THE HOGGATTEER REVOLUTION
  • Homeroom
  • Orientation
    • Meet the Teacher
    • Place in the World
    • Teacher File Cabinet
  • Positivity
    • Insightful Poetry
    • Inspirational Prose
    • Meaningful Quotes
    • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Scripture Studies
  • Exploration
    • Celebrate Good Times (Come On)
    • Cerebral Cinema >
      • Hoggatt-Made Videos
      • Mood Music
      • Music Appreciation
      • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Coursework >
      • Cultivating America
      • Focus on Science
      • Let's Communicate
      • M4+HEM4+1C5
      • Missouri, USA
      • Recess Bell
      • Scripture Studies

Spelling Bee Buzz

1/16/2019

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It's time for the annual Spelling Bee - one more opportunity for students to exhibit their great knowledge and abilities.  It's also one more opportunity to feel the butterflies of nervous tension as we put those skills to the test.

Maybe it should be called a Spelling Butterfly.

A number of years ago, one of our Hoggatteers went the distance to earn first place in the areawide Spelling Bee sponsored by the Joplin Globe.  MICHELLE continues to succeed as a college graduate and as an adult (She is the third from the right, on the front row, in the photo above.).

For students who wish to study and practice for the Bee on their own, the official 2019 lists are located on the Joplin Globe's Spelling Bee webpage.

Our class is currently practicing and identifying finalists who will carry our metaphorical banner to compete with other fourth and fifth grade students from our school.  From there, the champion will be eligible to compete in the areawide competition, usually held during Spring Break.

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George Washington Teacher Institute:  Alumni Essay

1/15/2019

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As a former participant in the George Washington Teacher Institute and a current applicant for the summer of 2019, I am required to compose an additional 500-word essay to tell how the institute influences my classroom and my teaching.  Here is what I came up with:
​George Washington permeates our fourth grade classroom in ways I never imagined.  My summer residency at Mount Vernon renewed my interest in this iconic American figure to the point that he is now a lasting member of our classroom family.  Not only does Washington appear in posters and portraits, not only is he prominently displayed on bulletin boards and webpages, and no longer is he relegated to lifeless readings in textbooks.  We bring George back to life daily.
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In our classroom, George Washington is not dead.  Though he no longer visits us in living form, we travel in time to find him.  We observe as he gathers his hair and  straighten his cuffs to face the day, we watch him mount his horse and draw his sword, and we hear his voice.  We truly wonder at his thoughts in each battle – as he witnesses the incredible slaughter of Jumonvillé, as he learns of the loss of ground at Bunker Hill, as he schemes to cross the icy Delaware on Christmas night, and as he lights the fuse to ignite the Yorktown battle.

We apply Washington’s thoughts to our own time – considering his Rules of Civility in connection with our own personal and classroom expectations, renaming our restroom breaks as "visits to the necessary", cheering for each other by shouting "Huzzah", dusting ourselves off when we fail, and respecting others.

George Washington stands before us, human, full of fault, a work in progress for all of his days.  From his early pretentiousness, impatience, and selfish ambition, we follow him to more effective days of long-suffering, quiet thoughtfulness, and wise decision-making.  One of our most valued ideas of Washington is that he develops as he lives.  We appreciate that he is not a romantically perfect superhero or messiah, but that he courageously faces his flaws, toes the line, and serves others.  He constantly takes risks, learns from his mistakes, and still moves forward.  If there is an overarching theme that applies to ten-year-olds, it is the avoidance of being discouraged and the headfirst drive to improve.

I always seek to make connections for my students - connections to other areas of the curricula, connections to outside resources, and connections to students’ own lives today.  With Washington accompanying us, we make use primary documents for reading, and we recreate Mount Vernon to understand symmetry in math.  I curate and archive resources – primary sources, videos, music, art, readings, etc. – for use in our classroom, and I share most of these publicly on our classroom website for other teachers to use.

