Sunday, June 11, 2017

Year in Review - June 2017

As the school year comes to a close, I am wrapping up my year of blogging and guest teaching.  I reflect on what I have accomplished this year and what goals I didn't quite reach.  Looking back on my first blog post, I was so excited to begin to guest teach.  I still believe that it is such a valuable opportunity.  And, to clarify, when I was guest teaching I had collaborated beforehand with a teacher and planned to teach the lesson.  This is completely different than filling in when a teacher is absent.  When I sub in a classroom we may just have a reading day, a work day, a movie day, or open gym.  When I guest taught, I met with the teacher before the lesson and we discussed objectives, methods, and outcomes.  I practiced and prepared and then taught a full lesson.

Some of my favorite memories of guest teaching were the funny things students said when I was in their class - "feces" rather than "thesis."  And when we made slime as a science experiment.  And leading the whole band through an entire song successfully!  I taught several different classes: PreAlgebra, Math, Literacy, Language Arts, PE, Video Production, Personal Development, American Studies, Global Studies, French, Band, and Special Education.  I was able to work in a different capacity with teachers.  They were teaching me and letting me in on their world.  I worked with students more individually and they were always so excited to have me in their classroom.  I learned a lot about what happens in our classrooms each and every day and the struggles and triumphs our teachers face.

I did not make it into everyone's classroom.  It was my intention and goal at the beginning to get everywhere, but it didn't happen.  I often ran out of time in my schedule or didn't work hard enough to schedule guest teaching into my schedule.  There were some teachers who were not interested in having me guest teach.  For example, the art teacher did not tell me to stay away, but the couple of times I approached her the students were in the middle of a project and there would be no real teaching happening.  Other teachers were very protective of their classrooms and worried about letting go.  Honestly, I also chose teachers and classrooms I knew I would be successful with to start and saved the others for last - and then ran out of time.  I did not get into Mr. Norton's advanced math classes or Industrial Technology, both of which I was nervous about in my first blog post.

The end of the year came up quickly and I spent a lot of time in classrooms substituting when we were short on classroom subs, but no real guest teaching happened in the month of May.  Over the school year I was able to use this blog space to discuss other things I believed in and worked on - PBIS, staff engagement, my one word, shadowing a student.  I am proud of my efforts to begin blogging and plan to continue doing it.  I am glad I tried guest teaching and am happy with what I did.  I would like to continue guest teaching next year and make it to the classes I didn't get to this year, and maybe even some of the ones I did.  Reflecting is an important part of professional growth.  I am able to see where I was successful and admit where I can improve.  I will blog again in the fall with a fresh start to guest teaching and a new school year!

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Video Production - April 18, 2017




Video Production class is a highlight for many of our students.  They record our daily announcements like a television show.  They also record commercials for upcoming events and speeches for student council elections.  I was able to sit in on one of the class periods.  I'm not sure I would call it "guest teaching", however.  The students were teaching themselves!

Mr. Raaf, the teacher for the class, was in the room as a guide and a reminder to students of what needed to be done.  I was along to observe and offer some simple suggestions to improve the show.  I also recorded a commercial to promote our final all-school PBIS incentive for the year - lunch outside with free ice cream!

The students did amazing work.  They wrote the script, determined the background, edited images and captions, programmed the sound, and practiced as anchors.  At times it seemed like one person or team had more to do than others, but Mr. Raaf assured me that the roles switch each week.  So one person may seem to get off easy, but then will have to work hard the next week.  I was very impressed with the professionalism behind the cameras.  Students were working hard and working together to create a good show.

It was a great experience for me to see how things work in this class and go behind the scenes of the morning show.  I think it also made me realize how valuable this resource is.  We need to encourage more classes to use the video production room and equipment.  I need to get in more often to be on camera and to promote things that are happening in the school.  Could we also use it for parent news?  There are lots of possibilities.  We just need to get in there and do it!

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Language Arts 8 - March 30, 2017

My latest adventure took me to 8th grade Language Arts where they were conducting lit circles around different books they have been reading.  I wasn't sure what a lit circle was, so I visited Ms. Williams' class the day before to watch her in action directing a circle.  It is basically a Socratic seminar about a book students have read with some specific requirements for students.

