Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Meeting "My Kids"

The first day comes.  They enter my room.  Some nervous.  Others dreading the start of school.  The little girls and one boy who enter enthusiastically, sit in the front, and love the teacher as soon as I say "welcome".  Everyone is on their best behavior for the first hour.  Then true colors start shining through.  The kid who can't keep a grip on his pencil and knocks the supply bin down twice in the first twenty minutes... just makes me smile, "Oh, he'll take some extra patience."  The little girl who knows very little English, but surprises me when she gets to work before I start typing on Google Translate.  She'll melt my heart all year as she learns English so fast.  There's the boy whose hair is spiked with gel and his shirt tucked in.  He sat in the front row and works diligently.  A little nerd and so stinkin' cute I love him instantly.  The kid with the English accent - always adorable for the American teacher.  The little girl who struggles in school, but begins working hard right away.  They're all here.

I call them "my kids".  They feel like that in some ways, as I spend 6 hours a day, five days a week with them.  Really they're just on loan.  Or entrusted.  As I work at a private international school, in a city where parents have several English-speaking options, I am honored that I get to teach these kids.  It's very humbling.  Especially when my students speak three languages fluently, translate for the adults around them, and still have respect for their native English-speaking teacher who speaks ONLY English.  Humbling.

But the best job in the world.  "My kids" for the next nine months.  

Saturday, August 18, 2012

The First Day of School

It's here!  The first day of school.  Some of the things I'm doing this year...

Learning Names: To help the kids meet their classmates, I'm playing a very simple name game even my beginning English speakers can do.  I've taped a child's name under each chair in the classroom at random.  I'll take roll on Day 1 and practice pronouncing each name (some of my students' names have sounds my tongue is just not used to saying, so it takes some repetition).  After I've said each name and identified each child, I'll tell the kids to look under their chairs for a piece of paper.  They then look for the person whose name was under their chair and give them their name tag.  Simple.  Easy.  Gets the kids moving around.  And not too "in the spotlight" for my shy new ones.


School Tour: As I give my kids a tour of the school and introduce them to other teachers throughout the day, I'll take pictures of the places and people we see.  I'll later print all the pictures and during an afternoon lesson, the kids will label each picture with a word, sentence, or paragraph of what the picture is.  Then I'll bind it in a book for the kids' reference.  Our first published book of the year!


Welcome Back Sack: All the kids' notebooks and supplies for the year are packed in a paper bag (free in any U.S. grocery store and a few cents each in Europe).  Then I put this cute little note I got online on the front of the bag.  I pass out each bag and the kids open their "present".  Each bag has supplies with a child's name on it, so this becomes a Name Game again, as the children have to pass their sack to the person whose name is on the supplies inside.  We organize all the supplies they've received and the kids then know where everything goes.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Summer Reading

Order it from Scholastic or Amazon
I ordered several professional books at the end of last school year.  I read one this summer.  But it was so great!  Janiel Wagstaff gives some wonderful suggestions for Writer's Workshop.  Some of the ideas I've gleaned from her are:

1. The Think Pad - A notebook where kids write one word, a short response, or a whole story.  Used multiple times every day across subject areas.  Janiel says, "We write in them, and we diagram, chart, and draw right over the lines."

2. Running Topics List - Keep an on going list of writing ideas up on the wall as ideas present themselves throughout the day.  Kids can always use this list during Workshop to get started when they're stumped.  (Later kids can make individual lists of their own ideas in their Think Pads.)

3. Author's Chair - Every day she has a few students share some of their writing at the end of Writer's Workshop.  "I schedule students' Author's Chair time by the days of the week.  The first five students on my class list share on Mondays, the next five or six on Tuesday, and so on through Friday.  First, when their day of the week comes up, writers know they have the option to share or pass.  If they choose to share, their job is to be prepared."

4. Quick Jots - "These are quick moments to think, job down (one word, a few words, phrases, or sentences), question, list, brainstorm, web, respond, or note.  Anytime I want to ask a question, get an opinion, or check students' understand may be a good Think Pad time."

5. Don't edit at first. - Don't focus on conventions so much.  Get kids writing, enjoying writing, and willing to take risks in writing before correcting grammar.  And don't always correct everything.  Choose one or two skills to focus on and correct those.

This book is really practical.  Janiel gives details on how she runs her Writer's Workshop daily and progresses throughout the year.  Includes many ideas, differentiation, and ESL.  Very easy read, short, and completely useful.  None of that theory we all dread reading for "professional growth".  I'll definitely be putting some of her ideas into my Workshop this year.  Thanks Janiel Wagstaff!

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Quotes for Kids

I like these quotes to hang in the classroom for a bit of inspiration...







And one more for teacher inspiration...

Setting Up My Classroom

It's August. Time to start thinking about a new school year.  Before planning lessons and inviting kids into my room, I always have to get myself organized and arranged.  Moving desks.  Decorating.  It can be the most time consuming part.  But it sure is fun!  Here are some ideas I've found that I plan to start with this year.

For my class website homepage.  Great with the name of the class in the middle of the heart.

 I'll put this on the door of my classroom.

Desk and shelf arrangement.  I love that each group has a shelf with all their supplies.  Great for my desks that have no storage.

Tree wall.  I'll put student pictures and student work in the circles.  Goes really well with our plants unit in science that we start the year with.  I'll add this quote to it:
 Class family photos.  Framed on the shelf.  We are family.

From Woonideeen:
I'm going to make covers for the backs of my students' chairs, but with pockets instead of the picture.  I'll pin their name tags to their chair covers instead of their desks (laminated of course).  Will solve the problem of name tags always coming off and getting off tape muck at the end of the year.  And the kids can store their pencils and erasers in the pocket.

At the end of last year I had all my kids make flags of the world on paper triangles.  I'm going to add a colorful paper back and string them up around my classroom.  A lot of color and student work.  (The flags are great for an international classroom.)

Students start the year with setting goals.  Write each goal on a balloon with the kids' pictures hanging from them.  This is a great way to post them up and keep everyone accountable to meet them.  The teacher included!

Other Pinterest ideas with no links:
 Turn my ugly avocado file cabinet into a magnetic bulletin board.  Becomes a good divider in the classroom as well.

Crates with cushions as chairs.  I'll put these in my reading corner.  Can be used individually, for group work, made into a bench or individual chairs.  Move around the room so easily.  Loads of uses!

Ok, that's a start.  More to come!