Thursday, September 21, 2017

9/25-9/29

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Monday September 25th-
Day 6-
Grade 6 Data Meeting
DORA/ADAM Testing Window

Out of Building- None

Tuesday September 26th-
Day 1
Title 1 Committee Meeting
DORA/ADAM Testing Window

Out of Building-Atkinson (Full Day), Paup (Half Day PM)

Wednesday September 27th-
Day 2-
Faculty Meeting
DORA/ADAM Testing Window
TANK
Intramurals

Out of Building- None

Thursday September 28th-
Day 3-
Dress Down will be today.
DORA/ADAM Testing Window

Out of Building-Roy (Half Day PM), White (Full Day)

Friday September 29th-
Day 4-:
Parent Visitation Day- No jeans today!!!
SLOs Due

Out of Building-Mellinger (Half Day PM), White (Full Day) 


PLC in Print

from Education Update/September 2017
Taylor Meredith, instructional coach at Kipling Elementary School, Deerfield, Illinois

T.G.I. "Feedback" Friday

"In classrooms, teachers are accustomed to hearing administrators ask, "Would you like some feedback?" But when I began hearing my students as the same question, it completely altered my outlook.
To receive feedback on my practice (especially feedback for growth), I placed a folder inside my classroom with forms asking for one positive comment and one thing to think about. I invited my fifth-graders, as well as colleagues, administrators, and visitors, to observe the class and offer feedback. This practice quickly spread.
Soon students were asking adults for feedback when they visited our room. They asked questions about participation: Did I build on the ideas of my classmates? They also began asking one another feedback-style questions: Was I reading with expression and fluency? We discussed the positive effect the feedback was having in our classroom, and then we took it one step further, to Feedback Friday.""

What is Feedback Friday?

"Feedback Friday was a designated time each week when students could sit down with me one-to-one to share their observations. Students were comfortable providing feedback on my teaching practice when I modeled a math problem or shared a piece of my own writing - but I wanted to move past that into what they were thinking and feeling about our classroom. Prior to implementing Feedback Friday, I gave students a specific look-for, something I wanted feedback on. But one we normalized the culture of feedback in our classroom, they understood that I was soliciting feedback to become more effective, not to hear praise. If they offered positive feedback, they also had to give me feedback the fed forward."

Among many other ideas, students have made these suggestions:

-Offer encouragement or feedback related to student-specific goals
-Be more aware of whom I cal on in different specific areas (a student pointed out that I rarely call on her during math).
-Keep up-to-date with things like anchor charts and the class schedule.
-Utilize one-to-one devices in different ways during the math block.

One student even let me know that I unconsciously use a "telling signal" when a student gives me the wrong answer - I tilt my head to the right slightly."

Why Ask Students?

"When students occasionally provided unhelpful feedback - such as comments on my hair or clothes - we talked about ways to reframe statements or offer something new.
There were times when the feedback I received couldn't be acted upon - and I missed an opportunity to communicate that with the class. Students sometimes wanted to know why we used a specific instructional approach - for instance, why we studied social issues in our book clubs or why we had to explain our thinking in math. I regret that I didn't always explain these approaches fully. This wasn't feedback from students trying to get out of work; it was feedback from students who hadn't heard a viable reason why yet. It was my job to provide that."

Thursday, September 14, 2017

9/18-9/22

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Monday, September 18th-
Day 1-
Data Meeting @  8AM in SGI
Reading with the Principal
-Kurtzman (9:15)
-Mellinger (9:45)
-Johnson (10:15)
-Roy (10:45)
-White (1:15)
-Norton (2:00)
-Shildt (2:15)
-Jennings (3:00)

Out of Building-Knepp (Full Day)

Tuesday, September 19th-
Day 2-
Data Meeting @ 8AM in SGI
TANK @ 2PM in Conference Room
Reading with the Principal
-Koppenhaver (9:15)
-Koppenhaver (1:00)

Out of Building- Johnson (Full Day) 

Wednesday, September 20th-
Day 3-
Bus Evacuation Drill
Data Meeting @ 8AM in SGI
PTO Meeting @ 6 PM in LGI

Out of Building-None

Thursday, September 21st-
Day 4-
4th Grade Field Trip - Envirothon
Data Meeting @ 8AM in SGI
School Board Meeting @ E.C. @ 7:30 PM

Out of Building-Baummer(Full Day)

Friday, September 22nd-
Day 5-
Data Meeting @ 8AM in SGI
Ms, White's Parent Visitation Day 1:15-3:15
Reading with the Principal
-Stauffer (9:45)
-Burrell (10:45)
-Dunlap (1:45)
-Orwig (2:15)
-Knepp (2:45)
-Shellenberger (3:00)

Out of Building-Kurtzman (Full Day), Jennings(Full Day), Paup (Full Day)

PLC in Print
(from The Master Teacher, vol. 47, no. 4)
"According to Stanford professor, Carol Dweck, every time students take on something they thought they couldn't master and master it, they get smarter and more confident in their ability to learn. This orientation to learning is referred to as a 'growth mindset.' A fixed mindset means once you've tried it, you're done - regardless of whether were you successful. A growth mindset says, 'If I work harder, my brain will become agiler and I'll be more successful.' Students with a growth mindset possess the courage and determination to tackle weaknesses. Students with a fixed mindset are confined by current limits on what they know and are able to do.
The Master Teacher knows that REAL LEARNING (for real life...sound familiar?) starts when students feel stuck. That's why he or she fosters an environment where all students feel compelled to give their best effort. Mistakes are diagnostic tools to tell students what they still need to learn. In a good struggle classroom, learning goals, such as mastering the methods of solving for unknowns, are more powerful than performance goals, like getting an A. While the difference may seem subtle, it can forever change how students interpret and respond to situations. The Master Teacher knows students' brains are malleable - and it's up to us to help students shape and remake them."

