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

Lighting Their Fires:  Crossroads

6/30/2017

0 Comments

 
An anonymous philosopher once wrote:  "If you chase two rabbits, both will escape."
Picture
Our lives are full of choices, but our children may not know that yet.  We all need to be reminded from time to time that we can't extend ourselves in too many directions.  We have lots of ways to describe it in American English:
  • I'm being pulled in too many directions at once.
  • She's jumping through too many hoops.
  • He's a  multitasker.
  • You can't have your cake and eat it, too.
​But, whatever metaphor you want to use, we understand that we can, and in some cases shouldn't do everything we want.
Here's how Mr. Esquith put it in his book, Lighting Their Fires:
Children need to be aware that they see decisions being made every day - in literature, in movies, and, most important, in real life.  These choices - and the consequences they produce - can be chewed, swallowed, and digested, such that each time students make a decision of their own, they can use the knowledge from the sum total of the decisions they have witnessed to help them choose the best path.
Yes, there are consequences.  I often think about cause and effect regarding American History or even Bible History.  If a certain patriot had chosen a different route, how would that have effected the Revolution?  If a certain prophet had ignored God, how would that effect his prophecy?  If a certain scientist had pocketed her discovery, how would that effect medical practices?

More directly, however, how do simple, bland, decisions we make effect everything else?  What if I take a different street to my destination?  Should we go to the beach or the mountains [Mountains every time!]?  Should I get one hamburger or two?  How much should I set aside for _____?  They are choices we make, sometimes on the fly and sometimes without considering the outcome, but lest we believe everything is a physical choice, think about this:
Sadly, teaching children the skill of making decisions often involves facing unpleasant realities.  In school, well-meaning teachers encourage kids by saying, "We're all winners here."  It's a beautiful thought, but it's not always true.  People lose all the time.  Actions have consequences, and those outcomes are not always pretty.  It is necessary for young people - in their studies, but even more so in real life - to examine decisions made by others that have led to awful results.
Might we make decisions based on the mistakes that other people have made?  It's impossible, but we all want to be winners.  It's not going to happen, but we all want everything to be peaches and cream all the time.

We understand the problem - everything we do effects everything else in the world - but is there a solution?  Is it worth our time to strive for personal utopia?  We're really just doing the best we can to overcome adversities from every side.  I never bought into peer pressure when I was a kid, but I understand the need to belong.  How do I, as an educator, help my students get along with others who are different?  Others who have different challenges? People from foreign backgrounds?  People from different cultures?

How do we bridle the tongue?  How are we quick to listen, slow to anger, and slow to speak?  How do we disagree in an agreeable fashion?
In the final analysis, exceptional kids make good choices when facing the toughest of decisions.  And many of these decisions are made under less-than-ideal circumstances.  Peer pressure is hard enough to deal with.  When the demands of societal norms are thrown onto the scales, it is no wonder very few kids have the strength to be true to themselves and their beliefs.  It is so hard to be different, which often requires standing up to the ridicule and judgment of others.
No matter how old, how experienced, or how educated, we are all works in progress.  
0 Comments

Lighting Their Fires:  I Can See for Miles and Miles

6/29/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
According to most experts, kids spend about seven hours a day watching television or looking at a computer screen.  Research has discovered that 70 percent of kids today have a television in their bedroom and that these kids score between seven to nine points lower on standardized language and math tests than children who do not.  There is also a direct correlation between increased television viewing and the decreasing percentage of kids who graduate from college.  The frightening statistics march on.  More than half of American homes have a television on even when no one is watching!  This research has also concluded that television's damaging effects cut across socioeconomic lines, meaning that children from wealthy families suffer just as much as children who are poor.  Television is an equal opportunity denier.
I don't need to add anything to this quote from Lighting Their Fires.  Read it again, and a third time to digest every part of it.  I know it applies to me and my family - our TV, tablet, and computer habits.  I also know it applies to most, if not all, of my students.

