Tag Archives: Kingpin

SRL in the Middle Years TC Orientation: Update for Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Welcome to a the 2011-2012 cohort of Midldle Years TCs.  This blog will serve as a record of what goes on in EDUC 310, EDUC 316, and LLED 320 (Term 2).  Those are the courses that Dave and I teaach.  Also, you’ll find information related to your practica in addition to bits and pieces on TC-related events.  Please note that this blog continues where last year’s and the year before that left off.  If you’re curious, you can peruse the old posts and see what cohorts in the past were up to.

Here’s what shook down on Day 1 of your “year long job interview”:

Kingpin as a Microcosm for the Year

Everything I needed to know thus far in life I’ve learned from movies.  Honest.  This clip from the Farrelly brothers comedy classic Kingpin condenses the Teacher Ed program into a tight 67 seconds.  It takes you from those nerve wracking early days on campus, to dealing with call outs in your classroom on prac, to the joyous victory that is graduation.  Enjoy!

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUSLiR0ZmbQ[/youtube]

Class Keeping

We took attendance and gathered contact information.

Instructor Introduction

Dave and I noted that we work from Monday to Thursday at UBC and spend Fridays working in schools in Coquitlam.

Perspectives on the Year

The MY program is small – 1 cohort of 27 in a sea of 38 other UBC Teacher Ed cohorts.  Be sure to self advocate so your voice doesn’t get lost.  Also, we stressed the importance of professionalism as you transition from student to professional and we set out the year-at-a-glance, indicating how coursework, practica, and breaks are spaced out over the course of 2011-2012.

In order to fully understand the requirements and regulations related to your B.Ed program, Dave and I urge you to read these publications from the UBC Teacher Education Office:

“Getting to Know You” Goal

We’d been talking for awhile at this point, so Dave and I wanted to give you a chance to get active and get to know one another a bit better.  To that end, we asked you to engage in the Newspaper Tower Challenge.  The task involved you answering the question “What’s the tallest tower you can build using only two sheets of newspaper?”  Here’s the handout I based the activity on:

You can find all the details on this Challenge and others on the PBS Building Big Educator’s Guide website.  By the way, here’s a YouTube clip showing how two groups of middle schoolers tackled the tower task:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nD58pkqBXwE&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PLEB8ECD7CE3ABAEC3[/youtube]

After a brief debrief, we adjourned class for the day and sent you off for a quick bite of lunch before the Faculty Orientation at the Chan Centre.

‘Til next time.

Cheers,

Lawrence

LLED 320 – Housekeeping, Unit Planning Intro, Brainwarming, and Haikuing: Update for Thursday, 27 January 2011

We started with some housekeeping items:

Temperature Check
Here’s the accompanying Kingpin video clip:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUSLiR0ZmbQ[/youtube]

Writing Assessment Task Q & A
This task is due on Thursday, 3 February 2011.  Please submit it in one electronic package via email or as a complete paper copy.

Authorfest Info

Class is cancelled on Tuesday, 1 February to encourage you to attend Authorfest from 4:00 – 5:30 in Wood 2.  I handed out a bibliography of the attending authors.  It’s also available here:

Integrated Unit Planning Task

I handed out the task sheet for the LLED 320 Unit Plan task due on Tuesday, 8 March 2011.  You can find the handout here:

Also, here’s the resource evaluation sheet you’ll need:

To get a visual sense of what’s expected, here’s a sample from a few years ago:

Writing in the Elementary / Middle Classroom

I had some guiding principles for the teaching of writing to share but, before then, I wanted to play with a pre-writing / warm up strategy.  Here’s the info

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:

  • Your favourite word
  • Power Words
  • Power Triplets
  • A 5-Winute Write
  • Writing quickly
  • Harnessing the power of the creative right brain
  • Supporting the diversity of learners –  from Gifted to LD – in your classroom

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:

12 Guiding Principles For An Effective Writing Program

We used the Ranking Ladder strategy followed up with Inside / Outside Circles to process 12 guiding principles related to writing instruction.   The conversation was vigourous.  Here’s the handout:

