Monday, July 8, 2013

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? 7/8/13

It's Monday, What Are You Reading? is hosted by Jen and Kellee atTeach Mentor Texts.
It was originally hosted by Sheila at Book Journey, but Jen & Kellee put a Picture Book to YA spin on it.

While summer is supposed to be a time for me to relax, catch up on my reading, and prepare for the coming school year, this summer our time has been consumed with house remodeling/repair. We are working hard to prepare an 150+ year old farmhouse that we are going to be renting, and hope to finish moving by the end of the month. I wasn't able to get a IMWAYR post in last week, so I'll cover two weeks with this one.

Graphic Novels






Friends with Boys, by Faith Erin Hicks



YA


Fox Forever by Mary E. Pearson


Amos Fortune: Free Man by Elizabeth Yates

Professional Development


Notice & Note: Strategies for Close Reading by Kylene Beers and Robert E. Probst

Adult/ Curriculum Related


The Pursuit of Happyness by Chris Gardner


The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls





 Currently Reading/On Deck:
YA



The Island of Lote by Emily Kinney




Wintering Well by Lea Wait

Professional Development

Real Revision by Kate Messner



Adult






Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Slice of Life 6/25/13


School ended a little over a week ago. First there was the push to wrap up the year. Exams needed to be graded and final grades submitted. Then there was the classroom cleaning and the summer mailing to prepare. After that was all done, I took a couple of deep breaths, read a book or two, and have hit the ground running.

One night a week at the library volunteering, painting at the "new" house so we can move in, tutoring 3 students once a week. This week I am teaching two staff training sessions at Camp Cedarbrook, so there is preparation for that. Teachers Write! started yesterday. I really need to spend time writing. I miss writing. I need to write to be a better writing teacher. But writing takes time. I don't have time to sit with my notebook and let my mind wander into my story.

My major focus every summer is preparing for the next school year. Our program is still very much in the building stage. I'm excited that we have hired a history teacher for next year and that I get to focus on English (my dream come true!). I have all four years to develop. It's a double edged sword. I have so much freedom to create my curriculum, yet that freedom is overwhelming at times. I kind of imagine it is like standing on the prairie with wide-open land and sky as far as the eye can see. I am fortunate to have some amazing collaboration partners through Twitter. Amie (@amiet731), Jen (@petzuk), Beth (@Beth139), and Kate (@KtBkr4) have already been planning up a storm in an East Coast meets West Coast collab-party while all I've been able to do is check in occasional as I get Twitter-bombed. I really want to engage, but have not had the time to really start thinking about my curriculum.

Then there is my poor, neglected Beloved Husband. He works 4 10-hour days doing production work (hey, someone has to build those fancy boats for the 1%) and comes home exhausted. But we need his steady paycheck and medical benefits. I wish I made enough and had benefits so he could retire and build custom furniture (he's extremely talented). I want to be a good wife- do my share of the housework, share the cooking responsibilities. But housework and cooking have never been a priority for me. I've never liked doing them. My dear mother tried to teach me, tried to instill in me those values, but I just didn't care. I know that it honors my husband when I get the dishes done- especially when I said I would do them. I know he appreciates coming home from a long day and not having to cook supper. I guess the bottom line is, I need a house keeper and a cook!

So I've been feeling pretty stressed this week. I keep reminding myself that there are still two more months of summer ahead of me. I hope these two weeks are not indicative of what my entire summer will be like. Once we actually get moved, I hope some of the pressure will lift and I will feel the freedom to sit and read, to gaze blankly at my writer's notebook, to allow myself to fall into story.

Monday, June 24, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading? 6/24/13



This is my first attempt at a "It's Monday, What Are You Reading?" post. I've looked at some other blogs, and am feeling a bit overwhelmed at how inadequate my blog seems, and how much has changed in the past year that I've been neglecting blogs. So these are my stumbling first steps. I may not get all the attributes or links right, but I'm learning.

It's Monday, What Are You Reading? is hosted by Jen and Kellee at Teach Mentor Texts.
It was originally hosted by Sheila at Book Journey, but Jen & Kellee put a Picture Book to YA spin on it.