As I expect my students to learn, grow, and apply the things I teach them, I must also drive myself to do likewise.  A single visit to the Teacher Institute at Mount Vernon lit a flame in me, encouraging me to continue to read and learn more about our founding era and that unusual combination of humans who made it all happen.  It is a story I love to tell.
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Monticello:  Online Resources

1/14/2019

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During the application process for the Monticello Teacher Institute, a question was posed concerning the online resources from the property.  I have quietly used their resources from year to year, especially enjoying the virtual tour available, as well as ordering some free Lewis and Clark posters a few years ago.  With our new emphasis on early American history, however, I have come to appreciate the great depth of resources that Monticello puts at my fingertips.  I can quite easily throw up an image of a real object from Jefferson's time, and students can analyze it with easy.  Whether it be a document or an object to hold in the hand, these primary sources are terrific to use in the classroom.

​The application asked the following question (with my respond following:  Take a look through classroom.monticello.org. What sources appeal to you the most? Based on your onsite research, what's resource that you would like to contribute to the site? Feel free to get creative!

I have discovered materials at classroom.monticello.org several times in the past, but now that our Missouri curriculum has shifted to the founding generation, I catch myself returning to the site to locate more and more resources for my fourth graders.  I enjoy showing images of some of the real objects from Monticello.  I encourage students to appreciate the things they are seeing in the image – the age, the origin, the owner(s), and the interactions implied by their existence at Monticello.
 
I also value the infographics and prepared informational images at classroom.monticello.org.  These images and their texts assist students in visualizing life on the plantation from varying points of view.  For example, there is one picture that depicts the residents at Monticello – from Thomas Jefferson himself to overseers to the enslaved community.  The comparison of numbers and the comparisons in the status of these individuals helps my class understand the size of the plantation, along with how much work was constantly demanded of the inhabitants of this little portion of Virginia.
 
Mostly, however, I enjoy building my own materials, lessons, and activities.  I like getting my hands into the materials and burying myself in creative freedom.  I take pieces of the lesson plants, mix them with the images and maps, throw in a video, and season the mixture with a gadget or two.  When I can tie in some science or some math, I know I’ve successfully made some connections.  That’s when I feel the most successful.
 
One example of this is when I pulled information about the construction of Jefferson’s house from the Monticello website.  I researched about some of the architecture and found that bricks were Jefferson’s choice for the exterior.  I even played a Flash-based activity on the site to depict the sequence involved in making the bricks on site.  Taking that as a base, I am currently creating a lesson that includes science (water resistance) and math (surface area and volume calculations, as well as identifying mathematical patterns within a growing set of bricks laid end-to-end or stacked).  This, combined with reading some of the text pieces that are written for elementary students, also gives students ideas for writing personal narratives from a brick makers point of view or journal entries for the things they learned in the lesson.  A recipe like this is easily shared with peers, and I will be happy to contribute something like this as a resource on the Monticello website, as well.
 
Keeping a larger picture in mind, at some point, I may also lead my students in some kind of mock protest on behalf of the enslaved people, asking for compensation for the work they are doing.  We will easily conduct conversations or debates about slavery and wonder how Thomas Jefferson justified owning slaves while declaring All men are created equal…
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"Teaching, Simplified" Episode 1:  Posting Objectives

1/13/2019

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The first full episode of my new, professional, teaching podcast is now available.  This episode is about posting your objectives for a lesson - an important consideration for rookies and veterans who want to shake things up, yet remain true to research and personality.

The first time I was evaluated by a principal - my first real, sit-down observation - did not go as well as it should have, but I credit that man with setting me on the right path for the rest of my career.  He knew that I had never been told how to put a lesson together properly, but after he gave me pointers, he also knew I could begin to play with things - even to the point of moving my anticipatory set to various locations on the lesson line.
Choose your preferred platform to listen, subscribe, and share:
Anchor
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​Apple Podcasts (iTunes)
Breaker
Google Podcasts
​
Overcast
Pocket Casts
RadioPublic
Spotify
Stitcher
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New Frontier

1/12/2019

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Liberty's Kids

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America the Beautiful

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The United States really does contain some of the most beautiful landforms and natural features in the world.  In the next few days, let's make maps of the United States - something for our Ozobots to explore.

Freedom of the Press

Watch this History Channel clip:
  • What is investigative reporting?
  • What is the role of the press?
  • Does the press ever "go too far"?  When?

