Here’s what happened in today’s session:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8E_zMLCRNg[/youtube]
See you next week for the Inquiry Project Presentations.
– Lawrence
Here’s what happened in today’s session:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8E_zMLCRNg[/youtube]
See you next week for the Inquiry Project Presentations.
– Lawrence
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:
Building From Clues – Natalia, Ashley, & Alyssa
Quadrants (of a Thought) – Melissa, Ali, & Paisley
Listen – Sketch – Draft – Pooja & Lovey
Sort and Predict – Mirela & Sukhdeep
Story Map – Heather & Anne
Energizers
Today, the following Energizers were presented in class:
Thanks to those three for getting us up and moving.
Administrivia
Student Diversity Reading for Tuesday, 21 February
Please read Chapter 8 – Poetry: Three Invitations and – in keeping with my desire to problematize the curriculum for you – answer this question in writing:
Which of the three invitations:
might work best with the students in your practicum class(es)?
Be prepared to defend your selection in class.
3 Polished & Published Haikus and Rough Drafts for Tuesday, 21 February 2012
In preparation for our Poetry Playoffs extravaganza make sure you have your 3 “best copy” haikus and rough drafts in class on Tuesday.
Unit Planning Conferences on Thursday, 16 February 2012
If we have a Integrated Unit Plan Conference on Thursday, I’ll see you then. If not, enjoy your long, long weekend.
Now that I think of it, you couldn’t find a better way to spend all your free time than watching my favourite movie of all time, This Is Spinal Tap. Here’s a compilation of some of the funny bits to whet your appetite:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeGteg74mjw[/youtube]
Check out the whole film to see the 120 minutes of funny bits that they couldn’t fit into this compilation 🙂
– Lawrence
The I.P. Presentation Component
Shep and I spent some time in today’s session reminding you of what’s expected for the Multimedia Presentation Aspect of this task. In essence, there are two key parts to it:
Please see last week’s blog entry – Round 2 of the Inquiry Project Small Group Meetings: Update for Monday, 6 February 2012 – for all the details on these two items in addition to information on how we’ll structure the concurrent presentations.
The I.P. Written Component Feedback
Thanks to everyone for their thoughtful feedback on the writing of your group mates. Please remember that the final draft of your piece is due to your FA on Wednesday, 22 February 2012 in a hard copy or via email.
That’s all for today.
– Lawrence
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:
1. Talk Show – Tim, Eric A. & Claire
2. Academic Controversy – Carrie, Dave, & Amanda
3. Scavenger Hunt – Jess, Christina, & Amy S.
4. Teams Games Tournament – Julie, Jan, & Will
5. Cause and Effect Chart – Eric M., John, & Liz
6. Concept Formation – Andrea, Amy V., & Nicole
Unit Planning Conferences
The goal of this conference is for you to get a chance to talk one-on-one about any ideas, questions, concerns and what not you have with respect to the unit you’ll be planning for the LLED 320 Integrated Unit Plan task. To get the most out of our meeting time, please have bring the following to the meeting:
That’s all for today.
– Lawrence
Information Smarts Workshop
A huge thank you to Danielle Winn, 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, Danielle showed us a YouTube clip on Digital Citizenship:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MX0aycyAAJA[/youtube]
and noted some of the key themes the video presents.
Then she 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. 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 Guide, The task addresses the five points of inquiry:
In the debrief, it came out the the following tools were of particular interest:
You can find much more information on the Ed Lib’s LLED 320 web page.
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:
That’s all for now.
– Lawrence
Thanks again to all those who attended this morning’s inquiry project check-in meetings.
In addition to talking about what’s new with your paper since we met last, I also outlined the schedule of events for the Inquiry Project. Here’s what I presented:
Rough Draft Face-to-Face Feedback
The rough draft of your Inquiry Project 1500-word MAXIMUM paper will be discussed in a small group meeting on Monday, 13 Feb. As arranged in today’s class, please make sure that you’ve emailed the draft of your paper to your fellow group members so they can read it and prepare some feedback for you to discuss in Monday’s face-to-face meeting.
For Monday’s meeting, you may wish to bring a hard copy of the piece(s) you read with your notes/suggestions on it (them) or you may prefer to make the suggestions on an electronic copy and then bring in your laptop, iPhone, iPad, or what not Pick your poison.