Since school ended on June 14, I've been trying to do #bookaday. Between wrapping up school and trying to get ready to move, I've not had the time to read that I would like during vacation. I keep reminding myself that it is only June and I still have two months ahead of me! My strategy for summer reading is to alternate between books I need to read for school and books I want to read for myself.
Clicking on the book's title will take you to it's page on GoodReads.

What I read last week:


Graphic Novels



William and the Lost Spirit by Gwen de Bonneval and Matthieu Bonhomme


Mercury by Hope Larson


YA


Secrets of Truth & Beauty by Megan Frazer

Adult



MG/ Picture Book


Giant Squid by Mary M. Cerullo and Clyde F. E. Roper

Currently Reading/ On Deck:

YA


Fox Forever by Mary E. Pearson


The Island of Lote by Emily Kinney

Professional Development


Notice & Note: Strategies for Close Reading by Kylene Beers and Robert E. Probst

Adult/ Curriculum Related


The Pursuit of Happyness by Chris Gardner


The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls

What else is going on? 


For my second summer, I am participating in Teacher's Write, an online writer's workshop for teachers and librarians hosted by Kate Messner, Gae Polisner, Jo Knowles, and Jen Vincent. It's a fabulous community! Click here for more information.


Saturday, June 22, 2013

I'm Still Breathing

I'm going to try to resurrect my blog over the summer. That is one of my writing goals. We'll see how it goes along with the painting, the house repair, the packing, the moving, the lesson planning, the course creating.

I keep reminding myself it is only the start of summer, I still have two months ahead of me. But I have yet to feel the freedom to slow down. There is getting the house ready. Then there will be the packing. Then there will be the moving. After that comes the unpacking. In between, I need to do a whole lot of reading and unit writing, as I design four English courses. At least we were able to hire a part time history teacher for text year so I don't have to teach history! I'm so excited to be able to focus much more on English. That is where my passion lies.

Oh yes, and I tutor once a week; important income because I don't get a paycheck during the summer. I  find that I am already worrying about money. A little confession here. I always worry about money and I struggle with being envious of people who get to do things, who get to take vacations and who own their own homes. I don't want to be rich, I just wish things were a little bit easier. I wish I could make enough that my husband could quit his job and build furniture (he's very talented). I wish we had the money for me to attend conferences such as NCTE and to get my Master's degree.

So time to get moving. Get down to the house and get going on the cleaning and the priming so that we can paint. Once the painting gets done and the shower gets fixed so that the water can be left on, we can start moving. At this point we've put enough of our own money and sweat equity into the new place to get the first month rent free. Hope the owner sees it that way! It would be nice to get this done and not have to pay rent on two places at once.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Small Victories

I'm blogging two days in a row. Definitely a record for me lately!

After a challenging day yesterday, today was a very good day. My 11th grade American Literature class went well. We are studying the romantic period. For homework the students had to read an excerpt from James Fenimore Cooper's The Deerslayer and fill out a chart showing the characteristics of modern day fictional heroes and the heroic characteristics of Deerslayer. Despite the fact that it was a short excerpt and they had a week to do it, the boys did not have it done. I had the class read through the excerpt and underline anything that was heroic and admirable, then I had them add to their charts anything new they came up with. This gave the boys a chance to actually do the assignment. It does frustrate me when they don't bother to do even simple assignments in preparation for class, but I do like having the freedom to have them get the work done and still accomplish the learning.

I have two round tables in my room and this class naturally segregates themselves. The three boys sit at the front table and the 5 girls at the back table. I love having the round tables because it lends to collaboration and discussion so much more easily. I had the tables share their charts with each other and come up with a statement about the American fictional hero during the romantic period and the modern American fictional hero. This gave me a chance to listen in on their thinking and to help the guys as they struggled with the assignment because they had not done the homework. There was some good discussion. This is one of the things I keep hearing from flippers. They like being able to talk with individual students about their learning and help them work through confusion. It really is fun. I enjoy the one-on-one aspect that the flipclass model allows.

