Mr. Mac

Mr. Mac
A Classroom is a Community

Thursday, December 27, 2012

This Blog Isn't Always About My Longwindedness!

     Over the years I have purchased MANY items for my classroom, from electric pencil sharpeners to colorful stickers.  Actually I only purchased colorful stickers my first year...I found that I was NOT a cutsie-put-a-sticker-on-graded-papers kind of educator.  Anyway...I have discovered that there is a great deal of crap out there, and also some pretty cool stuff.  Thought I would share.  I also thought I would share a WAY-cool list of classroom essentials, and just some general stuff/information for your classroom from teachervision.fen.com...especially for you wonderful novices out there!  One note to new educators...you will do as I did...you will try everything, and weed out the crap. 


  BEST ELECTRIC PENCIL SHARPENER! 
     I went through 7 electric pencil sharpeners until I found the Boston Pro at Staples.  It was $44.00 then, but worth every penny!  I bought it in 2003 and it is still going strong!  It won't heat up and stop after 3 or 4 pencils...it is awesome! You can also purchase it online from Amazon.com!

Product Features

  • X-ACTO School Pro Electric Pencil Sharpener
  • Sold as 1 Each
  • Power Type: Electric, Color(s): Blue, Gray, Sharpener Type: Desktop
  • Height ominal : 6 3/8 inches and Depth ominal : 7 inches and Width : 4 1/2 in
Boston elec school pro sharpnr
The following is a list of 10 things every classroom should have from the website teachervision.fen.com
http://www.teachervision.fen.com/back-to-school/classroom-management/56968.html?page=1

  1.  Basic Supplies
Pencils (colored & standard), pens, crayons, markers, notebook paper, tape, index cards, poster board, notebooks, folders, erasers, construction paper, and scissors. You'll probably come up with your own, personal list as well!

 




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2.  Filing Cabinets/Boxes

Use plastic tubs or cardboard filing boxes to store holiday projects, art projects, special books, and supplies. Be sure to label these boxes with the name of each project or unit. Or, keep different boxes for different students as an easy organizational tool.




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3.  Classroom Rules

It's vital to establish rules on the very first day of school. Invite students to contribute a set of expectations about behavior. Try to keep your list to about five general specifications so students can remember the entire list.
 


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4.  Substitute Teacher Packets

Create a substitute teacher folder or binder early in the year. Use it to file class lists, fire drill rules, seating charts, class schedules, and a general plan for the day for substitutes to follow. You might also include the names and numbers of helpful teachers and teacher's aides, plus office procedures and classroom policies.




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5.  Museum of Student Work

Show your students how impressed you are with their work by dedicating a section of the wall or bulletin board to their completed assignments, drawings, and other projects. Make sure that each student's work is displayed often and proudly!  Your Doodlers and artists will love a separate space for their work!




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6.  Personal Library

Books, newspapers, magazines...these are all vital for the classroom. They may encourage your students to spend their free time reading instead of staring into space. Just remember to write your name in everything you want to hang on to!  It will take a while to build up a big library, new teachers.  Visit thrift shops, and yard sales for age appropriate books.  Turn nothing down if offered or TAKE any give-a-ways that are in the teacher's lounge!  Local libraries sometimes sell books cheap annually.




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7.  Collection of Awards & Certificates

Congratulate your students for outstanding work, achieving perfect attendance, being a good listener, and much more, with awards and certificates.  Many can be bought at Staples, or a teacher supply store (Expensive)...be creative and make your own.  Plus there are a CAJILLION websites that are build-your-own type, or offer free certificates!




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8.  Introductory Packets for New Students

Make your life easier by creating a packet of materials that includes everything new students might need to assimilate into your classroom. Prepare lists of rules, procedures, current assignments, and other items you think a student entering mid-year might need.  Great for the beginning of the year and those times when you get a new student...this could happen at anytime.  I got 3 new students in a 4 week period.  Sometimes you will know in advance when a new kiddo is coming in...other times you will get a call before first bell informing you of your newest addition.  Either way...with this idea employed you will be ready!




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9.  Grade Book

It's important to keep all of your students' grades in one place so that you can easily see when students are doing well, improving, or letting their assignments slip. Try an online grade book for the quickest and easiest way to keep track of grades, while also allowing your students access to their records.  I still have an "Old School" mentality and keep an actual grade book even though we are in the electronic age.  I think I may be the only teacher in my district that actually records grade in an actual paper and pen grade book.  I input the grade into the computer a couple of weeks prior to Progress Reports and Report Cards.  My grade book is like my wallet...all of my most important information is in there (Student data, locker assignments, extra-credit, notes from parents, STAR and DCAS scores, etc.) also...I do not keep money in my grade book ergo there is NO MONEY IN MY WALLET!



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10.  And finally...

Perspective, a grain of salt, a sense of humor, an open mind, patience, a positive outlook, plans B & C & D, commitment, flexibility, compassion, hope, and creativity, a bullet to bite, a stress ball, confidence, honor, dedication, glasses for the eyes in the back of your head, a sixth sense, and most of all...an unfailing belief in your kids!



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How to Create a 'Safe" Classroom!

