Friday, July 19, 2013

Dear Mr. Pollock


Dear Mr. Pollock,
This is my last semester for my graduate degree.  I will walk across the stage on June 14th, 2013 at the St. Pete Coliseum… there are no words to describe the emotions of this life changing event for me.  I know you attending would not be a possibility, however please consider this letter as a stole of gratitude in your honor.  Looking back over the past almost 20 years, you are the reason I am here today… You believed in me, encouraged me, and guided me to this place in my life, even when my options seemed limited to my circumstances… You thought otherwise…We become teachers to “change the world” or hope too anyways.  As teachers, we see the possible when others see the impossible….Please know that you are loved and valued.  Your career was significant because of how you approached things...You stood up to the outdated factory system of education… You are exemplar 21 century teacher before the 21 century…It means so much to me today that you were and are a part of my life and career…Blessings to you and your family…. Well, the next item on the list will be my Phd. degree in education…As we come to close another school year, you are my inspiration to keep going to the next year with faith and a great attitude…Maybe just one day, I will make the difference that you have made in mine to a student, who will forever be changed….in their heart and life…

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

10 Practical Habits To Grow Great Writers



<     1.  Develop an evolving shared vision about Writing.  Everyone must share one consistent message for the delivery of instruction.

<   2.  Deepen your own personal knowledge of Crafts authors use in text to intentionally leave a sound print for the reader’s ear.

<   3. Actively seek, learn and know current best practices on the delivery of instruction.

<  4. Have an explicit plan in the management of materials for yourself and students.  Model how you expect students to organize their personal portfolios by keeping one for yourself to use.

<   5. Your daily-modeled writing should reflect your expectation of performance.   You must pre-write complete pieces before instructional delivery that are exemplar to what our standards represent for above level proficiency.

<   6. Conference…Conversations…Conference…essential not only with EVERY CHILD, but with all stake holders to improve content knowledge Teachers need to collaborate with each other and students to be considered highly effective.  Conference equals intervention and/ or differation of instruction to make learning authentic and purposeful. Conversations can be difficult at times, however structured conversations to get to the heart of an issue will provoke change.  Discomfort is not necessarily a “bad” thing when are students are at stake.  Our students need us to dedicate time to have these conversations as professionals and with them during independent practice to increase their content knowledge and our own. 

<   7. Model and lead a climate of respect and community.  A true leader is one who is mindful and aware of word choice and how they speak to others around them.  You must have zero tolerance of unkind words even if you are upset.  You must practice this principle when speaking to other adults, parents, or co-workers.  You may not like a co-worker, but that does not give you a license to alienate or bully them in front of others most importantly including students or peers.  Build a Writing Community will all members in the school.

<     8. Make a bond with Students through Writing.  You reveal your voice in modeled written chunks leading students to find their voice in print.  Your excitement for Writing will be shared.  Deliver this message -of excitement- in sequential lessons Use fineness and grace while sharing your thoughts aloud connecting your students the why and how of craft.

<    9. Use data: to plan your lessons (craft/elaboration/mode), words to show on word wall, develop instructional focus teaching points menu as team in PLC, and discuss trends common in student work.

1    10. EXPECTATION!  I cannot say this enough.  You get what you put out.  Make deposits into relationships with your peers and students.  Positive interaction is not negotiable.  Accept nothing less then 150% from peers and students.  Speak only positive words about what students can do.  I hear teacher’s labels all the time of why students are not performing.  Forget the acronyms, JUSST TEACH with HIGH expectation and believe they can!!!!





 

 

My personal reading list sparked the inspiration to draft these principles.



Inviting Students To Develop Skill and Craft in Writer’s Workshop- Jeff Anderson

Reaching Struggling Writers K-5 - Colleen Cruz

Mechanically Inclined- Jeff Anderson

How’s It Going- Carl Anderson

Writing Essentials- Reggie Routman

Starting With What Students Do Best- Katherine Boomer

But HOW DO YOU TEACH WRITING?- Barry Lane

Author's Craft- Defined


"Writers make deliberate decisions that leave that leave a ‘sound print” on a reader’s ear and eye through audio and visual craft."-Lester Lamnick   To be an effective teacher, you will discuss the “WHY” behind your own decisions with finess while modeling pieces.
It is imperative that you pre-write your complete modeled piece in advance before teaching the sequential lesson sets to be aware of your own decisions of placement of craft with purpose and care by thinking about the reasons for each decision and the intention behind them.   Craft is not done randomly or with out pre planned thought.
You begin to discover the ways to use the same crafting techniques for the most effective instruction and increasing rigor in your lessons. 
You are the LEADING AUTHOR of your apprentices! Your student’s writing is a reflection of your lessons that are modeled in the classroom.
  PLC's  can help evaluate your instruction, so you can improve your modeled pieces with more deliberate intentions in an artful manner to move your student’s understanding of craft and why it is taught verses creative writing.  

Your students will only be as knowledgeable as you are in the why behind craft and elaboration choice.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Teach with the Urgency of a Fire Fighter.....

  Fireman Arrived with-out Water....