For good measure, read that quote one more time before moving on - and this time try to think of any solutions you can to improve the situation in your house.
0 Comments

Off the Beaten Path in Missouri:  Johnson Shut-Ins (Part 2)

6/28/2017

0 Comments

 
Time to get out of town
Out of the city
Out of the neighborhood
Away from the concerts, the theme parks, and the sports arenas
Away from the job, the school, and the people we know
Away from the politics, the neighbors, and the traffic

Away from social media, cable news, and gossip
Out - into nature
Out into the world
Out into our beautiful state

Here's a little series of posts
about the great state of Missouri.
It's time to get off the beaten path
​and do some exploring!
Picture
Picture
When the people arrive, the Johnson Shut-Ins come to life in a whole new way.  During our June visit, the people with whom we shared the park were refreshingly respectful.  Most would help other people or at least greet each other with smiles during their wading, climbing, swimming, and sliding.
The Shut-Ins are stunning, but they could also be dangerous, so most people cautiously respect their surroundings.  They look ahead to where they are going, and they take their time to calculate their routes - nothing too crazy, but potential injuries.  As much as the water is in a rush, I like that it makes people slow down.  It's certainly wear a person out.

It might be time for some ice cream at the campground store.
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Meaningful Quote:  Words

6/27/2017

0 Comments

 
"Wise men speak because they have something to say;
​fools because they have to say something."  ​(Plato)
0 Comments

Lighting Their Fires:  Keep Your Eye on the Ball

6/26/2017

0 Comments

 
For most children, lack of focus is not a medical problem.  They are often bored and unfortunately are living in a society that fuels their lack of concentration with countless distractions.  This inability to focus can lead to disastrous results in the classroom as well as in life.  Students who reach great heights have learned how not to be easily distracted.  If a child can concentrate on school tasks, and, more important, on his own dreams and goals, his life will be better.
Picture
A few years ago, a mother enrolled her daughter at our school, in the middle of the year.  At the time, records were not kept on the computer, but on yellow cards.  Information was filled out on forms printed on yellow cardstock.

When the assistant principal at the time took a look at the girl's form, she was intrigued by one of the mother's answers.  On the line beside the question about medical diagnoses, the mother had written in 
80HD.  She asked the girl's mother about it and got an earful.

"You're the principal in a public school, and you don't know about 
​eighty-H-D???"

That story is not from Rafe Esquith's Lighting Their Fires.  It's something that really happened in out school.

ADHD - Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder - is a diagnosis that is handed out like candy in some areas, but is it real?  Are doctors over-diagnosing kids with ADHD?  Do that many kids really require medical intervention to pay attention and sit still?  Do teachers use ADHD as an excuse to allow students to fail?  The answer to each of these questions is "probably".

In this section of Lighting Their Fires, I found the quote that appears at the beginning of this post.  It may go against what people believe a teacher would write, but it's true.  I especially like the first line in the quote:  "For most children, lack of focus is not a medical problem."

The truth is there are many reasons for a child's lack of attention.  We can attempt to find the antecedent, and that certainly might help, but we also attempt to teach children more than content.  As a classroom teacher, I need to provide my students with opportunities to focus.  I must talk to them specifically about their individual attention habits, but might I also embed items into lessons for the express purpose of challenging their focus.  Focusing them on focusing.

One thing I do that really gets their goat in the beginning is play music.  I've always been a proponent of music in my classroom, having started in that time period when everybody thought Mozart Makes You Smarter.  I bought a Mozart tape and played it in the back of the room every time kids took a test.  What did I know?  I just ran with the trend.

Then I realized that music could change the mood of my class.  I started tweaking things.  I played calm, instrumental pieces, and I really liked the albums that featured birds, frogs, and rain in the background of the music. I found that music played too softly as students entered in the morning was completely ignored, that music played to loudly was shouted over, but that there was a sweet spot in the middle where students would let the music make be the only sound in the room.  But that sweet spot is very hard to find.

Finally, I started playing music with lyrics.  I even played pop and 80s rock.  I played current music during independent working times, and I found something that may defy logic...but then again, maybe it's completely logical after all.

I projected an assignment onto the wall - five questions - and gave students two minutes to complete it.  I handed them the first 10 seconds to get their bearings, and then I started the music.  It was not soft.  It was not instrumental.  And it immediately stole their attention from the questions they were trying to answer.  They looked up from their papers, looked at each other, and finally, with what-are-you-thinking? looks on their faces, they turned to me.

"Keep working!" I told them.

But they couldn't.

Or could they?

