Thursday, August 28, 2014

Hip Hip Hooray!!!!

OH MY GRACIOUS!!! 

My class had a HUGE and I mean GARGANTUAN milestone today.  My student who is ELL and selectively mute TALKED to me today.  But hold on to your chair... he not only talked, he approached me and ASKED A QUESTION about how to spell a word...  TWICE!  Then, he even sounded out the words with me and attempted to spell them.  

OH SWEET MAMA!!!! I could not believe it! 

Every time I've coerced words out of him before, I've had the kids give him a 10 Finger Woo AND he's earned a star on the Super Improver Wall.  17 days later HE TALKS!!!!!  Can you tell how excited I am??!!?!?! If we continue at this pace, he will be singing Opera in front of an audience by Spring Break! HA!!!  

I feel so proud of him.  I feel so blessed that I have WBT as a mindset that is so positive and encouraging.  I love that my classroom feels safe enough that he was willing to talk after only 17 days.  

I really wanted to share!  Please tell me how excited you are for my kids that they are making such amazing progress so early on!  I want to share with them how proud other people are and let them know that other people care about their progress.  

Have a great week!  My week can't get better after this....



Friday, August 15, 2014

Wowza!  TGIF!!! 

Happy Friday! #TGIF #SuperRecruiter #gratitude

I finished the first full week with my kids today.  Whew!  It was rough around the edges this week.  But each day has been better.  We have the Super Improver Team up and running, my kids LOVE Crazy Professor Reading, and we are consistently using capital letter and end mark brainies!  Yay!!!

After a Skype session with the fabulous Ms. Nancy Stoltenberg on Thursday night, I felt even better about our progress.  I was feeling a little deflated early on because I started with such enthusiasm and expected that my good intentions would be enough for me to internalize the skills so that they felt routine.  Welllllll..... as we all know good intentions provide motivation but it's the practice, practice, practice that provides the skill.  None of this feels "routine" yet (of course it is only the first week of school so I guess I should cut a girl some slack right?).  I'm just daily evaluating my consistency and setting goals EVERY afternoon for the next day.  So here are my goals for next week (deja vu):

  • Scoreboard
  • Assign homework
  • Scoreboard
  • Introduce more brainies (have them printed for the class)
  • Scoreboard
  • SuperSpeed 1,000 partner routine
  • and oh yeah, SCOREBOARD!!!
I really really REALLY want to do better at the stinkin' scoreboard!  The days I feel like I make progress and my student behaviors are most under control - TONS of scoreboard points.  However, the days I feel defeated... NO scoreboard points.  Coincidental?  I think not!



Sunday, August 10, 2014

First Day Failure....

So it's Sunday night at 8:39 and I'm watching the minutes tick by until I must force myself to go to bed and tackle another Monday first thing tomorrow morning....  Let's back track a bit, shall we?

We started back to work Monday last week and had three days of PD.  Our kiddos started on Thursday.  I've been on the edge of my seat with anticipation about school starting this year for WEEKS.  I've worked really hard all summer to organize, decorate, plan, learn, and instruct.  With all my new WBT goals I've been super excited to get into the thick of things: meet my new kids, start my lessons, really rev up the year from the very beginning.

Thursday morning... <sigh> did NOT go as planned.

My kiddos came in and had Play-Doh and a letter from me as usual.  They played quietly and whispered with neighbors for a bit and read their letter and even had an opportunity to write a letter to me in return.  I began my first day lessons with strength and passion.  We rocked through Rule 1 and learned the scoreboard before I had to deliver my sweet darlings to their enrichment class at 8:45.  At 9:15 my kids returned and we reviewed Rule 1 and practiced earning Smilies and Frownies on the Scoreboard.  (By the way, I was given all the special friends for third grade this year so my dynamic is a bit different than before.)  I had one sweet little dear who spent the next 2 hours asking when is lunch.  Every. Three. Minutes... Literally.  I could have set a clock by it.  Even though we had started on the rest of the rules and we were practicing rules 2 and 3 (not to mention 5!!!) the little dear just - kept - going.    