Let's talk about each section of a newspaper and each part of a television news report.
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  • Why is it important to notice the differences between articles and editorials?
  • Do articles ever contain opinions, slants, or spin?
  • What is fake news?
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While We're on the Subject

It's important to know how the press works.
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What Is Fake News?
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George Washington Teacher Institute:  Personal Essay

1/11/2019

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The application for the 2019 round of the George Washington Teacher Institute are due in mid-January.  That required the applying teacher to give some personal information, as well as write a personal 500-word essay.  As a member of the alumni from the GWTI, I am also asked to write an additional essay concerning how the institute has influenced my classroom.
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The first, personal essay follows:
​We steal from the future when we rob our children of history.  When our nation’s founding principals are blurred, so is our vision of the future.  I aspire to return history to elementary schools where context helps teachers give muscle to our founding documents.  My fourth graders hunger for the incredible stories of our nation’s founding era.  I am happy to dust off a history that has too often been relegated to secondary and collegiate courses.  It is my job and my pleasure to reveal and apply those stories earlier in their educational lives.

George Washington is an active, relevant member of our classroom.  We welcome him to sit around our table and discuss current events from varying points of view.  Hailing mostly from lower middle class or impoverished families, my students (and other classes, periodically invited to join ours), appreciate the opportunity to wrestle with Washington and his contemporaries, mull over their “radical” ideas, and debate over freedoms and rights.  They rigorously approach the Revolutionary struggle and wonder at the sacrifices of Patriots.

Washington’s courage and wisdom smacks of the difficult lessons he learned at a young age.  Students are encouraged to discover that he made costly mistakes and still developed as a great, successful leader.  Undeniably documented by primary sources, Washington is one of those great visionaries who resisted oppression, forged a free country, and gifted us with unprecedented rights and freedoms, but when I display images of the Necessary at Mount Vernon, students realize that, yes, even George Washington had to relieve himself.  It helps bring this hero from the pedestal to a human level where we can better relate to him.

As historians, my students collaboratively struggle with material and process.  They actively engage in the civilized discussions and disagreements conducted in class.  They draw conclusions based on physical and inferential evidence.  They respectfully dig into difficult topics and successfully unearth innovative solutions.  They gather information, learn from failure, and actively build systems to serve future generations.  Identifying mistakes and responses from the past, students equip themselves to face genuine issues and influence the future.  They can do so, because it has been done before!

Washington influenced uneasy times.  Amid confusion and extraordinary events, Washington’s strength and demeanor exhibited leadership and decision-making abilities.  He weighed risks, led boldly, calmed rooms, and sought civility and decency.  I aspire to be that resolute peacekeeper for stakeholders in our school, and I encourage my colleagues to do the same.  When my peers curiously spy into our window, freely click on my website, or observe my class directly, they find us time traveling – encountering real, stimulating situations, artifacts, and images.  I thrive when I openly and professionally share my experiences and expertise – through conversations, observations, and formal or electronic presentations – locally and at the state level.  At day’s end, I rejoin my family, under my own vine and fig tree, enjoying the satisfying fatigue resulting from empowering children with real mettle for success and encouraging others to do likewise.
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Hoggatt Cave:  Critters

1/10/2019

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Chiroptera.

​It's a word most people haven't heard.  It means hand wing.  It's pretty easy to see why bats are called chiroptera.  When you look at the skeleton, you can see the same bones that are in the human hand.  The fingers themselves are almost as long as the bat's body - longer than the bones of the arms.  When a bat flaps its wings, it's really flapping its hands.

This and other facts about bats will be included in the Hoggatt Cave tour.  The cave will be ready soon, and employee training will take place soon.  Students are anxious to get things started.
Other critters that live in Hoggatt Cave include cave crickets and blind cave trout.  In our environment, these animals are a rare, giant breed.
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Inspiring Potato Farmer

1/9/2019

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Sometimes we fail to appreciate the hard work that people do to get products to the table.
Take five minutes to watch this video.
Now for some questions:
  • How did Jorge get to be the boss?
  • What is it about Jorge's attitude that makes people like him?
  • Does Jorge do his work to receive gratitude?  Why does he work so hard?
  • Is Jorge's attitude all about work?  What else is important to him?
  • Can you think of anybody who never gets thanked for his/her hard work?  Tell about it.
  • ​What does expressed gratitude do for a person?
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Book:  Framed

1/8/2019

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It's unlikely that a 12-year-old boy would be selected to be a consultant for the FBI (Of course, they wouldn't exactly advertise it, would they?), but Florian is different.  Florian has developed TOAST, a rather interesting way of analyzing and synthesizing observations.

