Showing posts with label new classroom strategies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new classroom strategies. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Growing Great Classrooms with Best Practices

A Post on Student Achievement Best Practices

By Deia Sanders

Save your seat today for Conscious Teaching's FREE Webinar on April 25!

Student Achievement Best Practices: Growing a good classroom is like growing a good garden.
Deia Sanders teaching pre-algebra
I think a side effect of moving to Mississippi is that you feel the need to grow a garden.  Well, at least I did! With the only horticulture experience in my life being a cactus and venus fly trap I had as a child, (both short-lived) it was probably foolish to have the high hopes I did for my garden.  Much like you would probably expect I didn’t bode much success. While they grew big and leafy, not a single plant produced even one vegetable. When I asked around to find out where I went wrong, I discovered they weren’t getting enough sunlight.

Another addition to my life after moving to Mississippi was feeling called to become a teacher.  I am an alternate route teacher, which means I came from the business world and crossed over in to education.  I was fortunate enough to have great bosses during my marketing career and learned many lessons that have helped me as a teacher. One lesson I learned was that if I got a big account, to ask them why they went with me.  My boss’ reasoning was that if I didn’t know how I got the money, I could have just as easily lost it. Also, if I didn’t land an account, I had to make the tough call to find out where my shortcomings were so that I was ever-improving.  Although it seemed superfluous at the time, it built good practice for my future. Thanks to this training, it was only natural when I became a teacher  that if a student correctly got an answer, I needed to find out how they knew it, and if they didn’t it was my job not to let that happen again, which could only come from understanding my shortcomings.

At the beginning of the year when I started going in teacher’s classrooms I was shocked to see teacher’s ask a question and when the student responded they would say “yes, that was great!” or “no” and call on another student.  We never knew why they got the correct answer, or where the confusion was on the students with the wrong answers.  I was floored! Had this many people never thought this mattered?  It reminded me of my professional training, but also of my gardening experience, although things may be growing, they weren’t producing the high hopes we had intended.

Follow-up questioning and higher order thinking became my focus for our teachers very quickly this year.  We began working on building habits of never accepting one answer.  Simple questions such as “Can you tell me how you got that?” or “why wouldn’t it be…” have begun to become routine. Teachers have started seeing that this practice has spun off high level thinking discussions because other students want to express how they got their answers.  We are having educated debates over optional answers. This leads to opportunities to make connections between student’s comments and build a since of community in the classroom.  We are also hearing deep discussions and students using key skills such as justification and reasoning… and they don’t even know it!  The growth of new and veteran teachers who have incorporated this practice has been superb!  It’s comparable to planting 3 rows of vegetables and harvesting four.   In the same respect that my garden needed more sunlight for the energy to grow vegetables, effe
ctive questioning has added a new energy to our classes that has begun to produce students who are sprouting deeper learning.

In the spirit of learning from my mistakes, this past weekend I planted vegetables in a field with plenty of sunlight.  I’ve sacrificed the unsuccessful benefit of having the garden in my yard, to driving across town to a field with plenty of sunlight.  And with good professional practice, when I ask why higher order questioning worked in most classes and in a couple it never took off, I can see the changes I need to make to see this growth through in every class next year.   In the classes that it worked, they had established good classroom management and were able to facilitate the discussion that came with follow-up questions.  Inversely, the classes where this was less effective were classes with poor classroom management where the discussions were easily swayed off topic.   I understand now that while this is a best practice, we will have to invest, fertilize, and focus on more growth in the teacher before we can expect great growth in their practice.  Once we have this established in every classroom, I fully expect a large crop of great growth next year!

Speech-Language Achievement Best Practices

Finding the True Potential of Language-Impaired Students

 by Peg Marshall, Speech-Language Pathologist

Save your seat today for Conscious Teaching's FREE Webinar on April 25!

student achievement best practices can be achieved in speech-language pathology by focusing on what students excel in.
image courtesy of sciencebuddies.org
As a speech-language pathologist, my students face a variety of challenges in the classroom.  Language deficits can affect every subject and every grade level.  There are many valuable strategies that teachers can use to build the confidence of language impaired students in their classrooms through achievement.  The key to student achievement best practices for my students is to continually look at the many aspects of language and find the ones that the student excels in. 

Art work can be a fun way for the student to express complex thoughts and ideas with simple drawings. It is also a valuable tool for the classroom teacher to check student understanding when the student may not have the vocabulary skills to express their ideas.  Students can learn language structures such as sequencing and quotations by sketching their answers in comic strip style.  A teacher wanting to reinforce idioms, similes and metaphors might encourage students to draw humorous pictures of the language structure to reinforce learning.

Knock, knock.  Who’s there? Figurative language! Using humor in the classroom is another fun way to build vocabulary skills for language impaired students.  Homophones are frequently used in jokes to grab the listener’s attention.  Teachers can get a quick check of comprehension by noting which students laugh at the joke.  Expand the activity to include an explanation of the reason the joke is funny to incorporate the link between receptive and expressive language.

Timing is everything for language impaired students. Some students are impulsive and quickly shout out the first word they think of. These students are better at games like ‘Around the World’.  Others prefer to take their time and practice their response in their head. These students prefer small group activities and skits that have a script to follow. Teachers should try to take note of the timing style of the student and gradually try to move them toward the middle so they are able to find success in both types of responding. 

Technology is a comfortable form of expression for many students.  Teachers – don’t let it scare you off, but move beyond video games and text messages to stretch language skills.   Allow the students the opportunity to give detailed directions as they teach you how to use a new app.  The less you know about the activity, the more teaching they will have to do, and the greater variety of language structures they will be forced to use.  Podcasting, tablets, video-cameras, WIKI and apps are valuable language tools in our digital world.  Let the students show you what potential they truly have!