To Learn More
Dweck, C., (2006). Mindset: The new psychology of success. New York, NY: Ballantine Books

Ferlazzo, L. (2012, October 15). Classroom strategies to foster a growth mindset. Education Week Teacher.

Thursday, September 7, 2017

9/11-9/15

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Monday, September 11th-
Day 2-
PLC Grades 3-6
Wear Red, White & Blue

Out of Building-None

Tuesday, September 12th-
Day 3-

Out of Building-None

Wednesday, September 13th-
Day 4-
PLC Grades 1-2
Picture Day!
Intramurals Begins

Out of Building-None


Thursday, September 14th-
Day 5-

Out of Building- Shellenberger (Full Day)


Friday, September 15th-
Day 6-

Out of Building-Beam (Full Day), Mellinger (Half Day PM)


PLC in Print

Seven Ways We Can Coach, Teach, and Create Better Learners
(from The Master Teacher Pd, vol. 47, No. 3)

"Here are seven ways we can coach, teach, and nurture better learners. It's a blueprint for us to consult and utilize as we lead students throughout the year.
1. Introduce new content and skills by starting with the larger concept or system.
Remember to first help students see the whole before introducing and focusing on the parts and details.
2. Encourage students to ask "why?"
Knowing why they're learning a concept, how it will benefit them, and what they can do with it aids learning and retention.
3. Always teach students to transfer what they learn to other settings and applications.
Unless we routinely give students practice transferring learning across contexts, it will not happen for a significant portion of learners.
4. Encourage students to take learning personally.
"Reasons," beyond gaining teacher and family approval, for the purpose of learning make learning significant and worth doing - and give students the power to influence their environment and control their future.
5.  Give students opportunities to discover and construct their own learning in addition to the pre-framed, constructed learning tasks you give them.
The process of investigation, organization, hypothesizing, testing and discovering give students experience and builds skills important to success, especially in environments where problems don't come neatly packaged, waiting to be solved. Teaching student to frame problems rather than just solve them will serve students well now and in the future.
6. Provide students with ample opportunities to learn with and from others.
Finding, creating, and encouraging opportunities for students to engage with and learn from others can build flexible learning skills.
7. Teach, support, and have students practice reflection and self-assessment.
Among strategies we can use are having students maintain reflection journals, modeling reflective learning, and asking students to engage in formal reflections following significant challenges and projects.
The Master Teacher knows that we must prepare students to be their own best teachers. As researcher John Hattie states, "our focus must be on helping learners see themselves as their own best teachers."
To Learn More:
Hattie, J. (2012) Visible learning for teachers: Maximizing impact on learning. Abingdon: Routledge

Bits & Bytes

September 11, Patriot's Day


Constitution Day


Below are a few online resources that you may find helpful to prepare for the day:
https://app.discoveryeducation.com/learn/search?q=constitution%20day









Friday, September 1, 2017

9/5-9/8

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Monday September 4th-
Labor Day!!
No School!

Tuesday September 5th-
Day 4-
Wear Red for Kindergarten
Data Meeting - Grade 4

Out of Building-None

Wednesday September 6th-
Day 5-
Vacation T-shirt Day (you may wear jeans)
Wear Blue for Kindergarten
Instrument Guidance Day
Data Meeting - Grade 3
Electronic Textbook letters - scan and send to principal, then send hard copy home with student

Out of Building- Paup (Half Day PM)

Thursday September 7th-
Day 6-
Wear Brown for Kindergarten
School Board Meeting @ E.C. @ 7PM
Data Meeting - Grade 6

Out of Building- Flaharty(Full Day), Godfrey (Full Day)

Friday September 8th-
Day 1-
Wear Black for Kindergarten

Out of Building- Farmer (Half Day AM), Mellinger (Half Day PM)


PLC in Print

Take the Fear Out of Making Mistakes ...
(from The Master Teacher Pd, vol. 47, no. 2)
If we want students to engage and persist in their learning, we must help them understand that a mistake is not a permanent failure. A mistake is only what we did not know at the moment. And before we will ever be successful learning what we do not know, we will all probably make mistakes. Students need to accept that mistakes are an important part of real learning - and we do too. We also need to teach specific facts regarding fear to students of all ages. First, fear is present in life and in classrooms. We cannot ignore this reality or discount the power of fear to negatively affect students and their learning - or its ability to counter our efforts to teach. To say nothing to students about fear and learning would allow fear to flourish unchecked - and students to be dominated by this emotion.
Second, students need to be taught that if the fear of making mistakes keeps them from trying anything new, their fears will always keep holding them back. Fear will tie them to low level of performance and achievement. We can't allow fear of making mistakes control students. Say "It's an unnecessary waste of your talent. It robs you of engaging life and learning." Point out, "It's irrational fear - not your inability - that is keeping you from being successful." These are life lessons we need to teach students about fear.
Finally, in The Confidence Course: Seven Steps to Self-Fulfillment, Walter Anderson says, "In order to live a fulfilled life and feel exhilarated by your accomplishment, you must expect mistakes to occur." He calls this "worry well," not fear. To handle fear, he advises practicing RIP - Responsibility, Insight, and Perspective. As you know, RIP also stands for Rest In Peace. We should teach both messages to help students choose to lay aside their anxieties and fears.
To Learn More
Pratt, C. (n.d.), The fear of making mistakes: "They're actually good things, not bad." Online: www.Life-With-Confidence.com/fear-of-making-mistakes.html

Bits & Bytes

Simple K12 FREE online Google Webinar Event (Google Tools/Presentations/Forms)