Activity/Lesson: Wire Sculpture Activity
Submitted by: Linda Irwin~ Middle School Social Studies Teacher
School: St. Mary School, Royal Oak, Michigan
To get to know my students and to do a quick assessment of writing, I utilize this lesson on the first day of Religion class. (Note: This lesson could be utilized for any class.)
I have found this lesson and the student-created designs insightful and have learned a lot about each student through this process. This is a great lesson that builds self-awareness and trust.
~Linda Irwin
As the school year has just begun and we are busy in schools, I thought I would share a couple of great sites that offer “team building” lessons for students. We are excited to hear from and meet new teachers this year. I think that these sites provide great problem-solving scenarios for students to work through and can enhance any lesson in any discipline and be modified for any age to meet the needs of all students. Enjoy and have a super school year full of many new discoveries!
http://www.odysseyofthemind.com/
Computer Science Unplugged
Computer Science Unplugged is a great site to utilize in the classroom because it offers creative scenarios to solve or work through without utilizing a computer. This site has various activities for both teachers and parents to utilize with students to enhance team building and higher-order thinking.
I love to know your thoughts, ideas or lessons found successful in enhancing these skills. Please keep sharing. Together we can make a difference!
May we seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
Filed under Curriculum Resources, Science
Given our economy, professional development has been slim for many educators. There is a plethora of free webinars online. Have fun learning!
Life is busy and for those of us who do not have time to attend a class for learning or pleasure, webinars can be just the tool needed to achieve our goal. Given technology, webinars can be the next best thing for teachers too.
PBS Teachers Live Should be in Every Teacher’s Toolbox
PBS Teachers Live offers a wealth of webinars in many areas across the disciplines. For example, if a teacher were interested in educating students about Earth Day in April (hopefully), then PBS Teachers Live would be
a valuable tool. Teachers sign up for free and log on to various webinars, full of ideas, lesson plans and across the curriculum connections, to name a few.
Webinars, an Awesome Resource for Educators
After doing some research, here are a few webinar sites across the Internet that is recommended by those within the world of education:
Education Week (one of my personal favorites) offers many enlightening webinars. Check out “E-educators’ Evolving Skills”…talk about relevant!
American Statistical Association offers various webinars…currently hosting a K-12 “Meeting within a Meeting” for Science and Math Teachers
Exploring Middle School MiddleWeb is a blog powered by Typepad. They are a promoter of 21st Century Learning and offer live and archived webinars. Check out the latest webinar: The National Middle School Association is teaming up with the NSF-funded Middle School Portal to offer “Free math and Science Webinars”…the goal was to not only make the training affordable but user friendly; teachers could watch from home.
Webinars and Educational Professional Development
The life of a teacher is very demanding and organization is necessary. This is also true for those entrusted to lead and provide professional development for their educational staff. Given this amazing age of technology, regardless of budget, there is no reason that professional development is not occurring within schools.
All of the webinars posted here in this article, can be utilized to strengthen and enrich any school faculty. Educators can watch at their own pace or gather and watch as a team. This type of professional development is only going to increase not decrease as we progress further into the world of technology. There are many curriculum developers/professional development trainers, who utilize programs like these mentioned to create meaningful professional development for educators around the world.
OneNote and Education:
This MSDN blog was created to have a dialog about OneNote and education, including sharing ideas, resources, and building community with teachers, students and faculty.
Parents are the first teachers. All of these webinars mentioned are open to anyone interested in learning and changing the life of a child. This will be one of many articles written on the topic of professional development within the world of education. There is a plethora of free programs out there for all of us to learn and use, to meet the needs of our children,
our future.
May we continue to seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
As I sit and review my notes for Unlock the Teacher‘s first professional development session for the 2011/2012 school year, I reflect and wonder, what
words can I provide that might inspire and instill hope for all the amazing teachable moments that will happen in the life of the teachers with whom I will be speaking to tomorrow. Teaching is SO much more than a job, I honestly believe it is a calling; an urge that a person feels to make a difference, and is played out in the classroom.
We often think about all the teachable moments that happen throughout the school year for our students, our future. However, I also think of the amazing teachable moments that occur for the individual teacher. I hope that at this time of year, the teacher is reflecting and writing a curriculum map for the school year that will be used as a master plan.
The teacher, who starts the school year, is often different from the one who finishes it. Hopefully, this is the case, as a true reflective practitioner will evolve throughout the year as his/her students will…keeping in mind no two students are alike, no school year should ever mirror another for a teacher.
In regards to a teacher’s master curriculum plan, this is just a tool that is utilized to create lessons full of discovery for each quarter, with one scaffolding on the next to ensure that students are maximizing their potential. However, this is just a plan, as all good teachers know, true
“teachable moments” sometimes just happen and must be capitalized on in the moment.