We made it through lunch...  Finally! so for the next 3 hours he asked for a blanket so he could take a nap because he was tired.  (You know I teach THIRD grade right?)  Sweet little guy just couldn't help it.  We played games - a version of the Name Game with Brainies.  We read stories and interviewed our new friends.  We heard all about German schools from a new friend who just recently moved to the United States (she is American, but her family has lived in Germany for longer than she has been alive).  It should have been a FUN day.  

This year is my seventh year to teach and the first time I've cried on the first day.  I was also asleep on my couch before 7:30 and we went out to eat that night.

I have two other special friends who require a lot of attention.  One is fine as long as he is hugging me.  However, sit him at a desk for even a second and he becomes Mr. Chatterbox with no one but himself... so my solution for the time being is to let him walk in step with me in a hug as often as necessary to help him adjust.  And I have a third friend who cannot articulate.  Anything.  And has difficulty listening to the whole direction.  Even a very short one like "Put this in the keep at home pocket in your binder."  That one was a hard one.

I really shouldn't complain because the other 17 kids are amazing.  They were ON IT with my WBT activities and seemed to thoroughly enjoy themselves and learn a lot.  Which should have made me smile.  And on Friday when I thought about it, I did smile.  But Thursday... to say I was overwhelmed is an understatement.

Friday was better.  MUCH BETTER!  I'm not sure if maybe I was a sensory overload for them and they weren't ready... or they are just adjusting more slowly... or if I worked so hard that I was already a little tired.  But Friday was so much better!  I made a colored pictorial schedule for my time-oriented friend and made him my class chair-taker-downer (still working on that title) in the mornings, but only if he goes home on green or better on the clip chart.  Those two things seemed to help.  Plus, the positive peer pressure and rule rehearsal seemed to make a big difference as well.  But, I completely forgot about the scoreboard all day!  I felt dumb when I realized it was blank.  Buhhh-lank I tell you.  Craziness.

When I got my afternoon class for the first time, it went amazingly well in comparison. (We are departmentalized, so I teach a different class in the afternoon for more reading and writing.)  Except that I have one child, who is Hispanic, that refuses to speak out loud.  Not because he doesn't know it in English though.  He will whisper to another kid, or even whisper to me... but doesn't want to do the activity aloud or even with a partner.  I am struggling here.  I've had kids who were reluctant to speak, but I've always managed to win them over quickly.  I'm a little stumped with this kid.  Several kids would respond "He doesn't talk much." to which I responded that it was an unacceptable answer.  I even gave him plenty of warnings that I was coming to him, would call on someone else and come back to him, sandwiched him in between other kids kinda near the end of the group during the name game.... everything I could think of.  I need a prayer because my personal goal is to have him talking out loud to the class by Christmas.

So now it's 9:14 and I'm 35 minutes closer to Monday morning.  I have everything planned and ready: Shark Week!  I'm using texts about sharks to teach my classroom routines and procedures.  My goals this week include:
  • Utilize the scoreboard MUCH more often (like stop forgetting about it)
  • Begin Universal Homework
  • Introduce more Brainies - because, and, in addition.
  • Practice, practice, practice the rules
  • Super.  Improvers.


How is the beginning of your year going?  What are your goals?  Leave a comment and let me know!



Thursday, July 31, 2014

Classroom Sneak Peek

It's finally here!!!!..... It's already here.... I'm having mixed emotions about going back to school on Monday.  Kids don't start until a week from today, but that's really not swaying me toward joy or fear.  I am truly excited and ready to begin the year from the teacher perspective.  It's the mommy side of me that dreads leaving my little one at home for the next 10 months.  I will miss her terribly, but such is the nature of working.

As promised, a sneak peek of my classroom with my WBT features...