It seemed like an easy task to facilitate the circle.  The students would be doing most of the talking and I would just listen and moderate.  However, I was unable to stay quiet!  I violated the fidelity of the student-led circle.  I just couldn't help myself.  I wanted to help facilitate the questioning and the understanding of each particular book.  I had been an "outside circle" member the day before and knew that the inner circle members needed to speak up and be clear with their statements.  They weren't really doing so, so I stepped in.  It made for a more lively discussion, but probably not exactly what Ms. Williams was hoping for with a student-led circle.

The books seemed really fascinating to me.  One was Schooled about a boy who lived in a hippie commune, but when his grandmother falls ill he must move in with a counselor and start going to real school.  The students thought the main character was pretty weird.  The other book we discussed was Monster about a boy who was part of a murder that happened in a store.  It was written in play format from the boy's perspective in jail.  We had quite a discussion about his innocence (or guilt) in the circle.  You can imagine now why these two compelling books had me jumping in with questions, clarifications, and connections.

Another great experience getting to watch and participate in two days of literature circles with our fun 8th grade students.  Their insightful comments always inspire me.  And their desire to be heard and appreciated humbles me.  I can't wait to get back in the classroom for the next adventure!



Sunday, March 19, 2017

Spring break = spring reset

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As spring break is winding down, I am thankful for the break from the hectic pace of school and now reflect on the goals I set at the beginning of the year.  Only about 50 days of school remain in this year.  I think back to our keynote speakers at the beginning of the year as well as several articles I read to kick off the school year.  They had one main thing in common - why.  What is your why?  Know your why.  Focus on your why.  Share your why.

I set several goals for myself including to engage more with parents and the community and to guest teach in all teachers' classes.  I started off by engaging parents through a dinner at our back to school night.  I have worked with our PSTO and CPSO to encourage more parent participation.  Why is this important to me?  I know that students do better in school when their families take pride in it as well.  And parents will take pride in a school that they feel welcome in and a part of.  We have a very diverse community and need to celebrate it.  For the last part of the school year I would like to host a family night event at school to welcome our new feeder elementary schools and connect them with our current community.  I have already created a rough draft and hope to work with the PSTO during the next meeting.

I have taught several classes for teachers, yet have several yet to go.  It has been difficult to find the time to teach classes and to coordinate with teachers' schedules.  I have found that it is hard for them to let go!  Why is this important to me?  It gives me a purpose and a reason to connect and work with my teachers.  It gives me the opportunity to spend time with students and see how they learn and act in a classroom environment.  I plan to continue this endeavor and teach as many classes as I can in the time that remains.  However, I now realize that I might not get to teach every teacher's class.

I also shadowed a student this year, led our PBIS team to model distinction by our AEA, and helped to decrease the achievement gap in our Iowa Assessment scores.  I attended the PLC institute and led our Instructional Leadership Team to implement the PLC process in collaborative teams.  Yes, these are all great accomplishments, but I know that there is more work yet to do.  And I have more goals yet to accomplish.  That is why this is not just a spring break, but a spring reset.  Time to have recharged, reflected, and refocused.  Why?  For the students, staff, and for yourself.  Have you taken the time for a spring reset?
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Language Arts 8 - March 10, 2017

Sure, I'll teach your class on the Friday before spring break..... said no one ever! But I did.  I took over Ms. Starr's 8th grade Language Arts class Friday afternoon before we all left for break.  Everyone was ready to get out of school, including me.  But the students were willing to participate and complete the work we needed to get done.  Thank goodness for such good students!

Our task was to read the next section of Flowers for Algernon and make connections.  This is something students had done previously in the week.  I read this book many years ago.  So I asked students to help me remember what was going on in the story.  Students did a great job of filling in the gaps that I couldn't recall.  We read the section where the narrator was beginning to gain intelligence and discovered that people were not actually his friends.  Students made so many good connections and we had a fantastic discussion about whether or not it was worth it for the narrator to become smarter yet lose his innocence.  The vast majority of students said yes.  They argued that they wouldn't want to be left in the dark or that it wasn't fair that the other students could pick on the narrator.  Several students participated in this discussion, even ones I know were struggling with things outside of the classroom.  Students also made connections to times when they had been bullied or thought that someone was their friend and then realized they were not.  Someone also made the connection to the Tom Hanks' movie Cast Away by noting that it is almost like the narrator was marooned on an island until he began to gain intelligence.