       Each day of the school year, there is ALWAYS that one kid (maybe two) who did not come prepared with their homework.  The offense is always the same with a different excuse- a skin of truth stuffed with a lie.  
       What ever reason- or excuse one may offer- my reply is still the same..."What would happen if a firefighter arrived at the scene with out his or her water-hose?"
      At this point, the baffled child will give me a strange look and stutter a few syllables.   Proposing an offer of the same reason back of why I showed up at the fire unprepared?, Then, I ask," Could I come back tomorrow to put out their fire?  Reason sets in for most by this point.  
      The "task- avoider" will respond in a loud voice," You would get fired if you did that!!!!!".. or "I would loose everything because it would be too late!!!!"...  Exactly- my point stated! So please take a seat...
     As the leader and role model of your domain, the responsibility and sense of urgency will come from your expectations of the students.  The standard is set that you will hold them accountable for their personal best at all times.
   With this stated, you must be prepared with the same sense of urgency and dedication to the children.  Fire Fighters must work when ever duty calls.  They must train (not only physically) after their scheduled hours at the fire station, but after the fire is out.  They take courses in CPR and First Aid Etc.  I urge you not to be the teacher that shows up at the first bell and leaves at the last... or Even worse yet, "One who proclaims their summers are their personal time".  
        Like the firefighter you have a duty to the community to train after school hours.  Consider the hours at school as the hours of being at the scene of a the fire.  One may not have an exact time of "how long" they will be spraying water over some one's  home.   Upon the fire being put out there is still work to be done: a report must be made, the family will need assistance, investigations will occur, reports will continue or you may have to go back to the scene more than once to review.
      A teacher who shows up to school with out planning their lessons explicitly or management of materials/ procedures/ expectations would be the fireman showing up at the fire with out water... Why would anyone behave in such a manner?  This scenario would not occur.  A fireman comes with water and a teacher has a plan...
   In reality, I do believe teachers" think" they have a plan and believe their own excuses (skin of truth stuffed with a lie).  Let me clarify or define- plan.  
    Planning is taking the time (at least 24 hours in advance) to write down their teaching point as well as define it in kid friendly terms.  Planning includes thinking out the steps of instruction (how the lesson will be delivered), materials needed, jotting down your higher order questions (or a complete written model for author's craft),  instructing based on student need.  Also, having the lesson written down while demonstrating why children are expected to learn the task before them.  Designing how you are going to asses if they understand the concept.  Your plan has purpose like the hidden slide in power point- ready for each direction your lesson could lead to support your teaching point.
   If you believe, a plan is a snazzy book with blocks of time written on paper with page numbers, worksheets, and correlated standards you would be mistaken.  The snazzy book is what your principal would call "sub plans"... Busy work for when the real educator comes back. 
    True planning happens when you meet with your resource or content area "goo-roo", team members, and fellow stakeholders to discuss instruction, and look at assessments to guide the next teaching points, and put action research in place.  
        Planning  to a teacher could be considered in the firefighter world:  when the fire-fighter opens his investigation.  This person would sit down type up a report, meet with witnesses, discuss possible causes with the Captain-expert "goo-roo" of fires.  Take his lead or advice and put it into action.. The captain will be the one to meet with the Chief (Principle) to determine or approve the findings.  The fire research is the PLC and training.  One would not have a job if he only showed up upon a 911 call or his "scheduled hours".  Furthermore, if one did not physically train after the scheduled hours.  
       Is it possible to be an effective community role model or leader with so much responsibility with a Monday-Friday 7-3 schedule and two months off when lives are at stake?    You got to be willing to be inconvenienced when duty calls.
       Consider this point...  Would this be the person you would entrust want to in time of crisis at your home?   One whom is not prepared with basic supplies such as water, or walk away at 3 pm because his shift is over?  Yet, (even more scary) a fireman who had not physically trained and/or went to their CPR classes? After all the course was only offered in the summer? 
      Of Course not, You would never trust this personality type to be in position to save your life!  Ask yourself, "What kind of community leader are you?"  Do you leave kids burning in the fire because you forgot the water?  You expect your children to be prepared for you.  I urge you to do the same for them.  Make your class fireproof by collaborating with all stakeholders to design powerful lesson and be inconvenienced with training or support meetings.  Bring the water to the fire when called to duty!  Teach as if your heart is on fire burning for a desire  to be a part of a team when lives are at stake. 


   

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Teach Like A Champion: How Are You Changing The Classroom?





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC0ltKOwF_A&feature=related

Monday, July 30, 2012

VOTE TO HELP Title One School..

Please help vote... NEEDED HELP...
 A lot of people can  NOT part with their money, but they can click vote and   like..then share it with friends..  This girl worked so hard.. She fell asleep reading.. Help her class..


http://www.oo.com/safkids/detail/projectid/821332


Elmo Tickles All Students...

VOTE for a school to get an Elmo...:)
http://www.oo.com/safkids/detail/projectid/821332
  • In classes, two through five for Writing instruction to most effective use of the Elmo  and LCD projector are as basic as the pencil sharpener. 

  • In the k/1 workshops and training the ELMO is NOT best practice.  The teachers are to be making charts with read aloud of exemplar text use of craft. (CCS)
  •  For struggling writers as ELL to have the Elmo as the visual for children to understand the purpose as also the how and why behind every decision either in text or teacher demonstrated...  You are reaching all learning styles in this style of instruction.

  • Use the shades of meaning when you are at training.. If they are modeling with an Elmo and projector.. Use it in your instruction to students..... (it is not a dust collector)

  •  It is essential we all (seasoned and new educators) have the same message.  It is my goal to build not only a community of writers but professional relationships too... Unity comes in relationships for the common goal.  If I dont have your support on the practices  and how instruction is to be delivered from training, it will make it next to impossible to have teachers collaborate in Writing.  Instructional delivery must be in align with training. 


References:

Arlene Schultz- Helping Children Become Readers Through Writing
Regie Routman- Writing Essentials
Barry Lane- Reviser's Toolbox
Kim Ellis- Putting the Pieces Together
Mental Models for ELL 1-6 and 6-12 aha! Process