I enjoyed how this book was constructed, and I appreciated the crafty word selection of the author.  Granted, Framed is just one of the TOAST mysteries, making it the first of a series.  Granted, I do not like series for the most part.  But this story was complete, and it never stopped moving forward.  I enjoyed this one from cover to cover.  I recommend Framed as a fun read.  It may even challenge the reader to think differently.
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A description from the author's website:
Get to know the only kid on the FBI Director’s speed dial and several international criminals’ most wanted lists all because of his Theory of All Small Things in this hilarious start to a brand-new middle grade mystery series.​

So you’re only halfway through your homework and the Director of the FBI keeps texting you for help…​

What do you do? Save your grade? Or save the country?​

If you’re Florian Bates, you figure out a way to do both.

​Florian is twelve years old and has just moved to Washington. He’s learning his way around using TOAST, which stands for the Theory of All Small Things. It’s a technique he invented to solve life’s little mysteries such as: where to sit on the on the first day of school, or which Chinese restaurant has the best egg rolls.​
​

But when he teaches it to his new friend Margaret, they uncover a mystery that isn’t little. In fact, it’s HUGE, and it involves the National Gallery, the FBI, and a notorious crime syndicate known as EEL.
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Professional Development:  George Washington Pooped

1/7/2019

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The main obligation that follows last summer's residency at George Washington's Mount Vernon is to present a professional development session after returning.  My first opportunity to do so arrives today when I finally get to share my experience, some educational concepts, and resources from Mount Vernon with my peers before, hopefully, getting the chance to share at the state level, next summer.

What follows is a tentative outline for the first training, which, fully titled, should read as follows:
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It should be more than enough.

Act One (25 Minutes)

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Bull's Eye Graphic Organizer
Fill out the bull's eye, with the title (bold, above) in mind.

The first principal (Mr. Shelton) observation of my teaching skills went something like this:
  1. "That Wasn't a Lesson."
  2. "Now You're Ready to Play with It."
  3. Today, we call it a lack of engagement.

An educator does not always receive quality professional development - even when paying for it, even when traveling to receive it, even when it comes from a celebrated and entertaining public speaker - but this summer and fall, I sat on the receiving end of some of the best professional development of my 29-year career.
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  1. Crystal Bridges Teacher Institute
  2. George Washington Teacher Institute
  3. John Antonetti, Rigor is not a 4-Letter Word

It might be surprising to see how everything comes together, makes sense, and works.

​John Antonetti:
  1. Engagement
  2. Cognitive Rigor
  3. Posting Objectives - Speed Limit

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​Students must be given opportunities to bring something new to the material at hand.  "Rigor comes before truth."  Let's use some things we learned at Crystal Bridges, applied to material about George Washington, to learn something about Cognitive Rigor.
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OPTIC Organizer
Fill in with Parson Weems’ Fable, Grant Wood, 1939, in mind.
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Questions to Inspire Cognitive Rigor:
  1. What do you notice?
  2. What do you wonder?

When I was in elementary school:
  1. Biographies of Founders
  2. Flags of the U.S.
  3. Fife and Drum Wallpaper

When the curriculum shifted, I rediscovered those old passions, and I pursued them.  Enter George Washington Teachers Institute.  While I loved the romance of the founding era, I did not remember or know very much about it.

Act Two (40 Minutes)

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Rigor for the Teacher - Bringing Something New to Something True - I cannot follow someone else's script - Don't we all march to the beats of our own drummers?

MVLA Mission:  Restoration, Respect, Relevancy (Photos and Examples)
  1. ​Rustication
  2. Greenhouse
  3. Necessary
               a.  What do you notice?
               b.  What do you wonder?
               c.  Washington pooped...

George Washington “was born with his clothes on and his hair powdered and made a stately bow on his first appearance in the world” (Nathaniel Hawthorne). 

