Category Archives: Teaching

I have been teaching for ten years now, and it’s about time I share some of my stories!

Habits for Happy Teachers: Habit 1

Habits for Happy Teachers: Habit 1

There are SOOOO many things that a teacher must do in a day, week, month, year, etc. It can be overwhelming! By creating habits and systems you can maximize your teaching time and eliminate transition / distraction time. This is why I’m starting a series called Habits for Happy Teachers. The more these habits become habits, the less you will have to think about them and they will not drain any of your much needed energy. So here goes – habit #1: Pencils.

We are going to start with an easy one – pencils. The pencils in my classroom really annoyed me! I hated it when I went through my introduction and set up the lesson, and then when I tried to transition into students working five students needed a pencil and 5 more needed their pencil sharpened. Whether or not you worked in a low-income school, there were always students who don’t have a pencil. There is nothing that disrupts the flow of a lesson more than the whir of an electric pencil sharpener. And there is nothing more frustrating than having to buy 3 electric pencil sharpeners in one year because they keep breaking (yes that happened to me).

When you are trying to maximize your instruction time, you can save anywhere from 10-20 minutes when all your students begin working at the same time. If you have 5 kids start right away, 5 kids who take 10 minutes to get a pencil, 5 kids who can’t concentrate because of the movement of the other 5 kids who are looking for a pencil, and the rest of the class working at various ability levels, you can see why the students who are early finishers need something else to do while they wait for the students who just got started. This creates more work for you in the long run. Now I’m not saying you have to do your pencils like I do, but you must create a system that works for you. Here’s my system that works great for me!

1- Assume that your class won’t have pencils. Stock up at the beginning of the year when prices are low, so you always have a stash of teacher pencils. You can label these pencils “Teacher Pencils” and hope they come back to you, or you can create a fool-proof system like these steps listed. Give one student the pencil job and have them sharpen pencils at the end of class so they are ready for the next day (you can keep them in a cute cup or plastic tray). Allow any student to borrow a pencil at any time – then there’s no need to punish a student for forgetting a pencil! You just saved yourself some stress and annoyance because you are expecting students to forget and you already have a plan!

2- At the beginning of class before you start the “flow” of your lesson, have students get out their pencils and see who needs to borrow or sharpen a pencil. It is so much better if you have several manual pencil sharpeners (again, stock up at the beginning of the year – I recommend buying a dozen or more to last the whole year). These sharpen very well and you don’t have a line of students waiting to use one electric sharpener. I also can’t stand the sound of an electric sharpener right before I teach!

3- Set the timer. Don’t allow this pencil routine to go on for any more than 5 minutes. Once the timer goes off, students need to be in their seats. It helps to have the timer displayed on the board (smart board, projector, etc.) so students can manage their time and get their pencils ready quickly. You can shorten the time each week, and ultimately have pencils ready in one minute or less (trust me this works!).

4- Keep track of your pencils. If you want an easy system for getting your pencils back, have students write their name on the board beside your can of teacher pencils. At the end of the class period, before you dismiss the students, call all the students to return pencils and erase their names. I did this with elementary and middle school students, and it works great! I maybe lost one or two pencils, but for the most part my supply of pencils remained!

5- Have one cup or tray for sharp pencils and one cup or tray for dull or broken pencils. When students return the pencils they borrow, they obviously put them in the dull cup. This makes it easy to find a sharp pencil, because EVERY pencil in the sharp cup are sharp, and every pencil in the dull cup are dull or broken. This may seem unnecessary to have two separate cups, but I had several students who would stall their work because they stood at the pencil cup for 5 minutes trying to find a pencil that was sharp enough (when I had sharp and dull pencils in the same cup).

6- Be flexible. Some students don’t want to use the teacher’s pencil, especially because they don’t look all pretty and cute. If you have someone with “cute” pencils who breaks the lead and needs it sharpened, it doesn’t take long to use the manual sharpeners. To avoid the distracting movement, I had students raise their hands and ask to use my sharpeners. I would then hand the sharpener to them to use at their desk which allowed me to keep teaching with minimal distraction and movement. The flexibility comes because some students will prefer to use the presharpened teacher pencils, and other students will prefer to sharpen the pencils they brought from home. Allow that flexibility because it also shows you respect their preferences.

7- I kind of mentioned this already, but NEVER punish a student for not having a pencil. Even if the same student comes every day without a pencil. This is an easy way to show our students we care about them. When our students know we care, they open up their hearts to learning. When we punish our students for something as simple as a pencil in the spirit of, “I must teach them responsibility,” we are closing their hearts to learning. We need to pick our battles as teachers, and this battle is not as important as other opportunities to teach responsibility. Furthermore, most students want to have their own pencils, and if they don’t there might be an unhappy reason we don’t realize. Let’s help out our students and maintain a positive classroom by having a respectful pencil policy!

Now imagine a world where you never feel annoyed by pencils and all your students are prepared to work! That is worth the work it takes to develop habit #1!

Back to School – 4 Book Studies – Am I Crazy???