     We, as a nation, are still in mourning for the victims and their families in Newtown, Connecticut.  While our hearts are broken, our minds are preoccupied with the safety of our children in the classroom.  This conscious, frightening mind-play stems from the very core of every parent, magnified by the heinous acts of a gun wielding madman who targeted the most vulnerable; the most innocent of us all.
     As an educator, this tragic event sharpened my diligence to a fine point regarding safety in my own classroom.  As a parent, my heart is irrevocably broken for the victims and their families.  As a human being I am both shattered emotionally, and uplifted by the tremendous outpouring of love from multitudes all around the world.  The big question everyone wants...needs...an answer too?
"How do we stop this from ever happening again?"
     The question makes sense, doesn't it?  For every problem their is a solution, right?  In our classrooms we want well, thought-out questions from our kids.  Our own questions to our kids are designed to elicit knowledge that would propagate higher order thinking.  In a story, it opens on a problem, and ends with a solution.  Math is built on this...problems and solutions.  This question...the one centered above...is better answered in a seemingly closed environment like a classroom where solutions are more easily reached.  However, on a national scale, a solution is rarely ever easily reached.  I do not believe there will ever be an absolute, concrete...cut-and-dry solutiolon to this much asked question.  This conclusion I have reached is not pessimistic in my point of view.  The way I see it...it is realistic.
     Cocaine is illegal, yet it can be found in the veins and up the noses of millions across the United States.  Robbery, fraud, rape...all practiced every minute of everyday.  Laws do well with those of us who have impulse control, or a code of ethics.  For the rest, laws are simply challenges for the unethical to overcome!   Jail time does nothing to deter any of the propagators of crime...prisons are prolific in all areas of it!  So, realistically...can we EVER totally stop this kind of thing from happening again?
     Dearest friends...I do not believe there is an answer to this specific question.  I do not believe that we can ever absolutely stop this kind of thing from happening again.  If there is some kind of an answer to this question, it won't happen quickly, or externally.  Building fortresses around schools, or supplying teachers and administrators with guns (HOW STUPID IS THAT???) will not help.  Modifying gun laws, no automatic weapons for civilians, more of a police presence in and around schools, more personnel or established personnel trained in effectively monitoring school buildings and grounds certainly couldn't hurt!  The answer...a semblance of an answer anyway...must come internally.  
     I believe that we (Humans) are amazing when it comes to helping and supporting our fellow humans regarding any physical ailment, from cancer to the flu.  There are commercials, billboards, magazine ads all calling us to arms to donate, and/or support (This is awesome...I wholeheartedly believe in and support all of it!).  We are also amazing when it comes to our animals...we will send money to shelters, or we will adopt a Guinea pig in order to give it food and a good home.  When is the last time you ever saw a commercial for the support of Schizophrenia?   How about mood disorders, or social disorders? 
     There are more people in our own hometown who suffer emotionally, or mentally than suffer physically.  A small percentage have gone after help...a larger percentage won't because they are afraid of the stigma attached, and are yet...undiagnosed.  I believe that more education on mental health issues is needed for all of us.  Cancer is tragic, and can take a life in the blink of an eye.  Suicide can also take a life in the blink of an eye.  AIDS or cancer never picked up a gun and killed children...a person with a mental or emotional disorder did.  Our nation must start with its people if there is to be any kind of a solution.  Not gun control or any of that ilk! (Automatic weapons have no business being in the hands of any civilian human being.  Laws ending this are certainly needed, as well as better regulating who gets a gun permit!).  More research, more education, more support for and towards the mental well-being of our people.  This is a start. 
     In the "Old days" people who got cancer were shunned...exiled by friends and family.  It was something only spoken about in whispers.  AIDS was the same way...worse in many respects.  Because of education to the masses through various media there is now overwhelming support, and research helping to end these diseases and this has quelled the fear (s) and removed the stigma (s) that was attached.  It is time to move mental illness in the same direction. 
     The above is a long term plan, and only one of many ideas that will move us towards hopefully less atrocities in the future.  So, what can be done now!  How can we protect our students, and make them (And their parents) feel safe? 
     I believe that we are already doing everything that can be done.  This latest tragedy happened because the gunman blew a whole with an automatic weapon through a window to gain access into a secured school.  We have all read about so many schools...especially Sandy Hook Elementary...that take the protection of their students VERY seriously.  Locked doors, intruder alert drills, fire drills, security cameras, etc.  Lanza was mentally unstable 20 year old, and seemingly fell through the cracks as he progressed through adolescence.  I am sure that many close to Lanza have speculated upon the notion that MORE should have done for this guy when he was younger and was ongoing.  Had more been done, perhaps this horrible event would never have happened?  Could be that there were things done to help Lanza early on, but the silent system, being what it is, simply was not enough!  When the shooting first took place the word Asperger's was thrown out across the media.  Hardly anything is known about Asperger's regarding the general public as a whole, and for this reason a stigma was attached...linking this mild form of Autism to the reason the shooting took place.  So terrible for the millions who have Asperger's who are seen even more negatively now.  Asperger's, or having Asperger's has nothing to do with killing people!  I digress...Sandy Hook did everything possible to secure their kids.  Had it been a school lacking in the security department...many more tragedies would have come about on that day.
     Regarding my classroom...my school...Doors are always locked, any person entering the building must first come through the main office.  Whenever a student leaves the classroom they do so with a buddy.  Security cameras are in place, and students are escorted everywhere by their teacher.  We have regular Fire, and Intruder Alert Drills.  The same as Sandy Hook, and countless other schools across the nation.  Just a note...none of this will prevent an automatic weapon carried by a mentally impaired individual from blowing a hole into our school.  More research, more education, and more help for those who suffer any form of mental illness (From identification of the disease throughout life!) will help to prevent future tragedies.
     Educators...the best, most sure-fire-way of keeping your kids safe inside your classroom starts from the first day of school.  You must establish trust with your kids...YOU must gain a trustworthy rep!  Your parents must also trust you (HINT:  If your kids dig you, so will their parents.  If the kids trust you, so will their parents).  Be open, and be honest always.  Show the kids...everyday...that you "Got their backs!"  if they make a mistake, model to them how to fix it!  Most kids LIE as their first reaction...let them see that telling you the truth is the ONLY ROAD IN TOWN, and that once they do tell the truth...they are still alive...their heart still beats, THEN congratulate them right before you hand down the consequence!  Reward for honesty when it comes, while allowing the kid to pay the price for their mistake.  When my kids make a mistake I am on them like flies on crap, but if they are honest...I will still respect them...they will remain trustworthy, while they serve recess standing against the wall.  Tell your kids you love them, show them that you do!  DO more than SAY!  Remember everything from each kid...everything a kid says is important to him/her...it must be to you too!  Have high expectations for your kids, and always live up to their expectations!  Unless it is a breach in your school code of conduct (Fighting, a weapon, etc)...handle all situations inside your classroom.  You and the kid, or you, the kid and the class.  My kids know if there is a problem...we have a community meeting.  No one points out the guilty...the guilty reveal themselves!  We discuss...we fix, apologize, modify...whatever to remedy the situation.  If it calls for a consequence...my kids can choose some of the time (Every situation is different...sometimes I choose)...missing recess, ISS, more homework, no Gym, etc.
     If your kids trust YOU...they are already safer.  If they respect YOU...they are already safer.  If your kids listen to YOU...they are already safer.  Keep them close.  Keep them monitored.  Allow them to be kids.  Allow them to make mistakes...you can't become trustworthy until you screw-up and learn how to fix it!  YOU establish an air of confidence...your emotions and thought streams are contagious.  Your entire being is somewhat transferable.  Allow your kids into your heart...you will never regret it!  When they arrive in late August...it is all you!  Classroom Management is all about YOU, and it remains so until June.  When they leave on the last day of school, hope that each has acquired knowledge of something they never knew before.  My fondest hope is that my kids will leave me a bit wiser, and more compassionate and aware of the world around them.  Be ever diligent, and ever watchful.
     One last note...I am for gun control, but not the elimination of guns.  The use of common sense would help to change or modify gun law to a great extent.  There are no AK47's plotting an assassination, or a hand gun filled with malice ready to pop a cap into the head of its owner!  Remember Jim Jone's...the whacked-out cult leader?  He made big batches of Kool-aide laced with cyanide and convinced whole families to drink it.  Men, woman and children...dead!  No outrage at Kool-aide...just at the whack-job who brought the punch bowl!
    
    
    

Monday, November 26, 2012

Stubborn "Old School" Teachers...Please Consider These Resolutions for the New Year!

     This post will read as something familiar, but only to the few who actually read my rantings.  My fondest hope has been to hook novice teachers into reading my blog...my intention being to aid future educators in their classroom life.  I feel the need to repeat myself this time, because the end of the world doth approach!  In case you haven't heard the Mayan calendar comes to an end just a few days before Christmas this year.  I want to make sure that I have stated...emphatically stated...what I deem as important classroom management "Must do's" as well as some well-meaning advice for you (Who ever you are reading this) so that you never give up educating, or so that you stop pulling your hair out because there is SO MUCH TO DO, and SO LITTLE TIME to do it during your school day.  If this most recent Doomsday Prophecy is like the 500 others over the last 100 years that have proven to be as true as Squat, bubkus, or pay increases for educators then...carry on.  Simply carry on being an awesome educator.
     Below you will find a bulleted list of To Do's, Not to Do's, Advice, and anything else I feel that is important for an educator to know.  Before I go on, I do have to say that I know (We all know) that there are many teachers out there that have been teaching far longer than I...longer than you...longer than GOD!  Most are awesome...some simply NEED to retire.  Whether you are an Old Gray Mare, or a Grizzled Old Bull...please consider retiring!?  I say this to the stubborn ones...the ones we all had while in school (And they are still teaching!), the ones who stated it and expected us to get it.  The ones who wrote it on the chalk board and expected us to comprehend it!  The ones who never understood when WE didn't understand.  This list is for them too!  I am somewhat intelligent and realize that these Old Mares and Bulls would never deem any of my New Age insights, and/or advice as credible.  My hippie logic is far beneath their notice.  No worries here...the Mayans have it in for them too!  I know this sounds harsh.  I do not mind being thought of as harsh.  So...here goes!  A brief list of what I do, and though I may not be the best educator that ever lived...I have a blast in my classroom with my kids!

