Sunday, January 24, 2016

Build Relationships with Your Students


This year has been an eye opener for me. I have come to realize that it is quite easy to lose sight of why we chose to enter this profession; to lose sight of seeing our students as the individuals they are and not just another grade in the grade book; to lose sight that parents are oftentimes feeling so helpless and at a loss with their own children and are petrified of being labeled bad parents.

This year has been a turning point for me as a teacher. In the last five years, I've been that teacher that throws a fit over gum in the classroom, gets aggravated of late and missing assignments, and can't abide students attempting to have the last word. I somehow subconsciously came to the decision that I didn't want to be THAT teacher that would make a kid just say to themselves, "I'm done!" and begin their countdown to drop out and "get a real job" (dropout can legally happen at 16 in GA). I realized this year that more kids that I care to count walk into my room hungry, tired, without proper clothes for the weather, and stressed out from parents unrealistic expectations . I don't want to be that one more adult in their lives that criticizes, belittles, or just ignores what they are going through.

So, what changed for me this year?

Late work: Student doesn't have assignment? No problem. They have 3 days to get it in before they get a new one.

Missing Assignment: Student doesn't turn in an assignment, and it's more than 3 days late? Student gets an alternate assignment.

Failing test grade? No problem. Get the test signed by a parent. Complete your test corrections and extra practice you get from me, and you can retake any test I give during that nine weeks.

Want to raise your grade, but you've already retaken every test? No problem! Join my book club. Choose one of the two books to read and complete the discussion questions and one project from the project options list. Turn in to me for a check and discussion. If you've completed all required elements, you've just earned yourself an extra 100 test/project grade.


This is the first year I've combined all of these elements together. Not only do I have fewer kids failing for the nine weeks, To put it in perspective, I normally have about 10-12 students fail any nine weeks. I'm now down to 2. I have fewer kids taking zeroes when they know they can complete an alternate assignment for full credit. In addition, each nine weeks, I have fewer and fewer kids asking for alternate assignment since they don't want more work to do. The alternate assignment assesses the same material, but now the student must start over with a new article or topic from the original assignment.

Another big change for me this year is always having a well-stocked food drawer of snacks for students to have if needed. I know I'm not in a good mood when hungry much less have the focus to complete work. Why should my kids be any different. There are teachers that look down on that idea and make comments about not spending "their" money when the parents should be doing that job. At the end of the day, it's not going to break the bank to give my kids some crackers, and now I've built a relationship with that student that they can depend on me.

So what was the key to this year?? BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS WITH MY STUDENTS!
Why did it take me so long to figure this out? Why did I play the power struggle game for the last years??

At the end of the day, I try and always remember to ask myself, how would I react as an adult if someone spoke to me that way?

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Stitch Fix for Teachers!

I have been fully won over by Stitch Fix this summer. My teacher wardrobe was in desperate need of updating, but like many, I hate to shop and don't really have a knack for putting outfits together. Stitch Fix literally takes care of all three of those problems. They have sent me some of the cutest work outfits that are not only comfortable but stylish and easy to take care of. Because I have to try on all the pieces, items that I would never have bought off a rack much less tried on, I now get to see in a new light.

I feel that the prices are quite reasonable. I chose the "As cheap as I can get it" pricing option which equates to price points from $30 to $80ish depending on the piece. If you purchase all five items in the box, you get an additional 25% off your entire purchase. I kept everything in Fix #3 which came to just under $170.

Below are some of the pieces I have kept in the three fixes I have received so far.

Fix #1: I received these adorable dresses in my first box. I was absolutely amazed at how well they fit. I'm ballpark a size 14 (which is at the top of their available sizes), and I'm short (5'2), lol. Their petite pieces are spot on in length.


Fix #2: Maxi skirt and ruffle sleeve top. I'm not a long skirt person at all, but I fell in love with this geo print maxi!! The white ruffle sleeve top in the second picture below fit just right on me without being too long.


Fix #3: The gray and white striped top is a prime example of something I would never have tried on much less purchased, but it is so amazingly comfortable and goes with pretty much all my work pants. This dress was also a delightful surprise. It actually has an open back which would be so cute for date nights with the hubs, yet I can throw on a cardigan, and it's perfect for school. The pink top below is flowy and a little more boxy than I would have thought I would have liked. However, thanks to Stitch Fix's suggestions, I tried it on with a black skirt I already owned, and it looked great! The black cropped pants in the last pic also were a great fit with that top and a cute denim jacket.


