Category Archives: Lesson Updates

EDUC 310 – End-of-Term Calendar & Classroom Management BUMP 1: Update for Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Here’s what we managed to wedge into today’s POT class:

Calendar

Here are some dates to remember:

  • Thursday, 3 March = Practicum Seminar in Hebb Theatre from 12:30 to 1:30
    • LLED 320 class will start when the seminar ends
  • Monday, 7 March = Assessment Lecture in SC 100 from 10:30 to 12:00
    • Please attend this lecture in lieu of our regularly scheduled class
  • Wednesday, 9 March = TCs Without Lawrence As An FA Inquiry Project Conferences in SC 1310 from 9:45 t0 12:30.
  • Monday, 14 March = Pre-Practicum FA Meetings By School Group in SC 210 from 10:00 to 12:00

Classroom Management: Working with Barrie Bennett’s Theory of Bumps

Connecting

I asked you to think back to your classroom experience and…

“Recall a student who was beginning to stop you from teaching or stop others from learning.  Perhaps they were pencil tapping, talking to a classmate, or calling out.  How did you respond to that student?”

We took a few responses.  As it turns out, many of you were already using some of the techniques advocated by Bennett in Bump 1 – Preventing and Responding to Misbehaviour Through Low-Key Responses.

Processing

I used this PPT slidewshow to give you some background with Bump 1:

Next, partnerships presented short role plays demonstrating NO and YES examples on how to use 12 low-key techniques.  Each role play was followed up with a quick blurb on how to use the technique effectively and artfully.

The responses fall into two categories and are as follows:

Responding Strategies

  • Touch
  • Student’s Name
  • Gesture
  • The Look
  • The Pause
  • Ignore
  • Signal to Begin
  • Deal With the Problem Not the Student

Here’s an example of “The Look”.  Watch and determine if it’s a NO or a YES example:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNEmyHsqoVY[/youtube]

Here’s a musical example of “The Look”.  Please wield this one with extreme caution:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlVI7ZNiFlI[/youtube]

Preventive Techniques

  • Transitions
  • Dealing With Allies
  • Winning Over
  • Pre-empting Call Outs

You can find all the low-key responses in this handout from Bennett’s book, Classroom Management: A Thinking & Caring Approach:

Personalizing

To close, I asked you to consider the following question and to share your thoughts as you left the classroom:

“Which of the techniques we worked with today will you add to your repertoire on practicum?”

By the way, check out this clip from Star Trek IV: The  Voyage Home that I was referencing during our discussion on swearing.  After watching it, I recalled that “Double dumb-a*$ on you!” was my favourite expletive of 1986.  Enjoy.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7WTvEbUkeLM[/youtube]

That’s a wrap.

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Journaling, The Story Behind “Invictus”, Book Discussion, & Comprehension Strategies: Update for Tuesday, 1 March 2011

After sharing some book recommendations – I suggested you check out Kenneth Oppel’s Airborn, the first in the Matt Cruse trilogy:

– I modeled the process of developing journal criteria with students.  Unfortunately, I erased the criteria we developed in class.  I do, however, have the criteria I originally came up with as noted on the task handout (Children’s Literature Double-Entry Journal Task – 2011).  Here they are:

In class today, we took time to write in our journals twice, once at the start of class and once at the end of our session.

In the first write, I asked you to choose two of the following topics to respond to:

  • Reading Success Factors
  • Whole Class Novel Studies
  • Double-entry Journals
  • Book Conversation Circles
  • De Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats

For the end-of-class write, you were asked to choose two topics from the following list:

  • Developing Journal Criteria
  • The Story Behind the Poem
  • Say Something
  • Focus Question for Book Conversation Circles
  • Comprehension Strategies From The Video (Containers for Chracters, Setting, & Venn Diagram)

The task is due on Thursday, 3 March 2011.  It should include all 3 writes (this means that you would have responded to a total of 6 items = 3 writes X 2 items per writing session).  Please submit it via email or hand in a hard copy to me in class on Thursday.

Here’s a model of the DE Journal task if you would benefit from seeing the format as you develop your journal.  You’ll notice my inserted comments on the right and a final blurb on the bottom:

Prepping for Lit Circle Conversations Using The Story Behind the Poem & Say Something

A great way to get students excited about a new box of thematic books is to read and consider a poem on the theme.  I modeled that by using the Story Behind the Poem strategy to analyze the poem Invictus by William Ernest Henley.