Although we all had several other things on our mind (sun, sand, vacation), we had a great discussion and finished what we needed to do.  Students also made their selections for upcoming book talks that I hope I get a chance to hear!  I'm so thankful to have had a great class to work with before leaving for break.

Sunday, February 19, 2017

American Studies - February 17, 2017

Mr. Schroeder was absent today so we planned that I would take over his Sheltered American Studies class for the day.  Sheltered is for ELL students only.  It is a slower paced American history class that focus on big ideas, concepts, and vocabulary.  The hope is that students build their capacity to be successful in regular classes in high school.  I have never taught a sheltered class, but I have taught basic government, which was for lower level special ed students and ELL students.  I hoped that experience would help me be successful teaching this class.

Luckily for me, the students were working on creating a presentation about the three branches of government.  I taught governemnt for 10 years, so this was totally my thing!  I told the students and they thought it was cool to have an "expert" in class.  Mr. Schroeder wanted me to focus on presentation skills rather than content, however.  So we begain by making a list of things a good presenter would do.  Here is what the students came up with:

Eye contact/look at the audience
do not just read the slides
loud, clear voice
don't be shy
give examples
be prepared for questions

I thought it was a great list.  Then I took a practice presentation and presented to them poorly.  They had to note what I did wrong and how I should improve.  It was fun to really do it wrong!  The students even giggled at some of my mistsakes.  Then I did it the right way and they attentively listened.  I gave them some work and practice time.  Then we had one volunteer to practice his presentation in front of the whole class.  He was pretty proud of himself and did a great job remembering our presentation skills.

The take-away from this guest teaching lesson is that these students are really no different than any other students we have.  They want to learn, they are excited to share what they know, and they can learn.  I think that sometimes we think that they are lazy or don't care because it takes ELL students longer or they need different types of instruction.  I had fun working with these students and loved seeing their creative juices flowing as they worked on their projects.  And a big shout out to Gamal for being brave enough to practice his presentation in front of all of us!

Shadow a Student - February 16, 2017

I recently participated in the national Shadow a Student challenge.  I thought this was a great way to experience life as a Northwest Junior High student.  And it really goes along with my goals for the year - connecting with students and staff.  I chose Tyquanna, an 8th grade student, to shadow.  She wanted to make sure she wasn't in trouble, but then thought it sounded like a cool idea.  I chose her because she is an average student - no learning support classes, no advanced classes, no music.  She is also a student that has come a long way in her two short years at Northwest.  She has grown and matured so that she is prepared to be successful in high school.  I'm really proud of her.

We started our day doing volunteer work in the modified special ed class.  This was probably my most favorite part of the day.  It was fun to work with the students and even more fun to see Tyquanna thriving with these students.  She was kind, patient, and helpful.  It was a great example of how very different students can work together and make each other better people.

The rest of the morning was filled with academic classes.  The afternoon had two study halls and two academic classes.  A couple of my take-aways from these experiences included hunger and boredom.  After working hard all morning, I was starving by lunch!  Now I know why so many students complained first trimester about lunch being late.  We did move it up, but I was definitely hungry.  I was also really bored in the afternoon.  Two study halls and a language arts class that was having a reading day did not make for a very exciting learning experience.  No wonder why students end up sleeping or acting out.  I also learned why students complain about not having enough time between classes.  Sure, you can make it from one room to the next without a problem in four minutes.  However, if you need to use the bathroom or want to talk with your friends for the first time all day - it is nearly impossible.

I did see lots of good things happening in classes.  Teachers were always prepared and they seamlessly included me in their class, like I was just another student.  You could see the pride teachers take in their lessons and their craft.  This was unlike an evaluative lesson where they knew I was coming and prepped a special lesson.  I told them the day before that I was planning to be there, but I don't think I gave them enough warning to change their plans.  It was so great to see teachers in their element working with all types of students.

I encourage anyone who can take the time to shadow a student to do so.  I learned a lot about our school, our teachers, and the experiences we are giving our students.  Thanks to my student for letting me tag along all day!

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Focus on the staff this February

As we continue through a long, cold, dreary winter, I can feel myself dragging.  And see it in our staff and students too!  I was perusing Twitter one day and saw a great idea by Eric Ewald (@ericewald_iowa), principal of Van Allen Elementary.  Each Friday was a special day just for staff.  It gave them something to look forward to and something to bring them together.  I loved it and decide to steal the idea and change it around for our staff.