I have chosen the theme of “Teachers are Planters of Seeds” for tomorrow. I have had the pleasure of working with this staff on curriculum alignment and I am honored to be asked back into their building on their first day back to school before their eager students arrive next week.
I think as teachers, we have the awesome power to create new worlds in our students’ minds. We can take them to places they might not ever get an opportunity to experience, tell them and show them how to achieve the impossible dream OR we can crush the human spirit with one angry glance or snide comment.
Think about what kind of world we hope to have in the future and remember that it all begins with how we treat our children today, what opportunities we provide, what words of encouragement or defeat did we choose to utilize at the moment of chaos in the classroom. When we train our eyes to see the good and choose to use words to share the good, amazing things can happen!
Children Learn What They Live
By Dorothy Law Nolte
If children live with criticism,
They learn to condemn.
If children live with hostility,
They learn to fight.
If children live with ridicule,
They learn to be shy.
If children live with shame,
They learn to feel guilty.
If children live with encouragement,
They learn confidence.
If children live with tolerance,
They learn to be patient.
If children live with praise,
They learn to appreciate.
If children live with acceptance,
They learn to love.
If children live with approval,
They learn to like themselves.
If children live with honesty,
They learn truthfulness.
If children live with security,
They learn to have faith in themselves and others.
If children live with friendliness,
They learn the world is a nice place in which to live!
What kind of seeds are you getting ready to plant this school year?
May we all continue to seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
BASIC FACTS
A+Math
Online flashcards and games for math practice.
Cool Math Games
Fun math games.
Funbrain.com-Math Baseball
Fun game teaches addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and elementary algebra.
Math Fact Cafe-Flashcards
Online flashcards for the elementary grades. *** I really like this one!
More online flashcards, but in a timed setting and a progress report can be printed when finished.
Factor Game
Play this online version of the “Factor Captor” game in 5th Grade Everyday Mathematics.
F-R-A-C-T-I-O-N-S
AAA Math
Covers all fraction topics. NOTE: I think this is a fabulous site for scaffolding the learning process for all things fractions!
FUNBRAIN-Fresh Baked Fractions
A game for simplifying fractions.
Learning Planet.com-Fraction Frenzy
Use a game to practice matching equivalent fractions.
Visual Fractions
Practice identifying fractions and operating with fractions.
These are some great math sites I found while conducting research this morning. The fractions sites are so good, that I had to share. I hope these websites help make the learning process fun for your math learner!
May we seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
Parents are the first responders in regards to education. The following sites can be viewed by parent(s) and or caregiver and lessons or objectives can be giving for children ages 6 to 18 each day to enhance learning over the summer. Many of these sites have free educational webinars or videos where parent and child can learn together and have some educational fun! 20 minutes on computer at one of these sites can help your child explore and learn. Great ideas can be extrapolated from these sites, in regards to family outings, educational vacations, field trips and fun summertime projects at home.
Great Learning Games~ www.funbrain.com
Large Resource for Language Arts, Reading and Writing~ www.mrsgoldsclass.com
Great Science and Math Activities~ www.edheads.com
Create Puzzles ~ www.edhelper.com
Educational Webinars~ www.pbs.org
Everything Jan Brett~ www.janbrett.com/
Great Science Site~ www.chem4kids.com
A Typing Site for Kids~ www.bbc.co.uk/schools/typing
Everything Eric Carle~ www.eric-carle.com
A Variety of Activites~ www.apples4theteacher.com/
May we seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
I always enjoy going into St. Mary’s School in Royal Oak. The atmosphere is inviting and the teachers are friendly. I want to share with readers, a fabulous teacher utilizing “out of the box” techniques to teach peace. Linda Irwin teaches middle school literature and even if that knowledge wasn’t known, one could tell just by walking into her classroom.
Filed under Best Practices from Awesome Educators
This blog is about sharing the good found in all things. Today I read a great article I found on my bookcase in a Franklin/Covey’s Seven Habits Organizer on Noe’s, Peak Performance Principles.
NOTE: Organizer belongs to my husband and I am just realizing that it is chuck-full of great inspirational and leadership advice…this organizer has various inserts that he has pulled out of his planner for the last six years to make one awesome leadership reference tool!
Noe breaks down the attitudes he correlates to those who are high achievers into six easy steps:
If I did not find the six detailed attitudes for high achievers motivating, Noe’s last paragraph in the article definitely did it for me. To describe the algorithm of achievement, Noe utilizes the analogy of mountain climbing. A mountain climber would not go from peak to peak, they would reach peak, travel down again, to experience the thrill of a new adventure with climbing up to another peak. I found this analogy motivating and a visual reminder I can use when encountering a stressful situation.
If we dedicate ourselves over and over again to the goal of climbing one peak to the next…resisting the urge to become discouraged by the task-every one of us can become a high achiever. ~John R. Noe, Peak Performance
Have a great weekend and may we all continue to seek knowledge in all things,
Denise
Filed under Blogs that Inspire Us