Is it possible that by forcing my students to drown out the music, I was starting to give them a heightened sense of focus on the important assignment in front of them?  After the assignment, I stood before them and honestly recounted what I had just seen.  I explained to the class that I was challenging their focus, that I was forcing them to flex their attention muscles.

I realized that we've done the opposite for a long time, and we've made very little progress for gives who have deficits in the area of paying attention.  We've gotten rid of the distractions.  We've made rules about voice levels. We've sent them into the hallway. We've put them into quiet rooms.  We've installed traffic lights in the classroom to visually clue them in to their voice levels.  We've forbidden any possible noises - scooting chairs, drinking from water bottles, sharpening pencils - and in doing so we have not allowed students to flex their attention muscles.  In short, we've made them weaker.

I think there is something to Newton's third law that applies to the brain as well.

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Is it possible that when I press against certain habits, that the pushback is not always a resistance to change? Perhaps the opposite reaction is to accept the challenge.  In the times since I started playing "distracting" music, I have turned down the volume a bit, but the idea that students can develop a productive "tunnel vision" by tuning out the TV, the radio, the yelling family, and other distractions might be a nice goal to reach for.

Also, please do not get the idea that I always challenge in such a way.  I also recognize that, for decades, kids received much of their be-quiet-and-listen behavior from churches and the like.  They were encouraged to sit in pews, facing forward, and they were told to be quiet for an hour at a time, maybe even a couple of times a week. Nowadays, many don't attend such services.  Even if they do attend, many groups have adapted their "worship" to be more entertaining:  groups of people on stage with spotlights, lasers, and electric guitars sing for applause and encourage shouting.  Congregants in many of these settings are now an audience and do not participate in focused hymns.  No longer does the speaker of the hour help either:  in attempt to be one of the community, the speaker now walks around in ripped jeans, saying provocative things, and telling the audience when to applaud and say amen.

But I digress...

The only point I make in digressing is that our students no longer get the outside support of one or two hours of quiet focus from days gone by.  The conclusion I must make is that I have to also embed some of those times into my school day, as well.  It works quite effectively to follow up one of those flex-your-attention-muscles moments with a completely silent moment.  Pupils immediately see the difference.  They can audibly and visibly understand what is happening inside of them when suddenly that focus is easier.  Perhaps the most important is that they appreciate it when it happens - not years down the road, but immediately.
0 Comments

Misspellings X

6/25/2017

0 Comments

 
What we have here is a
failure to communicate

Find the misspelled word
in each 
of these pictures.
​Write and correct each word on your paper.

Picture
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Get In the Zone

6/24/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
As I prepare for the new school year, I've thought about the mood of my classroom.  It certainly has developed into something completely different since my first classes, nearly 30 years ago.  In those early years, somebody asked a group of educators how we viewed our jobs.

"What does a teacher do?" the leader asked.

One of the answers given was that we are motivators.  We motivate.

"What does that mean?"

"It means we inspire students."

"Again, what does that mean?  What do you do?"  The emphasis was on the word do.

The best anyone could answer was, "It means we make kids want to get better."

Now, if any answer ever sounded lame, I think that one did.  It's probably exactly how I would have put it in those early years, but the question has never left me:  What does it mean to motivate?

​Recently, we've thought a lot about Growth Mindset.  We've considered brain research.  We've noticed patterns in behavior.  We've collected data and created individualized interventions.  We've seen model schools and master teachers.  We've included physical movement in our lessons.  We've discussed levels of engagement.  We've emphasized the importance of taking students to higher levels of thinking.  We're conscious of multiple intelligences, cooperative and collaborative learning, depth of knowledge, team-building, and positive behavior supports.  Now, we are cross-curricular, whole-brained, open-ended, high-ordered, small-grouped, learning stationed, standards-based, and common-cored.

If you're a teacher, you feel like you're juggling all of those balls.  At the very least, you may have felt like you're expected to juggle them.  Don't let a single one fall, lest you fail!

This is why I encourage my peers to take it and leave it.  Take the things that work from the paragraph above, and leave the things that don't work for you.  Add what works to your teaching muscle, and drop the fat - the things that do not benefit your students or patrons.