My Virginia Experience: 
  1. Access (security – open doors?)
  2. Photographs (Slide Show)
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Trivia Scratch-Offs ​from Mount Vernon

We've brought something new to material about George Washington, and we've established that George Washington was a human being, not a superhero; now let's apply George Washington to Growth Mindset OR let’s apply Growth Mindset to George Washington.  He is Georgier in his early years and becomes Washingtonier later.
  1. ​May 28, 1754:  George Washington, Governor Dinwiddie, Half King (Tanacharison), and Ensign Jumonvillé (Self-Motivated)
  2. Jumonville’s brother at Fort Necessity – Articles of Capitulation (Consequences)
  3. Photos of Documents at GW Library (vault photos, including Journal of Major George Washington)
  4. Councils with Generals (Less of Self)
  5. December 25/6, 1776:  Crossing the Delaware/Trenton and the Hessians/Colonel Rall
  6. October 19, 1781:  Yorktown/Cornwallis

Act Three (20 Minutes)

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Stephanie DeMichele, an educational consultant, speaker, and instructional coach in Cleveland, Ohio:  “The mixtape curator becomes less a listener, instead adopting the role of archivist, editor, and active participant in creating a remixed product that meets and suits the desire of the listener.”
 
Look at our classroom website to see how I have done this with the Colonial/Revolutionary era: hoggatteer.weebly.com/these-united-states.html

Just about every aspect of Washington's life is intriguing.  Let's take a look at the resources on the Mount Vernon website:
  1. Lesson Plans
  2. Teaching with Objects
  3. Teaching with Biography
  4. Teaching with Documents
  5. Teaching with Music
  6. Teaching with Place
  7. Teaching with Food
  8. Teaching with Visual Resources

​Encouragement to pursue your own professional development, develop your own strengths, and strengthen your own skills

Online Evaluation from cards provided by GWTI

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Signs You Are Creating Dependency

1/6/2019

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Dan Rockwell writes a blog called Leadership Freak.  On the last day of 2018, he posted an entry titled One Thing You Must Stop Doing in 2019.  He began his article with five signs a leader may be creating dependency.  The attracted my attention because I know we often have to work on breaking learners from depending too much on their teachers or parents.  When considering my students, I have to realize that I could do everything for them - clean up their manuscripts, correct their computations, etc. - or I could empower my students to solve problems, attack and correct their mistakes, and challenge themselves.  I choose the latter.

Rockwell offers a simple list that makes sense.  His blog, of course, is about leadership and not applied specifically to education, but there are some practical ideas here that shouldn't take too long to remember.

He wrote that a leader does not empower the organization if members of the community must constantly ask permission before acting.  Trust is important.  Like oxygen, trust is invisible, but important to survival.  I have to think about how this is true in my classroom of 10-year-olds.  How do I empower my students without losing sight of procedures and expectations.

There are students in our room who seemingly put their hands in the air before approaching a problem on their own.  I refuse to jump in immediately to help them.  I must not fall into the temptation to crowd a child with guidance until I know s/he gets a chance to attack their challenges on their own.  I like how Rockwell puts it:  "Stay available but keep your hands in your pockets."  If I hurry to assist a child, I establish a dangerous pattern that says that I will always be there to swoop in, but the fact is, we (parents and teachers) are trying to get our children ready to face a world in which we will not always be present.

Rockwell also wrote that if nothing important happens when you're gone, then followers have to wait for the boss to be present in order to be productive.  We have to change this.  For the teacher, I have to stop believing that nothing worthwhile can happen when I call upon a substitute teacher to fill my shoes.  Learning should not stop when I have to be away.

Later in his post, Mr. Rockwell suggests clarifying expectations through use of repetition and daily practice.  He says followers need systematic feedback (That means they have to be vulnerable enough to accept constructive criticism.).  Rockwell writes that not only must gratitude be expressed for achievement, but that it's always important to show gratitude for effort.  He says people must be challenged and stretched.  He affirms the forward-leaning attitude of Growth Mindset when he tells leaders to let people "responsibly fail".  He explains that this only teaches people to play it safe.

In this simple blog post, Dan Rockwell reminds us (leaders/teachers/parents) not to run to everyone's assistance. It's not always intuitive to allow our developing children to develop on their own and to stretch their thinking.  We seem to be OK with working our muscles by using such a strategy; I wonder why we resist using this approach with emotions and academics.

