Sunday, April 27, 2014

Technology in the Classroom

I will be the first person to admit that I am maybe the least tech savvy person on the face of the planet. Just earlier today I was ready to smash my computer into oblivion trying to download a program for a class! The good news is my computer is still in one piece the bad news is the ITS help desk is not open until tomorrow! Anyways whether you are tech savvy or are like me on the other end of the spectrum one thing is true. Technology is all around us and it is our job as teachers to refrain from smashing our computers and learn how to be technology's friend...something I have a hard time doing due to its stubbornness at times, but hey I'm trying!

Technology has a tremendous amount of benefits to be utilized inside the classroom. We as educators are now dealing with 21st century learners and need to learn how to accommodate them. Using technology in the classroom is not only an amazing way to engage students but it also holds a wealth of knowledge that we ourselves cannot provide. So many of our students are now coming from a background where technology plays a key role in everyday life that technology helps students relate their learning to their real lives, solving the old question of "when am I ever going to use this?!"

In my practicum classroom I try to use technology as much as I can. The SmartBoard has become a key element in many of my lessons. The SmartBoard is a way to get students up and moving. I always try to incorporate activities that require students to come up to the board and move or drag something to a new spot. The SmartBoard if I could only have one element of technology in my room would be my first choice. There is so much to do with it and it incorporates so many different aspects of technology all in one spot. I love using it and I am still constantly trying to learn new ways to better my instruction with it.

A major aspect of technology I am looking into is how we can use technology to differentiate our instruction. Classes are becoming mainstreamed more and more all the time. Technology is the key to helping students with mental and physical disabilities succeed in the classroom. There are so many programs to help these students learn that we are unaware of. I think it is important that all teachers strive to meet everyone's needs in the classroom and technology is becoming a great way to bridge that gap.

Technology in the classroom is definitely an element of teaching that I am working really hard to learn more about. I feel it will be vital for me to be able to succeed in my future classroom. I look forward to learning more as I move forward in my classroom experiences.

Here is a youtube clip of students sharing their own thoughts about technology in the classroom. Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lSscbqRZVM 






Instructional Conversation

Instructional Conversation? Isn't that what I do everyday with my students? This is what I thought prior to implementing planned instructional conversations into my literacy groups. Truth is that just because you as the teacher are speaking and instructing does not make it an instructional conversation! I know who would have guessed right? But instructional conversation means that there actually has to be a conversation between not only you the teacher and the students but also between the students. An instructional conversation is intended to facilitate a discussion where the students are open to proposing questions and challenging each others thoughts and opinions in a productive manner.

Here is how I set up an environment where all of my students are comfortable expressing themselves. When students have a new idea to add to the conversation they make a thumbs up sign. When they have a comment that correlates and adds to the previous persons comment they make a plus sign. The differentiation between the new idea and the adding to someone else’s idea has been incredibly beneficial. The two signs allow me to ensure that I am calling on all students who have a similar thought before moving on to a new idea. And lastly to cut down on the “me too comments” students make a circle with their thumb and pointer finger with both their right and left hangs then interlock the two circles to make a silent connection. I decided to do this because I wanted all students to actively be engaged during group. I feel that the hand signals allow students to share their thoughts with each other and make connections to what another student has said. This not only cuts down on students interrupting each other but helps students to feel that their thoughts are truly validated by both me and their peers.

This is an example of how I used the story Half Chicken to create an instructional conversation. The students were asked to determine what the moral of the story was. I focused on the moral because it not only teaches the students a good lesson but it also it up for debate. The moral of the story is something that students could all agree with or something that their opinions might vary on. I asked the moral of the story in a very open ended way. What it is? The students came up with two different ideas. The first idea one student said was “If you help out people when they need it. Then they will help you back when you need it.” This was something that all students made a silent connection with they all agreed. This was also the moral that I had in mind. Half chicken helps the water, fire, and wind. They then in return for his help, help him escape a dangerous situation. After we discussed that moral another student gave a thumbs up sign for a different idea. I was surprised because I honestly had really only thought of the one moral so I was very excited to hear what she had to say. She said the moral was, “just because you may not look like everybody else does not mean that you can’t do good things.” She was really right this was definitely a moral to the story. All of the students began to verbally agree with her then quickly made plus signs. They then all gave a time where they had helped someone. The students really got what I was aiming for. With the instructional conversation they were able to determine the moral of the story but also connect it to their own lives, which is one of the most important things a student can do.

An instructional conversation is a great way to get students to be a leader in their own education!

The greatest sign of success for a teacher is to be able to say



Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Assessing Writing

Why do we assess? Assessing our students is one of the most important things we as teachers can do for our students. Without assessing our students we are unable to identify our students strengths and weaknesses. Identifying these strengths and weaknesses allows us to create our instruction. We must assess to find out what our students know and what they still need to know. When we learn this we are able to form whole group, small group, and individual lesson plans for our students. 