Engaging in The Writing Process

I struggled with the idea of how to present an interactive lesson on entire writing process in just over an hour.  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) –

A Writing Process

and, to that end, engaged in a variety of pre-writing activities.  The activities were:

Modeling

We looked over a dozen haiku, determined our favourite, and developed a list of key features for haiku poetry.  Here’s the list of poems we looked at:

I also shared a few of my favourite Redneck Haiku.  They can be found here.   If you’re yearning for more, check out these Zombie Haiku:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pd1Ws9QnmZY&feature=PlayList&p=332A297059FDF20E&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=9[/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]

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…

  • Are short

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

  • Have a Twist (Internal Comparison / Juxtaposition)

Most haiku have two images, one on either side of a break in the poem.

  • Have a “Haiku” moment in time

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.

  • Focus on nature, including human nature, shown concretely

Haiku avoid figurative language (similes, metaphors, personfication and the like) in favour of direct and specific descriptions of the world around us.

  • Are 5 senses specific

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

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.  Unfortunately, I neglected to collect any of the Halloween haiku for publication on the blog.  If you have yours handy, please feel free to write a comment containing your three lines.

We ran out of time for the scheduled nature walk aimed at gathering information for a haiku.  So, your homework for next class is as follows:

  1. Go on a nature walk
  2. Gather 5 sense information on the back of your Sample Haiku handout
  3. Write 3 haikus that fit with the key features of haiku that we explored in class
  4. Bring your 3 haikus to class on Thursday,  3 February 2011.

See you on Tuesday at Authorfest. Please remenber that our regularly scheduled class is cancelled so you can attend this event.

– Lawrence

UBC Middle Years TC Orientation – 2010-2011: Update for Monday, 7 September 2010

Welcome to a the 2010-2011 cohort of Midldle Years TCs.  This blog will serve as a record of what goes on in EDUC 310, EDUC 316, and LLED 320 (Term 2).  Those are the courses that I teaach.  Also, you’ll find information related to your practica in addition to bits and pieces on TC-related events.  Please note that this blog continues where last year’s left off.  If you’re curious, you can peruse the old posts and see what happened last year in the cohort.

Here’s what shook down on Day 1 of your “year long job interview”:

Kingpin as a Microcosm for the Year

Everything I needed to know thus far in life I’ve learned from movies.  Honest.  This clip from the Farrelly brothers comedy classic Kingpin condenses the Teacher Ed program into a tight 67 seconds.  It takes you from those nerve wracking early days on campus, to dealing with call outs in your classroom on prac, to the joyous victory that is graduation.  Enjoy!

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UjJaBJW7EOU&p=B4FC1233BE4030C2&playnext=1&index=10[/youtube]

Class Keeping

I took attendance and gathered contact information.

Instructor Introduction

I noted that I work from Monday to Thursday at UBC and, on Fridays, at Hillcrest Middle School in Coquitlam. I threw in a few other bits and pieces, as well.

Perspectives on the Year

The MY program is small – 1 cohort of 25 in a sea of 36 other UBC Teacher Ed cohorts.  Be sure to self advocate so your voice doesn’t get lost.  Also, I set out the year-at-a-glance, indicating how coursework, practica, and breaks are spaced out over the course of 2010-2011.

If you have questions related to the program, please check these publications from the UBC Teacher Education Office:

“Getting to Know You” Goal

One of my main goals in the early part of the year is to get to know you and your cohort mates.  The better I know you, the more able I am to place you with a School Advisor that fits.  To that end, we diid three tasks:

  • Factors That Influence How We Teach Task

Please complete this piece of writing, as per the instructions, to give me an idea of how your background and experiences may impact you as an educator.  Your piece is due on Monday, 13 September and the handout can be found here:

Factors That Influence How We Teach Handout – 2010/2011

  • Name Introduction Information

I plan to have you introduce a partner and share some information about their name in a future class.  To that end, please do a 10-minute write in response to the “Thinking on Your Name” questions that can be found on the bottom of the Factors handout posted above.

