I haven’t truly had the time to process this week the way that I really need to process this week. I’ve cried a lot. I’ve been bullied by students (that will be in a later post). I’ve received a diagnosis which made me realize that I wasn’t losing my mind. Let’s begin with the crying. …
August is gone in a flash
I blinked, and August disappeared. I’m not sure what happened, but one day I was starting August, and the next, it was gone in a flash. Labor day is behind us, and I noticed that the leaves are in prep mode to change. I do apologize for not posting, but in my defense, school life …
Summer is over for me
Work emails are rolling in. Sign ups for beginning of the year PDs are being sent. Schedules for the first week is here. That first day of school is fast approaching. I. Am. Not. Ready. Our district is initiating the year-round school calendar. The drawback: Teachers return in July and students start August 1st. It …
Using Socratic Circles in the Classroom
Students tend to learn best from one another. Having a student reciprocate a lesson to another student can be more effective than having a teacher go over a lesson. Moving them out of nice neat rows and placing them in a circle with the intention of discussion can breathe life into your classroom. Because of …
Love First, Teach Second
As I was taking down my bulletin board, I came across a small laminated card that I was given at the beginning of the year. It was my reminder to Love my students first, and then teach them after that. Simple. Love first, teach second. Unfortunately that small reminder was buried under the important information, …
Story Time Sunday: The End is Near
I know that sounds a little post-apocalyptic, but you teach, you know that there are multiple meanings behind that and each one feels real. We have 2 half days this week: Tuesday and Wednesday. No school on Monday. Am I personally hoping that no one shows those last 2 days? Yes! Will they show up? …
Storytime Sunday: State Testing, Teacher Appreciation, and End of the Year Craziness
This week begins our state testing. Oh how I dread those standardized tests! Add to that mix the craziness that has overtaken these students as summer calls out to them. On Friday, our school had a testing pep rally. I get it. Motivate these students to do well. The only problem is that while the …
Is a Reading Curriculum Revolution on the Horizon?
Twice this past week I have seen (and sent to myself to reread) articles regarding the use of balanced literacy or the science of reading in teaching students to read. As an ELA teacher with students who struggle to read and a grandmother of a Kindergartener who is struggling to read, I can sympathize with …
My Favorite Hobby
When it comes to relaxing after a stressful day or week, I turn to my favorite hobby: sewing. I was taught to sew by my grandmother when I was nine years old. She taught me using an old Singer pedal sewing machine. No electricity required. Just foot power. I’m not sure why, but there is …
The professional development we need
The professional development that I have sat through lately has been on writing curriculum. While writing curriculum is great, it doesn’t meet the needs that I currently have: the Covid bubble of students. When Covid struck and schools were shut down in 2020, we had entire groups of students who suddenly were moved along with …