Back to School – 4 Book Studies – Am I Crazy???

I posted recently (actually last year) about a book, Teach Like a Champion by Doug Lemov.  Great book!  I am excited for the school year to start because I received a grant for my school to do four book studies over the course of the 2013-2014 school year!  Teach Like a Champion is one of the books along with The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners by Carol Ann Tomlinson, Now I Get It: Strategies for Building Confident and Competent Mathematicians by Susan O’Connell, and The Café Book: Engaging All Students in Daily Literacy Assessment and Instruction by Gail Boushey.  You might be thinking, “Why on earth would you attempt four book studies in one year?  How will you get that done with efficacy?”  No need to worry!  I will explain!

Our campus has some specific needs, as does any elementary campus (my baby just started crying so I will try to be brief).

1-We need more differentiated instruction, especially as we prepare our students for the STAAR test this year.  Our whole campus will student The Differentiated Classroom once a month, with a different grade level leading the discussion for each chapter at our staff meetings.

2-We need more “tools” for effective teaching and classroom management, hence Teach Like a Champion.  We will also use our staff meetings for this – viewing videos and short presentations on the strategies of the month that the leadership team will be looking for during walkthroughs that month (we each do 25 walkthroughs a week – principal, assistant principal, and me – the instructional coordinator).  Since the book has 49 strategies, I expect we will not get through them all this year, and save some for next year!!

3-We need to build a stronger Professional Learning Community, so I will be using the last two books to create “true” book studies (everyone will be expected to read the whole book and respond).  All literacy teachers will study The Café Book, and all math teachers will study Now I Get It (yes, those teachers who teach both will participate in two studies).  I am creating an online environment for the teachers to discuss these books each month, and we will also meet during the week… pending my principal’s approval.

The overall goal of these campus-wide book studies is to improve student engagement and achievement by changing the way we think about our teaching.  We all have room for improvement, and the best way to improve is to research best practices and learn from each other.  The best part is the books were all paid for by the DeSoto Education Foundation!  Thank you sooooo much!!

Summer Again????

Summer Again????

Baby Florence

Ok, so there’s a really good reason that I haven’t posted anything for a year (really!)!!  Well first of all I got a new job.  Instead of teaching 4th grade for the 2012/2013 school year I became the Instructional Coordinator at Northside Elementary (still in DeSoto ISD).  Then in March I had our first baby, Florence!  Wow – what a busy year!

 

Summer Reading

Summer Reading

This summer I have a huge stack of books to read!  Of course the two that I’ve already read have nothing to do with teaching, but I think I’m ready for a teaching book!  The first book I’m reading is The Highly Engaged Classroom by Robert Marzano and Debra Pickering.  So far it’s very good – Marzano is my favorite researcher in education!  Basically I will be reading about research-based strategies to improve student engagement in my classroom.  Last year I had the Charlie Brown teacher syndrome WAY to often!  Waa waa waa.

The second book that just came in the mail today is called Teach Like a Champion; 49 Techniques That Put Students on the Path to College by Doug Lemov.  I haven’t started it yet and I don’t really know what to expect, but I hope to gain techniques for improving student performance.  I want my students to care about their grades and care about improving and learning.

I will keep you updated!  And hopefully I will finish these trade books before I get to Rick Riordan’s newest, The Serpent’s Shadow (from the Kane Chronicles – a great series for fourth graders!!).  Chances are I will read them simultaneously!

Grading

Grading

I’m sitting at my favorite coffee shop (White Rhino in Cedar Hill) grading papers.  It’s my teacher prep day and I’m getting my final grades in for the semester, and quite honestly this is depressing!  I am saddened and frustrated with how many students are just fine with getting answers wrong.  A friend of mine shared this youtube video with me:

I plan to share this with my students and discuss excellence.  I certainly wouldn’t want my doctor making just one mistake if I had to go in for surgery!  I wouldn’t want my car mechanic to do 90% of the job correctly!  We need to teach our students to strive for 100% all the time!!!

Grant Writing

Grant Writing

This won’t be along post – all I can say is, “Ugh.”  I have been working on this grant idea for a couple months now, and I’m ready for it to be over.  I really hope we get the project, but boy am I exhausted by the grant writing process.  I hope we get the IPADS!!!

Back to Work

Back to Work

Even though it’s only January 2nd, our district is back to school.  To be honest, I am ready to be back!  With the new Texas STAAR test coming I am working on a game plan to get the kids motivated and ready.  I want to start using one released test question each day so we can talk about it in depth without overwhelming or boring the kids.  Unfortunately today didn’t provide time to start – hopefully tomorrow.  Today was pretty good overall, until the birthday cupcakes came at the end of the day!  When my student’s mom came into the room, six kids rushed to give her a hug, and they were milling around the room until I corralled them to their seats.  Tomorrow I have a fun Science experiment planned, so hopefully we can make the time we need to do the experiment justice!  If all goes well I will share the experiment (I feel like I need to try it first before I tell you about it).