1. Rules: I hung our 5 classroom rules in a prominent area of the classroom.  Our PBIS expectations (SWAMP) also hang on this wall as "guidelines" for Rule 4.  This shelf houses our supply station: pencil sharpeners, testing folders, lunch baggies to turn in money, clipboards, construction paper will go in the black stacking trays, etc.



2. One of our whole class meeting areas.  Here we will have our guided reading mini-lessons, guided writing mini-lessons, CAFE strategy lessons, spelling lessons, and more.  This area has no "technology" per se and lessons are based more on anchor charts created at the easel.  Student literacy centers are housed in the drawers and baskets and mentor texts will be placed in the blue rack for student use.  Library books are on the black shelves that border the meeting area.  The shelves face outward this year to allow for more students to browse for books together.






3.  The front of my room: Super Improver Wall, Objectives, Interactive Whiteboard, and Scoreboard are all featured here.  The green, blue, and yellow pocket charts are used to hold small group materials the students need during work time.  The blue baskets will hold writing journals.  There is one basket for each class.  You can also see the Wacky Star Fun Button.  My kids LOOOOVE this feature!  And I LOOOOVE building the suspense before I explain it!



4. Teacher Work Area:  This is both another whole-class meeting area and my "home base" or desk if you will.  The cabinet with the red curtains rolls so I can move it around the room (some) and it holds my teaching computer - the one I use with the projector and the Mimio.  If you look closely you can see my teacher toolbox, plus a file box I use to organize the weekly/monthly/unit papers as I prepare them.


5. Kid computer area



6. Small Group Teacher Instruction - Here I keep future unit papers as I find them, a few more supplies, professional development books, and small group materials for Intervention.  This is where I will meet with my groups for any type of intervention.

This year my Power Pix will be digital - adding them to a Smart Notebook filebook.  I may even print out a sheet of them for student binders.  I haven't figured that out yet.  I'm also thinking that my Genius Ladder will be digital, but I may create an anchor chart that I can use on a regular basis.  Finally, I need to print the Brainy Cards and decide where to put them in my room.

What have you included in your room this year to gear up for a fabulous WBT year full of Funtricity?  Leave a post in the comments and let me know what you've included in your room this year!




Monday, June 16, 2014

National Conference 2014 - Day 1

OH SWEET MAMA!!!!!

Day 1 of National Conference 2014 @ Louisiana College in Pineville, LA
One day down... two to go!  Whew!!!!

My brain is on OVERLOAD but my limbic system is overflowing with excitement.  Where do I begin?

1. Mirror updates that I have apparently missed over the last couple of years, but I LOVE so I'm excited I learned them today:

* Mirrors Off - - use when you are done modeling with Mirror Words.  Yay!! An end to those pesky "stragglers" who turn "mirror" into "Monkey See Monkey Do."

* Silent Mirror Mmh - - Instead of just "mirror," it specifies that this mirror is silent.

* Magic Mirror Ooooh - - Listen to my words and make your own gestures.


2. When using Teach-Okay, have the kids say "Ok" as they clap and turn all at the same time.  Don't waste a second!  Or as Coach B says, "Keep that train rollin'!"

3.  There is absolutely NO asking "Who knows number 1?" and calling on one kid and only having one kid talk, or walk to the board.  When you call a kid, point to that kid and say their name.  They stand and say "Class" AS THEY STAND.  The class responds "Yes" and the student you called on answers the question.  When a mistake is made, no sugar coating... no lovey-dovey "that's interesting" when it's not.  You say "Mistake."  Everyone else responds, "You're still cool!" and you immediately correct the mistake.  Repeat and continue.

4. Coach discussed macro skills and micro skills.  In order to master a macro skill, the students must master all the micro skills.  For example, when you want to master swimming, first you must master breathing under water, moving your arms, moving your legs, etc.  The same is true for writing, math, and even lining up in the classroom.  Master the micro skills, to master the macro skills.