*  Go in like a lion, and remain so!  Don't be afraid to roar if you have too...this can quickly bring the attention back to the matter.
*  Don't put every grade in your grade book!  Allow the kids to practice without fear of failure!  Your kids will master any subject, any topic if they are allowed to fail in the beginning!
*  Consider your class as a collective, but also as 30 individuals that must be engaged, educated, entertained, and evaluated.
*  Be confident and stand your ground.  Accept no disrespect!  If you must roar...roar at what your kid did more than at the kid himself.
*  Be honest.  A kid can spot a phony from a mile away.
*  Demand honesty in your classroom...easier said than done I know.  Most kids have learned to be quite capable liars.  You must show them that no matter what happened YOU will stand with them IF they are honest.
*  Personal notes.  Write your kids notes now and again, and leave them on their desks in the morning.  Something congratulatory, or a simple 'I am so proud of you" goes a long way.
*  Give students responsibilities in the classroom, and make sure that only the most trustworthy of your kids get this perk.  You will find that the have-nots will want to have!
*  Validate your kids!  Most find Math boring, or Social Studies.  Be honest...let them know YOU know this.  This honesty also goes a long way with kids (Of any age!)
*  Slip in some fun...everyday!  I have heard so many educators whine that there isn't enough time in the day for fun!  BULL-PUCKEY!  Tell a joke!  Have the kids get up and stretch.  Play the Macarena and have the kids do the dance...it takes all of 3.15 seconds!
*  If you establish a boring, humdrum classroom where it is work, work, work from 9am to 3pm you are only giving your kids what YOU hated most about your own school experience.  Infuse some fun...some comedy.  Give your kids a reason to make it through the dull times.
*  Your kids must earn trust, but YOU must also earn theirs.  Stay true to your word...no matter what!
*  Let your kids into your life, if you do not...they will never let you into theirs!
*  Praise, reward, congratulate whenever it is warranted.  Seize every opportunity to raise your kids up!  You will find that most have never been higher than the ground they walk on.  Make it your job to lift them higher than they have ever been!
*  Establish Math Helpers, or Grammar Helpers, etc.  Kids helping kids is awesome!  Most of the time a student will achieve concept attainment quicker with a peer at the helm!
*  Most of all...love your kids!  There is a place in all children that needs to be disciplined.  Even your most hardened kids will eventually respond to consistent, structured discipline.  I DO NOT mean for hurtful, or belittling behavior on your part towards your students.  I mean...do NOT stand for any form of disrespect to you or to others.  Roar if you must, but always end with talking...that part...that secret part in every child will realize that you care, as long as you discipline from the heart and not your anger button!
*  DO NOT use the principal or counselor for problems that YOU yourself should handle.  Let your kids know that it is you and them against the world, and together you can do anything.  YOU handle the problem, you handle the discipline.  Parents also should not be called for every single whip-stitch!  Unless it is a serious school infraction...YOU and the kid handle it together!  This establishes dialogue, and stimulates trust.
*  Infuse your day with lessons about life as well as academics.  Take a few minutes to teach, or to UNteach behaviors.  Talk to the kids not at them.  Be with them always.
*  A happy kid...a kid that feels safe is a kid that will move mountains!  Even on the days when you have to ROAR, and roar some more...stay the course.  Let your kids know that you do not love them any less, and teach them how to fix any problem, or burst through any obstacle that they may encounter!
*  If you have a sixth sense...develop it.  My kids know that I have eyes in the back of my head, and that I can smell a lie from across the room.  If you have this sixth sense, awesome.  If you don't...fake it!
*  Make sure that your kids know that they...each one of them...are the most special kids around!  My kids are to me.  How could they not be...they are MY kids!  I am entrusted with them...you are entrusted with yours.  Make them special in your life!

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Hang In There, Newbies!

