I've decided to "Go Big or Stay Home!" where my classroom library is concerned. I have a ton of books (I thought I wouldn't have enough...) and before they go into the hands of the students they need to be sorted, categorized and labeled so that they are easy for students to put away.
I purchased a Classroom Library package from Teachers Pay Teachers. It included book basket labels (very important) but also individual matching labels for each book. So, today I am printing what I think I might need as far as the labels go.
When my classroom is ready in a couple of weeks, my niece and nephew will help me sort and label the books and get them into easily identifiable bins...tons of work, but I hope it will pay off in the long run!
I am eagerly returning to my roots. After 7 years in a leadership role for my school board, I have made the decision to return to the classroom.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
What I Do When I Can't Sleep...
Here's what I marked as important:
- The way teachers structure the learning environment and the way students spend their time influences the level of reading proficiency and the end of the academic year.
- How will we ever know what students are learning if they don't hand in pages for us to correct?
- Instructional time is in addition to the time spent reading in school
- The Daily 5 is the largest part of their literacy curriculum each day (location 197) - it is the structure that allows all children to do meaningful work independently as we work in small groups with individual children.
- This book is NOT about their entire literacy curriculum (location 221), but is about helping students develop habits for students. Instructional time is used to present daily focus lessons within the literacy curriculum.
- This book is not a prescription for literacy success. It is about developing shared awareness through instructional routines with students...while balancing students' need for choice and independence (location 228)
- When does the reflection piece happen?
- If there is no reflection, will students understand what it is that they have been learning?
- Will solidification of understanding take place?
- I am a firm believer in wrapping up each lesson with a conversation that reflects back on the goals of the session. Having students talk with one another about their successes and challenges and their plans for tomorrow. Does that happen in the Daily 5 and if not, should it become part of this structure?
Sunday, June 10, 2012
It's All Coming Back to Me Now...
Do any of you know the song, It's All Coming Back to Me Now, by Celine Dion? Well, it describes right now, in this moment, exactly how I feel about my return journey to the classroom. I have had the privilege of working with one of our most knowledgeable mentors who has had the challenge of trying to bring me up to speed in any of the curriculum areas that do not concern mathematics. It is safe to say that the "Learning Curve" is more vertical than an actual curve.
When I left the classroom 7 years ago, teaching literacy was one of the things I thought that I did really well; it was an area that made me enthusiastic and confident. As soon as my decision to officially leave the world that has been mine for the past 7 years, elementary mathematics, I knew that my focus had to shift to Literacy. And shift it has! Things have changed, but they have also stayed the same. Everything I am learning has a familiar ring, but the biggest shift I think I have noticed wasn't a surprise - teaching is intentional. From the books we read to the lessons we teach, it is all done using information gained from working with our students and striving to meet their very diverse needs. I need to watch, talk with and learn from my students and they will provide me with specific information that will help me decide where to go next.
I have been researching both reading and writing workshop, looking for examples of focus lessons, anchor charts and word study information. I now have several binders dedicated to these topics and they are filling up already. Yesterday I am sure that I printed nearly an entire package of paper! I have replaced one ink cartridge and have some spares on the side waiting to go to work.
Beyond the personal mentoring that I have been fortunate to receive, I have discovered what I believe to be, exemplary online resources.
Right now, the ones I have been visiting most have been:
Mrs. Meacham's Classroom Snapshots provides endless resources that will support so many aspects of my classroom beyond the Literacy piece.
Wachusett Regional School District which has an entire section devoted to Literacy. I have found yearly plans, lesson plans, lists of mentor text, you name it - I found it here.
I have not had much time (or paper) to begin exploring ReadWriteThink, which is the website of the International Reading Federation. Here I have found a ton of classroom resources that will also be helpful to me as the year goes on.
Just this morning I discovered the PFlugerville ISD , an online curriculum site for all subjects, which appears to have a ton of useful information.
My goal is to use this blog as the spot to keep track of my return trip to the educational place I love the most, my classroom. I hope that I will be able to provide information to others, that they may also find helpful in their journey as well.
If any of you have suggestions for other websites that I may find helpful, I would love for you to share them with me.
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