5. Class-Boom is a version of Class-Yes that reminds the students to end "Yes" in learning position.

In addition to these wonderful, amazing, life-changing points, Coach B also spent his breakout session for advanced WBTers discussing the new brainies.  A new post will follow later to explain the WBT 2.0 addition of brainies and how to use them in the classroom.

My brain is on overdrive with ideas and a To-Do list a mile long of what all I want to include in my room next year.  I'm not anywhere close to perfect at WBT, but being here with all these people who are so excited and getting to learn from Coach B himself, and all the other presenters has revved me up for another year!  Stay tuned, folks, and keep checking back often!



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!

Friday, January 24, 2014

Universal Homework Model (UHM)

I'm starting over on my video series from WBT.  I'm starting at the beginning.  Having a student teacher my first quarter and being on maternity leave my second quarter this year, made it very difficult to really get my kids in a good groove.  Soooo.... that means I'm kinda starting from scratch.  First up is the Universal Homework Model (UHM).  I started out with this model this year, but with pressure from some parents (who didn't quite get that the list was voluntary) and from my partner teacher who lives and dies by homework, I crumbled and started doing what everyone else does.  I was so disappointed in myself for not standing my ground.  BUT I was standing my ground on several very serious topics so I just let this one slide.  With that confession aside, I'm picking myself up, dusting myself off, and going at it again!

The Universal Homework Model (UHM for short) is a homework routine that allows the children choice over how much homework is completed each night.  The model incorporates genuinely entertaining assignments, with an added bonus of positive peer pressure, to build students' reading, writing, and math skills.  Students are not required to do any homework.  However, the amount of homework completed by the class determines how many minutes of Mind Soccer the class gets to play on Friday.  The class earns 1 point for each star of homework completed.

For example in my class of 20 students:
10 do 1 star homework (10 points)
4 do 2 star homework (8 points)
and 3 do 3 star homework (9 points).

My students earned a total of 27 points that night.  For mathematics sake, let's pretend they earn that many points for each night of homework in a week (4).  That means that the class earns 108 points.  Hold that thought!

For 20 students the highest number of points possible for the week is 240.  80% of 240 is about 192 so to get three minutes of Mind Soccer the class earns 192-240 points.  60% of the points possible is about 144 points.  So for 2 minutes of Mind Soccer the class earns 144-191 points.  Finally, 40% of 240 is 96 so for 1 minute of Mind Soccer the class earns 1-95 points.

Since my class earned 108 points, they get to play 2 minutes of Mind Soccer on Friday.  Do you understand what just happened?  You have students volunteering to do homework, asking begging you for additional assignments all to earn up to 3 minutes playing an academic review game.  They are volunteering for work to earn more work!  HEELLLLLLLOOO Teacher Heaven!  You are a beautiful place!

Now, here is where all that peer pressure comes in!  When kids bring in 1 star work, they hold it in the air.  When kids bring in 2 star work, they stand up and wave their work in the air.  When kids bring 3 star work, they stand up, wave their work in the air and everyone cheers! On Wednesday you are going to total up the points and looking very concerned, VERY concerned... ask who is willing to do EXTRA work to help the class earn those Mind Soccer points.  Write the volunteers' names on the board.  Have everyone cheer for them and make a BIG deal about it.  Have kids turn to their partners and BEG them to do 3 stars of homework.  Have the kids BEG you for MORE work to help them out!  Anything you can do to get them to do more work at home!

But isn't this supposed to SAVE me time? you ask....

Why yes!  You don't take these things up every day and grade and return them. NO! You may walk around and check that it has been completed.  Or, depending on the age of your students, you might choose homework captains (my preferred checking method) who check that homework has been completed.  If any times on the Super Speed assignment seem hinky, have a homework captain time the student reading the page to check the times.  Easy peasy!  On Fridays, the students staple all assignments together and return them to you.  <sigh> So simple!

Below is a video from Coach B. explaining UHM in even more detail.  Be sure to take a look so you get the full picture.