     It is a fact that our education system here in the US has been attacked by nearly every media source in this country.  It is a fact that many of our citizens believe that teaching is a cushy job where the workday is over at 3:30, and that summer vacation for the "Haves" isn't fair to the "Have not's."  It is a fact that many people in this country feel that teachers are already overpaid, and that any talk related to higher income for teachers is a conversation meant only for the idle minded.  It is a fact that political entities have slashed budgets at the expense of Art programs, Theater programs, and any other programs related to the Arts!  It is a fact that teachers have been placed under a microscope, and scrutinized to the point of mass paranoia.  It is a fact (According to the National Education Association) that one-half of all college graduates who majored in some form of education with the dream of becoming a teacher, leave the profession after two years.  It is a fact that teachers are now expected to cater to the whims of parents, and subjected to the caustic rants of mom's and dad's who believe that their child's teacher must be a liar, or a tyrant for taking recess away.  It is a fact that we have lost good teachers, and that optimism for the staying power of future educators is very low. 
     It is to this last point...the staying power of new or future teachers...that I wish to take issue.  Everything else in the above paragraph?  If my intention here was to write a 1442 page War and Peace type novel, I could then scratch the surface of the above factoids.  I haven't the time, nor the inclination to do this.  This post is for our NEW EDUCATORS, and those who are aspiring to teach.  First...you will become well versed in acronymous speech.  NCLB, RTTT, DCAS, DSTP, PTO, PLC, RTI.  You will come to know what each is, what each stands for, and to what importance your district and government has placed upon each of them.  Allow this knowledge to be cerebral...learn it consciously!  The only acronym I want you to absorb, to assimilate into your very being, to make as much a part of you as your capacity to love, honor and cherish is this...FELPSFight the good fight, Endure, Love your students, Persevere, and Stay the course! 
     To fight the good fight!  You have to know going in that educating young minds is not an easy task.  As an educator you must (On a daily, moment to moment basis) engage, educate, entertain, encourage, and evaluate your kids.  You have to do with 30 kids what most parents try desperately to do with two!  You must regard your homeroom as you would regard your own home...it is yours!  In time it will become a second home to your kids, but it IN NO WAY belongs to the parents of your students.  The rules, expectations, and overall atmosphere of your classroom comes from you, and you alone.  Chances are phenomenally good that you will encounter parents who have control issues (every year), or feel that their way is far better than yours!  STAND YOUR GROUND!  Be upfront with your parents right at the off!  Send home your mission statement, classroom expectations, and any other written communication about you and your Way in the classroom on the first day...better yet...prior to the beginning of the school year.  Then, at Open House...drive your Way home!  Don't let there be any surprises for your parents.  Be professional, but do not be afraid to fight for what you know is right.  Be open, be empathetic, but most of all be honest, and show strength in your convictions.  Like some of your students, some parents will be under the delusion that they can get anything they want if they display certain behaviors.  You must be able to show that those behaviors do NOT work in your classroom!  There have been a few times where I have had to deal with parents who felt that their Way was far superior to mine.  After some talking, and explanations (To no avail) my response (s) was...it is my way or the highway...you can like it or lump it...the door you came in will also lead you out, I will miss my student!  Don't be an ass if you can help it (No matter how much of an ass the parent might be), but don't be wishy-washy either.  If you have a principal who supports you...get them involved.  There is nothing wrong with having a boss at your back, but the first line of defense will always come from you!
     Endure!  You will be confronted with a multitude of tasks that will not include the time for educating your kids.  Grading papers, grading tests, attending mandated PLC meetings before or after school, planning lessons, planning them again...and again, attending faculty meetings, inservice attendance, entering data into the I-tracker data base, running reports, filling out paper work, keeping up with Common Core standards, staying on track with pacing, writing audits, planning field trips, maintaining correspondence with parents, keeping classroom supplies stocked (Supplies you will purchase) will occupy a huge chunk of your time.  You can expect to not get out of your classroom daily until close to 5:00pm  (Unless you take work home with you) and that may be on a good day!  In addition, you will have to deal with your students' behavioral issues all day (Good and bad).  There is no real Age Appropriateness for behavioral issues in school...every grade level is peppered with them.  You must endure!  Know going in (Every year) that...unless your kids are automatons who sit quietly; programmed to listen and obey your every word...you will have kids that chat, pass notes, gossip, bully, joke, and zone out every day.  This is a given...it WILL be.  Though you must endure, though you must carry on, it will be up to you as to what frequency and degree these behavioral issues impact your class.  YOU are the guiding force.  You are the leader down the path.  Grow eyes in the back of your head, and strengthen your sixth-sense.  Through consistency, your kids will come to know where the line is.  Your kids will come to respect you, and quelling these everyday behaviors will come down to...a look from you...a short reminder or prompt, or a letter of encouragement for a job well done.  You will have to endure, but that does not mean you will ever have to accept defeat, or become controlled by your class.  Things will happen...everyday.  Don't allow yourself to hope that all will be perfect.  Perfection is subjective and can walk hand in hand with unrealistic expectations.  I have had a perfect class every year, and no one alive could ever convince me otherwise, yet I never had unrealistic expectations!   I have loved my kids every year in spite of the fact that I have had to raise an eyebrow, or call a kid back from the abyss daily.  It isn't a temporary thing (Behavioral issues).  It is an everyday, it will happen kind of thing!  Your job is to give your kids a reason to make better choices.
     Love your kids!  It is probably true (It happened to me) that some wizened educator, or a college professor told you to NOT TO GET TOO CLOSE TO YOUR STUDENTS.  To keep them always at an arms distance, and make education the forefront of your classroom.  What a bunch of horseradish!  You will spend nine months, seven and one half hours a day with your students.  How could anyone spend that much time with kids (More time than most of their own parents spend with them) and not fall in love with them?  You will love your kids!  If you have a heart and a soul...you will conjugate the verb to love!  In every child there is a part, a very significant part, that needs to be disciplined...that needs to be told NO!  All children will argue that this part does NOT exist.  What they won't argue with is their lists of respected, and most loved people.  Newbies sometimes think (So do some parents) that if I holler or hand-out a consequence my kids will hate me.  NOT TRUE!!!!   Your kids will PLAY YOU!    That kind of mentality hands all power over to the kids!  You will see the best and worst qualities in your kids.  You will witness heartache, and dry tears.  You will punish your bully, and UNteach him/her what he has spent 10 years learning.  You will say No, and mean it.  You will enforce rules without wavering, and you will encourage, congratulate, and celebrate your kids every chance you get.  Being mean...imposing belittling consequences, or just hollering at a kid cause you are pissed is like the saying about sitting in a rocking chair...it keeps you moving, but it gets you no where!  Yell if you need too, but never without instruction...never without encouragement...never without showing and modeling how to fix a mistake; showing how to ensure the same mistake never happens again.  New teachers...a happy kid will move mountains.  A kid who is validated, and shown honesty (Even if it is hurtful) is a kid who feels important.  When a kid feels important they feel loved and cared for, and this makes mountain movers!.  When your students trust you, when they know who you are and what you are about then you have a classroom.  This transfers to the parents, especially when they see that little Johnny actually LIKES school!  Your kids will do anything for you when they feel loved, and appreciated!  This can be profoundly powerful...wield that power wisely.  Lead your kids down the path towards each of their own destinies...not yours.  No matter what grade you teach, when you genuinely love your kids they will love you back.  You will find that your kids will come back again and again to visit throughout the years  You will make a difference!  Something else, Newbies...learn the difference between disciplining a kid for you, and disciplining a kid for the kid.  If that statement does not make sense...it will.  My fondest hope is that it will someday.  Also Newbies...remember...NEVER FORGET...you are educating kids.  Let them BE kids!  Have some fun!  Break up the daily monotony with a joke, or some music!  Have the kids do the Macarene after or before a test!  Every Friday...stop the school day a bit earlier (If the kids earned it), pack-up and pop in a movie for the last 20 minutes.  Throw holiday parties; let your kids help plan them.  Be a nutball...cut loose, especially when the subject is felt to be notoriously boring by your kids...like Math!  Your kids will relax, and they will know that no matter what...you and they are in it together!  (MOST IMPORTANT...don't force your kids to love you.  Don't spoil the kids, or your parents.  The return is false love...false respect from your kids.  The kids will do ONLY when you GIVE.  the one time you DON'T GIVE...the kids WILL attack!  Be REAL, don't be a phony.  Kids can smell a phony and an easy-target from a mile away...like sharks with blood!)
     Persevere!  This could be used as a synonym for Endure, but I believe this core value runs much deeper in an educators soul.  Newbies this is especially true for you!  New educators...the ones worth their salt...will constantly question themselves.  You may feel that you cannot control your class.  You will see other classes that seem so meticulously organized that it makes your class look like a pack of rabid wolverines.  You may find your kids constantly chatting during a lesson, or that the test you gave yielded more 70%'s than you thought it should have.  You may have administrators questioning your methods with parents tagging along side, further causing you to question yourself.  You may find that your nights are taken up with grading and lesson planning, or that you have had to reorganize dinner time for your family, because you never get home before 5:00.  You may realize (Especially if single) that you will have to find a second job during the summer just to keep up with bills.  You may find yourself asking...why did I ever do this?  Dearest new teachers, if you ever felt, or thought the way I have described above...give yourself a pat on the back!  You have the makings of an amazing, effective educator. 
     In college you were given all of the knowledge in order to teach a subject, but there is no college class anywhere that can truly teach you how to BE a teacher!  Like anything else done well, you must develop it.  You have to find your style, your WAY in the classroom.  You will discover that what you tried in the beginning was thrown out the window after your first year.  Like new parents...there is NO guide on how to be truly effective.  You will make mistakes, and you will have monumental blunders.  Don't give up...persevere!  When you are questioned by administrators, or mentors...keep a stiff upper lip!  Explain, be open to advice.  In time...show them what you've got!  Be adaptable, be pliant.  Be willing to work a lesson until you achieve all 90's and 100's!  Realize that not every grade has to go into your grade-book!  Practice should just be practice...no kid should have to pay for practice!  Once mastery is achieved...then grade-book it!  Find a veteran teacher (One that you respect, or is respected) and latch on!  Swallow your pride and ask questions!  You won't feel so alone when you have a respected mentor at your back.  If one plan of attack (Regarding behavioral issues) doesn't work...mold a new one!  Realize that incentives work a hell of a lot faster than consequences.  Establish yourself as the alpha in the room, and roar if that is what is needed to get your kids' attention. 
     So many new teachers find that...once in the classroom...being an educator is REAL WORK!  Dealing with the kids on a daily basis is work to the 7th power!  Stick with it!  Once you find your Way...your kids will follow.  Once you gain your confidence, administrators will stop questioning.  Once you gain control...your kids will love you!
     Stay the course!  Ahhh yes!  The key word here is STAY!  Teaching will never become less busy!  Recent history shows that our workload will only become MORE loaded!  You will never get rich teaching, yet the rewards are far more valuable.  Like various parables, and fables state...we don't feed our kids turnips, we teach them how to garden (Something to that effect).  Is it tough?  YUP!  Is there a tremendous amount of work and responsibility?  YUP!  Will it be frustrating?  Double-YUP!  Will you feel like pulling out your hair sometimes?  YUP! 
     Realistically speaking all of the above is true, but think of what you are charged with doing.  In your class there could be the future doctor who cures cancer....because of you!  You may be teaching Science to the kid who one day will find the answer to the Everything Theory...because of you!  You could be nurturing the kid who will write the next, great American novel, or who achieves Gold in the Olympics...all because of you!  Will all the good come quickly?  No...afraid not.  You must endure, and persevere.  Will the bad come quickly...yup, but isn't that always the way? 
     We are artists and entertainers in the classroom.  Great art takes time, and anything worth doing is worth doing well.  Keep your eye on the prize, dearest Newbies.  Stay the course, hurtle the obstacles, charge through the blockades, expect the unexpected (Everyday).  Think of it this way, you have at your disposal a kind of magic.  This magic opens doorways to the future.  The influence you have on the young minds that you teach...or will teach...may be monumental...they could be the minds that change our world.  The broken hearts that you encounter along the way, will heal or remain healed just because you stayed.  Pound the walls when you need to.  Bang your head on the white board if it helps.  Scream from the mountaintops if only to release your frustration!   Just stay the course!  FELPS it, teachers...give it the time it needs.  Your life...just as the lives of the students in your class...will be forever changed!
    