My second grade students next week are completing the Developmental Reading Assessment (DRA). A great deal of this assessment deals with reading comprehension. The test asks students to read a piece of literature and then summarize the text. The summary should consist of the key events and important details rather than the student trying to recall every piece of information they just read. To aid students in preparation for the test I created a lesson plan to work on summarizing. The lesson “The Sensational Summarizer” was given to two different literacy groups in a second grade classroom. Group One is a below grade level reading group and group two is an at grade level reading group. Each group read one chapter and filled out a sensational summarizer worksheet. The worksheet gives students the words first, then, next, and finally followed by a blank set of lines. They then fill in the lines with a summary of that section of the chapter following one of the words. This lesson plan took place over the course of a week. 

Across the board the lesson went fairly well for all of the students. In every lesson there is bound to be both strengths and weaknesses. For both groups in general I believe that a major strength was the organization of their summaries. All of the students had a firm grasp on the understanding that their summaries needed to be in chronological order. All of the students put their summaries in order of what happened first to what occurred last in the chapter. This strength will aid them in their comprehension retelling of a story but will also help them in future writings. Second grade writing can often be random in order and difficult for a reader to follow and understand. The more students practice having a first, then, next, finally order their writing will improve in structure. This strength will help them communicate with an audience. An example of this from the students work could be seen in all of the students writing. An exceptional example of this would be student A's writing. She filled in the summary worksheet in chronological order. She uses each section to tell the audience what important events occurred in the chapter. She uses each transition to move to the next key event in the chapter. Another strength seen in the groups was writing for an audience. This strength was further developed in group two but it was clear that group one was progressing in the right direction to writing for an audience. The audience for the purpose of this lesson was a friend who missed group and they were filling them in on what occurred in the chapter or a friend who might be interested in reading this book. They used their writing to pick out key events to inform a friend of what was happening in the book. 

An example of this in group two is student B's writing. She wrote first they went into an empty room and saw the “clone” then they got caught by the guards, next they were locked in a room, and last they found the president. Her writing is to the point. She writes to inform her audience of only the important things in the chapter. She does not include a great amount of detail that would be irrelevant to someone who has not read the chapter. An example from group one would be student M’s writing. She follows a very similar format to Lilly’s writing. She also only includes important events in the chapter. Something that separates her writing from others in her group is that she did include some detail that the audience would need to know in order to understand her writing. The others in the group take a key event and only write down what they themselves need to know. They do not include they why aspect in their summary.  

All of these observations are something that allow me to determine what I can do for my students in the future. I take away important information about my students and how I can differentiate my instruction to help all of my students learn at their fullest potential. It is important that we are constantly assessing our students. It is vital that we are setting our students up for success so that when it does come time for that DRA or whatever test it might be our students are ready because we have been guiding them all along. 
 

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Failure! What is so bad about that?

Fail, we hear the word and our minds are flooded with thoughts of that paper... you know  the one that you worked so hard on to only see it returned with a big red ink F. Your palms began to sweat and the walls closed in around you. You were doomed! Your parents were going to ground you and your grade for the class...well it was history never to be recovered. And right after the fear of  the parents settled your next thought (or at least my next thought) was well...I'm not going to try in that class anymore because I'm only going to fail! But why did I think that? What is so bad about failing? Why would failing discourage me rather than encourage me? Well in my school days it seemed to really be the end of the world. But for me now as a teacher I want failing to mean something different! I am determined to teach my students to embrace the F!

I strongly believe that failure in a classroom is the most beneficial learning tool that there is. Why? Well without failure what are our students learning? If every student walked into a classroom and made no errors and never failed then why would they be at school? What would be the point? They would already know everything there is to know and in that case should be out campaigning for the next presidential election! But their not! Their in our classrooms to LEARN. And guess what folks learning is a trial and error process. Our students must make a mistake to learn from their mistakes. So how do we get kids to not fear failure. Well I will give you a clue PUT THE RED PENS DOWN!!!! We need to encourage students not send them running for the hills. If we were to create a classroom where students were not afraid to fail the results would be extraordinary. I would rather have a student try so incredibly hard on something and fail miserably then have a student timidly attempt something and just slip through the cracks of passing. But when that student that fails miserably receives that F, that can not be the end of it. We have to take the time to scaffold them. Go back with them find out what their goal was. Help them get there! Sure it may take a little more time for you and the student but won't it be worth it to see that student's triumph smile when they tackle a task that seemed way over their head from the start! I sure think so.

Not only will failing help our students learn inside the classroom but also outside in the REAL WORLD. I don't know if your parents ever told you this but guess what not everything in life is fair or perfect. You're going to fail. You're going to make mistakes. If our students make a mistake in the real world are we going to teach them to bury their heads in the sandbox or teach them to go back out their and try again. I know what I want for my students. I want them to be fighters in their lives. I want them to never give up. I want them to get knocked down and get up again. By teaching them to be okay with failing to be problem solvers they will become productive members of society. If my students walk away knowing that it is okay to fail and take that failure and turn it into a solution I will have done my job. They may not know the square root of 4658365 but they will go out and take life by the horns and accomplish some pretty great things. And who knows one of them might be out their campaigning for president someday...(hopefully with the intent to raise teacher wages!)

Wow well that was quite the rant but I hope it has inspired you to go out their and be the change that our students need so much! Here is a little video to get you going, enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-gQLqv9f4o