Posts

Attempting to Give a Brain Break

High school kids don't love to buy into new things. When I told them to take out a pencil at the end of our lesson on progressivism and workers' rights at the turn of the 20th century, they thought it would be a quiz or something academic. When I gave them instructions to make a dot then a winding line, some of them literally drew one centimeter out then back in again. Others drew a huge swooping line, others asked for more clarification in direction.."can we pick our pencils up?" "does it have to be straight?" These students are so structured and rigid with academics that I wanted to give them as little instruction as I could. When I told them to draw over their line, the student with the one centimeter line went "1-2 done done". I was mildly annoyed, but this definitely fits this students' personality. I noticed the females were much quieter and took the activity more seriously than the males. I did the activity with them so I tried to model ...

Snow Dayz on Snow Dayz

It happened again. Woke up at 5 AM like always, rolled over and saw a text from my school: "SPA WILL BE CANCELLED ON WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 20TH DUE TO INCLEMENT WEATHER". I was too excited to go back to sleep. I watched 3 episodes of The Office and eventually nodded off until about 10 am. Grateful as I was for the extra zzz's, it really threw my plans off. I bought a house at the end of the year, and closed on it at the end of January. I've been rehabbing it ever since, and getting ready to move this weekend of the 23rd and 24th. A blizzard is also coming the 23rd and 24th, so I moved my moving day to Friday the 22nd. What else was Friday the 22nd? My first, and likely only, observation by my principal. This could be a make or break! Do I drive in the snow in my Honda Fit and huge moving truck or do I reschedule the observation? I had already taken a half day by his approval, and with our previous schedule (a rotating block schedule), he could still make it, but not t...

Finding time to Implement Action Research

What: I'm finding a really hard time to naturally implement my small group discussions in my classroom. Part of this is because my lessons are literally written for me--the whole department World History II team does the same things on the same days with the same readings for all of 10th grade. They don't like when I deviate and I find the groupings take a long time to put together, and students don't often remember who they're with or the roles they are taking. So what: I'm afraid I'll have inadequate action research to write about and reflect on, including presenting at spring conference. Now what: Next week is a time where I would naturally have a place to do small groups prior to a large class discussion, but with shortened classes and snow days mixed in, I'm running out of time. I might talk to one of my department members to see if I can amend a lesson to fit the needs of my AR.

Sometimes you gotta call an audible...

Image
Post-Superbowl Sunday I figured I'd have a football theme! Kolb Model: Experience: I was absent on Friday for my U.S. History class so I had a sub. This sub did not follow my plans of teaching how to write a thesis for a research paper so we were essentially behind when I came back on Monday. Now, I had two lessons to make up in one day given the missing lesson. I thought I would be teaching about outline writing, but if the students didn't have a thesis like they were supposed to, there's no point in writing an outline with no argument! The first half of class I modeled what a thesis should and shouldn't look like, then gave students 25 minutes to work on their own. The second half of class I explained what an outline for a research paper looks like then gave students another 25 minutes to work on said outline. Observation:  This worked pretty well for the most part! I let students know that this wasn't my original plan so we were "calling an audible...

Staving off a Would-Be Snow Day

I work at private school. If my readers know anything about private school, it's that they essentially call all the shots. On everything. Today, almost every other district and school in the Twin Cities had a snow day. We did not. It was our Canadian headmaster's call. So be it! To get my students energized first period, we played a little game. What: Played 13 We stood in a circle and we can each say up to 3 numbers in order from 1-13.  Whoever 13 lands on is "out". We play till there's a winner. So What: We got a little competitive and energized! I saw some sleepy faces when I got in the room this morning, but we needed to do a lot of research so I had to get them awake. Now What: I want to do an energizer even when it isn't a crappy weather day outside. I want to find more to be age appropriate, though this was a really quick and fun one.

Action Research Time!

Image
My action research of pods in the 10th grade classroom has finally been approved! With a few tweaks to fit my school's Exeter style model of discussion, my proposal was finally approved yesterday and I immediately implemented my AR. While it wasn't a huge shift in how my students already discuss in small groups, I wanted to stress that these groups are permanent for the quarter yet their roles would change. Below is the image on the board that I wrote for my students. These were carefully curated groups with students who bring very different strengths to the table. The reason the "questioner" is starred is because only groups with four students in them will have a questioner. I gave students a "warm up" question per usual, yet they were instructed to get in their small groups prior to discussing as a class. My initial observations of this exercise was that students took much longer to actually discuss the question, but not much has changed in terms of w...

Games and Competition in the Classroom

Image
We all know that young students like games as a form of learning, and research has backed it up! However, this sort of "play to learn" gets phased out through middle school and high school, and it can be a fun and engaging way to mix up classroom routine. Since I teach at a decently rigid and formative prep school, games haven't been part of the culture outside of language classes. To prepare for our semester exam, students had roughly 91 terms they needed to know from about 150 years of American history. To make this more exciting, I made a Quizlet, and consequently had students play Quizlet live. Not only is this application a fun way to make students learn and review, but they also have to work together as a team to review flashcards. I can see who my most competitive students are, but also those who are quietly diligent at reviewing terms prior to coming to class. While students are supposed to sit next to their teams to see all screens involved in the round, I some...