    

Monday, September 3, 2012

New Age Kids!

     When I was ten we didn't have cable.  In 1974 many people on my block were also riding the antenna, and we were all at the mercy of the weather.  A clear sky meant good reception, a cloudy sky meant none.  In those days cable meant a clear picture (Clouds or not) with a maximum of 12 channels.  Saturday mornings found kids my age in front of the TV watching cartoons till about noon.  After school we had the same lineup until dinner time...Tom & Jerry, the Three Stooges, Wee Willy Weber!  Saturdays, and after school were the only two times mainly geared to kids and TV.
     Everyone on my block did share one item...land line phones.  We had the standard rotary phone upstairs, and a NEW, streamline, push button model that hung on our kitchen wall.  Unless our grandparents wanted to speak with us, we kids had no need of the phone...we called no one, and no one called us.  We really didn't care about the phone at all.
     We played Hide and seek, Red Rover, King of the Mountain, and Red light - Green light.  We rode our bikes everywhere. We played every game of tag we knew of (Freeze, TV, etc.) and built forts in any room my mom allowed us too, with anything we could find that wasn't off limits.  Sometimes I would play my 8-track tapes to pass the time, or really loudly to annoy my sister.
     I ran down, or up to a friend's house.  When it was time to go in (When the street lamps came on in the summer...dinner time in the winter) I left my friends and went home, not seeing them or talking with them until the next day.  Dinner time was 5:00, and bedtime was 9:00 sharp (I was the oldest, all of ten years old...I got to stay up late!)
     Was it a simpler time?  Certainly it was.  Comparing what we had then with what we have now is like comparing an apple to Apple (You know...the computer company?)  Was it a different time?  Again...certainly it was, but in what way different?  George Carlin (Loved him), in one of his stand-up masterpieces, stated that we have simply acquired too much stuff!  Everywhere there is stuff, and more and more people are trying to get more stuff!  Mr. Carlin was right.
     In the last 38 years technology alone has blown up exponentially; expanded to the Outer Limits, and has become integrated into nearly everyone's life in one way or another.  The stuff that we crave and acquire today can instantly message someone from anywhere to everywhere, find a restaurant at a click or a flip, play a wall-sized movie in your home, allow you to call someone without using your hands, play video games that rival major theatrical productions, surf an invisible-all inclusive-informational-entertainment in all forms web that encircles the Earth in the time it takes to press a few keys.  We have major cable conglomerates that give us access to hundreds and hundreds of channels for television viewing, and we have portable devices that allow us to do everything from chat to friends in other countries in the blink of an eye, to finding the exact location of a friend via a GPS satellite link-up!  In 1974 we had the board game Operation and sticks (Don't chuckle at sticks...I had some real fun pretending to be King Arthur!)
     The above paragraph pertains to everyone...including kids!  Kids are doing and experiencing everything stated above, and they are doing it far better than this old Irishman.
     I have heard scholars and politicians....educators and administrators state that our youth has become desensitized.  That our children are exposed to every kind of information that is available in the world!  Whether it be from the Internet, or television NOTHING is sacred any longer.  A kid can google anything they want.  If parents have imposed Parental Control on the TV or computer...chances are real good that the kid involved can hack the system when the parents are asleep and cyber where they want! 
     Communication is no longer person to person, it is smart-phone to smart-phone.  Bullies are no longer on the playground, or hidden in a hallway nook...they are on FB or Twitter!
     Video games take kids through gory, epic battles with aliens, or zombies, or pimps!  Kids can choose how to kill an enemy, or simply choose to kill any character any way they wish.  Online gaming allows kids to play these games over the Internet with other kids from all over the globe using headsets so they can talk, argue, or cuss at one another.
     Desensitized?  When the cavemen were exposed to tools, I doubt they ever looked back to the time without.  When ancient explorers breached the horizon to find they did not fall off the earth...they traveled to new horizons, did they not?  With every innovation comes human change as well...right?  Do kids know more about the world; what is in it both good and bad?  YUP!  Do they have the means to find out whatever they want at a key stroke?  Is it a good thing...darn tootin!  Could it be a bad thing...darn tootin!  Either way I believe desensitized is a harmful, inaccurate way to describe our kids, our NEW AGE kids.
     The kids today are different from the kids of yesterday.  Technology rules the kingdom, and the kids of today wield the power.  It isn't their fault that each of them were born into the world of today.  They, like all of us have done in turn, are taking what is available and surviving, thriving and future striving!
     Now...go back 50 years...60 years.  Kids went down into mines where adults feared to tread.  They worked for 12 hours a day in factories, and even fought in wars!  Kids are far more resilient than most of us give them credit for.  Let us NOT diminish there importance, or their differences by using words like desensitized.
     Here is what I know about my kids...my ten year old fifth-grade students.  Not just from this year...from every year I have taught.  In so many ways what is available to my kids is far and above different than what was available to me.  In countless ways my NEW AGE kids are different from my generation of kids mainly, almost entirely, because of all the STUFF.  What IS the same...what my New Agers and my generation have in common...what we share about being ten?  We share being a kid.
     My ten year olds giggle at inappropriate things.  They are afraid of ghosts, and even though they each will deny it...they all sleep with a light on.  They play tag, and hide-n-seek.  They cry when they are hurt, and want friends to play with.  They make forts, and play dress up.  They have sleep overs, and play outside till the street lights come on.  They ride bikes, and scooters and run races competitively.  They mostly know that Santa is a myth, but harbor a hope that he IS out there...somewhere.  They want attention, some need attention.  Some fidget in their seat, others fidget out of their seat.  They play their I-pods to pass the time, or while doing homework.  They rejoice, they fight, they make-up, they love to eat candy.
     My kids are still kids.  Highly advanced in technology (Hell of a lot more than I), but still kids.  They all have stuff, but internally they are all as I was...as you were.  Just as it has always been, and just as it will always be...kids will be kids!
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Feeling Safe in the Classroom!

     There are many feelings and/or emotions associated with attending school for a student.  During the elementary years there are separation anxieties that can render a child almost inconsolable.  During the intermediate years, when a child has more of a sense of self, social anxieties can develop with peers causing a child to begin the downward spiral of self loathing, lowering self-esteem, and self-worth. 
     Middle school?  Probably the hardest time for any kid!  Hormones are raging, social pressures are seemingly insurmountable, and the notion of "Being yourself" is such a frightening concept that most adolescents play-act, or become something (Or someone) else in order to survive!  Cliques are all the rage and the social protocol is to find one...a popular one...to assimilate into.  Harder choices...life or death choices... enter into the mix during the the middle school years relating to drugs, alcohol, love, sex, peer pressure, LIFE!  The adolescent relies less and less on parental advice, and stands alone (Or with their social group) making decisions individually, or allowing their peers to make decisions for them.
     High school anxieties are not much different from middle school anxieties, BUT...add more fuel to the fire.  Parental pressure to do well and go to college.  Academics, the right classes, college scholarship eligibility, jobs, paying bills, staying in school, NOT dropping out!  I could go on and on...I won't.

