Sunday, July 19, 2009
EPALS
www.epals.com
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
New Website
Monday, July 13, 2009
Websites
www.wordle.net
With this website, I can have the students type in words about themselves. Hint the more important things in their lives are typed multiple times so that they appear bigger. You can do this to find out the main ideas of texts. Copy and paste a text into wordle. The words that appear most often will be the biggest.
Another way to use this is to help the students use word choice when editting their writing. They copy and paste their writing into a wordle screen. The word that is the biggest is the word that is used the most. For example, a student might have a big "like." That would mean that the student has used like too many times in their work. It is a way to help them edit their work.
It can be used to see main idea and detail as well. Here is a website to give you more ideas of how to use wordle. www.slideshare.net/JenniferW/wordle-ideas
More sites to come!
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Another great health lesson is mypyramid.gov. My husband and I sometime get on there and plan meals to help us have a balanced diet. I showed my first grade class this site and they thought it was really neat.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Textbook tip for homeschooling parents!
Math Website
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Respect
The other incident involved a student from another classroom and the teacher. The teacher was introducing new vocabulary words to the class and while introducing the word "vast" a student pipes up and tells the teacher that she is vast. He meant that she was fat. It is just appalling that a kid would think of calling a teacher a name like that. What can we do to instill values in a child after they are in school? It seems that if they don't learn it at home that they won't learn it at school--no matter what I do. Both of these students are very bright kids. They should understand that this hurts people's feelings. Don't they? Why can't they? Why won't they?
What are we missing in society that makes them lack the respect? I don't understand. I would have never considered doing either of these things in school. Kids now will say whatever they want. Kindergarten students come in knowing what sex and everything else is. They have no problem telling their friends. Kids will say any cuss word and then act like you heard it wrong. It is really incredible! Any ideas how to make the kids understand respect?
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Department of Natural Resources Website
http://dnr.state.il.us/education/
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Another Spelling Website
This website is a great way to practice selling words in a fun way. There are games and activities to make learning fun.
Friday, April 17, 2009
More Websites
www.weeklyreader.com
Lesson plans, subscriptions to weekly readers, and much more!
http://www.gm.com/experience/education/
Website with lesson plans relating to energy, vehicles, and going green!
Literature Circles
A Literature Circle is a group of 4 to 6 students who read a section of a book. As they read each of them have a job to do. The jobs that I will give the students include summarizer, vocabulary finder, passage picker, connector, artful artist, and Question Writer. Basically, each student reads the same passage and does a different job. Then the group meets and I will lead them in a discussion about the book-being careful to make each person feel as though their job was important! Sounds like a lot of fun. I wish I wouldn't have had to wait so long to start this, but I didn't feel that the kids were ready. If I follow my class to second grade, I will do Literature Circles for the entire year. They will be exposed to many types of literature!
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Contest and Website
www.chicagobotanic.org/calendar/rainbarrel
This is the art contest.
http://newsletters.nationalgeographic.com/PS!G64S9tR5oP8FBgIAAAAGCgFICgg0MzQxOTg4MQoKMTYwODgwNDM4MgkAHqiDCgkzNzY0NTM3ODQF
This is an earth day link that has some activities. Looks like it is directed toward preschool and early elementary. Fun videos, games, activities and more.
Comment Posting
Teaching Reading
*Phonemic Awareness
*Fluency
*Vocabulary
*Comprehension
*Phonics
I will tell you more about them at a later date. Comment and let me know specifics about what you want to know about reading. I will try to post you answers.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Arts and Crafts Ideas
www.crayola.com
www.kinderart.com
Origami--I have found that almost all students love origami. You can fold many different things from a piece of paper. I usually show the students what the final outcome will look like then we begin to make it step by step. This is fun for young kids in a one-on-one setting; however, the youngest age I have taught it whole class is fourth grade.
Great Books for Kids
Authors
Shel Silverstein
Doreen Cronin (Diary of a _____) Worm, Spider, Fly --My students love these books
Dr. Suess
Books
Clifford Books
Junie B. Jones (Kindergarten-2nd grade)
Lon Po Po (A Little Red Riding Hood Story from China)
Magic School Bus Books (Teach Science Lessons in fun ways)
Eric Carle
Mo Willems (Pigeon Books)
Post books you are your children enjoy for others to see as well.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Teaching Letters to Preschoolers
Secondly, if the child isn't displaying good handwriting posture (thumb and two fingers) abandon writing utensils altogether until the child is old enough to hold the tool properly. Instead practice letters in a different but fun and still very effective way.
Here are some ideas to try.
*Use play dough rolled into long strips and arrange the pieces into letters.
*Put shaving cream on a surface and let the child make letters with it.
*Use blocks and plenty of floor space to write the letters with blocks.
*Find blocks with letters printed on them. Let the child find a block a you say the letter. Show them how to form their name.