From the American hero we transitioned to satire. I had the students pull out their smart phones/iPods, and look up satire. We formed our own definition and listed characteristics on the board and brainstormed modern day examples they were familiar with. This was to introduce the next assignment: an excerpt from Washington Irving's Knickerbocker's History of New York. I am using American Literature curriculum from The Center for Learning (I use their materials for many of my classes) and have a great handout that has vocabulary words in bold and questions printed next to the excerpt for them to answer. I gave each students a set of words to define. They had to look at the context to help them choose the correct definition. Once they had finished, each student shared their definitions in the order they appeared in the excerpt. As definitions where shared, students made notes on their paper so they would know what the words meant when they read the piece for homework.

My favorite class from today was my US History class. We had a debate on Shays' Rebellion and our Chinese student gave a presentation on the Chinese government. For homework the students read about Shays' Rebellion, chose a side, farmer or merchant, and prepared statements on three things: 1. whether or not the rebellion was justified, 2. whether paper money should be created and the farmers' taxes lowered, or the rebellion put down, and 3. the strength of the national government. The kids worked really well together to prepare for the debate, although the "merchants" had a bit of a hard time. There was some misunderstanding of the material/situation, and some of the students were unwilling to make revisions to what they had already prepared. It did present opportunity for good discussion and correction. Really, this is how I wish all my classes would go everyday- they come prepared, we discuss, I get to facilitate, to listen in on group discussion, and to talk with individual students, and we all experience learning.

Our Chinese student has very low English skills, although he is growing by leaps and bounds. We are blessed to have a tutor working with our international students this year. Her presence has made a huge difference. This year we have two international students- a junior from China and a freshman from Taiwan. They are taking their English class with the tutor for ESL but are mainstreamed for their other classes. Because their English skills prevent them from being able to read the materials in history, I have them work on alternative materials that are at their reading level. As we have been working on this Constitution Unit, I have had F researching and reading about our government and comparing that with his own government in China. Today he shared some of the history of the Chinese government and how things have changed in China in recent years. What a pleasure to listen to him! He had such presence. I think he has the gift of storytelling! He did such a good job telling about the things that the government did in the past that he felt was wrong, and how "new China" had a different way of thinking.

Today was a fun day of learning. Right now if feels that days like this are few and far between, but when I do have them, they feel like small victories that give me hope that there will be more.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Fall Seven Times, Stand Up Eight

I've always been intrigued by this saying. I wanted to use it for this blog post because it applies to how I'm feeling these days, so I went to google it. I wanted to make sure I was remembering it correctly and I wanted to know where it came from. The first hit was someone asking what it meant. I found the reply thread to be rather disheartening, but that is for another blog post on another day.

I've started too many blog posts with complaints about not blogging, and I didn't want to do that again. Consistent blogging is just one of the many things that I feel I am failing at these days. But I'm not going to give up. Most of the time these days I feel like a fish trying to swim upstream and I'm pretty weary. But I'm not giving up.

I'm continuing to learn about #flipclass and just spent a rather encouraging hour participating in tonight's Twitter chat. I found some new people to follow, and I got a few ideas for things to try. I also have been thinking about the sheer volume of what I've been trying to do. I rather feel like I've been trying to get a drink from a fire hose. A conclusion that I came to this evening is that I need to focus on flipping just one of my classes, rather than trying to flip them all. Now keep in mind, I'm not talking about 100% flipping. I'm talking about taking baby steps.

Now the questions is, which class do I focus on, and how do I balance all the work I still have to do to be prepared for all my other classes? Someone on #flipclass suggested that I start in the one that I feel most comfortable with content and has the highest achieving students. That is going to take some thinking. I have high achieving students in all my classes, but I don't have the comfort level with the content that I would like.

This is going to take some thinking. The hard part is trying to improve and move forward, not just operate in survival mode all the time. The hard part is to find the time to do the work and learning that I need to do without neglecting my husband or killing my personal life.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Insanity and the Flipped Classroom

Albert Einstein said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. I kind of feel this way about my intentions for blogging and writing. I intend to blog and read and write for myself, but it is always what falls by the wayside. I want to do set aside time, but never seem to be able to do it.