That said, Growth Mindset is one of the most sensible things to come around in a long time.  It adds to the definition of motivation.  No longer do we make students want to get better; now we can lead a student through conversations and relationships to persist through mistakes, stretch toward goals, and visualize his/her potential. There is an art and a heart to it, and it cannot be done by reducing kids to numbers on a graph or a data wall. While the information in those scientific tools can be useful, if I am more focused on the tool than on the person developing before me, my focus is blurry and misdirected.

I like what I'm seeing regarding the Learning Zone model, as well.  I don't need to dig too deep into research to realize that this makes sense.  First, however, let me say that I enjoy my comfort zone.  I like comfort, don't you?  At the same time, I have come to realize that I need to be more flexible regarding my treks into the learning zone, and I've known for a long time that the panic zone is dangerous and life-threatening.

Picture
We've experienced all of the zones in the illustration here.  As a teacher, I need to motivate my students to step out of their comfort zones with regularity.  I must get them to stretch forward and persist in the learning zone. The art and heart part of my job is to do this for each of my students - to get them to stay in the learning zone for longer periods of time (They'll never swim if all they do is dip their toes at the edge.)  But while the illustration is simple enough to understand, it's a little more difficult than it appears. Why?

  • The target moves.  My comfort zone expands when I learn new material and methods, which results in reshaping my learning and panic zones, as well.
  • Each person's zones are different.  That means each student has different triggers and learning strengths.  I have to be conscious of differences.
  • Things change with a person's mood, a person's choice of breakfast in the morning, and the interactions and experiences a person has before getting to my class.

The foundation to success, I still believe, is the relationship that the teacher builds with his/her students.  That means the key word - the thing I must establish up front - is trust.  That may not be earth-shattering, tech-heavy, or broadly marketable, but it's true.  When students trust me, they are more inclined to follow me into zones of varying colors.  They can endure discomfort, knowing that their stretching is for gain.  When they trust me, they will understand that I will never purposefully lead them into the thorns of panic and that I will not knowingly allow them to step off of a cliff.

I've had a similar illustration hanging on the wall in my classroom for a couple of years now, but I'm going to use the graphic above in a more explicit manner, this year.  I have already queued it up as one of the first things we'll consider on the first day of school, this upcoming year.  I plan to point students to the graphic more often throughout the year, as well.

0 Comments

Off the Beaten Path in Missouri:  Johnson Shut-Ins (Part 1)

6/23/2017

0 Comments

 
Time to get out of town
Out of the city
Out of the neighborhood
Away from the concerts, the theme parks, and the sports arenas
Away from the job, the school, and the people we know
Away from the politics, the neighbors, and the traffic

Away from social media, cable news, and gossip
Out - into nature
Out into the world
Out into our beautiful state

Here's a little series of posts
about the great state of Missouri.  
It's time to get off the beaten path
​and do some exploring!
Picture
Our "home" for our state park getaway, this year, was the campground at Johnson's Shut-Ins.  A short drive from our tent brought us to the visitor's center and finally to the heart of this park.  The entry trail is very inviting.
Picture
Picture
Soon, the visitor hears the water.  In the mild morning, I was able to snap some photos with no people in them.  Everything seems so pristine and inviting.
The water cascades through a series of crevices and chutes and pools into pockets.  Rock climbing and water slides in one?  Yes, sir.  It's an amazing place to ponder the world we live in and the size of a single human.

It's also fun to spot wildlife in our state parks.  We enjoyed watching rabbits, lizards, and deer, and I appreciated the chance to consider the flora along trailside.
While the ladies traced a path downstream, my son and I tried our hand at blocking one of the channels with rocks and gravel from the river bottom.  We weren't completely successful, but we made some great progress at raising the water level in the upper pool.  We also stacked some of the stones, one on top of the other to make columns. My greatest column was at least 14 rocks high when a group of people asked if I was the guy on Youtube who balances stones.  To that guy's credit, he balances the most unlikely of rocks.
Picture
A few years ago, there was a breech in the reservoir above the park.  The waters that rushed downhill was strong enough to move two-ton boulders, and it did, rearranging the park in an instant.  It's incredible to see how Missouri has rebuilt this park with attention to its amenities and the natural habitats.
Picture
The park is named for the water which is shut in, carving through solid stone to find the path of least resistance. The Johnson part of the moniker comes from the Johnston family who once owned the property.  The Johnstons are buried in a small cemetery just across the parking lot.  Somewhere along the way, they dropped the t from the Johnston name.
0 Comments

Building a Mathematical Mindset Community

6/22/2017

0 Comments

 
The team at youcubed have this wonderful "card"
as a PDF download on their website.
Teachers, download this helpful PDF!
Picture
Picture
Developed with the leadership of Professor Jo Boaler, there is more here than just a few bullet points of a mathematics religion. There is certainly something to understand about how we revolutionize our math instruction and delivery.