Here is a website with endless links for preschool age children. http://www.internet4classrooms.com/prek.htm
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Question-Only Strategy
The teacher tell the students the topic. Example: The teacher says, "The topic today is the Nile. You can find out about it by asking me questions. When you are finished asking questions, there will be a short test, so try to ask good questions."
The teacher will answer each question fully, but not give any more information than what is asked of him or her. The purpose is to challenge the students to think of good questions using higher thinking skills.
Example:
Student: You said, "the Nile." Does that mean Nile is a thing?
Teacher: Yes
Student: This is geography, so is it a country?
Teacher: No.
Student: A mountain?
Teacher: No
Student: A river?
Teacher: Yes
Student: It sounds foreign. Is it in Thailand?
The discussion will continue in this way for approximately 10 minutes.
Sample Test questions:
What is the Nile?
What does it divide?
Then teacher should point out other questions that should have been asked and add information to the ones that were.
Then the students should hear teaching or read text about what they should have learned, but did not in their initial questioning.
Portions of this post were taken and/or quoted from the following source:
Manzo, A.V. & Manzo, U.C. (1995). Teaching children to be literate: A reflective approach. Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace, (pp. 382-383).
Reciprocal Teaching
1. Summarize--The teacher may need to use prompts to help the students to summarize the passage.
Prompts could include:
- What was the big idea in this paragraph?
- What is the topic sentence?
- What idea do all the details point to?
- How is the passage organized? (Cause/effect, comparison, probem/solution sequential, etc)
- Do you think this was th introduction to the topic, the body, or the summary of the passage?
After the students become better at this they can develop the questions for each other in the discussion. Modeling by the teacher is important for the first few times, however.
2. Question--The students will question each other during this part, but intially the teacher will demonstrate the questioning process.
- How does this passage connect to what I know?
- Does this selection make sense iwth what I know?
- How does this selection relate to my predictions?
3. Clarify--In this part of reciprocal teaching, the students will try to discover the meanings of unfamiliar vocabulary or concepts that were not understood.
- I don't understand these words: _______
- Does this information fit with my experience?
- I didn't understand this part: _________
- I need to know more about: _________
- I don't understand how these ideas are connected: __________
4. Predict--Use this to ask what they students think with come next in the text.
- I predict:_____
KWL Charts
K-What do I think I Know?
W-What do I Want to know?
L-What have I Learned?
The student should answer the first two questions before reading and the last question after reading. Some researchers and teachers (me included) believe that there should be one more question. Let's call it C.
C-What if I am confused?
The purpose of this letter is for the student to realize that not everytime will the answer to his or her questions be found in the current text that he or she is reading. If the answer was not found, the student should find a way to get the answer. He or she may choose to read another text which may have the answer or find another way to discover the answer.
Text Pattern Guides
- cause-effect
- sequence
- description
- problem-solving
- comparison-contrast
The goal is to help students recognize a single pattern that predomininates over long stretches of print, even though you recognize that individual paragraphs and sentences are apt to reflect different though relationships within the text selection.
Provide assistance and numerous examples because perceiving text structure can be one of the most difficult tasks that a reader will do.
You may wish to use a graphic organizer to help the student think about and map their thoughts. http://www.eduplace.com/graphicorganizer/ You can find many kinds of graphic organizers as well as many other resources at http://www.enchantedlearning.com/graphicorganizers/. There is a charge for some of the activities on this website.
You can find many more graphic organizers by going to google and typing "graphic organizer" in the search. Select images tab. Then tell it to search.
Reader's Theater
Goosh
Every Friday night, we have a goosh. Sometimes we have a goosh at home, and sometimes we don't. This week our neighbors are coming for goosh.
We all help Mom prepare the goosh. First, we have to go to the store and buy a goosh kit. We each get to choose a favorite item for it. Then we go home and the fun begins.
When we get home, Dad has preheated the oven for us. Mom reads the directions on the back of the kit and gives each of us a job to do. After we have each done our jobs, we combine everything. Mom puts it on a pan.
As the goosh is cooking, it smells spicy. I peek in the oven window and see the cheese bubbling. I can hardly wait to tste the gooey goosh.
Ding! It's done. Mom slices it and puts it on the table. Our mouths are drooling. Uh-oh! Dad put those little fish on it again! Dumb Dad!
Fry's Readability Graph
1. Select three 100-word passages near the beginning, middle, and end.
2. Count the total number of sentences in each 100-word passage (estimating to the nearest tenth of a sentence). Average these three numbers.
3. Count the total number of syllables in each 100-word sample. Average these three numbers. Plot the two averages on the graph. Here is a website with a good graph. http://www.idph.state.ia.us/health_literacy/common/pdf/tools/fry.pdf
I have found this to be a great way to find out the true reading level of a book.
Word and Picture Sorts
Words
row
go
no
so
grow
tow
-ow
row
grow
tow
-o
so
no
go
Picture example
You have the following pictures.
A red car
A red house
A blue store
A green truck
A blue van
A green school
The child could choose the category of colors.
