Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Knowing Your Students Inside Out!

Social-Emotional Learning




Social-emotional learning is the ability to recognize and manages one's own emotions, solve problems, and build positive relationships with others. In the classroom, this looks like daily check-ins, reflections through art and writing, collaborating, sharing, and understanding, and community building games and activities. The teacher should use student-centered discipline practices, be supportive and inviting, set high and attainable expectations, and encourage responsible decisions. 



Activity Examples:
  • Dail Check-ins: This could be written, a wall-chart, or even a google survey.
  • Calm Down Corner: Choose a secluded area, add visual supports, and refocusing activities (breathing exercises, stuffed animals, coloring book, journals, calming bottles)
  • Calming Bottles: This is a great bonding activity for the entire class! All you need are bottles of some sort and things to fill them with!
  • Morning Meetings: This can include greetings, sharing, activities, GoNoodle, and routine rundowns. 
Conscious Discipline
Conscious discipline gets rid of reward and punishment. This type of discipline allows teachers to address the emotional and social issues of their students. Instead, it includes empathy, composure, choices, positive intent, consequences, composure, assertiveness, and encouragement. An example of this being used within the classroom is the "Time Machine" method. To begin this method, have students "roll back time" by rolling their hands and wish each other well to set positive intent. Then, ask the students if they are willing to go back and solve the problem at hand. Have them take some calmin breaths and use conflict resolution sentence starters to begin the process of solving the problem. 



Apps:
  • Superbetter- sets goals, uses games to progress healthy behavior
  • Smiling Mind- guided meditation
  • Peekapak- four-week curriculum to help build self-regulation and empath
  • Avokiddo- learn essential emotional skills through dressing and taking care of characters





Seriously Awesome Student Led Conferences & Digital Portfolios

Student-led conferences are a great way for students to showcase their work, take responsibility for their own learning, and lead their own learning. Autonomy is key. This is very different than a teacher-led conference. In this situation, the teacher is only the facilitator and the students are the leaders. It is student-centered and student lead. Students are able to lead discussions, be in their own process, pick out and prepare the materials to be shown, and are able to reflect on their own work. The teacher is there to facilitate, mediate, provided support if it is needed, provide expectations for the meeting, and may even provide a script for the student if needed. Parents are able to listen, engage, encourage, and ask their child questions.
In order to prepare for this, teachers need to keep students' work samples, give the student autonomy to choose what they want to include, structure the work for the student, and LET GO!
What is I have an ELL family?? Well, I'm glad you asked! If the teacher can have a translator present, that would be great! There are also translating apps, such as Google Translate that could be used. The teacher should also try to incorporate the diversity in your classroom and encourage the use of native language!






Digital Portfolios are a collection of student performance and assessments over time in the digital form. This should be standards-based and show significant student engagement. Work that is showcased is chosen by the student and should include the students' reflections and comprehension.

Apps to use:

  • Artsonia Kids Art Museum - empowers students to exhibit their work
  • WeLearnedIt - allows students to showcase, reflect, and comment on student work
  • Sesame - Custumizable rubric creation
Benefits of Digital Portfolios:
  • Great way to express and show student growth over time and provides a record of their educational career.
  • Gives teachers the opportunity to see students' learning and areas of improvement.
  • Gives students an audience! 




ACTIVE Learning

An instructional method that helps to engage students in the learning process is active learning! Active learning gives students the opportunity to be active participants in their own learning process and become metacongnitive. Active learning increases students' involvement, engagement, critical thinking, independent thinking, and creative thinking. It also increases students' collaboration with
one another and their motivation and performance.



When Should I Use Active Learning Strategies?