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Things Teachers Secretly Do but Won’t Admit

1/5/2019

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About a year ago, author Meghan Mathis wrote a gif-ladened article for the We Are Teachers website. The full title of her article was 15 #SorryNotSorry Things Teachers Secretly Do but Won't Admit.  I realize the author was trying to facetious with her list, but when the reader gets to the last three items, things take a turn for the serious.
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  1. We've all been happy when certain students are absent.​
  2. We've all wished for extra snow and ice to cause a snow day.
  3. We’ve all tried to sneak snacks or drinks without students seeing us.
  4. We’ve all faked genuine interest while receiving terrible admin feedback.
  5. We’ve all failed to be the “grown-up” in an argument with a student.
  6. We’ve all played a little fast and loose with our sick days.
  7. We’ve all shown a movie or made students do something silently because we needed a break.
  8. We’ve all realized something really embarrassing way too late.
  9. We’ve all been secretly furious when asked to do icebreakers at staff meetings.
  10. We’ve all had favorite students we like just a little bit more than the others.
  11. We’ve all stolen (or at least thought about stealing) that drink or snack from the faculty fridge.
  12. We’ve all had that one colleague whose drama is just too much.
  13. We’ve all regretted something we’ve said to our students.
  14. We’ve all secretly wondered what other jobs we could do with a teaching degree.
  15. We’ve all secretly giggled at anyone who doesn’t have a job as awesome as ours.​​
​​Mathis explained, for the last item, “Wait. Your job doesn’t make you laugh, cry, jump up and down with joy, pull your hair out, sadder and happier than you’ve ever been? You don’t absolutely know for sure that you’re making a real difference every day? Wow, that’s … weird.” That's a lovely sentiment.

I wonder what I would come up with.  It won't be easy.
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THINGS TEACHERS SECRETLY DO BUT Should Honestly Admit

  1. We've all used the phrase, "I'm just a teacher."  It just slips out.  We're in a group of people, meeting new people who are introducing themselves and identifying themselves by their professions.  That's when an educator says it:  "I'm just a teacher."  Why?  Why do we describe ourselves as just a teacher?  Should we not rather stand proudly and announce, "I am an educator.  I save the world every day."
  2. We've all complained parents are the problem.  It's easy to do.  When we can't find a solution, or none of our magic words seem to work, we look for a scapegoat, someone to blame.  The natural thing to do is to blame the other folks who should have the most contact time with our students.  In some cases, the parents may actually be the issue, but that doesn't move us forward from our current location.
  3. We've all reduced boys and girls to data points.  That's what happens when educators focus too much on the numbers, with standardized testing in mind.  It's not to say that numbers and tracking improvement are not important, but it loses its validity when a teacher spends more time with a data wall than in maintaining true relationships with students.
  4. We've all neglected our own families for the sake of lesson planning and grading.  There is a time when work ends and life begins.  As much as we are affecting the world one student at a time, we must always remember to focus on our own relaxation and families when we go home.  It's important to understand that.  Our own families must not be put on the back burner.
  5. We've all lost sleep over a student.  There is always that student who presents an ongoing challenge. Whether that student is a discipline problem, a social train wreck, or has physical disabilities, we want to solve his problems.  We repeat scenarios over and over in our minds to see if we can correct the issues.
  6. We've all thrown away student papers.  Sometimes an assignment doesn't go the way we planned or doesn't reflect the results we expected.  We blame ourselves as we quietly "get rid of the evidence".
  7. We've all accepted questionable gifts from students who couldn't afford more.  That old used Magic Eight Ball still means something to me.  That plastic basket of broken toys and figurines meant something to that kid; that's why she gave it to me.  I should feel honored by the sentiment.
  8. We've all cried on the last day of school.  And that's OK.  When we cry with students on the last day, it means the year has meant something to us.  That group hug that knocks us to the floor, the final speeches, and the reflection on a difficult year demonstrates how much we value our students.
  9. We've all started the year with more energy than we ended it.  That means we've invested, used, and spent ourselves for the good of the world.  The summer can't come soon enough to recharge us for the next year.
  10. We've all "faked it" with lessons.  Intricate planning is not always the most important part of a lesson.  A teacher must be flexible and be able to "wing" a lesson in the moment.  Sometimes we're presented with those impromptu opportunities.  That doesn't mean the lesson is empty or shallow.  It means that a teacher understands when and how to usurp a planned lesson with a better lesson for the moment.
  11. We've all waited until the last minute to post grades for a report card.  This one just comes with better time management.  Usually, it's the result of waiting to grade papers until they stack up into a mountain of work that we don't want to do.  Then, like any other such looming task, we avoid it...and we feel awful because of it.
  12. We've all pretended things were going smoothly when they weren't.  It could be a pride thing.  We don't want to admit when we've lost control, but if we need help, we should  ask for it.  We're all in this together, searching to solve problems.
  13. We've all complained too much in the teachers lounge.  They told us in college to avoid the lounge.  The lounge is the location of gossip and gripe sessions.  At the same time, we try to maintain professional relationships, and the lounge is the place for this to happen, too.  Can we eat lunch with our peers without talking about students or other teachers?  Can we make the teachers lounge a positive place?
  14. We've all made mistakes in front of a crowd.  Admit it when you do it.  Whether your error was in front of your class, parents, or peers, you can't let it go too far.  Sometimes the simple solution is to confess and apologize.  Sometimes I just have to be the bigger man.
  15. We've all skipped lessons that we were uncomfortable with.  We are never the master of every lesson in every subject.  We have our strengths, but there are moments when we don't really know what we're talking about.  We might not have been as interested, or we paid less attention in our own schooling, and perhaps we just don't like it.  It's not the end of the world, and students won't perish because of a little shortcoming.  In fact, they'll probably get twice as much of another lesson from us at another time.