Red
car
house
Blue
Store
Van
Green
Truck
School
OR
They could choose building and vehicles.
Buildings
house
store
school
Vehicles
car
van
truck
You can make this activity fit with many different subject matters and age ranges depending on whether or not categories are given and what words that they students are classifying. It could even be used for vocabulary if you used several words with the same meaning and several words with a different meaning. The students would put them with the other words that are the most similar.
Sometimes I make this activity more difficult by having the kids think of a few more words on their own that fit into the categories.
Levels of Thinking and Questioning
Knowledge
At the knowledge level, a teacher is asking only for recall of a fact. You are expecting the learner to remember something that they have been taught. Questions on the knowledge level use words like list, identify, locate, memorize, review, match, name, read, recall, reproduce, label, arrange, check, cite, define, find, group, offer, omit, pick, point to, quote, recite, repeat, say, spell, state, tally, tell, touch, underline, write
Comprehension
Comprehension usually requires a little more thought from the student. The purpose of a comprehension question is usually to see if the learner can explain the information. Comprehension can include translation, interpretation, and extrapolation. Comprehensions questions use words like alter, change, convert, group, moderate, paraphrase, restate, reword, tell, translate, transform, vary, submit, sheme, propose, project, off, contrive, comptemplate, calculate, advance, account for, annotate, summarize, review, interpret, infer, group, generalize, expound, explain, describe
Application
Application is the third level in the hierarchy of thinking skills. The purpose of application is for learner to learn to transfer information. An example question: Solve mathematical problems. or Demonstrate how to ___________. Application questions use the following words: apply handle, llustrate adopt, collect, interview, profit by, relate, show, solve, make use of , construct, consume, mobilize, state rule, demonstrate, manipulate, survey, devote, organize, try, employ, operate, use, explout, put to use, utilize, give example, put into action.
Analysis
Analysis is the fourth level and the level that begins to delve deeper into the thought processes. I prefer that the majority of my questions are at a level three and above. When you write or ask questions using this level of thinking you are asking your students to break things down into their part, to determine, the distinguishing factors, and to uncover the special characteristics of something. Here is an example question: Simplify the musical piece into its basic rhythms. or Compare and contrast the two poems. This level is characterized by words such as analyze, audit, break down, categoriz, classify, compare, contrast, determine factors, diagnose, diagram, differientiate, dissct, distinguish, divide, examine, inspect, outine, reason, screen, scrutinize, search, section, separate, simplify, sort, specify, study, survey, debate, experiment
Synthesis
This level seeks to find whether the child can combine information. In this level a student will be able to take information given to them and make something new from it. Here are some of the words commonly used for this level: compse, construct, create, design, develop, formulate, hypothesize, manage, organize, originate, plan, produce, propose
Evaluation
This is the sixth and highest level of thinking. It determines whether or not a student can make a judgement. The words used in this level of thinking include appraise, assess, choose, compare, contrast, critique, decide, estimate, evaluate, grade, judge, prioritize, rank, rate, recommend, select, value
Geography Series
Treasures Reading Series
Helpful Websites
Another great website is Netsmartz. You can access this website by going to http://www.netsmartz.org/. It teaches children about internet safety. I will caution you that you should preview this site and direct the children to the things that you find appropriate. There is a character (Numbutts) who some people find offensive or at least not school appropriate. The basic concept behind him is that he sits around all day. I never found it to be a problem; however, I know some who have. This is a great site. Just use it with caution.
Rising to Our Goals
For the background, I used colored paper. We have a big roll of several different colors that all teachers have access to. I chose yellow, but you could choose any bright color. I found some border for the board that had hot air balloons on it. I put it around all four sides of the bulletin board. Next, I made four bubble shaped objects on which I wrote the words, "ONE GOAL!" on the first, "TWO GOALS!" on the second one, and so on. I put them on the board with one goal near the bottom and four goals near the top. Then I made hot air balloons which I cut from a variety of colors of construction paper. I put the students names on the hot air balloons and stapled them to the bottom of the board. Everytime the students reach a new goal, I move them up to the equivalent goal on the board. They get really excited about seeing their successes and are challenged to try harder when they see a classmate has reached a new goal.
Most recently two of my first grade students finished reading a book entitled The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. It is labeled 5.1 reading level. That stands for fifth grade first month! The other students are now challenging themselves with chapter books so that they may also read this book. I have found that showing each students individual successes (no matter how small) to others in the classroom only encourages them to try to achieve greater things.
My Purpose
I hope that the start of this blog will be just that--a start. I hope to continue to blog throughout the remainder of my teaching career at public schools. Then I will begin blogging my challenges and successes while being a homeschooling mom. One of these days, I may write a book about my experiences.
Note: I will never tell my full name, my school district, my state, or any of my students names to protect my job, my school's credability, and my student's identities. Any names I use (other than my first name) will be changed to protect all parties involved.