Here’s the recipe for the Story Behind the Poem strategy I used:

Here’s the handout for the poem.  It’s set up to accommodate the SBTP sketching:

Below is the scene from the movie Invictus that features the poem prominently.  According to the movie’s production notes:

“In the film, Mandela calls upon Pienaar (the captain of the South African national rugby team, the Sprinboks, in 1995) to lead his team to greatness, citing a poem that was a source of inspiration and strength to him during his years in prison.  It is later revealed that the poem is “Invictus,” by William Ernest Henley.  The title is translated to mean “unconquered,” which, Eastwood (film director, Clint Eastwood) says, “doesn’t represent any one character element of the story.  It takes on a broader meaning over the course of the film.”

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FozhZHuAcCs[/youtube]

When you’d had time to gather your thoughts on the poem, I asked you (a select few, in reality.  We were short on time) to Say Something – your connections, questions, imrages that emerge – about the poem.  Say Something is an easy, fun, and interesting strategy that should support effective discussions in the book-based discussion groups.

Brownlie suggests reminding students of the criteria for effective group discussions at the start of the Say Something and reviewing the criteria again at the end:

  • all voices must be included
  • all students must feel included
  • all students must have their ideas respected
  • the discussion should move us to new understandings

Lit Circle Discussion Group

Last day’s book discussion was guided by the sticky notes each participant had brought to the circle.  In an effort to model another possibility for setting up the book-related talking, I posed a thematic question as a prompt:

“What has the book taught you about life and living?”

After the conversations we discussed the pros, cons, and artful nuances of structuring the conversation in such a way.

Comprehension Activities

Comprehension activities supplement the reading, discussing and journaling during Lit Circle time.  This gives the students not participating in a discussion group one more thing they can be working on.   One of Brownlies’s Literacy in the Middle Years – Part 2 webcasts does a nice job of covering the topic of comprehension activities.  I’ve the webcast’s timecodes below:

Literature Circles (33:49)

Timecodes (all time are approximate):

▪   0:00 – 1:45: How to Do Comp Strats
▪   1:45 – 6:00: Containers for Characters
▪   6:00 – 9:00: Setting Activity
▪   9:00 – 11:30: Venn Diagram
▪   11:30 – 13:00: Character Tree
▪   13:00 – 16:30: Hot Seat
▪   16:30 – 17:50: Comp Strats Create Book Buzz
▪   17:50 – 22:00: Assessment in LCs & Wrapping Up LCs
▪   22:00 – 25:00: End of LC “Advice Letter to the TC”
▪   25:00 – 30:30: Ideogram
▪   30:30 – 32:00: Call Back to 4 Conditions that Support Readers

Here’s the handout that has much of the material Brownlie references in her webcast:

Here’s another handout – this one from the first edition of the Student Diversity text – that has more details on some of the tasks discussed in the webcast, namely the Ideogram:

We only watched the first 11 minutes of the webcast today so we’ll finish it up next session.

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Guest Speaker = Debbie Gregg, SD43 H/R Senior Manager: Update for Monday, 28 Feb 2011

A huge thank you to Debbie Gregg, Human Resources Senior Manager in SD #43 (Coquitlam) for visiting our class and answering your “getting a job”-related questions.  According to one class member, it was “the best thing we’ve done all year.” High praise indeed!

For your reference, the SD #43 website has a Job Opportunities page with info on TOC (or is it TTOC?) applications and more.

The EductationCanada.com website has lots of teaching job-related info.  Of particular interest might be the page on Resume Samples and Tips.

Finally, here’s a handout with details on behavioural interviewing – the new approach to teaching interviewing utilized in Coquitlam and elsewhere – and a long list of common behavioural interview questions:

Cheers,

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Developing Information Smarts: Update for Thursday, 24 Feb 2011

Information Literacy Workshop

A huge thank you to Jo-Anne Naslund, Instructional Programs Librarian at the Education Library, for presenting today’s workshop, Developing Information Smarts: Inquiry in a Digital World.  The Education Library website has a page devoted to the LLED 320 course and that page can be found here.

As an introduction, Jo-Anne asked us to work with the material found in a document produced by the BCTLA Info Lit Task Force, The Points of Inquiry: A Framework for Information Literacy and the 21st Century Learner (Thanks to Kaela for the link – LH).  The task was to consider how each point of inquiry – connect & wonder, investigate, construct, express, and reflect might play out in a lesson.

After the intro we got right down to work on the Developing Information Smarts Webquest, a task accessible via the Ed Lib’s LLED 320 web page.  The task addresses the four main aspects of the research process:

  1. Find & Select
  2. Analyse & Evaluate
  3. Record & Organize
  4. Communicate & Present

The day wrapped up with SMART Bingo and prizes to the winners!