     Stepping away from the topic a bit (Not far away) we adults have all been there.  I remember every age I have ever been (With the exception of the first two years of my life), and I remember school...nearly every year of it.  I write here from experience...just as all of you could.  I also write as an educator; an educator more concerned with my students than with the curriculum I have to teach them.  In addition, I write as a parent.  Those of you who are also parents know what I am talking about.  We now know what our parents went through...the worries, the fear, the heartache, the pride, and the exhilaration regarding our own turn at being a kid, a teenager, and a young adult way back when.  That being said, I want you to know that there is more of ME as a whole in this piece than ME as just an educator.

     There is a reason I teach fifth grade.  The average age of a fifth grader is 10.  At this age children begin to gain a real sense of self. This age group pretty much knows who they are, and can make complex decisions regarding their world, and their place in it.  They can tell a joke, and they can take a joke.  They have a well developed sense of humor, and are capable of doing amazing things academically, socially, and emotionally.  They know what right and wrong is (Don't ever let a kid fool you...at ten a kid KNOWS!), and though they may not be able to put it into words eloquently, a kid knows how to trust, and how to be trustworthy.
     To speak metaphorically...a fifth grader is a field of fertile soil.  If we are careful we can plant seeds there.  Some of these ten-year-old fields are neglected and overrun with weeds.  The soil underneath is still fertile...just needs a bit of weedin'!  To plant a seed is easy, to get it to grow is the hard part.  Plenty of encouragement, and consistency will help.  Give it what it needs, don't let it fall through the cracks.  Keep the weeds away, and hopefully it will take root.  If we are lucky...we can see it begin to grow.  If there is no growth, or minimal growth during MY year (Or your year)...my fondest hope is that the root is strong and that something I planted will help to make a good choice someday, or help to form the answer "NO" instead of "Sure...I'll give it a try!"  I know...this sounds a bit off topic too.  It isn't...bear with me.
     Everything above (First 3 paragraphs) has to do with one word...FEAR!  I hope that all of you know that there is Good Fear, and Bad Fear?  I ask this because I heard someone state the other day...
                                             "There is only one kind of fear, and it is bad!"
     I did not interject when I heard this, but if I had I would have told her that what she said was not true.  Here are a few examples of some good fears:
*  Pay your electric bill on time...for fear the electric will be turned off.
*  You drive carefully, for fear of getting into an accident.
*  You lock up your home at night to keep everyone inside safe.
     Healthy fear keeps us on our toes.  It keeps us away from dark alleys, and helps us to think before we leap.  Good fear keeps us responsible, and considerate to others.  Good fear can be...good! 
     Bad fear...this is another animal altogether!  Bad fear...if allowed to hang out or linger...can stunt our growth into who we are meant to be.  Bad fear terrifies us at every age, and can cause us to do things we ordinarily would never do.  Bad fear can make decisions for us that can lead us down a wayward path.  It is this very topic that will balance out my article here. 
     There are many things our students need while in our classroom.  One of the most important things is that every child must feel safe.  It isn't enough for your kids to KNOW they are safe.  Each child must FEEL safe.  To know is conscious...it is voluntary.  To feel is involuntary and its benefits run deep.
      In order for any child to do well in the classroom many things must happen.  When a kid is happy...when a kid is challenged...when a kid is confident...he or she will move mountains.  If you are lucky a few of your students will simply "Come that way!"  Most will not...they will have some form of the Bad Fear instilled within them.  You can't get a kid to move a mountain when said kid is in fear of failing at the task.
     My firm belief is that educators must be more than teachers.  We have to be providers for some, and parental figures for others.  We have to be bank tellers when needed, and disciplinarians when warranted.  We must be honest and straightforward staying constant while maintaining a balance of flexibility.  We must be open minded and big hearted.  We must be firm yet pliant...and balance humor with a genuine sense of seriousness.  We must be protectors...always!
     You will have kids who are afraid to make a mistake.  You will have kids who are afraid to appear foolish in front of their peers.  You will have kids afraid to be themselves.  You will have kids who will bully because they are afraid of being bullied themselves.  You will have kids afraid to trust, because they have been let down so many times before.  No matter what the fears are...the bad fears...you must dig in!  Before you can tackle the fears you first must gain your students' trust.  HOW do you do this?  It takes REAL WORK ladies and germs!  I can tell you how I do it, but you will have to find your own way with this.

     First and foremost you must be consistent with discipline or with incentives regarding the rules and the procedures in your classroom. 
     Talk to your kids, and not at them. 
     Laugh with them, and not at them. 
     Reveal  who you are...admit when YOU make mistakes. 
     Validate how your kids feel on a subject, and have them validate you. 
     No matter the circumstance...when you have to discipline a kid walk beside them through the entire procedure.  Don't allow your kids to be alone.  Standing with them may be a whole new experience for them.
     Explain instead of lecture...allow your kids to have an opinion! 
     Give your kids ownership of the classroom...it is as much theirs as yours! 
     Be genuine and make realistic expectations....then raise the bar when you see fit. 
     Realize that your kids will make all of the age appropriate mistakes.  Be consistent and unwavering but realize one thing...if you have a kid who's only downfall is being a chatterbox...be happy!  This is age appropriate, a pain in both buttocks, but NOT the end of the world. 
     Unless it is a true breach of school policy (Fighting, drugs, terroristic threatening, etc.)...handle the discipline yourself...with the kid who NEEDS YOU!  Talk to the kid, let him/her know what the consequence is, and never finish a conversation...when disciplining...without stating that you believe in the kid, and that you will be there when or if he/she falls again. 
     Unless it is very serious...DON"T get the principals involved.  Handle the situation between you and the kid.
     Try contacting parents with compliments about their kids.  If a kid comes into your classroom with a bad-behavior reputation, his or her parents are probably accustom to being called by the teacher or principal every day or every week...seemingly to no avail!  Let the kid see that YOU mean business...that what happened is between you and him/her.
     I keep an open classroom, and we have Open Classroom Meetings.  If something has happened whether one kid is involved or many...we talk about it as a classroom...as a community, and come up with solutions.
     Be firm, be tough when you need to be, and never be afraid to show you care.
     I believe nearly everything can be fixed.  Help your kids fix a bad situation.  Some only know how to cause a bad situation...not how to fix one...how to make something right, or even to make amends.
     Trust must be earned...this goes for the teacher as well.
     Make each of your kids important in your life as an educator.  Make their families important also.  Give value to what your kids think and how they feel.
     When one of your kids is victimized or bullied by another be the protector, and follow through on all procedures.  Make it important, and stand beside your kid.  Report it, and...if possible...go with your kid if he/she must have a meeting with the principal.  Support your kid.  Keep your eyes and ears ever vigilant.  This IS a time for principals and parents!

      I could go on and on.  Once your kids trust you THEN you can start hammering away at their fears.  You can slowly bring a kid out of their shell.  You can let another know that it is OK to make a mistake, and realize that making a mistake simply means DO OVER!  It takes a great deal of work, every minute of every school day.  Is it worth it?  Darn tootin it is!
     In this day and age it is certainly realistic that kids and parents are afraid of something bad happening to their children while in school.  As a parent this is in the back of my mind every day.  Physical fear is real, and on the minds of many.  Your kids must feel physically safe as well as emotionally safe.  We educators must be a protector in this arena too.  In the recent light of the Colorado shootings...it has hit home that horrendous things can happen at anytime, and anywhere.  We must be willing to put our kids above ourselves, and know what procedures to follow should there ever be a situation where we would have to do just that.  My kids know that if someone comes through our door with ugliness on their mind...they will have to get through me before they get to them.
     Good fear and Bad fear will always be a part of humanity, just as teenagers will always be angsting!  Early in my career I learned that until I quell the bad fear in my room...no mountains will be moved.  I like it when my kids move mountains.  They like it too! 
     This newest little ditty may come off sounding like getting kids to trust, and quelling fear is a successful procedure for every educator as long as they follow a few steps. It has always been a successful procedure for me, but...I have not always been successful in gaining every student's trust, nor have I been able to eliminate the fears in every one of my kids. Some kids have been exposed to such fear driven conditioning that I was unsuccessful in getting in that deep.  These few who I have not been able to reach will be the regrets of my career.  I will always feel I failed them, no matter how hard I tried.  I do have hope.  I will forever hope that a seed did in fact set and root itself...or...that someone else was able to reach them.
     Educators...make your kids feel safe.  Make your classroom a home-away-from-home!  I promise the rewards far outweigh the consequences!
   
