Tuesday, May 30, 2017

The High's and Low's of the Year

It's that time of year...the end. The dog day's of teaching. This is that time of year where teachers answer the question, what are we doing here? And what should I do with my students? Hopefully, some of the good teachers are asking? What worked? What will my students remember?

Here are two good ideas for the end of the year.

1. The highs and lows.
 Have each student construct a chart. On the y axis a student should place an H and an L.  This will stand for High and Low. On the X axis the students should place M1, M2, M3, M4 for each of the four marking periods( this may change based on your school). Then have your students place a high and a low for every marking period. Eventually on giant sticky notes, the students will combine these highs and lows. Eventually each student will share.  This is a great time to reflect on what students found worth while.

2. ABC's of the year
 Have the students come up with a word or phrase for every letter of the alphabet. For example, the M might stand for Metaphor.  After this is completed, do a rapid fire around the room. With each student saying there words or phrases.

Each of these are short and quick but are very effective. This is a great reflective activity for the students and the teachers. I've done these with every grade 7-12 with great success. Obviously these can be easily modified to fit the needs of your students.

This is a much better use of your time then showing another movie...I promise.

Friday, March 31, 2017

Exit Strategies

 Exit Strategies are a phenomenal formative assessment for any classroom. Incorporating the bell to bell strategy exit strategies are great ways for students summarize what they've learned and refocus themselves.  For teachers it is a great way for us to assess our material. We want to strive for mastery learning not just regurgitating ideas. We want our students to feel they've mastered the material.

I like to use the metaphor of Pluto.   The picture below was taken last year. The mission took ten years. If NASA was off by even a 1/1000th of a degree they would have missed the planet completely.

How many times are we as teachers off by 1/1000th of a degree but we move on. Then we wonder at the end of the year how the students missed the planet of education.  

Image result for pluto

Below is a table of Exit Strategies that can be adapted to any course and any grade level. Many were adopted from a recent Edutopia article while some are ones I've used in my own classroom. Therefore I can't take credit for all of them. Yet, I can encourage you to try them, and let me know how it goes. 

Strategy[1]

Explanation

Snowball
Students write down what they learned during the lesson on a white piece of paper and wad it up. Given a signal they throw their paper snowballs in the air. Then each student picks up a nearby snowball and reads it aloud.
Twitter
On a notecard or post-it students “tweet” what they’ve learned in the lesson that day. They may use emoji’s and hashtags but their responses must be within 140 characters.  Alternatively, they could write down what they would retweet or quote later.  Answers could be displayed periodically.
Two Dollar Summary
Students write a summary of the lesson. Each word is worth ten cents their summary should add up to two dollars. (Twenty words)
Paper Slide
Have each student make a quick slide about the most important element of the lesson and as they leave they must record their slide.
Even a First Grader Gets It
Students must retell the hardest element of a lesson in terms that a child would understand. They should be able to synthesize the lessons key ideas.
High-Five Hustle
Ask students to stand up, raise their hands and high-five a peer – their short-term buddy. When there are, no hands left, ask a question for them to discuss.  Solicit answers. Then play do the hustle, and have them switch partners.  Repeat several times.
Parent Hotline
Give the students an intriguing question or fact as they leave. Then contact their parents the answer so they can be discussed over dinner.
DJ Summary
Learners write what they’ve learned in the form of a rap or song lyric.
Gallery Walk
On chart paper, small groups write and draw what they’ve learned. After the completed “works” are attached to the classroom walls, others students stick Post-its to the posters giving praise, questions, or extending the ideas.
Sequence It
Students quickly create timelines (on paper or digitally) to represent a sequence or steps in a process
Low-Stakes Quizzes
Give a short tech quiz using technologies likes Socrative, Bubblesheet, Goggle Forms, or Kahoot
Cover It
Have kids sketch the book cover or magazine cover for the lesson. The title is the topic, the author is the student, a short celebrity endorsement or blurb should summarize or articulate the lesson’s benefits
Question Stems
Have students write their own test questions based on the lesson. Begin class the next day with the best questions.
So What?
Have kids answer the following prompt: What takeaways from the lesson will be important to know three years from now, and why?
Dramatize It
Have students act out a real-life situation where they may need to know the information
Beat the clock
Ask question. Give students ten seconds to confer and then call on a random student.  Don’t dismiss them until they can get three right in a row.
Review It
Ask a student a question. As he or she answers the question have the class rate the answer with thumbs up or thumbs down.
Cheat Sheet
Have kids create a pretend cheat sheet they would use if they had a surprise pop quiz.
Simile Me
Have students complete the following sentence: The (concept or skill) is like _____________ because ______________
Ask it Basket
Have students write a question they still have, or something they’d like to discuss later and place it in a basket as they leave the room.
Red Light/Green Light
Give students a blank picture of a stoplight. Have them fill in the color that represents their comfort with the material. Red-means stop and recover, yellow- means proceed with caution and Green – proceed and move on.
Caption It
Have students write an Instagram or snapchat caption for the lesson. They can include filters if they want.
Cook It Up
Turn your understanding of the lesson into a recipe
Telephone
Have one student say a fact from the lesson. Have them whisper it to their partner, repeat this step through the class, at the end see if the fact is still accurate and the original fact.
Noble Peace Prize
Have students write their acceptance speech of the future Nobel Peace Prize. The information from the lesson should help them win the award.
ABC
Have the students complete the ABC’s with a word, phrase or fact about the lesson for each letter of the alphabet. Can be done as a round robin, group, or randomly selected.


[1] Many of the strategies came from edutopia.org 



Friday, March 10, 2017

Snow Ball Poetry

The following activity is a perfect activity for a snowy day; short, simple, and fun.  Yet, at the same time it challenges students to work with, and generate a variety of poetic devices. The activity is adaptable to all grades and the results can be serious, or seriously funny.

The activity is called...Snow Ball Poetry.

1. Students receive a piece of white printer paper
2. Students write a noun...this will become the title of their poem
3. Students ball up the paper to become "snowballs" and proceed to have a "snowball fight"
4. Students grab a snowball that is not their own
5. Students write the first two lines of a poem that matches the title...it must have a poetic device in it.
6. When done students repeat steps three and four
7. Then students write lines 3 and 4...with a different poetic device
8. Students repeat steps three and four

Repeat this process as many times as you feel comfortable

9. The final step should be the title repeated.

Afterwards, have students stand up and share the completed poems. They can even vote on the best one.

As I said before, the students love this activity. It is engaging and it is a great way to work on poetry in a low stakes writing environment. Furthermore, you can differentiate the strategy to fit any learner or any age.

I hope it works, let me know if you try it and like it in a comment below!