Of course, to be info literate, you need to be able to use the hardware.  For some, that can be a real challenge…

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQHX-SjgQvQ&feature=PlayList&p=AD1FFBF34A2FE141&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=15[/youtube]

Choice Literacy Website

If you can get your hardware working, please check out this website recommended to me by Dr. Marlene Asselin, the LLED 320 coordinator – Choice Literacy.  According to Marlene:

“It’s a rich and extensive collection of ideas from people on the ground – literacy leaders, coaches, and teachers.  It includes:

  • Workshop protocols for leading study groups, in-services, and workshops
  • Sample observation forms and needs assessment surveys
  • Professional quality video examples of best literacy practices from classrooms throughout the country
  • The newest writing from top authors in the field
  • Short, focused articles for use in workshop discussions and mentoring meetings
  • Year-long calendars and plans for leading new teacher initiatives
  • Themed booklists for content and genre study

That’s all for now.

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Inquiry Presentations, Day 2: Update for Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Thanks to all of today’s presenters.  Our guest, Tony Clarke – one of the EDUC 310 Inquiry Project Coordinators, was impressed with your tasks.

Remember that your work is due to me today.  Please zip / compress all the relevant files into one folder and email them to me at lholbrook@sd43.bc.ca.

Thanks,

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Poetry Playoffs, Reading Placemat, De Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats, Whole Class Novels, and Lit Circles: Update for Tuesday, 22 Feb 2011

We covered a lot of ground today.  Here’s the highlights:

Poetry Playoffs

After reviewing the 8 Ps of Powerful Presentations:

  • Proper Articulation
  • Pronunciation
  • Power
  • Pace
  • Pause
  • Pitch
  • Passion
  • Poise

I asked you to rehearse your best haiku in case you were one of the 8 contestants chosen to face off.  Here’s the draw and how it turned out:

Congratulations to Kira on her victory.  In a related story, check out this clip to see Anthony Bourdain enjoying a bowl of “mysterious meat” pho and a beer:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsSiA-JHm0U[/youtube]

If you search this blog using the keywords Poetry Playoffs, you’ll find information I’ve posted last year on how to run a the PP in your class, if you’re interested.

Wrapping Up Writing in the Classroom

I mentioned that we just touched on writing in the classroom.  Also, I urged you to consider the principles of effective writing instruction as you teach.  Penultimately, in an effort to address several comments that arose as I marked your LLED 320 Writing Assessment Tasks, I pointed you toward the ESL Standards document (2001) developed to assist teachers with the assessment of writing, reading, and oral language work completed by EAL / ESL students.  It’s structured similarly to the Performance Standards document we used in class and you can find it on the Ministry of Education ESL website or below:

Finally, if you’re interested in a great LA survey text that has a good section on Writing To Learn, I recommended that you check out Marion Crowhurst’s Language and Learning Across the Curriculum (LB1576 .C76 1993 in Ed LIb).

Factors That Help Students Develop As Readers

We ended our previous session with by having you consider the factors that you thought helped students develop as readers.  I asked you to put your ideas together and create a placemat with a group of three others and try to come up with 3 – 5 factors that all group members could agree on.  After sharing the ideas of several groups, we compared the responses with the research:

I asked you to consider our upcoming reading activities through the lens of those 4 factors.

Considering Whole Class Novel Studies Using Using De Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats

With your graphic organizer of Chapter 6 – Whole Class Novel from Student Diversity in hand, I asked you to consider the WCN through the lens of one of De Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats.  After reading up on what type of thinking each hat represents using the handout below:

I asked for each group to report out on their thinking around WCNs.  To wrap up, we all put on our Blue Hat – the metacognitive hat – and discussed the process of using the 6 Thinking Hats.  It was pretty meta!

Lit Circles: Double-Entry Journal Task

One During-Reading activity that really promotes thoughtful engagement with lit circle books it journaling.  In an effort to model this process with you, I’m asking you to keep a Double-Entry Journal as a means to consider the lit circle activities we’re engaging in during class time.  The task will be completed in class and it’s due on Thursday, 3 March 2011.  Here’s the handout:

To this point you had experienced:

  • Book Talks
  • Time to Read (in class and at home)
  • Sticky Notes

I asked you to choose to of those ideas and to give me your thoughts on them in the My Thinking side of the journal.  We took 10 or so minutes in class to do this.

Lit Circles: Conversation Time

I modeled a Lit Circle conversation with the members of The Hunger Games reading group and utilizing a Fishbowl strategy.  After a quick debrief, I asked each reading group to meet and engage in a similar conversation.  The discussions were lively and could have run much longer than the time we had left in class.