Staff need incentives and boosters as much as our students.  I have read the book Kids Deserve It and it was filled with so many great ideas to support our students, and some to also support our big kids - staff!  They work hard for our students and if we don't support them, they will not be able to continue to do all that they do for our students.  The ideas are nothing extravagant or expensive.  Just a little something to bring the staff together, get them talking, and build them up.

I also am bringing an idea from another district I worked in that will get our staff talking and building respect for one another.  A traveling trophy for teachers doing great things!  Teachers will present the trophy (actually I think two trophies) to their colleagues who are doing something extra, something extraordinary, something special.  Our Instructional Leadership Team will choose two people to receive the first trophies.  This will happen at our next building meeting.  Then at the following meeting, those winners will pass on the trophies to other staff that they have found doing something great.  It could be something related to PBIS, something related to academics, or just something where they saw a special connection to our students.  It could be for teachers or support staff.

These couple of new ideas for February are sure to get our staff smiling again and keep them working hard for our students.  Kids deserve it and so do our amazing teachers and staff!


Sunday, January 29, 2017

PBIS Improvements

This week I was not able to schedule a guest teaching spot, but I did present on our school's PBIS improvements at a Grant Wood AEA PBIS regional meeting.  I am so proud of the work of this team!  The positives are definitely beginning to show.  Our behavior data shows great improvement from last year, the hallways are clearer, and teachers comment on how much better things are going overall this year.

We began by starting fresh over the summer with a new team of committed individuals.  We attend two and a half days of training with Grant Wood AEA.  We planned lessons to teach behavior expectations, re-worked the behavior matrix, and developed PD for our teachers.  When school started, teachers taught the lessons with fidelity - from going to the cafeteria to talk about lunchroom expectations to reviewing when you can and cannot use your cell phone.  Our PBIS values (Viking Virtues) are safe, responsible, and respectful.

We use V2 tickets - Virtuous Viking tickets.  Teachers hand these out to students when they see that they are displaying the Viking Virtues.  We are sure to tell the students why they are receiving a ticket and give them the praise they deserve.  These tickets can then be used at the store for various prizes including snacks, pencils, Viking apparel, and raffle prizes.  Some of the raffle prizes are most popular and do not cost anything - your table goes first at lunch, play basketball with a teacher during study hall, sit in a teacher's comfy chair, pizza with the principal, etc.

We had a fantastic all-school incentive first trimester.  If the tickets redeemed at the Viking Store filled a box, Herky and the University of Iowa cheer squad would attend our spirit assembly.  It worked!  We filled the box and students loved seeing Herky run through a giant V2 ticket and play with our school band.  The cheerleaders did a cheer and took selfies with the students.  Huge success!

This trimester we are in the middle of a homeroom challenge.  Students must first show their V2 tickets to their homeroom teacher who keeps a running tally.  The homeroom that has the most tickets at the end of the challenge will play a staff team in dodgeball!  There are prizes for second and third place as well.  Students are totally in to it.  They are checking the totals every day and reminding each other to turn in their tickets and do good things to get tickets.

The most important measure of success is the data points.  Behavior is down and especially the behavior categorized as "major."  The PBIS team has worked hard and met consistently.  We share this data with the whole staff and celebrate our success.  Teachers have bought in and are enjoying the benefits of a good system.  We still have work to do, but will take a minute to bask in the glow of a little success.  And then start thinking of our next all-school incentive!

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Language Arts 7 - January 19, 2017



This week's guest teaching adventure took me to 7th grade Language Arts.  Ms. Nourski was going to be absent, so this was a perfect opportunity to jump in and teach.  Students had begun a unit on persuasive writing.  Ms. Nourski had gone over key vocabulary terms such as thesis, reason, evidence.  Today we were to read an essay and find the different parts.

We began the lesson with a DOL (Daily Oral Language).  We had to proofread two sentences.  Students did a wonderful job and even found one thing I didn't!  Students complete these every day.  It is a great way to practice writing skills, especially ones that are often found on standardized tests.  Next we reviewed the persuasive vocabulary Ms. Nourski had previously gone over.  It was a good refresher and most students seemed to understand.

Then we read a persuasive essay titled "I'll Take a Cat."  We read together as a class.  Then we talked about whether cats or dogs make better pets.  This became a slightly heated argument and students shared some funny stories about their pets.  It was interesting to learn that several students had both cats and dogs.  And just as many didn't have any pets.