I don't need to think of math as New, Old, Traditional, or Common; this is math to make students think for themselves.  It makes sense that 21st Century kids need more than multiplication tables and repetition.  All students can buy in if we let them.  Again, the link above is enough to make a Math teacher think around all the challenges.

In fact, after seeing all the access points to the scenic rivers of the Ozarks, I think I like the analogy of our having multiple access points to Math.  Students might choose to fish, kayak, paddle board, or wade into the river.  They might be up for a short float before they are ready to put in further upriver for a longer trip.  Some are ready to navigate the eddies of some white water rapids.  Our first job is just to get them off of the shore.

Then we can introduce them to all the beauties of Math.

0 Comments

Lighting Their Fires:  The Readiness Is All

6/21/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
​I had heard of the book, Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire, but I have never read a book written by Rafe Esquith.  When I spotted this one at this year's Book Fair, I added it to my list, and read it shortly after.  I learned a few things about the teacher/author, Rafe Esquith, along the way.  First, I learned (outside of this book) that Mr. Esquith is the subject of some controversy with his former school district, but I don't need to consider that in looking for useful information.

Esquith was a teacher in California.  He took a non-traditional approach, sponsoring chess clubs and most notably conducting after school Shakespearean theater groups. For the purpose of this book, Esquith relates a time when he took his class on a trip to a professional baseball game.

My opinion of the book?  It's a mild, opinionated work.  There's nothing too deep here, but in it, but it does have its moments.  For example:
It seems that we live in a "bottom line" society, where the final score or final grade is all that matters.  Exceptional children grow to understand that the journey is everything.  It's wonderful to get an A on an exam, but even better to reflect on the studying and learning that led up to the grade.  It's exciting to perform a play or concert and hear the cheers from a live audience, but extraordinary children know that the thousands of hours spent rehearsing are actually more meaningful and joyous than the performance itself.
I like this, and I understand it.  All my life, I have striven to be different from my peers.  I tend to take a different approach.  While many want to focus on the science of education (If a child scores n%, then you must differentiate in xyz manner.), we must not lose sight that our students are not numbers.  We must add character to our classrooms, and not become lost in the weeds of test scores (predictive, cumulative, formative, summative, common, or otherwise).  I also know that educators can use their time more wisely than to constantly enter disaggregated data into endless, complicated spreadsheets.  Yes, there is a purpose for data collection, and yes, I need to understand what some of that data means for my students, but no, it does not drive everything I do as an educator.
These days, many well-meaning school districts bring together teachers, coaches, curriculum supervisors, and a cast of thousands to determine what skills your child needs to be successful.  Once these "standards" have been established, pacing plans are then drawn up to make sure that each particular skill is taught at the same rate and in the same way to all children.  This is, of course, absurd.  It gets even worse when one considers the very real fact that nothing of value is learned permanently by a child in a day or two.
Yet this is what happens in schools every year.  Districts impose and police sequences for instruction down to the day and the hour.  They believe things are best if every student gets exactly the same information at the same time. They put more value on the transient student than on the stable student.

Education gurus, in this manner, talk out of both sides of their mouths.  While requiring teachers to rigidly apply lessons, they tout the need for project-based, open-ended, STEM-focused, differentiated instruction.  Why is there often no balance in the situation?  Only by empowering teachers and students at the forefront - by allowing teachers and students to exercise local control over their instruction and learning - will they truly dream and innovate.  If we want our students to think independently and solve their own problems, we must not continue to subscribe to outdated methods of pinning teachers to scripts and common assessments just for the sake of comparing and contrasting students.  In the interest of standardizing content and schedules, we undermine every attempt at personality and relationships, and we add stress to an already stressful group of professionals.