Please keep in mind that your feedback should be focused on the criteria that Shep and I – and all EDUC 310 instructors, for that matter – will use to assess your piece. As per the EDUC 310 Course Outline, your project should reflect an emerging ability to:
So you can marvel at my chalkboard writing prowess, here’s a photo (courtesy of Devin) of the criteria taken in last year’s class:
Outlining the Presentations
We took some 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, 20 February 2012 – SCARFE 210 from 10:00 am – Noon
Wednesday, 22 February 2012 – SCARFE 1003 rom 10:00 am – Noon
Presentation 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:
Guidelines for the Inquiry Project Oral/Multi-Media Presentation
One-Minute 3*2*1 Synthesis
This one-minute blurb is a quick review of your presentation. This will serve as a “short blurb” you will give to pique the interest of the audience before they choose which of the concurrent presentations to see each round. It should include the following information from your Inquiry Project:
Here’s an example of a 3-2-1 synthesis piece from one of last year’s TCs:
Submission of Inquiry Project Papers and 3*2*1 Synthesis Blurbs
Please submit your paper and your 3*2*1 blurb to your FA via email on or before Wednesday, 22 February 2012.
Here’s a photo of the calendar and due dates courtesy of Tim. (Thanks to John, too, who took a photo that I didn’t end up using):
On a note completely unrelated to inquiry…
Date for Submitting Your the First Unit Plan of Prac to Your SA
As a professional courtesy and to get some useful feedback, we’re asking you to submit the unit plan of the first unit you’ll be teaching on prac to your SA by Monday, 5 March 2012. This will give your SA a week before the start of Spring Break to take a peek and give you their thoughts on your planning before you start the long prac on Monday, 26 March 2012.
Cheers,
– Lawrence
Today’s 320 class was cancelled to give you the opportunity to attend Authorfest 2012 at Hebb Theatre from 4:30 to 6:00. Below are the notes I took as I watched the event. It’s not live tweeting but it’s close, I suppose:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMNWkxZgm_M[/youtube]
That’s all for Authorfest 2012.
– Lawrence
I started today by highlighting my objectives for the session:
In the end, I think we met all but one of them. Here’s how we did it…
Daily Write – Cow Poetry
After a reading of Cow Poetry and brainstorming a list of animals, you had a go at writing your own Animal Poetry. Here’s the handout to support that task:
Here’s another way you could use Cow Poetry as part of an introduction to poetry class. A former colleague of mine, Liz Orme in the Coquitlam School District, developed this one:
Energizer #1: Newspaper Telephone Death Race 3000 by Jan
12 Guiding Principles for An Effective Writing Program
We used the Ranking Ladder strategy to consider the guiding principles outlined on page 43 & 44 in the Student Diversity text. After some partner talk, we took a class poll on which principles were ranked at the top or the bottom, analyzed the poll results for patterns, and tried to explain the patterns.
Here’s the handout that supported this activity:
Student Diversity Readings Conversation
In this part of the lesson, we partnered up to compare graphic organizers on the day’s reading – either Chapter 4 or Chapter 5 of the text. To sum up, we talked about the use of graphic organizers for this task in particular and the efficacy of G.O.s in middle school classrooms in general.
Energizer #2: [I forget the name] by Sukhdeep
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, 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 class on Tuesday, 21 February 2012, please revise and create a good, final copy of your 3 haiku. Be sure to bring along the original draft versions of all 3 poems to class as well.
On the day the poems are due we will have a Poetry Playoff in which poets will face off in a single-elimination tournament as a showcase for their haiku writing prowess.
Energizer #3: Handshake Murder by Nicole
Integrated Unit Plan Task
I took some time to introduce the Integrated Unit Plan (IUP) task. It’s due on Tuesday, 6 March 2012 and you can find the handout on the Assignments page of this blog.
To support you in the completion of this task, I’m holding 15-minute conferences at various times over the next few weeks. Here’s the schedule:
Energizer #4: Mosquito. Salmon. Bear. by Alyssa
Group Presentation Preparation Time
To end class, I set aside some time for work on your group presentation task. The first set of these 20-25 minute presentations on a teaching strategy or graphic organizer are due on Thursday, 9 February. Please see an earlier post for the complete schedule.
That’s all for today.
Giddyup!
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8rEHbmYEtc[/youtube]
– Lawrence
Thanks again to all those who attended this morning’s inquiry project check-in meetings.
The rough draft of your Inquiry Project 1500-word paper will be discussed in a small group meeting on Monday, 13 Feb. In our session on Monday, 6 Feb, we’ll make arrangements so the other members of your group have time to read your piece and prepare some feedback for you to discuss while face-to-face on the 13th.
Also, we’ll set aside a portion of our meeting on Monday, 6 Feb to talk about what the 10-minute multi-media presentation on your project and the one-page synthesis might look like.
