Friday, February 26, 2016

Donors Choose


Principals and teachers alike should be sharing DonorsChoose.Org with EVERYONE!

The website is a great resource and I have seen it used countless time to get supplies for classrooms. 

Two years ago I created a DonorsChoose project and was lucky enough to have more than 100 new books donated to my classroom! You can view the project I completed by clicking here

Teachers and administrators create projects, post them to social media or share with others, and then people donate to your project. Once the project is completed students send a thank you to those who donated to the project.  

Other successful DonorsChoose projects include Miss Downer's project. She contacted a local newspaper and had the project featured in their blog. Within a day her project was completely funded.

Below is a quick video highlighting DonorsChoose and how easy it is to use.


Friday, February 19, 2016

The Triple Focus: Social Emotional Education



This story excerpt was featured on the HUFFPOST BOOK blog on August 8th 2014. 

The Triple Focus: A New Approach to Education is a fantastic quick read. I highly recommend this book to anyone working with students. It provides insight to the emotional well being of children.

A New Approach to Education


 
The following is an excerpt from Daniel Goleman's new book with Peter Senge, The Triple Focus: A New Approach to Education.
Empathy and Academic Success
The key to compassion is being predisposed to help -- and that can be learned.
There is an active school movement in character education and teaching ethics. But I don't think it's enough to have children just learn about ethical virtuosity, because we need to embody our ethical beliefs by acting on them. This begins with empathy.
There are three main kinds of empathy, each involving distinct sets of brain circuits. The first is cognitive empathy: understanding how other people see the world and how they think about it, and understanding their perspectives and mental models. This lets us put what we have to say in ways the other person will best understand.
The second is emotional empathy, a brain-to-brain linkage that gives us an instant inner sense of how the other person feels -- sensing their emotions from moment to moment. This allows "chemistry" in our connections with people.
Those two are very important of course; they're key to getting along with other people, but they're not necessarily sufficient for caring. The third is called, technically, empathic concern -- which naturally leads to empathic action.Unlike the other two kinds of empathy, this variety is based in the ancient mammalian circuitry for caring and for parenting, and it nurtures those qualities.
That last type of empathy offers the foundation for what's been called a "caring classroom," where the teacher embodies and models kindness and concern for her students, and encourages the same attitude among the students. Such a classroom culture provides the best atmosphere for learning, both cognitively and emotionally.
Learning in general happens best in a warm, supportive atmosphere, in which there exists a feeling of safety, of being supported and cared about, of closeness and connection. In such a space children's brains more readily reach the state of optimal cognitive efficiency -- and of caring about others.
Such an atmosphere has particular importance for those children at most risk of going off track in their lives because of early experiences of deprivation, abuse, or neglect. Studies of such high-risk kids who have ended up thriving in their lives -- who are resilient -- find that usually the one person who turned their life around was a caring adult.
If you ask them what made the difference, very often they'll tell you it was that teacher who really saw them, who really understood them, who really cared about them and saw their potential. Such caring and genuine concern is important not just in the classroom but also throughout the school.
Administrators need to care about teachers so that the teachers feel they have a secure base. When you have a secure base, your mind operates at its best. You can function optimally. You can take smart risks. You can innovate and be creative, feel enthused, motivated, and tune in to other people. Compassion comes more easily.
The more upset we are, the more self-focused we become. We tune out the people around us, tune out the systems around us, and we just think about ourselves. Being able to manage your inner life lets you tune in to others with genuine care, and function at your best. It's true for teachers, for parents, for administrators, and for kids.
2014-07-31-TripleFocusCover2.jpg
Several research centers have been piloting programs that cultivate an attitude of kindness and concern, Stanford and Emory Universities among them. The Mind and Life Institute has created a network of educators and researchers (from these and other institutions) to distill the active ingredients from this research and adapt it into a curriculum for younger students. They plan to start with the first or second grade, and then roll out developmentally appropriate versions for each successive grade level.
For instance, one of the guided reflections a teacher in such a program might lead students through is all the ways other kids are "just like me." The children would be instructed to consider their common hurts and hopes, their fears and anger, their kindness, and their need to be loved. Such a widened view of how others feel and see the world acts as an antidote to a one-dimensional view of other children that can lead to negative stereotyping or bullying.
One appeal: these are empirically tested methods, and so this program in cultivating compassion should be state of the art. Helping children cultivate their capacity for caring and concern -- for empathic action -- will likely be the next major step for SEL.
From The Triple Focus: A New Approach to Education. Copyright 2014 Daniel Goleman and Peter Senge. 

Friday, February 12, 2016

Achieve The Core Professional Development




Achieve The Core is a great resource for teachers and administrators alike.

As a teacher I have used Achieve The Core in my classroom for writing prompts, lesson plans and ideas, as well as pacing guides. They also have many great resources on how to teach reading, comprehension and close reads.

As an administrator Achieve The Core has designed presentations for you and your staff on various subject matters. I have used the Text Set Project Training presentation to build my own understanding of reading comprehension. They share the power point presentations so you can download and change them to meet the needs of your staff and school

Friday, February 5, 2016

Academic Vocabulary List

Are you teaching academic words in your classroom?

Are academic words being taught at your school?

These are the academic words third grade students need to know in order to 
answer higher level thinking questions. 
Do you think your third graders truly know the meaning of all these words?

What are you doing to make sure these words are being taught?

The list came from Berkeley Unified School District.  I highly recommend looking through the PDF document listed below because it has great activities as well as videos resources. 

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Marzano's Vocabulary List

Who: Teachers and Administrators

What: Academic words need to be explicitly taught to students in your classroom(s). Robert Marzano identified four subject matters and they include Science, Social Studies, Language Arts and Math. He composed a list for grades kinder through 12. It is very important that students KNOW these words. 

Why: Nearly a century of research  shows that vocabulary is a very important part of comprehension. Researchers in 1925 stated that growth in reading means continuous growth in word knowledge (Whipple). Today scholarly academic articles are titled Vocabulary and Syntactic Knowledge Factors in 5th Grade Students' Reading Comprehension (NAEP, 2013). Main content area

Having to determine the meaning of too many words slows readers up and the problem gets much worse with complex text. Not knowing words on the page is debilitating! There is a “30 Million Word Gap” which found that students from low-income backgrounds had much lower vocabularies and exposure to words than their affluent peers. 
 
When: You should be teaching vocabulary ALL THE TIME! Teachers make sure these words are used regularly in your classroom and that students have continuous exposure and practice with them throughout the year. Principals check to see teachers have included these words in their pacing guides and lesson plans. We need to be explicit with our vocabulary instruction. 

Below is a quick list of Marzano's list for third grade. For other grade levels click here