I have enjoyed reader’s workshop more than ever this year by
getting my students to read, write, record, send and share. LOVE that kids have enjoyed reading
more than ever! Some are easier
than others to engage into some of their favorite books but at the same time
they LOVE the high expectations of reading. Reporting out to their friends
electronically and individually in our conversations is when things start to happen. Honestly, creating a book
report online has become a collaborative conversation verses, “Why do we have to
do this?” These students enjoy sharing their books verbally and electronically as
they have learned to persuade others to read similar books.
Showing posts with label iAchieve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iAchieve. Show all posts
Saturday, June 28, 2014
Saturday, April 12, 2014
State Testing TIme
Ready....set.....go! AIMS is right around the corner! This marvelous group is ready for serious business! They had a great time making their own video to show they were ready for AIMS baby!
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Croaking!
Croaking novel summaries and making QR codes is coming right along! Today's focus was reading summaries fluently in the 30 second time period and croaking the summary on the app Croakit. After practicing and recording the students had to navigate the iPad to listen to their recordings, save it and then send the link off. In the next lesson the kids will be using the link to make a QR code. One step at a time! I pushed a few kids that could follow the steps and they were able to create and send me the image of the QR Code! Yay! In the next mini lesson everyone will be on board. :)
My favorite part of the day was listening to students coach each other, "The word is An-tarc-ti-ca, try it!" She broke apart the works by syllables for her partner then she said Antarctica 2-3 times, they decided she was ready to record. It was a loud room of sharing until recording time, over half the kids went out side in different areas to illuminate distractions or extra noise.
My favorite part of the day was listening to students coach each other, "The word is An-tarc-ti-ca, try it!" She broke apart the works by syllables for her partner then she said Antarctica 2-3 times, they decided she was ready to record. It was a loud room of sharing until recording time, over half the kids went out side in different areas to illuminate distractions or extra noise.
Partner Practice with timing and focus on reading fluently. Her example 1 below. |
Mini lesson was on what good readers sound like to read fluently. This is the rubric I will use to score them this time around, thank you Kagan! |
Final time to summarize on Croak it. |
Example 1: Ms. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
Example 2: The Hobbit http://croak.eu/1aZHKZQ
Friday, July 12, 2013
ISTE 2013
Going to the ISTE 2013 was a fabulous experience and hopefully we will get the opportunity to go back one day soon. I am so amazed with what technology offers our kids, which is such an advancement from what I had as a
child. I heard so many innovative
ideas that my brain is still over flowing. I am just starting to sort them out.
The organizers were phenomenal- they were inspiring, kind,
and so passionate about kids learning in new creative ways. Two people
that stood out to me that I couldn’t help but ask to personalize my book with a
signature and get a picture with were two innovative science teachers, Jon
Bergmann and Aaron Sams. These two
are the founders of the ‘Flipped Classroom’ methodology.
It was an exciting moment meeting Moby, a unique friend to us all. Kids love him! He keeps ideas so simple
and real! Group photo time!
There are so many people I can talk about that I truly
enjoyed. I feel like I just
blinked my eye at what was offered here.
Leslie Fisher, Hall Davidson and Grey Tang were just a few of the
sessions I went to that I could write about. So many more classes and opportunities going on at the same time. AMAZING LEADERS in technology education!
One of my big takeaways was was the idea of promoting curiosity in children. Every child is
curious about something. We need
to give them the opportunity to combine their creativity with their curiosity. Engineering ideas though kids! Bored students….YUCK! Kids deserve to
be enlightened and excited. It stems from that excitement and knowledge that they become passionate from their own
curiosity and learning.
My goal this year is to spend more time guiding kids and
giving them opportunities to create and make learning their own with their ideas through the content.
In all, ISTE 2013 was an amazing experience. I am very thankful
that I was asked to help deliver Creighton School District's iAchieve presentation and given the opportunity present with my own district
leaders. I am thankful both of them provided this unique opportunity to my sister and I both.
San Antonio was a unique city to check out while we debriefed, shared or gathered our new ideas and drew conclusions with good friends.
This was a special treat! |
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Blogging begins....! |
The River Walk had lots of great tastes and we learned all about the history of San Antonio on this little cruise. |
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My dear sister and I had lots of quality time learning together, one passion we both love most! |
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Took a tour of the Historic Alamo. |
Enjoying the evening view from our hotel! |
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Passion for 4th Grade
Blogging... wow, not what I thought I would ever do. I am excited to learn how to blog as well as keep a journal of my experience flipping my classroom. Last year was my 7th year teaching fourth grade but my first year "flipping" the classroom. It has changed my teaching pedagogy. I LOVE it!
I also love 4th grade. Why......I don't know I have never taught another grade level. I tell myself it's the developmental age, the content in science or the math, maybe it's that the kids are ready to start reading more involved chapter books. I just love the opportunity to open kids eyes to how numbers really work, what they mean mathematically. I will tell you I am looking forward to the common core standards due to a solid foundation of number sense. I love teaching science and putting scientific ideas into kids heads to ask more inquisitive questions and think about ideas at a deeper level.
As far as reading, I love opening kids eyes to new author's and classic stories like Number the Stars, The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, Bridge to Terabithia, there are so many. I find joy in helping them find their just right level and pushing them to read books at their level while building their confidence about their love for reading.
With flipping they have had so many opportunities to create videos about their learning, make projects and presentations at their finger tips.
So flipping....it started a whole new game. More to come. I'm not sure I am the blogger type or that anyone will to read these but it will be a nice way to keep track one of my favorite passion- teaching in the classroom and now flipping the classroom.
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www.edudemic.com |
I also love 4th grade. Why......I don't know I have never taught another grade level. I tell myself it's the developmental age, the content in science or the math, maybe it's that the kids are ready to start reading more involved chapter books. I just love the opportunity to open kids eyes to how numbers really work, what they mean mathematically. I will tell you I am looking forward to the common core standards due to a solid foundation of number sense. I love teaching science and putting scientific ideas into kids heads to ask more inquisitive questions and think about ideas at a deeper level.
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Recording the daily weather to find patterns. Each kiddo was the expert meteorologist on a different US city. |
As far as reading, I love opening kids eyes to new author's and classic stories like Number the Stars, The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, Bridge to Terabithia, there are so many. I find joy in helping them find their just right level and pushing them to read books at their level while building their confidence about their love for reading.
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Working together to ask different types of questions and how to find the answers. |
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Nonfiction short stories with cause and effect. |
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We loved participating in "Battle of the Books!" |
With flipping they have had so many opportunities to create videos about their learning, make projects and presentations at their finger tips.
So flipping....it started a whole new game. More to come. I'm not sure I am the blogger type or that anyone will to read these but it will be a nice way to keep track one of my favorite passion- teaching in the classroom and now flipping the classroom.
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