Let us do the things that are best for our kids, rather than the things that are best for the spreadsheet.
0 Comments

June 20, 2017:  The First Official Day of Summer

6/20/2017

0 Comments

 
Summer officially begins tonight at 11:24.  That means tomorrow is the first full day of the season.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Misspellings IX

6/19/2017

0 Comments

 
What we have here is a
failure to communicate


Find the misspelled word
in each 
of these pictures.
​Write and correct each word on your paper.
Picture
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Off the Beaten Path in Missouri:  Elephant Rocks (Part 2)

6/18/2017

0 Comments

 
Time to get out of town
Out of the city
Out of the neighborhood
Away from the concerts, the theme parks, and the sports arenas
Away from the job, the school, and the people we know
Away from the politics, the neighbors, and the traffic

Away from social media, cable news, and gossip
Out - into nature
Out into the world
Out into our beautiful state

Here's a little series of posts
about the great state of Missouri.
It's time to get off the beaten path
​and do some exploring!
Picture
Picture
I like rocks.

One of the reasons I love Missouri is the rocks.  When I was a boy on vacation, driving through Missouri and visiting tourist caves, I always admired the roads that cut through the seemingly solid rocky hillsides.  Rocky cliffs on each side of the road astounded me.  That may be why I loved our visit to Elephant Rocks State Park.

Combine that sense of wonder that I had as a kid with boulders that dwarf humans, and you get me at Elephant Rocks.
Not only that, but there are some cool touches of history in this place.  Some of the granite miners in the area, left their calling cards in the form of carvings.  I snapped the picture of T. J. Murray's 1885 signature (above), and ran my fingers through its grooves.  I wondered who T. J. was and what kind of fellow he was.  There are many carvings here, but none that are recent (It takes a lot to carve into these hard rocks.).
In the midst of these huge stones, on this glorious evening at the "top of the world", I found great peace.  In the cool of the evening, with a light breeze, the shade of the elephants, and the company of my family, I could have sat in this place for another hour...but with the coming of darkness, we needed to return to our campsite for some hotdogs, s'mores, and some sleep.

​
The pictures turned out all right.  I was pleased with the color and the framing.

But when I looked at one picture, I was reminded of the book Holes, by Louis Sachar.  In the book (and the movie), Stanley Yelnats, following in the footsteps of his great great grandfather, sought refuge on a rock formation he called God's Thumb.  Turning my photo on edge, I too found God's Thumb​.  What do you think?
Picture
0 Comments

Making Connections:  Orchestrated Immersion

6/17/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
There is so much rich content in this section of the book, Making Connections:  positive attitudes, making connections, creativity, and teaching to the top.

I'll begin my comments with this quote from the book:
Two stonecutters...were engaged in similar activity.  Asked what they were doing, one answered, "I'm squaring up this block of stone."  The other replied, "I'm building a cathedral."  The first may have been underemployed; the second was not.  Clearly what counts is not so much what work a person does, but what he perceives he is doing it for.  (Wille Harman, Global Mind Change​, 1988)
We've all experienced the effects of a negative attitude.  In fact, we may have been the source of negativity ourselves from time to time.  I know that's true for me.  Sometimes things don't go our ways.  Sometimes we forget our place, our purpose, and who we have decided to be.

Generally, I tend to be a positive person.  Some people might disagree because I'm not a bubbly person, but it's true.  I am the person who looks at his class with high hopes for the year.  I'm the person who doesn't like to give up on kids when they fail or give up on themselves.

I know some bubbly people who are not as positive.  So what if I'm not a morning person.  So what if I don't wave to friends in other cars on the way to work.  That may be only because I am focused on the task at hand and my mind is planning for the future.

I must realize that I am not just getting kids ready for the fifth grade (squaring up a block of stone), but instead getting them ready for the rest of their lives (building cathedrals).

Here's something else from this section of the book:
Like all professionals, teachers must assimilate basic procedures and strategies and then implement them in a way that reveals personal artistry.  One of the reasons some methodologies work very well for some teachers and not for others, we suspect, has to do with the sense of artistry of different teachers and their innate but often unrecognized ability to integrate different elements of experience.
Yes!