    

    
    

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Saying Goodbye is Tough!

     With 12 years of teaching under my belt one might think that saying goodbye to my kids would be easy.  One might also think that an educator spending nine months, five days a week, seven hours a day in class, and three to four hours at home working would be ready to say "so long" to his kids.  One might say a number of other things too. 
     I say...tomorrow will be the hardest day of the year (Last student day of the 2011-2012 school year), because I have to say goodbye to my kids.
     My kids become a part of me.  I am with them all day, and I take them home with me at night (NOT literally of course).  I have the priveledge of spending more time with my students than most of their parents do over a nine month period.  I get to know each one of them inside and out.  I get to see them grow academically, and as people.  I get to experience hard lessons learned in Math, in the classroom, on the playground, and even in the cafeteria.  I get to shed light where there was none before, and I get to hope that the kid I shed it for will see.  I get to see friendships made, and enemies established.  Fights initiated, and "Fix-it" sessions mandated.  I get to witness...first-hand...young minds hungry for something new and interesting, open full to something amazing!  I get to guide, and unteach.  I get to look into the face of a kid who hated Math and see the spark of comprehension.  I get to make tears, and dry tears.  I get to Laugh hysterically with my kids, and make my kids hyeterically laugh.  I get to make mistakes, own up to them, and make amense.  I get to lead by example, and consistently demonstrate ethical, compassionate behavior.  I get to expect nothing less from my kids.  I get to instill the belief that moving a mountain is as simple as believeing you can do it, and I get to assure my kids that their weaknesses are just as important as their strengths.
     Inevitably, every year...after all of this, I find that I love my kids.  Saying goodbye to anyone you love is NEVER easy.
     Tomorrow I will again say goodbye.  My heart will break, but I will hold it together as I always do.  My intellect knows that they are each on to bigger and better things.  It is my heart that will ache.  Every year...the same story.  Different class.  Different kids.  Same story.
     Is it worth it?  Damn straight it is!  Come fall...new young minds in need of expanding will walk through my classroom door.  Oh yeah...it is worth it BIG TIME!

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Here We Go Again!

     Well, I think we all knew it would happen.  Not the kind of "Knew it would happen" like when something good occurs, and those of us who worry fear that at some point thereafter the ax will fall.  Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesn't...hope has a place with this worry.  This "Knew it would happen" (For me) was as certain as the sun rising every morning, or me having to say..."Shhh, quiet down!" everyday in my classroom.  DCAS is moving out, and something NEW is moving in!
     Remember the DSTP?  Remember NCLB?  Soon you will be remembering DCAS!  If you haven't heard already, a new standardized testing program will be implemented by the year 2014.  This new program is aligned with Common Core and will require the students who take the test to do more than answer multiple choice questions.  There are writing components involved, and a new rubric for it.  Craft Plus...is evidently being thrown to the curb as well.
     The one thing I liked about the DCAS was that the kids' scores were immediate!  The kids knew, and we knew right away.  We tested 3 times a year, and had some data to measure student growth.  This was awesome to me when compared to the DSTP...one testing session a year, scores WERE NOT immediate, and the data was year to year.
     This new testing program has similar traits of the DSTP.  It will be administered once a year, and the writing components mentioned above.  It is similar to DCAS as the kids will take this new test on the computer.  This NEW test is linked (Siamese Twinned!) with Common Core.  Do you know about Common Core?  All of you know that it is in our schools, but do you really know ABOUT it?
    
     The Common Core State Standards provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them. The standards are designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers. With American students fully prepared for the future, our communities will be best positioned to compete successfully in the global economy.  (Mission statement taken from corestandards.org)

     Common Core was designed to keep curriculums on a level playing field, and to steer our students towards college and the careers their diplomas promise.  Of course we know how that is working out...kids graduating with degrees, and advanced degrees who are jobless, or taking jobs that have nothing to do with what they majored in.  I digress.  Common Core has everything to do with getting our kids to think outside the box.  It is an analytical approach to learning that is geared to make our kids think-deeply over choosing options from multiple choice questions. 
     The Federal Government offered Common Core to all states, and the schools that reside in them.  It was presented as a choice...it was never mandated.  However, the choice came with temptation (As all things that look, and feel good do)...Adopt Common Core and you can waiver out of the NCLB legislation, and we will give you some money to boot!  If Daniel Webster had been a teacher, I imagine the Devil might have made him a similar offer!  Needless to say...only a handful of states opted NOT to take on Common Core.
     Regarding Common Core and all of its "This and thats"...my research shows a great divide on how educators feel about it.  Many feel that, because it has NOT been field tested properly, there is no real proof that it will improve test scores or send them into the toilet.  Some educators hate the idea that the Federal Government is stepping in...controlling education and the way that schools are being Tempted (Made) to adopt something that may or may not work.  Others like Common Core.
     For me...I have accepted the fact that change is inevitable.  I have accepted the fact that somewhere people are running around in a frantic attempt to figure out a way to make our kids smart.  I have accepted the fact that our government has adopted "The Grass is Greener" mentality...being covetous is the new proud!  I have accepted the fact that we will never have a consistent way of measuring our students' achievement, because what is AWESOME one day is obsolete the next.  I have accepted the fact that I am sick of accepting facts!
     Regarding Common Core and MY classroom.  I believe it has its place, simply because I have ALWAYS taught my kids to think outside the boundaries of what is in the book, or on the paper.  Metaphorically...I have always led my students down the path, and I have ALWAYS encouraged them to stop now and again and stray...explore what's NOT on the path.  That is when real learnin' takes place, because after I call them all back to the path...each has something to present.  Something to think through.  Something to discuss.  I have always encouraged my kids to talk through what they are un-sure of with me, or with a partner, and I have never "Given up" an answer easily.  Keep looking...search for it...I know where it is, now you have to find it...are all things I say, everyday, in my classroom.
     That is all about that. 
     Summer is nearly here.  The kids can feel it...we can too!  I will be teaching Summer School, and a Summer Theater Workshop at our local Opera House (Great fun!).  I hope that all of you have a great summer.  Be safe, have fun, rest up, energize yourselves!
     I do have to say, when I heard about what I already knew...about DCAS moving out...this is the face I made.  My...I absolutely knew it, face!

I Knew it Would Happen Again...I Just Knew it!

     Well, I think we all knew it would happen.  Not the kind of "Knew it would happen" like when something good occurs, and those of us who worry fear that at some point thereafter the ax would fall.  Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesn't...hope has a place with this worry.  This "Knew it would happen" (For me) was as certain as the sun rising every morning, or me having to say..."Shhh, quiet down!" everyday in my classroom.  DCAS is moving out, and something NEW is moving in!
     Remember the DSTP?  Remember NCLB?  Soon you will be remembering DCAS!  The new standardized testing program is ready to go for the 2014-2015 school year.  This new program is aligned with Common Core and will require the students who take the test to do more than answer multiple choice questions.  There are writing components involved, and a new rubric for it.  Craft Plus...is evidently being thrown to the curb as well.  Smarter Balance...that's its name!!!
     The one thing I liked about the DCAS was that the kids' scores were immediate!  The kids knew, and we knew right away.  We tested 3 times a year, and had some data to measure student growth.  This was awesome to me when compared to the DSTP...one testing session a year, scores WERE NOT immediate, and the data was year to year.
     This new testing program has similar traits of the DSTP.  It will be administered once a year, and has the writing components mentioned above.  It is similar to DCAS as the kids will take this new test on the computer.  This NEW test is linked (Siamese Twinned!) with Common Core.  Do you know about Common Core?  All of you know that it is in our schools, but do you really know ABOUT it?
    