As Winston Churchill said, “Continuous effort – not strength or intelligence – is the key to unlocking our potential.”  In speech-language pathology, we try everything to help our students communicate, because language is everywhere!

Peg Marshall has practiced speech-language pathology in a variety of settings; including schools, medical clinics, hospitals, home health and skilled nursing facilities.  She is passionate about helping students achieve in the classroom and advocates for inclusion in special education.  She is married and has two children.  She enjoys music, sewing and writing in her free time.

Peg Marshall is a speech-language pathologist at Lake Asbury Elementary School in Clay County, Florida.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Webinar on Student Achievement Best Practices

Stuff You Can Use for Managing and Motivating All Students


[EDITOR'S NOTE:

Rick Smith, master teacher and founder of Conscious Teaching, and his associate, Grace Dearborn, will deliver a must-see webinar titled "Stuff You Can Use for Managing and Motivating All Students" on April 25th that focuses on student achievement best practices. Below are some of Rick's ready-to-use strategies for conscious teaching, classroom management, and student achievement. Look for more strategy-filled blog posts from Rick this month!

Learn about April's free webinar and save your seat here!]

Classroom management and student motivation are essential elements of effective teaching.  Our upcoming webinar will focus on these issues, offering dozens of powerful strategies that teachers can implement easily right away.

Visuals for Procedures

Many teachers use visuals and rubrics for teaching content.  They can also be used to teach classroom procedures.  In our webinar we’ll share dozens of samples.  Below are three, along with teacher testimonials.  Our website – www.consciousteaching.com - has more information on these and other strategies that we’ll be sharing on April 25th.

Using the Textbook:
One of this Houston teacher's student achievement best practices is to use a textbook to help students stay focused.
"When I ask my students to get out a piece of paper and pencil and open their textbooks to a certain page I always get the same questions, like "What are we doing?" and "What page are we on?" So I tried displaying a “textbook readiness” photo on my projector screen with an image of a student desk with a book and paper and pencil, and I write the book page number using my overhead pen.  Now students know what to do and if they get confused i just reference the photo and they do it. Voila!

-­K. Servante, 11th grade English teacher, Houston, Texas

Tardiness:
Student achievement best practices - This teacher uses images to set rules and have strong classroom management
"My students have to be seated when the second bell rings, otherwise they are tardy. Every time I mark a student tardy who is in the room but not seated, he or she argues and becomes disruptive. I tried using photos to show what is tardy and what is not, like I saw in the workshop, and it actually worked! Now if a student argues I just point to the photo on the door and the argument ends right away."

-­S Santos, 7th grade math teacher, New York, NY

Lining Up Rubric:

“Before  I used the lining up pictures and numbers, I dreaded asking my kids to line up at the door. Now it goes  smoothly every time. I just hold up the number of fingers that their line looks like, and the kids adjust and do all the work!"

-A Miller, 3rd grade teacher, Sacramento, California

Student achievement best practices and classroom management even extend to lining up at the door.

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When teachers understand student achievement best practices, then lining up at the door is no longer simply "lining up at the door."

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Student achievement best practices must give students a feeling of order and confidence, even when lining up at the door.

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Friday, March 2, 2012

March, Frameworks, and Videos

Hi, everyone! It's Jared Heath--the man behind the scenes, as it were. I wanted to let you know about a few changes going on. Let's start with the free conference registration:

Free SIIS 2012 Registration

Our guest bloggers for the month of March will receive free registration for SIIS 2012. No catches. No gimmicks. You get registration to the summit worth $395 for only a few thoughts--when was the last time someone paid you that much for a few hundred words?

teachers apply job-embedded professional development in the classroomThe theme is "Job-Embedded Professional Development for Teachers--How to Apply PD to the Classroom." Maybe you have found simple methods of driving a concept home, or you have re-engineered your classroom. Perhaps you have your own form of PD that works particularly well for you. Whatever you're doing, tell us about it in a blog post! You can email me your post at jared.heath@schoolimprovement.com.

Job-Embedded Professional Development for Teachers

Starting on Monday, this blog and the Weekly Video Blog on schoolimprovement.com will begin focusing on the theme ""Job-Embedded Professional Development for Teachers--How to Apply PD to the Classroom." We want to know what you are doing in your classroom that breaks up the norm and introduces education in the most effective ways for your students.

Do you host webinars between classrooms for a joint teaching session? I always wished that I could have a joint history and science class--the Chinese dynasties are interesting, and chemical reactions were supposed to be interesting (I'm not really a science guy), but how fun would it have been to study the development of black powder in connection with Chinese warfare? Or to study math and art together as physics students explain certain principles and art students show how to mold clay on  the wheel? How about studying Jane Eyre in conjunction with health sciences and the spread of tuberculosis or the study of psychology and mental health?

So what's working for you? What's not? Let's talk about it right here.

Free Monthly Webinar

On March 22, School Improvement Network will host a webinar by  Learning 360 Framework trainers that talks about building structure around your professional development! Whether your district uses a framework, needs a framework, or employs other methods of professional development, this webinar will help you refine the training process and structure learning for both students and teachers.

Free PD 360 Videos

Don't forget to check the Weekly Video Blog every Monday! You can watch videos straight from the PD 360 library for free. Check out past videos that are there for your viewing pleasure. It's a small sampling of what PD 360 has to offer, and we want to help in any way we can.

Monday is the day--I look forward to what this month has to offer!