  • When students work in pairs or small groups
  • When in need of pre-assessment data
  • When accessing prior knowledge
  • To discover misconceptions and misunderstandings
  • To set a purpose
  • To check for understanding
  • To build movement
Examples:

Biopoems - This acvtivity helps students make a personal connection with characters or concepts, helps to increase creative thinking, and gives the students an opportunity to use descriptive language. 
Guidlines for each line:
  1. First Name
  2. 3 or 4 adjectives that describe the person/object
  3. Important relationships
  4. 2 or 3 things, people, or ideas that the person or object leved, was attracted to or interested in
  5. 3 feelings that the person/object experienced
  6. 3 fears the person/object experienced
  7. Accomplishments
  8. 2 or 3 places, people, or experiences, the person wanted to see or wanted to have
  9. His or her residence
  10. Last Name



Think, Pair, Share - This activity helps to build wait time, increase participation, check for understanding, provides time for the teacher to prepare. 
Process:
  1. Ask a question
  2. Tell students to think quietly, allow for at least 30 seconds to a minute of think time
  3. Tell students to pair up with a partner and discuss their thinking, allow 2-3 minutes
Signal Cards - This activity gives students a chance to express their understanding of something or express that they are in need of more help. Students are given cards to signal this understanding. 






Friday, April 10, 2020

Differentiation is a MUST!



Differentiation is the act of tailoring and modifying inctruction based on the needs of individual students. By differentiating your lessons, your are giving students from all walks of life and with all differnt learning abilities the best chance to learn and succeed.



Lower-level Students
Students with lower academic abilities often need more supports for their prior skills to help build a firm and solid foundation for any future learning. They need hands-on activites and a diversity of learning modes. They may not also be able to show their understanding through standard tests or assessments, sometimes they may need different forms of assessment ot trully show what htye know and are capable of doing. These students most likely already feel discourage because of their academic struggles, it is our job as teachers to constantly and continuously encourage them and help them feel valued within our classroom.

Strategies:

  • Anchor charts
  • Visuals
  • Video Modeling
  • Demonstrate think alouds and the thinking process
  • Lists
  • Sensory Activites
  • Google Doc Collaboration
  • FlipGrid
  • SeeSaw
  • Limited answer choices
  • Verbal Exams
  • Drawings instead of writings
  • One-on-one meetings
  • Classroom Jobs
Average Level Students
These are students who are in the middle of the spectrum, not overachieving, but not necessarily underachieving, just meeting the standard right where its at. These students usually need reinforcment of strategies and need misconceptions to be corrected. They tend to be more successful with specific strategies. These students often can show understanding in many ways. Sadly, these student get overlooked the most because they do not need extra help, nor do they need extra challenge. 

Higher-level Students
These students are the ones that are not only meeting the standard, but are exceeding it. They need more challenge and may want to use different strategies than what has been taught. The can show their understanding in many ways that demonstrates their strengths. Many times these students get bored in the classroom from a lack of challenge. 






Success of English Language Learners


English language learners (ELL) are students that are unable or have trouble communicating or leaning in English. Most of the time these students come from non-English speaking homes or environments. These students usually need specialized or modified instruction for both the English language itself, but also for their academic courses.



Relationships and Responsiveness 
Build personal connection! Know your students! Do they have pets, play sports, like superheros? Bring these personal interests into your lessons. Also, bring their culture into your lessons and activites. These little things make a huge difference to your students.

Incorporate their native language and cultures by using tools, such as Google Translate to enhance communication. Use YouTube to show the class aspects of their culture to help build a family among your class. Find multi-cultural and diverse books to help represent their culture and other cultures in the classroom or community.

Time To Process
Increase you wait time by 3-5 seconds! Allow time for the student to process what you are asking, what they are thinking, and what their answer will be. When teaching, speak slowly. Be consistent with what you say and how you say it. These strategies will help to increase the students participation in the classroom!

Fair is NOT Equal
Every single one of your students are different. Even if you have mutltiple ELL students, they are not the same and will not need the same teaching styles and modes of learning. Offer support for your students that vary from student to student. Create lessons to be FAIR not equal. Equal is giving every student the same thing. Be fair by giving every student what they need to be succesful.