Finally, students highlighted and labeled the different parts of the essay.  We reviewed some just as the bell was ringing.  A few students were confused by the thesis and the reasons.  I worked with a couple of individuals to make sure they got it.  Others highlighted a whole body paragraph claiming that the whole thing was evidence that cats are better.  I tried to convince the student that perhaps not every sentence was evidence.  But they did not back down.

I think the biggest challenge during this guest teaching experience was the variety of levels.  Some students completed the highlighting activity while we read as a class and were done with lots of time left.  Other students quickly finished and were reading other books or working on other homework.  Still others sharpened pencils three times, asked to go to the bathroom, and accomplished little to no work.  The differences of need and ability was very apparent in this class.  Luckily Ms. Nourski's sub stayed in the room and was able to work one on one with a few students while I tried to do the same.  In a perfect world, class sizes would be smaller.  Teachers today have to juggle so many different things.  The quick learners and workers were quietly talking or doing other work because they were done early.  Could they have been doing some other extension activity?  How does a teacher plan for all of this?  Could students partner up?  I don't have any of these answers.  I am impressed every day with how our fabulous teachers manage with the resources they have. I will support them with what they need and advocate on their behalf.

Monday, January 16, 2017

Practical Science - January 12, 2017

I am continuing my guest teaching adventure as we move into 2017 and my first stop was Practical Science.  This is a class for students who require more modifications and accommodations than can be provided in a general education class.  However, the class does follow the Common Core and Next Generation Science Standards - just in a more modified way.  I was excited to work with Ms. Schmitt and these energetic scientists.

The students had been learning about matter and how matter can change due to chemical reactions.  On the day that I got to guest teach, we were going to complete a cool chemical reaction lab where we combine to chemicals to make flubber!  I knew the students would love it.  They had to first make observations about each chemical and record them on a chart.  Then they worked with a partner to combine them and watch the chemical reaction turn the liquids into flubber.

The students were great scientists, offering answers and following along.  They were excited to show me what they knew and to complete the experiment.  They worked very well as partners, each helping the other and encouraging them.  They were responsible workers and were amazed to see two liquids turn into a slimy solid.

The Practical Science class is small, only 9 students.  I was able to check in on each pair of students and talk with each of them.  This is valuable in a hands-on class like science.  It is obvious why other teachers wish they had smaller class sizes and were able to work more one-on-one with students.  These particular students were inquisitive, respectful, and responsible for their work.  I was impressed with how they cleaned up after the lab and helped each other, even if they weren't in the same group.  Just a great group to work with!






Wednesday, January 4, 2017

One Word - Believe

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Inspired by other educators and principals, I decided to participate in the One Word 2017 challenge.  I have chosen Believe as my one word this year.  I had originally thought about a resolution I wanted to make and I also thought about taking my goals for the school year and doing a mid-year review.  But I chose to participate in the one word challenge and I believe it is one that truly has purpose for me.

To believe is simple yet grand.  Anyone can say they believe in something or someone.  To actually take that belief and act upon it is what makes a true believer.  I set some goals for myself this school year, including this blog and guest teaching.  Midway through the year I am continuing this goal.  I believe that this is important work.  I have spent quality time with teachers in preparation for teaching their classes.  I have gotten to teach in classrooms full of students again.  I have worked with students and shown my vulnerability as I have struggled through algebra lessons and conducting a large band.  It has been a fun experience and also one that I truly believe in.  I will continue to work toward this goal.

I believe in my students and the staff that we have at Northwest Junior High.  I finished three books during break: All American Boys, Between the World and Me, and For White Folks Who Teach in the Hood.  All three of these books had a common theme of the struggles that African American students (particularly boys) in our world today.  I believe that schools can be the catalyst for change.  Education, specifically teachers, can open up so many doors for our young people.  And the opportunities we provide for them in our schools can create change.  I believe that we have teachers who are looking for new and innovative ideas to inspire our students.  I believe that we have students who are on the precipice of change.  I believe that together we can try new things and make NWJH a place where all students feel at home and ready to learn.

I believe that this year holds great promise.  I look forward to the challenges and the successes.  I will continue to believe and to work to make those dreams come true - for me and for all those that are part of our NWJH family.  Together we can all believe!

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