That’s all for today.  As a good follow up to our in-class activities, I recommend reading Chapter 7 – Literature Circles: The Basics, the Big Ideas, and Beyond in Student Diversity. It provides more details on how Lit Circles addresses the factors that help students develop as readers and it illustrates a model of how one teacher uses Lit Circles in her classroom.

That’s all for today.

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Inquiry Presentations, Day 1: Update for Monday, 21 February 2011

Thank you to all of today’s presenters.  Also, I appreciated the whole class feedback on how to improve the format of the presentation process for Wednesday.  In that session, we’ll use the 3-2-1 Synthesis pieces to introduce each speaker.

Speaking of Wednesday, here’s the Inquiry Project elements that are due to me on  that day:

  • Final Inquiry Project Paper (approximately 1500 words)
  • 3-2-1 Synthesis of Your Inquiry Project Paper
  • IF APPLICABLE: A copy of your supporting visual (Slideshow, Prezi, Popplet, or what not)

To save time for you and to aid in my collation of all these files, please compress – “zip” – all of your I.P.-related files together.  Mr. Pepper kindly found very short video clips that will show you how to do this on both Mac and PC platforms:

Mac

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YnP1sN-LJE[/youtube]

PC

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mq3vdsCux-c[/youtube]

(P.S. – Hmmmmm.  I think it’s interesting that the PC tutorial is over twice as long as the Mac one.  Food for your ease-of-use thoughts, no? Feel free to comment below.  It’s been some time since I’ve had a commenter – LH.)

Lastly, I’ve compiled and categorized the questions you had for Debbie Gregg, HR Senior Manager of SD#43 (Coquitlam).  Here’s the list:

– Steve Jobs… er, Lawrence

LLED 320 – Haiku Revision, Lit Circle Books Out & Intro to the Reading Process: Update for Thursday, 17 Feb 2011

Haiku Revision

To get you thinking haiku again, I asked you to watch two video clips – a funny one and a serious one – and to bring the 5 criteria for a powerful haiku we developed in class back to the front of your brain.  Here are the clips:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwnqUmmJ-zE[/youtube]

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/2268876[/vimeo]

Next, after a short review of the principles of effective writing instruction, we engaged in Author’s Club – a process for refining writing that I picked up at a writing workshop by Diana Cruchley.  Here’s the PDF I used to structure the Author’s Club work:

Here’s the PPT Slideshow I showed that served as a model mini-lesson on punctuation and line breaks in poetry:

For Tuesday’s class, please revise and create a good, final copy of your best haiku.  Be sure to staple the original draft versions of all 3 poems to your best copy page.

In Tuesday’s class we will have Poetry Playoff in which 8 (or more!  I have an idea.) randomly chosen poets will face off in a single-elimination tournament as a showcase for their haiku writing prowess.

Lit Circle Books Distribution

As the kick off to our work with Literature Circles, I organized the distribution of the texts we’re going to read.  Due to time constraints, I gave an in depth book talk of only one book – The Crazy Man by Pamela Porter, Sarah book talked Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech and, for the rest, I only showed a book trailer or gave a quick blurb.

Here’s the list of in-depth book talks for most of the books in the kit:

Here are most of the book trailers and videos that I showed to “sell” the books:

Among the Hidden by Margaret Peterson Haddix

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ufQeRrPQAbg&feature=fvwrel[/youtube]

Boy in the Striped Pajamas (actually a movie trailer) by John Boyne

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBdalsgNHsM&feature=related[/youtube]

The Giver by Lois Lowry

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNL77KnIRI8[/youtube]

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6TnxXoMpF3c[/youtube]

Schooled by Louis Sachar

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gVC14-hcw4[/youtube]

If you were away from class and didn’t grab a book, please see me on Tuesday to get one.

Prior Knowledge on the Reading Process

As class wound down, I asked you to consider what you to consider factors that help students to develop as readers.  You wrote your ideas on a numbered sheet of paper.  Please bring that sheet and the mind map / graphic organizer you created to represent Ch 6 – The Whole Class Novel in the Student Diversity text to class on Tuesday… along with your haikus.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Group Presentations, Day 2: Update for Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Whole Class Novel Study Reading for Thursday’s Class

In preparation for our work looking at the reading process, please read Chapter 6: The Class Novel from the Student Diversity text and process the important information using a graphic organizer.  Bring your graphic organizer to class on Thursday, 17 February 2011.

Here’s the link to an online copy of Chapter 6: The Class Novel.

