Showing posts with label Genius Ladder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genius Ladder. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Red/Green Writing


In WBT, writing is super important!! I know it seems like every thing we do is out load, oral repetition. BUT at some point students have to get all that knowledge on paper and compose intelligible coherent thoughts. One way to encourage this, while differentiating for your students is Red/Green writing. It's so simple it's almost silly: as you are waking around the classroom monitoring and conferring, you carry a red marker and a green market with you. (Side bar - I found single markers for sale at Office Depot during back to school! Bonus: their scented!!!)

So, anyway, you're walking around and conferring and walking and conferring. But where are the anecdotal records? Where is the visual feedback for the students? Insert markers here. Green means go. Red means stop. Use the green marker to dot anything the student does well based on his or her personal goals. (More on goals in a bit.) Use the red marker to dot a few (repeat with me: no more than two of three!!) things the students should avoid doing in the future. Like I said, so simple it's almost silly. But it's EFFECTIVE!! 

In conjunction with red/green writing, we have been practicing genius ladder sentences. Here are the results for our pumpkin writing today. My kids did all rotations and independent or partner work for the whole reading and writing block while I met with every child. Every. Single. Child. My kids were given the instructions: "Write a genius sentence about fall." (We haven't gotten to the detail adder sentences yet.)








I was IMPRESSED with my kiddos!! I hope you are too. Can you incorporate Red/Green Writing into your day?

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Amazing Reading & Writing Achievement!!!

I've just finished compiling my quantitative standardized data from the last 4 years of teaching third grade.  (In other words, I made charts of my kids' achievements from the last four years.)  I use this information to analyze my suggested strengths and weaknesses as a teacher to direct my professional development  and "focus skill" for the upcoming year.  

My raw quantitative data shows that the average growth in reading was 2.2 grade levels, and writing was 1.98 grade levels.  I've never shown this kind of growth before! (During this year I also trained a student teacher just before I took an 11 week maternity leave...)

My classroom demographics:
I teach a block of Reading/ELA twice a day.  Total I teach 35 students (32 are depicted in the data because they were enrolled from October 1 through the posttest, and that is how our data is calculated.)  In my classroom of 35, there are 11 boys and 24 girls; 4 black, 19 white, and 2 Hispanic; 4 students have IEPs, 3 receive 504 accommodations, and 1 is gifted; 23 students receive Title I funding.  My school is a rural school in Northwest Louisiana.

Here are the charts:

 1. A look at my standardized test result patterns:  As you can see in 2011 and 2013 I had 0 Advanced students and several in the Unsatisfactory range.  In 2012 I had a couple of Advanced students but still had several in the Unsatisfactory range.  In 2014 I had a LOT more Advanced students and none in the Unsatisfactory range.  Yes, this includes my most special friends!!!!

2. Another look at the same information.


 3. Same information as above, but specifically for 2011.


  4. Same information as above, but specifically for 2012.


  5. Same information as above, but specifically for 2013.


 6. Same information as above, but specifically for 2014.


7. My class' average writing scores on the state standardized test (iLEAP).  In 2011 the average score was 50%.  In 2012, 56%.  In 2013, 49%.  In 2014, 70%!! I will admit that I was a little disappointed with an average score of 70% after all the work my kids and I did this year.  HOWEVER, it is MUCH better than 50% so I am happy with the increase.  I hope that next year with even more consistency and the new Brainy challenge set-up Coach has going my scores will soar even higher!


How did I achieve these phenomenal results???!!?!?!!??!!

WHOLE BRAIN TEACHING, of course!!

I’m including pics from an example PowerPoint I made to use with my kids.  I made them as easy to follow as possible and trained the kids to lead them so that they continued even while I was on leave and a substitute ran my room.  This example is from early in the year while they were still learning the routine, around week 8 of school. 



Every day my classroom routine begins with the following WBT Strategies:
1.      Genius Ladder—we started these very slowly at first, and as the students progressed we began to choose topics from their science, social studies and math content classes.  Also, the kids began keeping a notebook of these some mornings once we moved from oral to written expression.  The days the kids wrote them down, I simply inserted a pencil clip art on the Genius Ladder slide and the kids knew to get out their notebooks.






2.      Writing Game—each day included a puzzle and a complexor.  Every so often I would announce that the Writing Game would be a QT and the kids would record answers on index cards and turn them in.  These were great because I could really see them making progress.  I only did QTs occasionally and only after I returned from leave.





