Showing posts with label crt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crt. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Thinking Prompts

Excellence in Education: Thinking Prompts
Thinking prompts are designed to promote and prompt thinking and dialogue. Thinking prompts can be used at the beginning of class to prime the brain for the day’s learning.
Thinking prompts vary in length. Thinking prompts can include video clips, short readings (articles, short stories, poems, etc.), visual arts (photographs, advertisements, paintings, etc.), and metaphors.
Why Use Thinking Prompts
When used with fidelity, thinking prompts engage all students. They prompt discourse and conversation by engaging students through reflection, creating opportunities for dialogue and allow all students to equally comment on. For example, after sharing a photograph, the opportunity exists for every student to comment equally and the teacher should strive to take a back seat during this process.
Effective thinking prompts help students make connections which in turn increases motivation as students are better able to understand not just what they are learning but why they are learning. They can also provide students with background knowledge which is integral to learning (one of the strongest indicators of how well students will learn new information).
By engaging students in conversation around a visual or other thinking prompt, we authentically engage students.
According to Jim Knight, effective thinking prompts are:
Provocative: The prompt inspires conversation and deeper thinking.
Complex: They promote different ideas, emotions and thoughts and can be seen from many different perspectives.
Personally relevant: When taken personally, students are going to be more invested in the learning that is about to occur.
Concise: Shorter clips keep students engaged and leave more time for thinking and learning.
Positive: Thinking prompts can set the mood for a class and can have an impact on the culture of the classroom.
Knight’s Six Suggestions for Sharing Thinking Prompts
  1. Establish respectful norms for classroom dialogue.
  2. Use the right kind, type, and level of question.
  3. Listen empathetically.
  4. Encourage students by offering authentic praise and paraphrase when unclear.
  5. Suggest connections between various ideas offered by students.
  6. Keep the dialogue session short so that all students remain engaged.
Excellence in Education: CRT Quote
Don’t focus on achievement; focus on getting your kids excited about learning. ~Pedro Noguera 
Tasks, Important Information, Upcoming Events
Mustang Morning. This week our sophomore seminars are meeting during Mustang Morning. Please remember that students should have passes when they are in the hallways during Mustang Morning (and at other times too). We’re trying hard to make sure students are signing up and using Mustang Morning for advancement. If you have students in the hallway, please remember that you are responsible for them and they should be provided a pass.
This Friday will be an extended 1st block for PSAT Pre-test Administration. Details will follow.
Friday is a B-Day. No Mustang Morning or clubs.
Parent-Teacher Conferences: Thursday 10/17 , both from 4:30-7:00.
October 16: PSAT / CWRA Tests (3rd and 4th periods will meet)
Diabetes training
If you are going on a field trip with a student who has diabetes, a chaperone on the field trip is REQUIRED to be diabetes trained. Training is a combination of online (4-5 hours) and includes a one time hand-on portion. The latter is being offered from 4:15-5:15 on October 21 at Center 1/Seminole Place. You will not be able to go on a field trip if you have a diabetic student and no diabetic-trained chaperones. List of students attending field trips should be provided to Ms. Tomlin 3 weeks prior to the field trip. For a helpful field trip checklist, click here. See Ms. Tomlin for more information.
Once an employee completes the training and passes a test at the end, he/she will be issued a certificate of completion that counts as being trained. Recertification credit will be granted.
ACPS AVID is hosting a Fall Workshop on October 22-23.  If you are interested in attending this workshop, please click on the link below and submit your names in the attached Form.
To be considered AVID trained and receive recertification points participants must attend both days (there are 5 topics discussed).
For those deciding to attend, please request your subs early.  If you are unable to attend this workshop there is a second workshop in February. The February workshop is the same as October.
October 31: End of Quarter; 10th grade field trip to Career Expo (will miss Mustang Morning and 2nd period)
Field Trips
French Tours: Through October 11
Job Shadowing: October 8 @ PVCC
October 31: 10th grade Career Expo (all 10th graders)
October 31-November 3: Theater Trip/Competition

Birthdays
October 12: Paula Loving
Shout Outs
Mike Schafer inspired this week’s Excellence in Education for how he used  John Gast’s American Progress/Spirit of the Frontier painting in his ST US/VA History. It was great to see a lively conversation and the ahh-has when students developed a greater understanding of the painting as it related to the time period. When one student referenced Manifest Destiny, I thought to myself, “mission accomplished.”
Useful Information
Bell Schedules http://bit.ly/MustangBells 
Seeking volunteers? ACPS is attempting to expand volunteer outreach and help teachers find volunteers. Here’s a form that takes a minute to complete.
Want something included on the Monticello Outlook Calendar, the Monticello website, in the PowerSchool Daily Bulletin, schoolwide Schoology accounts, or the student newsletter (viewed by parents, students and staff)? Please use this link https://goo.gl/forms/bIjfJLKokWPcEHx33 
Worth Your Time

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Being Purposeful in Meeting Students Where They Are

Meeting Students Where They Are...With a Purpose
We often talk of meeting students where they are. But how do we know where they are? And once we know, what do we do?

For my seventeen years as a classroom teacher, I built strong relationships with almost all of my students. I didn't have significant classroom management concerns. Students would hang out in my room before school and would eat lunch in my classroom. Many would share their school experiences and some confided their personal stories. While many of my actions, like greeting students at the threshold of the classroom, attending extracurricular events, etc., were purposeful, in hindsight many of them seem superficial.

About ten years into my teaching career, I remember my principal calling me into his office during lunch and asking, "Reed, how many African-American students are in the freshman transition program (a program for at-risk students that I was in charge of)?"

