Sunday, December 5, 2010
Good teaching is good test prep!
Check out the following article by Nell K. Duke and Ron Ritchhart from Harvard. They include ways to help students navigate different formats, to use specific strategies for math and reading, and to ease their stress.
http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=4006
Six Tips for Nipping Test Stress in the Bud
1. Don't Skimp on Practice Tests: They are vital to helping students understand the mechanics of the tests. Call your test company to request samples.
2. Promote Positive Attitudes About Testing: When discussing tests with students, make three recommendations: Be serious, confident, and strategic.
3. Deal with Basic Roadblocks: Do your best to circumvent problems such as inadequate breakfast, lack of sleep, and chronic tardiness prior to testing week.
4. Plan a Fun Day-of-Test Activity: Avoid academic activities immediately before testing. Instead, try something less stressful, such as Simon Says.
5. Look Out for Daydreamers: Seat easily distracted students in cubicles and corners. Encourage them to stay on task by checking off each line they read.
6. Talk About Those Last Few Minutes: The final moments of a test period are valuable for checking work and guessing on remaining questions.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Parent-Teacher Conferences!
"We believe that children will get ahead when we spend most time on the areas where they are most challenged. The problem with this notion is that it is a one-sided or half-baked approach to education. In the long run, children don't make their biggest contribution in their areas of weakness. Children overcome weakness, but they rarely excel in them or end up building their lives work around activities that make them feel depleted.
By looking at a child's strengths we are not failing to consider his challenges, we are merely balancing the equation that has been out of proportion for too long." by Jenifer Fox, Author Of Your Child's Strengths
Early in my teaching career, conferences were a source of anxiety. I tried to anticipate and prepare for difficult conversations and ensure I had evidence to back up assessment of students. Our conferences were attended by students and supported with detailed narratives. Yet, some parents were surprised by information gained in the conference and students saw conferences as something being done 'to' them rather than 'with' them. I left with a feeling that our work was somewhat incomplete.
Over time, we worked to involve students in assessing their progress and setting goals. We included parents in this dialogue and tried to create concrete actions for each person (teacher, student, parent/guardian) to take in supporting the student reach these goals. We ensured that there were few surprises at conference time. Parents felt more involved and students took more responsibility for their learning. As teachers, we saw conferences as a part of our assessment process rather than an isolated exercise.
Whatever your conferences look like, a bit of preparation can allow you to make the most of the time you have. There are steps you can take to help you strengthen relationships and build strategies for student success.
See below for some basic tips and links to other resources and readings:
* Gather evidence of student learning. Be able to show student work or other examples to demonstrate student achievement and areas for growth.
* Enlist students in self-assessment and preparation for conferences. No parent or student should be surprised by their grades or overall assessment. If you have not had ongoing conversations with your students about their growth, start now. If possible, have them participate in choosing work that showcases both their strengths and areas of challenge.
* Start positive and build on student assets. Emphasize the strengths you have identified (hopefully with the student). Use these as a starting point for next steps. Not all goals have to be based on problems. Consider setting goals for enrichment with ALL students.
* Give parents time to share and the opportunity to participate in the goal-setting process as much as possible. This can be done ahead of time by asking parents to share ideas in writing. These can then be consulted when setting student goals.
*Help students/parents focus in on just one or two goals for the next quarter. These can be subject specific and related to behavior or study skills. Some students will be able to articulate where their struggles are and what they could do to improve. Still, for many students, especially those who do not see the impact of their efforts on achievement, defining clear actions will be difficult. This is a place for you to help students identify specific strategies.
(see template below).
Parent-Teacher Conferences, a Time to Celebrate Strengths
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jenifer-fox/parent-teacher-conference_b_315322.html
Why Urban Parents Resist Involvement in their Children's Elementary Education
by Peter McDermott and Julia Rothenberg
"Using focus groups, our purpose was to learn how we could better prepare teachers for urban schools. The data revealed that teachers are frustrated with a lack of parental involvement in literacy activities at home and at school. Parents, however, expressed distrust toward the local elementary school because they felt the faculty has been biased against African American and Latino children and their families. Consequently, the parents said they deliberately decided not to participate in school activities. Parents explained they would only work with teachers who respected and valued their children."
http://www.nova.edu/ssss/QR/QR5-3/mcdermott.html
Conference Record Form
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/custom?q=cache:Gn3fz59jHhUJ:www.educationworld.com/tools_templates/RecordOfConference.doc+conference&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=pub-6489775476269284
Saturday, October 30, 2010
FREE Resources for teachers!!
Teaching Tolerance is a wonderful resource for free teaching kits and unit/lesson plans for all ages on a range of social justice/ social emotional themes. For example, the award-winning video on Bullying is accompanied by an extensive viewing guide and standards-based lesson-plans.
On the Teaching Tolerance website, you can search by subject area or grade level. Materials are free, with a limit of one per school. These are high-quality materials, with engaging content across the curriculum. Perhaps most importantly, they address critical issues that all of us have to address while meeting our students' academic needs.
Other titles: Mighty Times: The Children's March, Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks, Viva La Causa (Cesar Chavez).
Please come back and comment on any kits that you have used and how these may have been helpful in your classroom.
Teacher Spotlight on Resources:
Diala, 2nd-year UNITE teacher found some much-needed FREE books at SCARCE in Glen Ellen.