Thursday, April 9, 2020

CoDiNg & rObOtIcS

Helpful Tips

  • Let students explore! Give the time to play with it and come up with their own codes.
  • Let students be the teacher! Let the students learn own their own and teach YOU!
  • Encourage failure! Let students know that this classroom is a safe environment for them to try, fail, and try again!
  • Coding and robotics is NOT only for science!!!
Coding with Bee Bots:



Math:
  • Adding & Subtracting: have the students roll two dice, add or subtract, code the bot to go to the sum. 
  • Mapping: code locational coordinaates to navigate a map.

  • Even & odd numbers: have students roll the die, if they get an even number they code the bot to go up the ladder, if they get an odd number they code the bot to go down the ladder. 
  • Colors & Shapes: code the bot to go to certain colors and/or shapes.

Literacy:
  • Spelling words: one student draws a card and the other spells the word on the card using the bot to move from letter to letter.
  • Short stories: prepared drawings on the board and have students tell the key events from the story using the bee bot.
  • Retell: have students to use the bee bot to retell events from a story
  • Letters and Sounds: have students to identify letters and sounds useing the bee bot. 



Super Assessments for Super Teachers


Assessments
Assessments are the key component of learning. When students can see how they are doing, they will be able to see what they are able to understand. Assessments help to motivate studets by setting goals and being able to see when they achive those goals.



Formal and Informal Assessment
Informal assessment is catagorized as non-standardized and is not taken for a grade. This type of assessment is formative, meaning it is taken throughout the learning process and is used as a way for the teacher to further specifiy their instruction so that it is meeting students' needs throughout the process. This type of assessment is individualized to the student and is used to motivate student learning.
Examples:

  • Think-Pair-Share
  • Discussions
  • Journal entries
  • Kahoot!
  • Hand signals
  • 4 Corners
  • Stop/Go sticks, cards, or cups

Formal assessment, on the other hand, is standardized, structured, and taken for a grade. This type of assessment is taken after the learning process. For example, an end of unit test of end of semester comprehensive exam. This assessment is testing the students knowledge and comprhension of the skills that have been taught to show what they know.
Examples:

  • End of chapter/unit tests
  • Midterms/Finals
  • Projects 
  • Presentations
  • Term Papers




Assessment Tools:
  • Kahoot!
  • Prodigy
  • educreations
  • FlipGrid
  • goformative.com






Super Stupendous STEAM



STEAM stands for Science Teachnology Engineering Art and Mathematics. Now, you may be thing, "Science, technology, engineering, and math all makes sense together, but why art?". Well, I'm glad you asked! This could be representaed as inclusion of Language Arts or as creative art. Students may integrate these as oral or written explanations or their scientific discorveries, drawings, videos, paintings, charts, diargrams, or an other visual or creative way they feel that they can best express their thinking and understanding.
Examples of this may also include:

  • Engineering and Science Journals
  • Presentations
  • Drawings of their predictions and conclusions
  • Written summaries of their experiementations
Books and Lessons:
  • 11 Experiements That Failed by Jenny Offill and Nancy Carpenter - Lessons: Questions, hypothesis, what to do, what happened, experiements fails sometimes, encourages students to be curious and to experiment, teaches importance of having adult supervision. 
  • The 3 Little Pigs - Lessons: Incorporates opoprtunity fo design thinking and engineering, have students make their own houses using different mateirals and see how their designs and engineering hold up against the big bad wolf.
  • Junkyard Wonders by Patricia Polocco - Lessons: recycling, teaching diversity, opportunity to write about their creations.
  • The Mitten by Jan Brett - Lessons: sequencing events in the story and coding skills (Found on Teachers Pay Teachers).



Apps:
  • NOVA
  • Tappity
  • PBS Play and Learn


All about: Sensory Integration, Ortan Gillingham, & Montessori

Sensory Integration:

Have you walked into a classroom lately? Bright colors everywhere you look, posters filling the spaces on every wall, brightly lit LED lighting,  loud noises coming from every direction, and stacks and stack of books, movies, papers, crafting tools, and toys piling high in every corner. It can be quite over stimulating for even a grown adult such as myself. Just imagine this same situation for a child that already has difficulty paying attention for more than ten minutes at a time. What a nightmare!
Now, just to be clear, bright colors and posters on walls is not inherently bad. However, many modern classrooms have become much less sensory friendly in the past decade.



