Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Great Handout Creator-Smore

Recently my school tech department gave me a new Chromebook, and I spent some time perusing apps. Among other things, I was looking for an easy, seamless way to make eye-catching handouts. There are so many cool infographics and neat looking handouts around these days, I thought I could make some for my students. -That turned out to be a pretty tall order! I found this app, Smore via a Twitter post. It's easy to use, and makes beautiful "flyers"!

***After writing this post, I discovered that Smore is actually not free. When you sign up, you are allotted five free flyers. After that, you have to pay. They do have a discounted educator rate.

Here is a practice handout I made that I think I will actually end up using with my freshmen: 





Here is the Tweet where I found information about Smore. If you are interested in the concept of app smashing, it is really informational!

Monday, July 27, 2015

Bulletin Board Ideas

Image result for inspiring teacher quotesI have been working on some ideas for my classroom bulletin board. The goal is for the board to brighten up the space and be meaningful for my students. I am hoping to involve my students each time I change up the board. Which, let's be honest, will not be often. So, since I will not be changing it up more than three-four times a year,  I want it to look really great.
Here is the first idea I am going with:

Turn Over a New Leaf
  • Freshman do a journal entry about what they want to do differently this school year
  • Seniors do a quote activity: find quote on Quote Garden (a great site!) and share it with a small group
  • Freshmen choose a word to represent what they’re going to change and put it on a leaf, seniors write their quotes on leaf bordered paper--both are added to bulletin board
  • Occasion: start of the school year

To see more ideas click here.

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Character Shift Chart


I have mentioned that I was reading Deeper Reading by Kelly Gallagher; and I have finished it. What a great resource! Right now I am teaching summer school and I wanted a good way to assess students' understanding of the novel Speak. Using an idea from Deeper Reading, I created this great Character Shift Chart, perfect for demonstrating understanding of the development of protagonist, Melinda. View the chart here

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Genius Hour & Passion Projects

I am in full-on summer research mode. I came across this great idea first on Edutopia. Apparently the Genius Hour originated with Google; they allow their employees to use 20% of their time on anything they want. Educators have taken this idea and run with it as a way to give students more control over their education. I LOVE this idea! I am trying to think of ways to use it in my classroom. I think it could be a really neat way to liven up choice novels. HERE is where I found an idea of how to use this concept in the English classroom. (If it doesn't take you right there, you are looking for "Project Inspiration.")

Monday, June 22, 2015

Deeper Reading

I am reading Deeper Reading by Kelly Gallagher, and really enjoying it. Because of his great, deep discussions about the way students read, I wanted to brush up on Bloom's Taxonomy. I came across this really helpful graphic. To view the teacher's website where I found this graphic, click here. (I have bookmarked this site for future use!)

'Bloom's Taxonomy as a wheel' photo (c) 2009, Doug Belshaw - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Monday, June 15, 2015

Education Buzzwords: Reading Strategies & Skills

I was recently doing some research on literacy related topics when I came across this article, "Clarifying the Differences Between Reading Skills and Reading Strategies." The authors' have identified two often used buzzwords in English/ELA/Reading education and have clarified their meanings really well in this article. My general take away is this: reading skills are what readers do automatically, and reading strategies are what readers do intentionally. In addition to this clarification, this article offers some great insight for instruction. Even though the concepts and discussion are geared toward earlier readers, the instructional points can be applied to any grade level. Click here to view this article.

Friday, May 22, 2015

Vanderbilt Center for Teaching

I have to share that the Vanderbilt Center for Teaching website is amazing! I stumbled upon it as I was looking for ideas for my end of year student feedback survey. There are so many excellent ideas on this website. One aspect of fascination for me at the moment is mindfulness in the classroom, and they have a great section devoted to that topic. This site is intended for new teachers, but there is such a wealth of information teachers, regardless of how far they are in their careers, could find something to inspire them with ideas for their classrooms. Enjoy!