We have decided to ground our work in a book study. We have decided that we would like to study Kelly Gallagher's Deeper Reading and look at ways to improve students' abilities to implement higher level thinking skills within their reading of texts. During our search for a book, I found a link that covers many possible literacy strategies we could try out, so I am including it here.
http://www.learningpt.org/literacy/adolescent/strategies.php
Integrating Technology into the Writing Process
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
PLC Meeting 1.23
Casey Weyls and Will Darter are joining our PLC this semester.
As a PLC, we decided to focus on the following Common Core Standard:
As a PLC, we decided to focus on the following Common Core Standard:
KCK12R11W9
Draw evidence from literary or
informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research.
a. Apply grades 11–12 Reading standards to
literature (e.g. “Demonstrate knowledge of eighteenth-, nineteenth- and
early- twentieth-century foundational works of American literature, including
how two or more texts from the same period treat similar themes or topics”).
b. Apply grades
11–12 Reading standards to literary nonfiction (e.g. “Delineate and
evaluate the reasoning in seminal U.S. texts, including the application of
constitutional principles and use of legal reasoning [e.g., in U.S. Supreme
Court Case majority opinions and dissents] and the premises, purposes, and
arguments in works of public advocacy [e.g., The Federalist,
presidential addresses]”). (CC.W.11-12.9)
We chose this standard as the anchor for our work this semester because we wanted to focus on deepening student understanding and on increasing their ability to demonstrate that understanding through writing.
Big Idea #1: Ensuring That Students Learn
What will our PLC try that will impact student learning?
Use of Bloom's to push students through the higher levels of analysis
Use of Active Reading/Annotation to aid student comprehension of texts
Use of comprehension questions directly after reading to gauge understanding
Use the 6 trait writing process to evaluate and encourage students to produce deeper and more meaningful writing
How will this contribute to student success in the classroom and increased student achievement for all students?
Students have to have these skills to be successful in English, and they will transfer to all other content. These are also necessary skills for college readiness.
Big Idea #2: A Culture of Collaboration
How will we work together to impact student learning?
We will read various research on these topics, attempt new strategies, and collectively share the results of our experiences.
Big Idea #3: A Focus on Results
What results will we measure to determine if our effort improves student learning? Will come back to this question.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Showcase Supplies??
I do not see any supplies requested for your Showcase presentation. If this need changes, please see Brittany McWilliams by November 30th.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
PLC Showcase
At the end of our semester of work, all PLCs will be showcasing their work at the Wyandotte High School PLC Showcase on Wednesday, December 12th in the Social Hall.
The showcase will be a public demonstration of our learning,
collaboration, and results. Each PLC will showcase work that reflects
how your learning and collaboration has impacted student learning. Each
PLC is encouraged to be creative and innovative in their demonstration
(student examples would be highly encouraged); however, please be sure
the following are addressed through your presentation -
PLC Focus
If your PLC requires any kind of additional resources, please submit any requests for those materials via the comment section to this blog entry by NOVEMBER 9th. You will receive these materials by or before your November 28th meeting, so you will have AT LEAST two weeks to work on organizing your demonstration.
PLC Focus
Collaborative Actions
Summary of PLC Learning
Impact on Student Learning
Connections to Future Teaching and Learning
In
addition, all staff will have an opportunity to visit each
demonstration during the Showcase. Many outside guests will also be in
attendance. If your PLC requires any kind of additional resources, please submit any requests for those materials via the comment section to this blog entry by NOVEMBER 9th. You will receive these materials by or before your November 28th meeting, so you will have AT LEAST two weeks to work on organizing your demonstration.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Update on the Research Paper process
My students are beginning to utilize Notestar well. I think the seniors are finally starting to see the benefit of planning and organizing their research. We have been using Read Write Think's webbing tool for organizing their ideas. I don't like it as well as Inspiration (which isn't on the kids laptops this year). Its pretty basic, but there is no saving and going back in to edit which is its major flaw. They kids need to be prepared to finish all their planning in one session or the risk losing info.
The biggest problem I am trying to conquer with my Seniors right now is time management when it comes to a long term project. A lot of them are letting deadlines get away from them, so I have been playing with some project organizer tools to figure out what to recommend for them. I am trying out Trello and Zoho. Another possibility is the Lazy Meter, which I have used in the past.
The biggest problem I am trying to conquer with my Seniors right now is time management when it comes to a long term project. A lot of them are letting deadlines get away from them, so I have been playing with some project organizer tools to figure out what to recommend for them. I am trying out Trello and Zoho. Another possibility is the Lazy Meter, which I have used in the past.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
New Adventures in Technology
I have been attempting to use some new types of technology including Notestar & Blogger.