Many people are disinformaed about our senses, as I learned from the presentation, we do not just have five senses! We also have vestibular and proprioceptive senses. Vestiubular senses focus on the position of the body and its movement. For example, feelings of balance and movement. You may not like fast roller coasters or sitting in the back seat of your aunty's minivan while she drives quickly down a curvy road. Propriopceptive senses process information through contraction and stretching of our muscles and by bending, straightening, pulling, or compressing joint between bones. For example, when you're stretching in your hot yoga class or hanging from the pull up bar at the gym, these movements help to refocus your attention.

Solution Ideas:

  • Provide students with frequent opportunities to move!
  • Provide a variety of space for individual and group activites
  • Provide with opporutnity to choose between a variety of activities, both physical and mental.
  • Natual lighting instead of LED lighting
  • Flexible seating options
  • Opportunity for active and unstructured play
Orton- Gillingham
Created by Samuel Torrey Orton and Anna Gillingham. They brought listening, speaking, reading, and writing together so that students would have the optimal help needed to enhance their learning for all of the language skills. This approach is an action-based learning.



Resources: 
  • Orton Gillingham Online Academy
  • Making Teaching Fun
  • ABC Magic Phonics
  • Starfall
  • Reading Eggs
  • Special Words
Montessori Education
Maria Montessori developed specialized mareials after she realized that children understand complex concepts better if all of their senses are engaged. She also realized that the role of the teacher should be to facilitate student learning and not dominate student learning. She focused on the whole child with the goal of developing responsible adults. Components of Montessori education should include freedom and autonomy of the child, structure and order should be cale and chaos free, reality and nature should be included regularly. 





The Wonders and Uses of Nearpod



This amazing instructional platform provides a space for teachers and students to engage and participate in formative assessment and dynamic media so that they are able to learn and build new experiences together. This platform enables and enhances student participation while promoting 21st century skills and creating digital citizens. Teachers have the option to choose between a variety of pre-created lessons of all subjects and age ranges or they may create their own lessons and fun activities. There are many different games, vitual field trips, discussion tools, and quiz tools available to be inserted into a lessons. The teacher may also download a presentation they have created from Goolge Docs or Google Slides into their Nearpod lesson. Once they have picked the lesson or created their own lesson, their students may access it from any of their own devices using a code given to them upon starting the lesson. They may interact with the lesson, with the teacher, and with each other in real time throughout the lesson. They can participate in games together, write on virtual sticky notes and post them on virtual boards, go on virtual field trips, and take quizes created by the teacher in real time. All answers and progress are recorded for the use of assessment by the teacher.




Nearpod Categories:
  • Nearpod DCL: Digital Citizenship & Literacy
  • Nearpod CCE: College & Career Exploration
  • Nearpod EL: English Learners
  • Nearpod LL: Learning Lab
  • Nearpod HPL: Historical Perspective & Literacy
  • Nearpod SEL: Social & Emotional Learning


Cost:
  • Silver (Free) - Includes sessions sizes up to 40, storage space up to 50 MB, lesson size up to 20MB, and basic features.
  • Gold ($120/year) - Includes session sizes up to 50, storage space up to 3GB, lesson size up to 50 MB, and advanced features.
  • Platinum (349/year) - Includes session size up to 75, storage space up tp 5 GB, leasson size up to 50 MB, premium features.
  • School & District (Contact Nearpod 1-855-NEARPOD) - Includes session size up tp 200, storage space up to 20 GB, lesson size up tp 80 MB, and all features.
  • Higher education (Contact Nearpod 1-855-NEARPOD) - Includes session size up to 250, staorage space up to 25GB, lesson size up to 100 MB, all features.

My Nearpods

https://share.nearpod.com/afjqf84cQ0
https://share.nearpod.com/LjA1EUsk30
https://share.nearpod.com/30vKWNSGH0