3.      Prove It!—we used the same text each day, but asked a different question.  Each day the question dug a little deeper than the day before.  (I can’t wait to insert some of the new Brainies lessons here!)  At first I started with a book of comprehension stories like the one you see in the PowerPoint.  But, I realized after a few weeks that these texts were not meeting the rigor necessary for my students to show the growth needed this year.  I began to choose text from science and social studies, or from the district mandated “Fresh Read” tests the week before.  After they had taken their weekly test, it would become the next week’s Prove It! text.




4.      Power Pix—I used Power Pix when teaching new skills.  I didn’t have them up in my room this year, but I did use them on my electronic presentations.  Next year I hope to have them displayed all year on a bulletin board, as well as to make a glossary of them for my students to keep in their binders.





5.      Writing frames—I used the color coded writing frames to help my students have a structure for answering questions.  In this presentation, the students answer the question orally with a partner after reading the text.  Then we go through several text-dependent questions.  I didn’t design those slides.  I bought the question slides on Teachers Pay Teachers.



6.      10 Minute Writing—“every” (as often as I didn’t get interrupted) day my kids had a single question to answer and 10 minutes to write their answer in a journal.  Some days it was a question we had already discussed in class, like the one you see in the presentation.  On other days the questions would be “What did you learn?” “What questions do you have?” or a direct content comprehension question like, “Explain the three types of matter.”




7.      Mixed in with all of these my students ALWAYS answer in a complete sentence, even if I ask something as simple as, “Do you need a pencil?”  Requiring complete sentences, and the gestures that go with each part of that sentence, has made my students much more aware of their academic language (and honestly their manners too!) We use gestures for everything we can.  I like to NOT tell guests about the gestures and just see the looks on their faces when they start speaking and my kids start the capital letter and punctuation gestures to mirror the guest’s speech!  I’m excited about adding in new Brainies next year!


I hope that gives you a picture of what my day looks like!  

I believe 100% in WBT.  I started using WBT when I was struggling my first year teaching in an all minority school.  I relied heavily on the management strategies during my second year at a different all minority school, but still ended up being “let-go” (fired).  The official reason is that my certificate was still temporary because I was in the alternative certification process, but my certificate was completed just not mailed out by the state yet.  The truth was, I absolutely could not “handle” the students… of course I received no help even though I asked for it.  But, I landed in the perfect school and now in my sixth year of teaching I’m not just surviving day to day, but actually thriving!  I appreciate all the work you and the other founders and leaders put into this “program,” “system,” MINDSET of teaching!  My kids get very upset when I have a substitute because quote “They just don’t get our way of learning,” and that makes me smile!

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Genius Ladder.... Getting the Classroom Ready!

As I begin the process of setting up my room (our custodians completely empty our rooms every summer, so we have to spend a large portion of time rearranging furniture, but it's TOTALLY worth it because our rooms are SUPER clean!), organizing my materials, and my favorite part - decorating for all the new smiling faces that will enter my room this year, I am getting more and MORE excited about all the WBT aspects of my classroom!  One of my favorite areas this year is the Genius Ladder I've positioned at the front of my room.  I perused some of my favorite blogs and combined ideas from two of my favorite WBT teachers in the blogosphere:  Pinetreelia and Deanna Schuler.  I used Deanna's whiteboard idea, with Pinetreelia's printable Genius Ladder Kit (which you can snag for yourself for FREE on TPT!) to create an AMAZING display in my room!  This completely grabs your attention and focuses the kids on the task at hand.

From Pinetreelia:


From Deanna:


How it looks in my room:




Because I am very techno-oriented in my room, I knew I needed a way to incorporate this display with all of my electronic teaching gadgets.  So, I have made for you several PowerPoint slides, also available in jpeg format, which you can insert into your own PowerPoint, Mimio, Promethean, or Smart presentations.  You can grab your Freebies in my TPT store!





I also included a "graphic organizer" for students to record their genius paragraphs a little later in the year.  We will start out doing the Genius ladder completely orally, then they will have the worksheet printed out on cardstock and housed in a page protector so they can record their ideas with a partner in a wipe-off format, and finally the will be used for formal and informal assessments periodically throughout the year.



Enjoy!