I try to be eclectic, not accepting 100% of any educational program that presents itself, choosing instead to assimilate new ideas into my current best practices.  In fact, I do not believe any package is complete or has to be used completely to be effective.  When I do find something that will work for me and for my students, I may even try to smoosh it into other units or activities.

​Here's something else:
Knowledge becomes natural when it is sufficiently connected with what else is already known.  These patterns of interconnectedness are what we call maps.  To help students create sophisticated maps in the brain, teachers must not present subject matter in isolated, meaningless pieces.  Rather, the student needs to experience a sense of wholeness. Crowell (1989) calls it "dynamic Unity."  As Houston (1981) says, "Why is that Johnny cannot read, spell, or balance his checkbook?  How could he, when his education is so fragmented?"
Our world is not divided into subjects.  Our lives do not break every hour to change classes.  Why then do our schools separate Math from Science, History from Reading, and PE from Writing?  One never knows when a problem will arise, and one never knows which learned strategies must be called into use to solve it.  So I do what I can to combine topics, mix them up, and scoop out the results.
Teachers often seem to fear that the use of real-life activities and large-scale projects will interfere with the coverage of the prescribed materials.  In effect, they often feel that invoking locale memory will jeopardize the treatment of taxon information.  Our experience is directly to the contrary.  The proper use of complex activities makes it possible to deal with substantially more material than would otherwise be the case.  The teacher of students may model or demonstrate the subject, bring in experts, engage in genuine problem solving, interview authorities, and create learning games.
It's not easy to do - all of this mixing and scooping, all of this large-scale immersion.  It takes a lot of thought to orchestrate a unit that completely envelopes students, but when they are encouraged to stay engaged - when they take ownership of every part of the day - the extra effort by the teacher is worth it.

I don't have to worry about as much about kids making poor choices when they are engaged and encouraged, and I can leave at the end of the day feeling the delightful fatigue that makes me feel like I've accomplished something important.
0 Comments

Professional Pet Peeve:  Stop Making Excuses

6/16/2017

0 Comments

 
At least be honest with yourself, and stop making excuses every time someone asks about your scores or your students' abilities.  Is there a reason they achieve more than expected?  Is there a reason they perform below average?

The thing is we all tend to get defensive and throw up blocks to deflect the blame:

If those third grade teachers had done their jobs last year...

If they'd come to us with the skills they're supposed to have...

If their parents gave a hoot...

If they didn't have such terrible attitudes...

If the water was treated with fluoride...

Really, we need to be honest with ourselves, admit our shortcomings, and work on our strengths.  When I talk about teachers having teaching personalities, I mean that we each have our niches - things we do that work for us, combinations of skills that are unique to our classrooms.  We might also call it a certain chemistry that only exists when we are present.  But I digress...

So, since we have these strengths, we can honestly admit our shortcomings and work to rid ourselves of such. Either work on the things that we aren't good at doing, or (and I like this option) find a work-around that uses our strengths instead.  Sometimes we must get creative in order to avoid the things we don't like, and honestly it can get tedious and cost us our time, but in the end its necessary and worth it.  In the end, we can survive and thrive by finding our own path.

Admitting our shortcomings is not equal to admitting failure.  It's really more in line with a Growth Mindset in our teaching.  As such, we take a dose of our own medicine when we use this as a step to correction, or a step to advancement.  I will not improve - I will not overcome my shortcomings - without taking steps to forward myself in the areas I lack.

For example, I have never felt like I've been a very good reading teacher.  I do not subscribe to learning centers or small group instruction in my classroom.  It's not from a lack of trying; I have indeed tried, repeatedly, to use both of these teaching strategies, but they are well outside of what works for me.  Therefore, I must find a way to either make them work (force a square peg into a round hole), or strategically avoid the strategies.  Since I'm not one to follow a script very well, I choose the latter.  I must have ownership in my teaching, so I must find other ways to teach the things I am assigned to teach.  That means I have to reflect on my strengths and find ways to apply them to a new situation, in this case the teaching of reading.  Because I've done this in the past three years, I have discovered some methods that work for me.  I wouldn't prescribe them for every teacher, but they work for me.  And because of this my reading scores on standardized tests have increased.