Cheers,
– Lawrence
Nitobe Memorial Garden Field Trip
We had wonderful weather for our excursion to the Nitobe Memorial Garden this afternoon. The goal of this outing to a traditional Japanese Tea and Stroll garden, was to gather 5-senses information for use in writing Haiku poetry, a Japanese poetic form. Ahh, the synergy! Here’s the note taking organizer:
Also, I wanted to model the value in getting your students out of the four walls of the school and into the “real world” for curricular purposes.
In-Class Writing Task Assessment Description
I took some time to describe the nature of this task and to outline the format I’d prefer. You can find the task handout on the Assignements page of this blog. Also, below you’ll see a photo of the layout and a model task from a previous year’s TC:
Here’s the generic, four-to-a-page rubrics for you to use if need be:
Please note that your completed task is due on Tuesday, 7 February 2012. Please submit it all electronically or entirely on paper.
Energizer #1: Spelling Tag by Heather
The Writing Process: An Illustrative Example with Haiku
I struggled with the idea of how to present an interactive lesson on entire writing process in just an hour or two. In the end, I settled on a lesson that involved the writing of haiku poetry, a form often used in elementary & middle school poetry classes. We started to follow the Writing Process (as envisioned by writing teacher Diana Cruchley. I took a workshop from her 2 years ago) –
and, to that end, engaged in a variety of pre-writing activities. The activities were:
Brainwarming
Just as athletes get warm up their bodies before game play or practice, writers need to warm up their brains. To this end, we worked through a Brainwarming activity designed by Julie Ferguson of Beacon Literary Services. As a part of the Hillcrest Middle School staff, I took a workshop with her last year, enjoyed it, and I thought I’d pass along what I’d learned about improving the quality and quantity of the writing students do.
Here’s are some of the key pieces in Brainwarming:
The PowerPoint below is the one I used in class to guide you through the exercise. You can find more info at Julie’s website, if you are interested:
Modeling
We looked over numerous haiku, determined our favourite, and developed a list of key features for haiku poetry. Here’s the list of poems we looked at:
If you’re yearning for more haiku, check out these Zombie Haiku:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pd1Ws9QnmZY[/youtube]
or Biff from the Back to the Future trilogy with some funny haiku songs:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwnqUmmJ-zE[/youtube]
or these “classic” Redneck Haiku.
Here’s a wonderful visual representation of a traditional Japanese haiku:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ucc8l2Yg0qo&feature=related[/youtube]
Criteria Development
The haiku criteria we developed were almost bang on with the criteria outlined in the text I took this lesson from, Wordplaygrounds by John S. O’Connor. His criteria are as follows:
Haiku poems…
Typically 3 short lines with a maximum of 17 syllables. They may follow a 5-7-5 pattern but need not. Here’s a one line haiku by Lee Gurga:
trying the old pump a mouse pours out
Most haiku have two images, one on either side of a break in the poem.
They capture moments of epiphany or discoveries about the world and our place in it. To best capture the immediacy of the moment, haikus are generally written in the present tense and benefit from an economy of language.
Haiku avoid figurative language (similes, metaphors, personfication and the like) in favour of direct and specific descriptions of the world around us.
Powerful haikus are based on vivid imagery based on the five senses.
Pre-Writing
In an effort to make those criteria as clear as possible, we engaged in a variety of short writing tasks:
Word Seasons (handout: Word Seasons Word List)
I showed a list of words and asked you to associate each one with a season.
Sandwich Poems (handout: Sandwich Poems Examples)
These are three-line poems in which the first two lines and the second two lines form a different compound word. Here’s an example:
fire
alarm
clock
Energizer #2: Who Am I? by Amanda
Drafting Based on an Image Pool
I gave out the first line of a haiku:
Halloween night —
then asked you to visualize your most memorable Halloween night and share a few images to create a class image pool. After that, you generated a haiku of your own and many examples were shared with the class. Here are a few of the poems written on the board (Thanks to Tim for today’s photos – LH):
Homework for Next Class Session
Haiku Writing
Student Diversity Reading
Please read your assigned chapter in Student Diversity and summarize its main ideas in a graphic organizer of your choosing. Bring your completed G.O. (and your S. D. text) to class on Tuesday, 31 January 2012. The readings are assigned by surname as follows:
My goal with these readings is to deepen your understanding of the writing process in general and, specifically, how that process might play out in an elementary/middle school classroom. My goal with having you use a graphic organizer is to play with ways that information can be summarized. Graphic organizers are incredibly useful tools to support the learning of all students.
The interwebs are full of many sites with information on graphic organizers. Here’s a few:
– Lawrence