science and Graduation Project- An effort is being made by districts in our state to share what I would call: “tips and tricks”.
  • New Units aligned to Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy- CD containing the science curriculum units in K-12 Science are ready. Participants received three CDs. One K-5, one 6-8, and high school. This resource will be available online soon. It was announced that the resource will be password protected for copyright reasons. Also, the units have include SIOP strategies for ELL students. My teachers will like that. Thanks NCDPI!
  • Standard Course of Study Revision- is currently slated for June 2009! That is right, not a draft, the final version. Science textbook adpotion will follow for the coming school year (’10-’11).
  • Two Science Competitions- Science Fair and Science Olympiad.
  • CCSSO STEM education initiative update- I must have been checking my BlackBerry’s email or Twittering when this topic was discussed. Sorry!
  • Testing updates- One thing that I did not know about EOG test schools in Science for grades 5 and 8, is a push to make the test scores a part of the ABC Performance Composite, which would not effect ABC Bonus Money. I am not going to say what I want about that pot of money, it would not be politically correct- wink wink. Oh, and this appears to not be “writing in stone” at this point in time. So, stay tuned middle school folks.
  • Presidential awards (PAEMST)- packet contains a flyer. Interesting point here was a we are encouraged to nominate a middle school science teacher.
  • Professional Development Opportunities- Teacher Academy
  • MSP Project updates
  • Exemplary Science programs- opps, must have been looking in my bag os swag…If you are reading this post and you were there please add your snap shot.
  • Future Meetings and Institutes- lots of dates or ideas about possible future dates for meetings. One proposed meeting is a Spring Science Supervisors Meeting. Hey that would be cool. IMHO, we need to have it at Wrightsville Beach. Like the week after school ends.
  • Ready, Set, SCIENCE! - Thanks to Bev Vance for a great overview of this great resource.

Edd Dunlap, Science Section Chief, Ragan, Spain, and Benita Tipton, you guys rock! Ok, enough brown-nosing. Oh, one more thing- As much as the Westin charges for rooms, it is hard to believe they wanted to charge for WiFi in the rooms. Capitalists!!!   [Maybe I could have left that out]

Have you heard that “inquiry” is now referred to as “Science as Practice”?

NC Revamps Computer Skills Test

nc-instruc-tech.jpg

Framework for Change:

The Next Generation of Assessments and Accountability

North Carolina educators…have you heard the latest news on the NC Computer Skills??  The current NC computer skills test is to be reviewed and revised to ensure it measures 21st century ICT literacy, including understanding of systems of technology. The testing window for students to take the test is to be expanded to allow administration anytime between the sixth and eighth grades, depending on student readiness. Scores are to be banked for accountability purposes.

Effective: 2008-09 school year

For additional information visit http://www.ncpublicschools.org/sbe_meetings/revisions/2008/pdfs/0805issues.pdf

What do ya’ll think about that???

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