It seems like this year is even crazier than the last. We are now half way through the first marking quarter and I am so incredibly behind in my correcting that I don't think I can possibly get caught up in one weekend. It's Columbus Day weekend, when I usually get caught up for mid-quarter. However, I am spending this weekend recovering from a nasty cold (thank you, students, for sharing) and trying to revamp my classes, especially my 11th grade US History class. I am not at all happy with the way that class is going.

All of my classes (9th grade English Comp & Lit, 10th grade English, 11th grade English, 9th &10th grade World History, 11th US History, SAT Prep) have felt like a big flop. Let's just take a minute to look at that work load. Yes, I am teaching 5 core classes and a SAT Prep class, as well as monitoring study hall 3 afternoons a week, and supervising an advisory group 4 days a week. I am writing the curriculum for all of my classes. I don't have textbooks for either of my history classes, and we have limited technology available.

I spent this past summer doing some ground work, but as we've gotten into the school year, it has become increasingly clear to me that I did not do nearly enough planning. I am at this point, all around dissatisfied with my classes. It's not the kids and it's not the subject matter. I love my students, I love English and the literature I've selected, and I love history. I am just not being a good, effective teacher. I'm not implementing into my classes the aspects of reading & writing that I want; things like read aloud, independent reading, and quick writes. I am convinced that this is because I have too much on my plate. Unfortunately, that is not going to change. The school has no money for personnel or resources.

Last week, after a month of school and being frustrated with how my history classes are going, I was again presented, through Twitter, with the idea of flipping my class. When I first heard about flipping class last year, I didn't take the time to learn about it. It seemed like it involved using technology in a way for which I did not have the time or resources. Last week I decided it was time for me to learn more.

Monday night I spent some time on Twitter, participating in #flipclass chat and connecting with other teachers who are flipping their classes. I asked lots of questions and begged for resources. I got many links to blogs and websites. I started reading. Tuesday I tried explaining what I had read to my colleagues and didn't do a very good job. It became obvious to me that I still didn't understand enough myself (another lesson in of itself!). So I spent more time reading and Tweeting.

I realized that I needed to do a better job of identifying what I want the students to learn, how I want them to learn it, and how I want them to demonstrate that learning. Really it is the same principles behind Understanding by Design (Grant Wiggins). I like how Kate Baker explains it on her blog, which is actually from Cheryl Morris' Blog:


Flipping English is about two things:
1) helping students take responsibility for their own learning by understanding them and their unique skills, abilities, and needs, and
2) leveraging technology to build a student-centered environment that meaningfully engages the cultural context in which our students live.

The flip is the process of how the students learn, not what they learn from.


This makes so much sense to me. And it relieves the pressure of technology. Because it's not really about the technology.  I think many people make the mistake of thinking that flipping your class is about using technology.

Is was only a few days after this that I landed upon the Civilization Project idea for my World History class. I was thinking on a small scale based on a project that I'd done in the past with Paul Fleishman's book Weslandia. My middle school Social Studies students had read the book and created their own civilization similar to Wesley's in the story. I was planning to do that again with my high school students. I was searching the internet for ideas for the project when I stumbled upon the Teacher Quality Collaborative website. There was the idea project! I've done some editing and will continue to morph the project into my own. The energy in the room when I presented the project to my 9th & 10th graders was amazing! Without realizing they were doing it, the kids were implementing information that I had already given them on foundational characteristics and factors of civilization! It was so much fun to listen to them!

I'm feeling really good about my World History class now, but still have much work to do for US History and my English classes. I've spent much of this weekend so far wrestling with the question of what to focus on with US History. I think I'm narrowing down my focus for US History. The Big Question (thank you Jim Burke) that I want to use is "What does it mean to be American?" The question is broad enough that I can use it for basically each era that I want to study from Colonial to 19th Century. I still need to figure out what exactly our class will look like. I love the idea of Problem Based Learning and I've got the problem. I need to decide how to engage my students in discovering the answer. What project/task do they do to explore the idea of American Identity and how do they demonstrate what they are learning?