Ms. Burks turned me on to Notestar (notestar.4teachers.org) as a tool for helping students organize and save their research notes. I believe it will also create their Works Cited page for them when they are completely finished with their research. We believed this would be beneficial since:
1. We & our students do not enjoy creating Works Cited (besides work smarter, not harder right?).
2. Our students have difficulty keeping their materials in a safe place.
3. It allows them to copy and paste a quote which may help them incorporate outside info. into their papers.
Helpful Hints from my fumbles:
*Email students their username & password AND have them save it to a sticky note on their Dashboard
*Be sure you have created a Project for students AND assigned it to them
*Be sure students have put in their topics (in the Topic Box & the Description Box)
*Be sure students click 'Create' to really create & save their note
* Also, as a way to prevent plagiarism and force students to think more about their research, I require 3 parts on each 'Notecard': quote, paraphrase quote, how this info. relates to your topic
Ms. Burks also turned me on to Blogger (seeing a pattern here?- I think it's obvious who the expert is). I have decided to have my freshmen respond to their journal prompts on Blogger. Now, I will definitely try to help you avoid some headaches with this process.
1. Have students create Google Accounts
*Some of my students needed a verification code via a text message. I used my phone and borrowed another student's phone in order to obtain these.
*Make students save this info. on a Dashboard sticky note (Re-inforce the fact that you cannot access this information for them!)
*Create a Google Form with the following (required) fields- Name/ Email/Hour (make sure they put in an accurate email address/ spelled correctly) Make students write down which email they put in the Google Doc
*Create a Blog
*Copy and paste the emails from the Google Form into the "Add authors" box on the Blog. Be sure to put a comma after each email. Send the invitation.
*Have students check the email account they put in the Google Doc (thus why you had them write it down, esp. if this is done in a later class which I would recommend).
*In the email from you, students should find a link. They will click on that link and it will take them to another page. On this page, there will be a link at the top- DO NOT CLICK (this is just the view the blog- they won't be able to publish anything to it). Under that link you will see a statement similar to this: To join this blog as an author click here (the 'here' will be in blue). This is what students need to click on to be an author on the blog.
*Have student do their post in a Word Document (you may want to assign a word count requirement)
*Have students copy and paste their post into the blog and publish
*Encourage fellow staff to visit the blog and respond to student posts
*There is a way to remove a post if it is inappropriate or if you want them to revise it first (I think you just change it to a Draft- but like I said Ms. Burks is the expert)
Hope this helps & I will keep you abreast of our progress:)
Ms. Burks turned me on to Notestar (notestar.4teachers.org) as a tool for helping students organize and save their research notes. I believe it will also create their Works Cited page for them when they are completely finished with their research. We believed this would be beneficial since:
1. We & our students do not enjoy creating Works Cited (besides work smarter, not harder right?).
2. Our students have difficulty keeping their materials in a safe place.
3. It allows them to copy and paste a quote which may help them incorporate outside info. into their papers.
Helpful Hints from my fumbles:
*Email students their username & password AND have them save it to a sticky note on their Dashboard
*Be sure you have created a Project for students AND assigned it to them
*Be sure students have put in their topics (in the Topic Box & the Description Box)
*Be sure students click 'Create' to really create & save their note
* Also, as a way to prevent plagiarism and force students to think more about their research, I require 3 parts on each 'Notecard': quote, paraphrase quote, how this info. relates to your topic
Ms. Burks also turned me on to Blogger (seeing a pattern here?- I think it's obvious who the expert is). I have decided to have my freshmen respond to their journal prompts on Blogger. Now, I will definitely try to help you avoid some headaches with this process.
1. Have students create Google Accounts
*Some of my students needed a verification code via a text message. I used my phone and borrowed another student's phone in order to obtain these.
*Make students save this info. on a Dashboard sticky note (Re-inforce the fact that you cannot access this information for them!)
*Create a Google Form with the following (required) fields- Name/ Email/Hour (make sure they put in an accurate email address/ spelled correctly) Make students write down which email they put in the Google Doc
*Create a Blog
*Copy and paste the emails from the Google Form into the "Add authors" box on the Blog. Be sure to put a comma after each email. Send the invitation.
*Have students check the email account they put in the Google Doc (thus why you had them write it down, esp. if this is done in a later class which I would recommend).
*In the email from you, students should find a link. They will click on that link and it will take them to another page. On this page, there will be a link at the top- DO NOT CLICK (this is just the view the blog- they won't be able to publish anything to it). Under that link you will see a statement similar to this: To join this blog as an author click here (the 'here' will be in blue). This is what students need to click on to be an author on the blog.
*Have student do their post in a Word Document (you may want to assign a word count requirement)
*Have students copy and paste their post into the blog and publish
*Encourage fellow staff to visit the blog and respond to student posts
*There is a way to remove a post if it is inappropriate or if you want them to revise it first (I think you just change it to a Draft- but like I said Ms. Burks is the expert)
Hope this helps & I will keep you abreast of our progress:)
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Status Update
We started to discuss the ways to attack the writing process and what we can do to support the brainstorming process. Jason is looking for ways to attack new vocabulary. My personal goal is find the strategy we had to break down a question-- I can't remember its name. I think it was a part of our Wyandotte First materials. I think it could be powerful to marry those strategies with our technology. The ability to breakdown a question is a skill that will help students both inside and outside of the classroom. Giving them the ability to tackle a problem is a necessary skill for survival. Whether it is for an essay test or figuring out what to do if you are short on rent, you have to be able to tackle a problem and look at it from all sides. At this stage, I think the only measure we can have is if we are prepared to implement some aspect of our research in the classroom in the coming week, we aren't quite to the point to apply it to students yet.
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