LLED 320 – Websites, Whole Class Novel Study, 6 Hats Thinking, Journaling, & Comprehension Strategies: Update for Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Here’s all the news that’s fit to print from today’s session:

Learning Intentions

  • Show you great LA websites – NCTE.org & readwritethink.org & Rubistar
  • Experience Six Thinking Hats approach to content analysis
  • Critically consider the pedagogy of Whole Class Novel studies
  • Engage in a book discussion group
  • Understand the criteria creation process for a DE Journal
  • Describe a variety of comprehension strategies to use during LCs to help Ss understand literature features

After taking some time to show you several great websites – all available in a previous post – that could assist you in your pre-prac planning (NCTE, readwritethink, Rubistar, & Reading Power) we did the following…

Daily Write

I asked you to consider a decision your character has to make in today’s daily write.  We used this piece as a stimulus for conversation in our LC discussion groups later in class.

Whole Class Novel Study

Here’s the process we followed in the processing of Chapter 6: The Whole Class Novel from Student Diversity:

  • Meet as a hat group and, using your notes as a tool, consider the topic of WCNS from the perspective of your hat.
  • Come up with a slogan that suits your hat’s type of thinking
  • Now, consider WCNS through that lens
  • Jot your thoughts on the poster paper
  • Include a hat of your colour on the poster
  • Present your findings in this order – white, red, black, yellow, & green
  • We’ll do blue at the end to process the activity

Blue Hat Thinking


  • What did you think about the process of Six Hats Thinking?

Reading for Class on Thursday, 1 March 2012

Please read Chapter 7: Literature Circles and Chapter 9: An Integrated Unit in Student Diversity and process the text by creating a TOP 10 LIST – The Top 10 Tips for Teaching Lit Circles.

To get you in a TOP 10 mood, we watched this classic list from Letterman, the Top 10 George Bush Moments:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9w73dVVPRk0[/youtube]

Literature Circles…Revisited

We engaged in:

  • another book discussion group – this time with the character-based question from the daily write – as a stimulus for conversation
  • criteria building for double-entry response journals (based on the model outlined on page 25 of Brownlie’s Grand Conversations, Thoughtful Responses.
  • viewing a webcast by Brownlie on the use of comprehension strategies during lit circles time.  That webcast – along with one on formative assessment – can be found here.  You can find a list of all BC Min of Ed webcasts on the Index Page.  There’s some really good stuff there, if you’re interested…and have the time.

Here’s the handout to support today’s instruction.  It includes a day-by-day breakdown of how to work with Lit Circles in your classroom:

  1. Literature Circle Resources Handout – 2012

That’s all for today.

– Lawrence

5 Websites Worth Your Time: NCTE, readwritethink, Rubistar, Reading Power & Filmumentaries

Everyone can use a bit of help when unit planning.  To that end, here are four websites I can recommend as sources of inspiration:

  • NCTE.org – the official website of the National Council of Teachers of English in the USA

  • readwritething.org – free high quality reading and language arts instruction resources

  • Rubistar – “a tool to help the teacher who wants to use rubrics, but does not have the time to develop them from scratch.”

  • Reading Power – the official website of Adrienne Gear’s Reading (& Writing) Power program

  • Filmumentaries – the ultimate ‘making of’ documentaries (OK, this one’s got nothting to do with K-12 education but the films this guy makes are amazing treats for movie fans.  They weave material from multiple different sources – including the actual feature film itself – to tell the stories behind the making of such classics as Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and Raiders of the Lost Ark.)

EAL Learner Lecture by Sylvia Helmer, PhD

Today’s regular class session was cancelled to allow you to attend a lecture on EAL Learners by Sylvia Helmer, an instructor and FA in the Faculty of Education.  Here’s the PPT from her presentation:

[to be posted when I receive it]

Here’s the Test Your Awareness video:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ahg6qcgoay4[/youtube]

and here’s the one from Desmond Morris on Gestures, Meaning, and Culture:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRQSRed58XM[/youtube]

We worked with the Diamond Ranking Activity a few times.  This activity comes from the classic teaching text, Global Teacher, Global Learner by Pike and Selby:

A big thanks to Sylvia for her lecture.