After a moment of contemplating, I gave him an answer and returned to my classroom. Walking back to my classroom--actually a trailer--I waited for my students to return. As I waited, I was actually proud of myself that I wasn't caught up in racial and ethnic data points. Then my students started filing into the trailer. In that one class, which represented only a quarter of the freshman transition students, I had as many African-American students as I had estimated were in the entire program. At that point, I realized I need to become more purposeful in my actions.

I needed to adjust from being unintentionally inviting to intentionally inviting, meaning I need to be more purposeful and sensitive to student needs and take appropriate actions based on their needs.

For me this meant going beyond positivity and knowing my students' interests. I needed to share my own personal stories with my students and provide opportunities for them to share their own stories. I re-examined how I taught world history to ensure I spent more time on issues that concerned and interested my students. Together with other teachers from the transition program, we visited some of our students' homes.

It also required changes to my instructional approaches. I made greater use of pre-assessments to better plan lessons and to ensure my students were able to monitor and see their progress. Increasing my use of formative assessments helped students progress as well. Using the data from formative assessments students were able to see their progress and when they didn't meet the learning targets, I would always take responsibility, "I need to do a better job of teaching. If you haven't learned it, I haven't taught it."

Meeting students where they are means that we are purposeful in our actions. It means making informed and purposeful decisions. It requires empathy and attending to the students' needs.

I still have a long way to go. I look forward to learning from all of you and our students this year.


Need to Knows
Please bring your computer to Monday's nuts-and-bolts sessions. We've made a slight change in the schedule

Below are a couple of  bell schedules for reference. Please be sure to double-check your lunch period as there were a couple of changes since the original version was sent. All schedules can be found at Bell Schedules : http://bit.ly/MOHSbells

First 2 Weeks Schedule

Extended 1st Block
August 22, 23, 27, 28, 29, 30
7:40-8:40
Zero Period
8:55-11:05
1st Period
11:10-1:00
2nd Period


Lunch
Class
1st: 11:05-11:35
11:40-1:00
2nd: 11:50-12:15
11:10-11:50 and 12:20-1:00
3rd: 12:30-1:00
11:10-12:30
1:05-2:25
3rd Period
2:30-3:50
4th Period


AM CATEC Students: Depart from Monticello High School at 9am and return from CATEC and 
return to Monticello High School at 11:55am
PM CATEC Students: Leave class at 12:50pm for 12:55pm bus departure

Wednesday, August 22
Computer Distribution
Thursday, August 23
Freshman, Sophomores, Juniors: Naviance Goal Setting Lesson
Freshman: Class Meeting
Friday, August 24
8 Period Day
Monday, August 27
Senior: Class Meeting
Freshman: Naviance Goal Setting Lesson
Sophomores/Juniors: Club Slide Presentation
Tuesday, August 28
Junior: Class Meeting
Freshman/Seniors: Club Slides
Sophomores: Cyber Safety
Wednesday, August 29
All: Club Sign-up and Mustang Morning
Thursday, August 30
Sophomore: Class Meeting
Freshman, Junior, Senior: Cyber Safety


8 Block Extended 1st Period
August 24
0 Period: 7:40-8:40
1A: 8:55-10:03
1B: 10:08-10:46
2A: 10:51-12:16


Lunch 1
10:46-11:16
Lunch 2
11:20-11:45
Lunch 3
11:51-12:16
2B: 12:21-12:59
3A: 1:04-1:42
3B: 1:47-2:25
4A: 2:30-3:08
4B: 3:13-3:50
AM CATEC Students: Depart from Monticello High School at 9am and return from CATEC 
and return to Monticello High School at 11:55am.
PM CATEC Students: Leave class at 12:50pm for 12:55pm bus departure.

Club Day with No Lunch
August 31
0 Period: 7:40-8:40
1A: 8:55-9:35
CLUB: 9:40-10:03
1B: 10:08-10:46
2A: 10:51-12:16


Lunch 1
10:46-11:16
Lunch 2
11:20-11:45
Lunch 3
11:51-12:16
2B: 12:21-12:59
3A: 1:04-1:42
3B: 1:47-2:25
4A: 2:30-3:08
4B: 3:13-3:50
AM CATEC Students: Depart from Monticello High School at 9am and return from CATEC 
and return to Monticello High School at 11:55am.
PM CATEC Students: Leave class at 12:50pm for 12:55pm bus departure.

Field Trips and SOLs







Stats of the Week
 Percent of teachers at Monticello who deduct points on late work. 

 
Percent of teachers at Monticello who include one or more of the following in grades: effort, participation, tardiness, attendance, and/or adherence to class rules.




Birthdays
August 19: April Wilkerson
August 20: Jon McDaniel
Sorry if I'm missing anyone new. 

Shout Outs
Hat tip to all of those responsible for a great start to the school year. This includes Garry Gibson for all his tech support and getting computers ready to roll out; our custodial staff for juggling CFA, a tornado, new furniture, August 14 with every ACPS staff member here, and our own needs; and our front office staff for getting keys ready.

A personal thank you to Miriah Dudley, Michael Jennings and Mike Parsons for helping sort computers for distribution.

And finally for all of you who were part of Fresh Start (especially Katina Dudley), Freshman Seminar (especially Meghan Streit), and/or attended our Southwood Community Event, we appreciate your extra efforts.

Useful Information
The presentations and resources from the first couple of days have been added to the Monticello Team Drive on Google.

Don't forget to use the Shared Monticello Calendar. 

Bell Schedules : http://bit.ly/MOHSbells


Worth Your Time

A Right to Life, Liberty and....Literacy? 

A Year of Personalized Learning Mistakes and Making It Work A lot of similarities, pluses and minuses to some of our own initiatives.

Plagiarism Check is Now Integrated into Google Classroom