​
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Another Growth Mindset Image

1/4/2019

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This came across the Twitter feed, last week, and I thought it was
​an accurate depiction of the way we typically think about things.
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In the coming year, let us remember that our goals are not always easily reached, that we should expect
to stumble along the way, and that the prize is made all the more valuable because of the struggle.
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Articles of Confederation

1/3/2019

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Word Wise

compromise
confederation
honor
retreat
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Mr. President

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Were you aware that there were presidents in the land before there was a president of the United States?​  Henry Laurens was the fifth president of the Continental Congress.  Would you recognize any of the other 13 names on the list?  You can find the list on Wikipedia's page about the subject.  Scroll down to see the complete list.

Liberty's Kids

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Page 1, Articles of Confederation
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George Washington Loses His Cool

PictureCharles Lee
  • What do you think of General Charles Lee now?
  • Would things have turned out differently if Washington had retreated along with Lee at Monmouth?
  • Why was it so important for Washington to win?
  • Why was it acceptable for the battle to end as a draw?
  • What is the difference between the British army and the Patriot army?
  • This is one of the few times we see Washington lose his temper.  Do you think his attitude toward General Lee was appropriate?
  • After being court martialed, Lee openly attacked George Washington's character.  Is it OK to be critical of the president or leader of your country?

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Music Appreciation

Don't Look Down
I Won't Give Up
​Never Give Up
0 Comments

Book:  Moo

1/2/2019

1 Comment

 
Sharon Creech is a very successful author.  I came to respect her writing more when I read a book called Love That Dog.  The unfolding of that story through a boy's responses to poetry in the classroom is enchanting.

This book, Moo, is compared to Love That Dog in that Moo is written in verse.  It is, in fact, a combination of poetry and prose.  I'm afraid, however, that's where the similarities end.  With Moo, Creech has offered a storyline for a side of life not often written or read about.  It is a story of rural America, the raising of cattle, and county fairs.  It is a story that includes what few children know about any more - the showing of lifestock.
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The description of this book on the author's website is as follows:
Following one family’s momentous move from the city to rural Maine, an unexpected bond develops between twelve-year-old Reena and one very ornery cow.
When Reena, her little brother, Luke, and their parents first move to Maine, Reena doesn’t know what to expect. She’s ready for beaches, blueberries, and all the lobster she can eat. Instead, her parents “volunteer” Reena and Luke to work for an eccentric neighbor named Mrs. Falala, who has a pig named Paulie, a cat named China, a snake named Edna—and that stubborn cow, Zora.
This heartwarming story, told in a blend of poetry and prose, reveals the bonds that emerge when we let others into our lives.
I'm just not satisfied that the story has the heart the author intended.  The intending is somewhat predictable and long in coming, and the relationship between the children and Mrs. Falala could have gone deeper.  Not only that, but I wanted to see more interaction with the other animals in the story, and there could have been more attention paid to the Maine culture and language.

Overall, this is an easy read (I read it in virtually a single sitting.), and the poetry runs keep the reader moving for page after page, so you might consider checking it out.  See if your evaluation agrees or disagrees with mine.
1 Comment
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