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Reassessing Assessment, WHERETO, and Lit Circles: Update for Thursday, 23 February 2012

Learning Intentions

By the end of you lesson I hope that you can…

  • Get answers to some of your assessment questions
  • Understand the WHERETO elements in a unit’s lesson sequence
  • Experience one way to teach the Say Something strategy
  • Participate in a Lit Circle discussion group
  • Start your final 320 task – the Lit Circles Journal
  • Experience Six Thinking Hats approach to content analysis
  • Critically consider the pedagogy of Whole Class Novel studies

As it turns out, we didn’t get to the last two.  We should be able to wedge those in during our next session.  Here’s what we did fit in:

Reassessing Assessment

I took some time to answer some assessment-related questions you had about in a previous lesson and questions related to your writing assessment tasks.  In my responses, I referenced Ministry of Education documents that can be found on the Ministry’s Classroom Assessment and Student Reporting page.  In particular, I mentioned ideas in these two documents:

There’s a lot more good stuff here.  Don’t be shy and wait until your summer assessment course to dip into this material 🙂

Unit Planning Call Back

The UBD unit planning template I’m suggesting you use for your LLED 320 Integrated Unit Plan mentions the acronym WHERETO in Stage 3 – Learning Plan.  Today we took some time to unpack the elements of WHERETO – in essence, “the key elements that should be found in your learning plan” (Understanding By Design Professional Development Workbook, p. 214).  Here’s a summary:

and here’s the package we worked with in class:

We used a moving tableau strategy to process the material.  Here’s how it worked:

  1. Form a group of 4
  2. Randomly choose a WHERETO letter
  3. Read the information relating to your chosen letter
  4. Come up with 2 or 3 key ideas related to your section.   Ask yourself, what do my classmates really need to know about this WHERETO letter?
  5. Design and rehearse a scene involving tableau and movement – but NO speaking – to visually represent the key ideas from the section
  6. Present and explain your movement piece.

Here are a few shots to summarize your take on the WHERETO elements (Thanks to John and Eric M.):

Reading Fiction – Literature Circles

The Lit Circles model is based on research on what helps students improve as readers:

Here’s how we engaged in the Lit Circles process.  The approach we’re using is the one advocated by Faye Brownlie in the Student Diversity text.  You can get more details in her book Grand Conversations, Thoughtful Responses: A Unique Approach to Literature Circles and in a webcast hosted by the BC Ministry of Education – the same webcast I showed clips from in class today.

Reading Time

I gave you some time to read, exchange books, and find a passage to “sticky note” for sharing in your discussion group.

Getting Started: Learning the Say Something Strategy

Left to their own devices, the students will not spontaneously have great conversations about the texts they are reading.  They must be equipped (Hello, WHERETO!) with the skills for conducting thoughtful conversations.

A great way to develop these skills – a way that has the added benefit of getting 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 a few of you  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. [OK, we didn’t actually do this part because we were short on time but this is what it could look like in a middle school classroom – LH]

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

I modeled a Lit Circle conversation with the members of The Holes 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.  They used a modified First Turn / Last Turn process that worked like this:

  • Group members mentioned how far they’d read in the book (to make it less likely that one speaker would “spill the beans”)
  • One participant read a sticky note and explained their choice
  • Group members took turns speaking with NO cross talk
  • When everyone had had a go speaking, it was time for free-for-all conversation
  • The process was repeated with a new person reading one of their sticky notes.

Lit Circles: Double-Entry Journal Task

One During-Reading activity that really promotes thoughtful engagement with lit circle books is 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, 1 March 2012.  Here’s the handout:

To this point you had experienced:

  • Book Talks
  • Wide Variety of Books
  • Time to Read (in class and at home)
  • Sticky Notes
  • The Story Behind the Poem
  • Say Something
  • Discussion Groups

I asked you to choose two 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.

We didn’t have time to get to our Six Hats Thinking on Chapter 6: The Whole Class Novel so that conversation will have to wait until next week.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

Inquiry Project Presentations, Day 2: Update for Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Thanks to all of today’s presenters.  When the slideshows were over and the puppets were put to bed everybody was ready for a little…

Business Time

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhN93rFZuJs[/youtube]

  • IP Tasks In

Please email your task – paper and 321 synthesis – to your FA.

  • Calendar

Here’s what’s on tap for the remainder of our class time together:

  • Post-Inquiry & Pre-Prac Conferences

Shep and I have set aside class time on Wednesday, 29 Feb 2012 for 15-minute conferences.  The agenda for the meeting and our schedules are posted below:

– Lawrence

 

LLED 320: Writing Reflection & Conferencing, Poetry Playoffs, Poetry Reading Discussion, & Lit Circle Books Out: Update for Tuesday, 21 February 2012

We had a lot to get to today so I won’t start lollygagging now.  Oh, wait.  Speaking of lollygagging:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDaFcQJC4z8[/youtube]

OK.  Now where was I?  Oh, yes.  No lollygagging and all that.  Off we go…

Learning Intentions

Here are the goals I had for each learner by the end of today’s session:

I [the learner] can…

  • Self-assess my haiku writing
  • Give thoughtful feedback to an author in a conference setting
  • Rehearse and present my haiku with power and passion
  • Sell my preferred poetry strategy from the Chapter 8 reading to a classmate
  • Thoughtfully consider the Lit Circle books on offer and choose one to read

In hindsight, I think we touched on all of these.