My point is this:  I had to reflect on my teaching style, my teaching personality, my teaching strengths, and on the standards provided to me.  Had I not done the meditation and had I not verbalized my thinking (to myself), I could not have created the work-arounds necessary for success.  In nearly 30 years of teaching, I am still learning and discovering the things that work for me.

Honesty with myself has been the key.  I can't blame the kids, the parents, or administrators for everything, but while the kids, the parents, and administrators bear their fare share of responsibility, I can only directly and effectively control what I do in the classroom.  I am the tip of the spear, I am on the front line, and I have to be the one who makes the primary decisions for what happens in my class.

I listen to teachers in the lounge.  I see what they post on social media.  But as a professional, I try to be positive and effective for my students.  I am a work in progress, and I have to remind myself to deal with my students honestly in order to become the best teacher I can be.
0 Comments
<<Previous

    Anthem

    The Hoggatteer Revolution
    is
    an extensive,
    award-winning, 
    inimitable,
    digital platform
    for Encouraging
    ​and Developing
    ​the Arts, Sciences, and honest Christianity

    in the beautiful, friendly

    LAND OF THE FREE
    AND THE HOME
    ​OF THE BRAVE
    This site is described as
    "a fantastic site... chockablock full of interesting ideas,
    hilarious ane
    cdotes,
    and useful resources."
    Picture
    Picture
    ...to like, bookmark, pin,
    ​tweet, and share

    about the site...
    and check in regularly
    for new material,
    ​posted
    often before 
    ​DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT!

    Picture

    Passing Notes

    EMAIL MR. HOGGATT
    Picture

    History in Residence

    Elementary Schools:
    ​Bring Mr. Hoggatt
    into your classroom
    for a week
    of engaging
    ​
    and rigorous

    ​history programming
    ​with your students.

    ​LEARN MORE
    Picture

    Intercom

    GigSalad Member Since 2022
    Book Mr. Hoggatt Securely
    ​for Your Event
    ​at GigSalad.com.

    Picture

    Trophy Case

    Picture
    Preacher, starting 2025
    Picture
    Project TRAILS, starting 2025
    Picture
    Student Teacher Supervisor, since 2022
    Picture
    Master Teacher, since 2021
    Picture
    Recruited Lincoln Presidential Foundation Curriculum Writer, 2022
    Picture
    Retiree, 32 years serving Joplin and Oklahoma City Schools, 2022
    Picture
    Selected Participant for 2020-2022
    Picture
    Selected Honoree/Celebrant, 2022
    Picture
    Outstanding Achievement, 2022
    Picture
    Classroom Grant, 2018-2022
    Picture
    2021 Missouri History Teacher of the Year and National History Teacher of the Year Nominee
    Picture
    Recognized in Joplin Globe, February 2021
    Picture
    Teacher Institute Participant, 2019
    Picture
    Summer Residency Participant, 2018
    Picture
    "The Bus Stops Here" Grant, November 2018
    Picture
    Summer Residency, 2018
    Picture
    Recognized 2017
    Since 2017
    Picture
    MSTA Media Award, KOAM-TV's "Manners Matter", Featuring Our Class, May 2017
    Picture
    Third Place, 2016 Film Festival
    Picture
    Recognized 2016
    Picture
    Slide Certified, 2012
    Picture
    2009 Outstanding Class Website
    Picture
    2005 Nominee
    Picture
    2005 Joplin Teacher of the Year and Missouri Teacher of the Year nominee
    Picture
    2004 Recipient
    Picture
    2002 Excellent Education Program
    Picture
    2001 Nominee
    Picture
    1996 Outstanding Classroom Video
    Picture
    Grant Recipient, 1993

    Picture

    Fireside Chats

    Picture
    Choose Your Platform:
    Anchor
    ​Apple Podcasts (iTunes)
    Breaker
    Google Podcasts
    ​
    Overcast
    Pocket Casts
    RadioPublic
    Spotify
    Stitcher
    Picture

    Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012

    Picture

    Checks & Balances

    Links to external sites
    on the internet are for convenience only.

    No endorsement or approval of any content, products, or services is intended.

    Opinions on sites are not necessarily shared
    by Mr. Hoggatt
    (In fact, sometimes
    Mr. Hoggatt doesn't agree with anyone.)
    Picture
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.

Picture