  • “Which Object is Most Like My Life?” Poetry

To wrap up this intro lesson, we engaged in a personal poetry writing activity.  In essence, I showed a collection of objects – a broken clock, a dragon heat bag, a coffee mug, a wooden hippo, and an oyster shell – and I asked each of you to choose the one that was most like your life, free write for 5 minutes on the object’s connection to your life, and highlight 3 interesting images, phrases, or words in your piece.  We ran out of time at that point, so I asked everyone to shape the 3 chosen ideas into a poem to be presented in the next class.  You can find more detailed instructions for this activity (and a sample free write and poem from yours truly) on this handout:

Brendan McLeod’s Children’s Festival Ojbect Poetry Task

That’s all for this class.

Cheers,

Lawrence

LLED 320 – Intro to Lit Circles: Update for Tuesday, 2 March 2010

Welcome back to LLED class.  Here’s a rundown of the happenings in today’s class:

Temperature Check

If Roy Munson can keep his cool under pressure…

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UjJaBJW7EOU[/youtube]

I reckon you can too!  To see just how much pressure you’re under, we did a temperature check from 1 (“I’d rather sandpaper a bobcat’s butt in a phone booth than get out of bed today”) to 11 (“Giddyup!  I’m golden”).  Most TCs were around a 6 or 7. Considering that the Olympic high was wearing off, I figure this wasn’t too bad.

Writing Review

In an effort to put a bow on our examination of writing in the classroom and to solidify that content in your mind, we did a Circle of Knowledge activity.  Here’s how it goes:

  • List all you recall from our work on the teaching and assessment of writing.  Draw a line under your list
  • Go for a walk & talk to gather at least 3 ideas from your classmates
  • Present a unique idea in the Circle of Knowledge, a circle formed around the classroom as ach TC gave a new writing-related idea.

The Reading Process

I gave a quick overview of the reading process outlined in Chapters 2 and 3 of the Student Diversity text.

Our Process

I explained that we would be doing the following in our examination of the reading process:

  • Intro & Selection of Literature Circles books
  • Your Thoughts on Effective Reading Instruction
  • Examing the Reading Process In-Depth: Fiction
    • Whole Class Novel Study
    • Literature Circles
  • Examing the Reading Process In-Depth: Non-Fiction
    • Strategy for Textbook Reading

Lit Circle Book Talks and Selection

In order to ensure that you received a book to start reading in time for our Lit Circle conversations that will start on Tuesday, 9 March 2010, I did book talks on all the books in our Lit Kit:

  • Night by Elie Wiesel
  • Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
  • Among the Hidden by Margaret Petersen Haddix
  • The Crazy Man by Pamela Porter
  • Silverwing by Kenneth Oppel

I showed book trailers from YouTube for the three books below:

  • Holes by Louis Sachar

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zc3V7ZcK0kg[/youtube]

  • The Giver by Lois Lowry

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNL77KnIRI8&feature=PlayList&p=33CC1DBFD4F7A561&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=3[/youtube]

  • Among the Hidden by Margaret Petersen Haddix

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXLGIokzbdA&feature=PlayList&p=123A9E1A17E13147&index=0&playnext=1[/youtube]

If you’re curious, here’s the file containing all the Book Talks I wrote up to deliver in this class:

LLED 320 Lit Circle Book Talks – March 2010

After considering which books were their favourites, each TC chose one and started to read it.

For class on Tuesday, 9 March 2010 please complete the following Lit Circle book activities:

  • Read up to at least as far as your group agreed to
  • Put a sticky note beside 1 or 2 passages of interest in your novel.  Be prepared to “say something” about each passage in the next class.

Connecting to What You Know About Effective Reading Instruction

To wrap up class, I asked you do the following:

  • Complete a placemat activity while answering the question “What factors help students to develop as readers?”
  • Classify the responses into 4 or 5 key factors

We will compare your ideas to those presented in the research quoted in the Student Diversity text.  That’ll happen next week.  Please bring your textbook to class on Tuesday, 9 March 2010.

See you then true believers,

– Lawrence