Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Week 11 Blog Post

Hello, friends.

I hope you have all had a fantastic weekend and great start to your week. This past week, on Friday, I had such a wonderful opportunity to go to my first professional development symposium. It was held at Duke university. Here is some information from Duke's website about the training: Duke Center for Science Education, Duke Institution for Brain Sciences, and Duke Program for Education presents a symposium on understanding and educating children affected by fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs)" https://dibs.duke.edu/events/FASD Getting up at 4 o'clock in the morning was not the most fun activity I have ever done, but the symposium was definitely worth it. From the talk, I learned that students who struggle with FASDs may look the same as all their peers, but they are biologically different. I also learned different ways to help students with FASDs be successful in the classroom. They need for their teachers to repeat themselves, for they may have trouble getting it the first time, to have patience, a strict schedule, and a sense of humor. 


In my research for the week, I have been researching technology for literacy and DOK strategies. 


A great tech tool for literacy is an app that is called Teach Your Monster to Read. 


There was a great activity for students to help with vocabulary knowledge. It is called Word Detective. Here is some more information:  "Your Monster to Read is a free, award-winning series of games that teach early readers or reading-challenged students phonics in a skills-oriented environment. Students create a monster and then teach him how to read so he can find his way home. This includes learning letter and vowel sounds, blends, segments, phonemes, graphemes, and eventually sentences. Reading skills are used in a series of adventures that incrementally move the monster closer to his goal. Student progress is tracked on a colorful map that shows what’s completed and where they must go next. Through class accounts, the teacher can monitor student progress and see where individuals might require assistance."  (http://askatechteacher.com/2016/04/18/5-tech-tools-to-inspire-reading/)

Word Detective (http://www.teachhub.com/teaching-strategies-5-ideas-instructing-vocabulary)

The most valuable thing that you can do to increase your student’s vocabulary is to encourage them to read. Research shows that wide reading is the main pathway for word acquisition. This activity enables students to see words in different contexts, therefore deepening their knowledge. It requires students to find new words as they encounter them in their daily reading. Here’s how word detective works:
  • The teacher gives students a list of key words to search for.
  • Students are to write each target word and its sentence on a sticky note, then place it on their desk each time they encounter a key word.
  • At the end of each school day, devote a few minutes to reading each sticky note.
  • You can even make a game out it by assigning each word a point. 
  • Students then share the words and make groups and research their given words more in depth. 
The Teach your Monster to Read application aligns with the NCSOS standard 4. "Teachers integrate technology into their instruction" I love finding new apps to help the littles. 

Finally, I will share an encouraging word. 

No matter what anyone tells you, you matter. You are good enough. You are loved. 

Stay positive, peeps. 
Mallory 

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Blog Post #10

Hello, friends.

Welcome back from spring break. I hope you all had a great time. This week at Washington Elementary was great. During the lunch hours, several volunteers from GWU came to help with a duty-free lunch. GWU SOE provided a taco bar for the staff as a token of gratitude toward Washington. We appreciate all they have done for our program, and it was a great experience to work with all grades in a day. A tiring experience, but a really informative one. In my classroom, students were working on a map of their own island with a map key. It was great to see them talking about something other than math and literacy. Those things are EXTREMELY important, but learning how to navigate a map is important, too.

For my outside research, I have focused on technology and literacy and Depth of Knowledge activities for students. The picture below has several ideas for students who need to be challenged. There are some students who will know how to do something before you teach the lesson. It will help to have tricks to challenge them. I thought this chart was neat. I got the chart from http://teachingwithhaley.com/2016/01/24/supporting-gifted-and-talented-students/ .



For the technology assisted literacy portion, the website flocabulary.com is awesome. Flocabulary has songs and videos for just about everything from elementary to high school. My CE recommended this to me. Her students love the rap songs that flocabulary.com offers. This specifically assists with the vocabulary development in student's learning. 

In my future classroom, I would like to use flocabulary.com as well as some of the ideas listed in the chart above. They both seem like they would benefit my students, and my students would enjoy the challenge of the activities and the fun of flocabulary. The flocabulary videos connect well to the NCPTS because it directly relates to standard 3 which states that teachers make instruction relevant to students. My students at Shelby Intermediate LOVE flocabulary. They actually asked if they could make their own raps through their poetry unit.

"Choose Well"















Everyone has the choice to choose to see the beauty in every day. Choose joy this week, friends. As much as you can, choose joy.

Stay encouraged, 
Mallory

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Blog # 9

Hello, all.

This week has been short but stressful. I cannot wait for spring break, and I am sure a lot of you all feel the same way. I am ready to have some time to get some things done! I love being able to spring clean and get organized. I plan to take some time off, too.

Back to business,
This week we were working on our flipped classrooms, and this is proving to be more difficult than I thought it would be. The most challenging thing for me was writing in EdTPA format when I had never really done this before. One of the biggest problems for me was trying to understand what was expected of me. I knew a few words of the academic language but some I did not. I began researching to find something that would help. This video helped me out a lot.


My time at Washington this week was wonderful. I got to co-teach a geography lesson with one of my classmates. The students seemed to really enjoy singing songs to help them remember the continents. I loved their enthusiasm. 

For literacy this week, I found an awesome idea online. It combines QR codes and reading. The students roll a cube with QR codes on all sides and scan the side it lands on, and it will take them to a book to read. This was a really neat idea because it allows the students to have a little bit of fun and mystery in their literacy time. The first link below will take you to the blog where I got this idea from. The second will give you the PDF for the QR cubes. 




For DOK (depth of knowledge) activities, I found a great poster for classrooms. It is more or less an activity card that allows students to dig deeper into the text. This also aligns with revised blooms taxonomy words! 


Both of these things will apply directly to my future classroom. I can use QR codes for many different things, assessments, readings, math, and more. I can use those DOK cards to encourage my students to think just a little harder about what they're reading. The QR codes are directly associated with Standard 4 of the NCPTS: "Teachers integrate and utilize technology in their instruction." The DOK chart links with Standard 4:"Teachers help students develop critical thinking and problem solving skills." 


Yall, it is SRING BREAK. I cannot tell you how much I need this break. From 1 Peter 1:6, Be Truly glad. There is wonderful joy ahead. I hope you all have a joyous and relaxing break. 

Stay joyful, 
Mallory