I suggest applying the mind mapping strategy presented in today’s session to this task.  You could use Popplet, a different online tool, or old school pencil & paper to complete your mind map.  Here’s a primer on mind mapping found on the very useful Instructional Strategies Online website, if you’d like more info on this powerful strategy.

Also, Barrie Bennett, a renowned author (Beyond Monet & Classroom Management) teacher educator from U of T – OISE, plays a lot with Mind Mapping.  Here’s a handout with some useful tips on how to MM:

Also, here’s a sample of a 1st year university student’s first attempt at mind mapping:

If you’d prefer to use a different graphic organizer [This is me differentiating instruction to meet your needs, by the way 🙂  Same content, different processes], there are many G.O.s that could suit this task.  Check some of them out here at Teacher Vision: Graphic Organizers.

Group Presentations

Thanks to all those who presented this afternoon’s engaging presentations.  Here are the titles along with the supporting files.  The handouts should provide a valuable resource during practicum, as you look for ways to engage the learners in your classes:

Critical Thinking Strategies for Viewing Films

Mind Mapping

Sort and Predict

Building From Clues

Think of a Time

Anticipation Guide

That’s all for today.  Cheers,

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Discussing The Drafts & Outlining the Presentations: Update for Monday, 14 Feb 2011

Discussing the Drafts of Your Inquiry Project Report

Thanks to everyone for your thoughtful participation in today’s peer editing session.  Hopefully, the feedback you received will help as you refine your paper and get it as near as humanly possible to 1499 words.  No small feat.

Just a reminder that I am assessing your piece.  As per the EDUC 310 Course Outline, your project should reflect an emerging ability to:

  • Engage substantively with a topic as reflected in careful reading of the literature and an understanding of significant issues, perspectives and assumptions
  • Position one self in relation to ideas discussed
  • Consider educational issues critically
  • Relate one’s learning to curriculum and pedagogy

So you can marvel at my chalkboard writing prowess, here’s a photo (courtesy of Devin) of the criteria from class:

Outlining the Presentations

I took the last few minutes of each group’s meeting time to go over the shape of the Inquiry Project Oral/Multi-Media Presentation and the One-Minute Inquiry Project Synthesis.  Here are the details:

Presenters

Monday, 21 February 2011 – SCARFE 210 from 10:00 am – Noon

  • Amber
  • Melanie
  • Christian
  • Lou
  • Alice
  • Kat K
  • Jennifer
  • Devin
  • Ian
  • Amanda
  • Farisha
  • Miguel
  • Leanne

Wednesday, 23 February 2011 – SCARFE 1003 rom 10:00 am – Noon

  • Sarah
  • Jeremy
  • Ross
  • Kat M
  • Jenna
  • Aaron
  • Lars
  • Shaun
  • Caitlin
  • Maria
  • Tyrel
  • Sally

Schedule

Each day will follow the same schedule.  During the concurrent presentations, 4 students will be presenting at the same time.  Non-presenters will choose who to see after hearing a short blurb about each project:

  • Concurrent Presentation #1 – 20 minutes
  • Concurrent Presentation #2 – 20 minutes
  • Break – 10 minutes
  • Concurrent Presentation #3 – 20 minutes
  • One-Minute 3*2*1Synthesis From All Presenters – 20 minutes

Guidelines for the Inquiry Project Oral/Multi-Media Presentation

  • GOAL: Highlight the NEED TO KNOW points from your Inquiry Project for your audience
  • 15 minutes to present + 5 minutes for Q & A
  • Must include a visual component (mind map, diorama, puppet show, diagram, graph,…)
  • Suggested Format: What? So What? Now What?
    • What?
      • What’s your question?
      • Where did your question come from? (Purpose)
      • What did you do? (Approach)
    • So What?
      • What did you learn?
      • What must TCs know about your findings?
    • Now What?
      • Where will you go from here?
      • Where to look for more info?
      • Where should TCs go from here?

One-Minute 3*2*1 Synthesis

This one-minute blurb is a quick review of your presentation for those who did not hear it in class.  It should include the following information from your Inquiry Project:

  • 3 – Big Ideas
  • 2 – Points to Ponder
  • 1 – Action for TCs to Take on Prac…or Beyond

Submission of Inquiry Project Papers and 3*2*1 Synthesis Blurbs

Please submit your paper and your 3*2*1 blurb to me via email on or before Wednesday, 23 February 2011.

Here’s how all the Presentation & Synthesis info looked like on the board (courtesy of Devin’s Android phone):

Thanks to Devin for both photos.

Cheers,

– Lawrence