     The Common Core State Standards provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them. The standards are designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers. With American students fully prepared for the future, our communities will be best positioned to compete successfully in the global economy.  (Mission statement taken from corestandards.org)

     Common Core was designed to keep curriculums on a level playing field, and to steer our students towards college and the careers their diplomas promise.  Of course we know how that is working out...kids graduating with degrees, and advanced degrees who are jobless, or taking jobs that have nothing to do with what they majored in.  I digress.  Common Core has everything to do with getting our kids to think outside the box.  It is an analytical approach to learning that is geared to make our kids think-deeply over choosing options from multiple choice questions. 
     The Federal Government offered Common Core to all states, and the schools that reside in them.  It was presented as a choice...it was never mandated.  However, the choice came with temptation (As all things that look, and feel good do)...Adopt Common Core and you can waiver out of the NCLB legislation, and we will give you some money to boot!  If Daniel Webster had been a teacher, I imagine the Devil might have made him a similar offer!  Needless to say...only a handful of states opted NOT to take on Common Core.
     Regarding Common Core and all of its "This and thats"...my research shows a great divide on how educators feel about it.  Many feel that, because it has NOT been field tested properly, there is no real proof that it will improve test scores or send them into the toilet.  Some educators hate the idea that the Federal Government is stepping in...controlling education and the way that schools are being Tempted (Made) to adopt something that may or may not work.  Others like Common Core.
     For me...I have accepted the fact that change is inevitable.  I have accepted the fact that somewhere people are running around in a frantic attempt to figure out a way to make our kids smart.  I have accepted the fact that our government has adopted "The Grass is Greener" mentality...being covetous is the new proud!  I have accepted the fact that we will never have a consistent way of measuring our students' achievement, because what is AWESOME one day is obsolete the next.  I have accepted the fact that I am sick of accepting facts!
     Regarding Common Core and MY classroom.  I believe it has its place, simply because I have ALWAYS taught my kids to think outside the boundaries of what is in the book, or on the paper.  Metaphorically...I have always led my students down the path, and I have ALWAYS encouraged them to stop now and again and stray...explore what's NOT on the path.  That is when real learnin' takes place, because after I call them all back to the path...each has something to present.  Something to think through.  Something to discuss.  I have always encouraged my kids to talk through what they are un-sure of with me, or with a partner, and I have never "Given up" an answer easily.  Keep looking...search for it...I know where it is, now you have to find it...are all things I say, everyday, in my classroom.
     That is all I have to say about that. 
     Summer is here!  I will be teaching Summer School, and a Summer Theater Workshop at our local Opera House (Great fun!).  I hope that all of you have a great summer.  Be safe, have fun, rest up, energize yourselves!
     I do have to say, when I heard about what I already knew...about DCAS moving out...this is the face I made.  My...I absolutely knew it, face!

Sunday, March 11, 2012

How Many DOE People Does it Take to Screw In a Lightbulb?

     The night before my very first day of teaching, I was incredibly excited!  It was like an adult's version of a kid's Christmas Eve.  I was also terribly frightened. 
     I wasn't frightened because I lacked the necessary knowledge to pass on to my students; college and life gave me that.  I wasn't afraid of the responsibilities that come with the job.  I knew...even then...that the "Teaching" aspect of my vocation was the easy part.  The lesson planning and implementation of lessons, the time frames for each subject maintained, the curriculum pacing, the grade recording, the filing, the classwork and testing applications, the multitude of copies made...all of this is simply busy work.  To the lay-people of the world this (And a great deal more) is all that constitutes a teacher's job.  Of all of this...I was not scared.  Not one bit.  What frightened me...what scared the hell out of me were the questions my evil subconscious kept bringing to the surface of my mind on the night before my first day as an educator.  Would I be an effective educator?  Will I be able to make a difference in a child's life?  Will I just be a teacher, pumping out and putting forth only the busy-work...OR...will I be an educator of young minds? 
     After that first week...after incorporating the busy-work with what would become my classroom atmosphere...I realized that I loved being an educator, that each of my kids was unique and awesome, and that classroom management was the KEY to success. 
     I have always had the mindset to teach my kids first, and the curriculum second.  Unteaching is also a part...curbing bad behaviors, lifting low self-esteem, changing a hate for school into at least the tolerance of it...are all factors in this.  Over the last twelve years so much has changed.  Unlike evolution...taking millions of years for change to occur...our curriculum, the testing regiments, and mandated NCLB, and RTTT regulations have caused almost overnight mutations, ripping at the very soul of what it was to be an effective educator.
     This has been debated to death...here it goes again.  Educators have been placed under microscopes, and have been forced to fill every school day with more busy work than any factory or sweat-shop has ever had to endure.  The kids have been forced to DSTP, DAZE, and DCAS...not to mention STAR Test, and fit into slots for RTI.  Finding the time JUST to get our kids ready for all of this is overwhelming...teaching to the test comes into play at times...even with the best of us.
     All of this being said...here is the meat of what I have a beef about tonight.  Our third round of DCAS testing was to begin last week.  We (The teachers) were informed that DCAS would be pushed back a week.  Evidently the cause for this postponement stemmed from the calculators that had been used since last year by the students during the Math portion of the test were NOT regulation.  It was determined that because these calculators had the square-root button, and percentage key...they could not be used by the students during the Math DCAS (Even though these were the same calculators ok'd, and used since last year AND the same calculators used this year for the first 2 testing sessions).  New calculators had to be ordered...calculators that only had the four operations' keys. 
     I am devoting an entire paragraph to this one!  This past Monday we just found out that flagging a question during DCAS testing will result in a lower score!  Every time a kid flags a question...so he/she can come back to it later...the test re-calibrates itself, and begins popping up questions of a lower caliber, fetching an overall lower score.  My reaction was...ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME?  I have always taught my kids...on Math, Reading, Social Studies, Science, etc...if you come across a question or problem that feels like it needs more time dedicated to it, or if you are not sure about it...circle it, and come back to it later.  This has always been successful.  I did it myself...on tests especially.  If I came across a problem (s) that was multi-stepped...I circled it and moved on THEN I went back and devoted my time to the circled problems.  I have also taught that speed is not an issue while testing.  One kid takes 15 minutes while another takes one hour to complete the same test.  If the score for both is an ACE...Bully for both kids!  This, to me, is Common Sense Test-taking 101!  Now...at the last minute...the week before the last DCAS of the year we find out that flagging questions dummy's-up the test, resulting in a lower test score!  Flagging questions quelled a good deal of test-anxiety for many students, as most kids need to get the juices flowing during a session to tackle the challenging questions on standardized tests.  DOE...this last minute crap...burns my butter big time!
     Well...I am sure that many of you feel as I do...I hope that isn't presumptuous of me?  I told my kids the whole deal, and I also told them not to flag.  I told them...reassured them...to trust in themselves, and to do their own personal best.  I told them I was already incredibly proud of their accomplishments this year, and I also told them that I was not worried about next week's DCAS.  If I am not worried, you shouldn't be worried!  I told them...if you come across a question where you are unsure...take the time to work it out then and there.  If you are still unsure...make your best guess, move on and don't look back!
     Alright...time to end this.  Regarding the fear I had the night before my first day of teaching?  I am just as afraid today as I was then, but now it is two-fold!  Not only is it...will I make a difference?  It is also HAVE I MADE a difference?  I work hard everyday to become effective at what I do...I hope I have?  Goodnight.