"I got 70 copies of Lord of the Flies and 36 brand new Writers Inc Student Handbooks. The place is amazing. If you are a teacher you can pick up whatever they have for free!"
Diala, 2nd-year UNITE teacher
Check it out or send one colleague with your wish list.
Thanks, Diala!
http://www.bookrescue.org/books/default.asp?page=Boverview
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Problem solving in the classroom? Stay flexible!
Read Larry Ferlazzo's short article, 'Teacher Eyes on the Wrong Prize?', highlighting a particular interaction with his 9th graders. His practical solutions and reflection provide rich food for thought.
Read Larry Ferlazzo's article from EdWeek.org
How do you think Larry's flexibility and responsiveness help him meet these goals? Does this scene sound familiar? Where could this approach work for your students?
Come back and share your thoughts.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Prezi: Present Information in Dynamic Ways!
Friday, June 11, 2010
Math as a Social Activity!
Monday, May 24, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
What Kids Can Do
Posted using ShareThis
Monday, April 12, 2010
Hip-Hop, Poetry, and Social Justice!
Monday, March 1, 2010
Teen brains: They really are wired differently!!!!
So, that 7th grader with the surly mood and questionable judgment is merely a product of a poorly connected frontal lobe? While there are certainly a number of factors affecting the personality and performance of teen students, our understanding of development and the brain can explain a lot.
Check out NPR's Morning Edition and the story of Frances Jensen, a pediatric neurologist at Children's Hospital in Boston. Her study of teen brains has helped her better understand her sons' behavior and helped them perform better in school. Having your neuroscientist mom tell you that studying and then getting a good night's sleep will actually help move the information from your short term memory to your long term memory proved to be pretty handy.
Understanding the teen brain a bit more won't solve all your challenges, but at least you can see it's not all in your head...it's in theirs.
Teen Brains Are Not Fully Connected
The brain's "white matter" enables nerve signals to flow freely between different parts of the brain. In teenagers, the part that governs judgment is the last to be fully connected.
Source: Nature Neuroscience 2003
Credit: Elizabeth Sowell
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Test Preparation: Managing the Stress
You have prepared your students throughout the year through instruction and practice of content, reading strategies, and general test-taking skills. And surely in the past weeks, you have incorporated a variety of practice test exercises.
We know from a large body of research and our own life experience that stress can positively or negatively affect performance depending on our ability to manage it. The brain's ability to function is key. It is highly sensitive to changes brought on by hormones, food additives, oxygen, and water. As much as is still unknown about the brain, there are techniques that have been shown to have a positive impact on overall health and performance. Of course, we want to be sure our students are well hydrated and that they have proper nutrition on test days.
Be sure you also give ample attention to preparing students emotionally, physically, and mentally to deal with tests. It is critical that students learn to manage their own stress. There are simple, deliberate techniques you can teach your students today!
Deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, and using positive talk/images are all tools that can allow students to manage their stress response. Teach, model, and remind students to use these whenever they feel the negative affects of stress.
1) Breathing Techniques can help activate the body's own calming response. Simply telling students to breathe deeply often results in a room of hyperventilating kids. There are simple techniques students can learn and use before, during, and even after stressful events.
- Breathing deeply engages the diaphragm.
- Teach students to breathe in through their nose and out through nose/mouth.
- Their bellies and rib cages should expand when they breathe in and contract when they breathe out.
- Simple counting technique: Breathe in to a count (maybe 5 to start), using the full count. Hold the breath for a second, and then exhale for the full 5. Guide students to feel their ribs expand, their diaphragm release, and their shoulders release down.
2) Muscle-relaxation. Teach students progressive relaxation techniques. This can be as simple as closing your eyes and tightening up and releasing parts of the body, head to toe. Different mental images work for different people. Students can do a few simple head rolls, shrug shoulders up and down, and even releasing their jaw where many people hold tension.
3) Positive self-talk/images. Students can practice simple self-affirming statements and images to visualize how they want to feel. This extends to how we direct students, such as stating the behavior we want rather than the behavior we don't.
Examples for reducing stress:
- I am relaxed and prepared.
- I feel peaceful and energetic.
- I breathe out tension. I breathe in calm.
Putting it together: Students can combine positive images with relaxed breathing. There are many more physical techniques, including Brain Gym exercises and simple yoga postures.
The following technique is from Victoria Tennant, called Take 5. Ask students to use the fingers on their hand to memorize five calming steps. Tell them to "Make a fist to represent feeling stressed. Release a finger each time yoau say a step – thumb: "I notice how I feel"; pointer finger: "I accept myself"; third finger: "I calm myself", ring finger: "I notice how I feel now", little finger: "I tell myself something positive." Say "You now have an open hand to represent feeling relaxed and calm."
Educate yourself and your students about the impact of stress on the brain and body. Then teach them real ways to manage their stress. Learn the techniques, model them for your students, and give them opportunity to use and adapt them. Some of the methods may seem hokey to some, but they work. They may even help you deal with the stress of testing, among other things, yourself!! Peace!!
Student link-general tips for test stress: http://pbskids.org/itsmylife/school/teststress/article10.html
For more on the effects of stress on the brain, as well as a range of techniques: http://www.newhorizons.org/spneeds/inclusion/teaching/tennant.htm