Daily Write – Haiku Self-Assessment Process

I asked you to self-assess your haiku products and writing process with the following 4 sentence starters.  The audience was the “teacher” that you would conference with shortly:

  • You should notice…
  • I’m most proud of…because…
  • My greatest challenge on this task was…because…
  • My best haiku is…because…

Writing Conference

After modeling a writing conference focused on these three questions:

  • What’s working (in your work)?
  • What’s not?
  • What next?

I gave you a chance to have a go in the role of “teacher” and student in a conference setting.

Energizer #1 – Telephone Charades by Christina

Poetry Playoffs

I set the stage with a poetry presentation clip from the Mike Myers joint, So I Married An Axe Murderer:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlkoQ4bUE5k[/youtube]

Then, in an effort to model the need for skill work with students if you want them to improve as speakers, we worked with Punch (=power) and Paint (=passion), two concepts we’ve played with before in our Me in a Bag Speeches (remember those?) in Term 1.  John S. O’Connor’s book, Wordplaygrounds: Reading, Writing, and Performing Poetry in the English Classroom, is where I found the ideas we used.  I can’t recommend this poetry book highly enough, as I borrowed our Haiku process from there, too!

Armed with your powers to punch and paint, you rehearsed for the PPs, we chose the draw, and decided how would would assess the presenters (on delivery, content, and form, as it turned out) [Thanks to Nicole for the photos in this post – LH]:

As the image above attests to, in the end, Eric A. – the freshly crowned Haiku Guru – took the honours with his piece.  Here it is in all its award winning  glory:

Entering

Naked I enter

From my mother’s womb I slip

…brr  Let me back in.

Luckily no one captured the final performance on their camera so I won’t be posting an accompanying video!

Energizer #2 – What’s My Fave Food by Mirela

Reading Discussion on Student Diversity’s Chapter 8: Poetry – Three Invitations

To process this chapter, I asked you to identify your preference for one of the three strategies outlined in the text and then sell it to a classmate.  We debriefed by talking about the reasons we thought the strategies might work with the learners in your classrooms.

Literature Circles Books Out

Using one full-blow book talk for The Crazy Man by Pamela Porter and a set of book trailers from YouTube, I introduced the set of books we’re going to work with over the final 3 weeks of class.

The book trailers are in a previous post and here’s the blurb I wrote up for The Crazy Man:

Homework for Wednesday’s Session – Novel Reading & Six-Hat Thinking

You have two tasks to take care of for Wednesday’s session and both are outlined in this image:

The hat you need to use for your Six-Hat Thinking on Chapter 6 – The Whole Class Novel was assigned by numbering off in class.  Here are how the numbers fit with the hats:

Here’s the Six-Hat Handout that was, ahem, handed out in class.  This style of thinking was pioneered by Edward deBono:

The video clip below gives you a nice primer on the purpose and power of the Six Thinking Hats approach:

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

If you missed class and don’t have a number, just choose one, put on its associated Thinking Hat, and have a go with your reading and note taking.

Oh, and there’s no excuses for not doing this reading.  For some reason, Chapter 6 of the Student Diversity text is online here.

That’s all for today.  See you on Thursday.

– Lawrence

LLED 320 Lit Kit Book Trailers & Clips – February 2012

Here are book trailers and video clips to support my Book Talks in an upcoming LLED 320 class:

Among the Hidden

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ufQeRrPQAbg&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBdalsgNHsM&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

Persepolis

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlzKo2GyseE&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

The Giver

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNL77KnIRI8&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

Holes

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MORKTUz6l9o&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

The Hunger Games

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgssLmsOa2s&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

Schooled

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gVC14-hcw4&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

Airborn

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzwW08XWqkE&feature=BFa&list=PL3AB613EFB4537597&lf=mh_lolz[/youtube]

– Lawrence

Inquiry Project Presentations, Day 1: Update for 20 February 2012

Thank you to all of today’s presenters.  I look forward to seeing what’s on offer in Wednesday’s session.

Speaking of Wednesday, here’s the Inquiry Project elements that are to be emailed to your FA on or before that day:

  • Final Inquiry Project Paper (approximately 1500 words)
  • 3-2-1 Synthesis of Your Inquiry Project Paper

Speaking of inquiry, check out how Will Ferrell inquires into the effective use of cowbells in this classic SNL clip:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRzds1HHkas[/youtube]

– Lawrence