Fix #4: Will be here in three days!! EEEK! I'll keep you posted!

The Whirlwind of Week 2!

Here in Georgia, we are back in full swing with our new school year. We just finished up our second full week (kids came back on 8/5!!), and it has been a whirlwind to say the least, lol. The first eight days are always filled with the usual collection of paperwork, textbooks, and lockers in addition to prepping for Parent Orientation. 

Now that I'm headed into our third full week, things are starting to fall into the normal routines giving me time to blog, finally!

First up: My new room! I literally moved from the first room on the hall to the last. My hallway is the green hall, so we all joke about walking the "green mile." This is literally what I started with this summer.


Next up: My door. I really wanted to create a warm and welcoming environment for my kids. Since I'm in a new room, I was able to really brainstorm with my "blank canvas." My door was my first project :) I have an entire Pinterest board of quotes and sayings that I really hope make my students stop and think about their own choices and actions and how those choices and actions might be felt by others around them. 


Third: My updated bulletin boards! I found an awesome TEXT FEATURE CHART chart that my media specialist made into a laminated poster for me. 

Text Structure and Text Features
On the other side of that same long bulletin board are my non-fiction and fiction signpost charts along with some amazing close reading keys made by Jen White at Teaching Teens in the 21st Century. Check out her TpT store. She has some fantastic ELA materials!!
Non-Fiction and Fiction Signposts along with Close Read Keys
Fourth: The basis for my lesson plans this year.... I am so so excited to incorporate Kelly Gallagher's writing strategies in addition to Jeff Anderson and Gretchen Bernabei's grammar lessons into my every day instruction. In the four lessons I've already done in the last week of school, I've noticed that my students don't moan at the idea of grammar or writing instruction!!!
I had all of these spiral bound at Office Max. About $4 each.
 Fifth: At the end of last school year, our 8th grade ELA department requested iPad minis in an effort to more meaningfully incorporate technology into our classrooms. Our county also put on a wonderful conference in which a fellow ELA teacher and I learned about mirroring our iPads via Apple TV. Seriously people, a whole new world just opened for us!!!! While I had an ELMO, I just passed it on to another teacher because the ability to mirror my iPad using the Apple TV has totally replaced my Elmo. I can edit essays with students using OneNote in addition to taking pics of their warm-ups to put on the board to discuss. IT'S AMAZING!!!!
Just got my iPad and Apple TV hooked up :)
I am truly so excited about this school year to try out new tech and inspire kids to reach higher than they thought possible! I'll keep you posted :)





Sunday, July 19, 2015

Awesome Grammar Site!




This year I'm trying out Grammar Keepers with my ELA interactive notebook. I've decided to have two separate spirals, one for reading and one for grammar/writing. In the grammar/writing spiral, I will be following (for the most part) Bernabei's list of grammar concepts. While these are not in our standards, they provide great writing practice for my students. On the left side of each page, we'll have a warm-up Grammar Keepers lesson, and on the right, students will have writing practice to incorporate the grammar concept. I'm excited to try this out this school year, and see how students do. My big focus this year is to have students really examine their writing.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Adorable Backgrounds for Classroom Posters


I've always loved the creativity of posters I've seen on TpT with the adorable chevron backgrounds, yet I could never figure out how to make them myself. Thank you Google! Below is a link to a fantastic blog that takes you step by step to create everything from labels to full pages for posters. Extremely user-friendly!

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Who knew rubric making could be so easy???



So as I'm perusing Edmodo and looking for better ways to keep in touch with students, I came across ThemeSpark on the Edmodo app page. Since I'm about to give a presentation on easy rubrics geared toward non-ELA folks, this app definitely sparked my interest. As I watched their brief overview video, I definitely became intrigued. What would be me sitting at the computer typing out my rubric in Microsoft Word, ThemeSpark has all the Common Core Standards for you to check off based on which standard OR substandard you are assessing, and it also fills in your grade boxes for 1, 2, 3, etc. Every box is editable for full flexibility. I will definitely be adding this to my teacher toolkit next year!