THE HOGGATTEER REVOLUTION
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    • Meaningful Quotes
    • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Scripture Studies
  • Exploration
    • Celebrate Good Times (Come On)
    • Cerebral Cinema >
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      • Mood Music
      • Music Appreciation
      • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Coursework >
      • Cultivating America
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      • M4+HEM4+1C5
      • Missouri, USA
      • Recess Bell
      • Scripture Studies

Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers IV

2/28/2023

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I think new teachers and teachers in training are often too focused on being popular with their classes.  They don't want to be labeled as the mean teacher or the strict teacher, so they hold back on anything that might be construed as negative.  Let me just say this about that:  STOP IT.

The truth is that a class will respect you more - and appreciate you more - if you maintain control and organization. They don't like the chaos of an unruly class any more than you do.  Not only that, but your relationships with individual students will blossom in the process.  You can maintain a positive relationship by adding some expectations to your daily activity.

  • Demand eye contact.  Yes, demand is the correct word.  It will take explicit practice.  You should not - and cannot - expect students to keep their eyes on the speaker without teaching them what it looks like and how it is done.  Teach them and practice with them.  Have students track conversations with their eyes, whipping their little heads around from speaker to speaker like they're watching a tennis match.  I want to feel the wind of their collective pivoting.  Of course, eye contact is a part of active listening, in which they listen to learn and not listen to respond.  It includes that all-too-important skill of staying quiet until it is appropriate to speak.  All of this is best taught in the beginning of the school year, but I assure you, it can be taught anew at any time. And don't think it will happen when you're being observed if you don't demand it all the time.

  • Do not tolerate backtalk.  My former students might tell you that this is my number one pet peeve concerning kids.  Most teachers don't even recognize backtalk most of the time.  Backtalk includes body language - gestures, sighing, crossing the arms, rolling the eyes, etc.  Sometimes it manifests as talking without being asked a question - especially in conflicts on the playground or in the cafeteria.  Typically, two kids have a fight.  They both approach the teacher for mediation.  The teacher asks one for the story, and the other answers, not waiting his turn.  In another case, it might start with, But I..., or I was just...  That's not something the teacher asked for, and it is backtalk.  Teach your students to respect your mediation process. You cannot listen to two voices at the same time, and someone who interrupts or dominates is usually not the one the teacher will believe.  Don't let them do it:  call them on it every time.
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  • Manners matter.  You won't find it in the curriculum, but etiquette (an old-fashioned word for manners) is invaluable - and again, it must be explicitly taught.  They will not get it if you don't teach them through the steps.  You can find lots of entries on this website about firm handshakes with eye contact.  There are steps to getting that right.  I came late to this game in my career, but once I adopted a policy of giving my students employable skills (Some call them soft skills.), my classroom completely changed.  In fact, we changed the culture of our entire 500-600-student elementary school.  Visitors noticed.  Not only that, but I started teaching students to respond with Yes, sir and No ma'am when addressing adults.  I expected them to let others go first.  I expected them to help one another.  Of course, I expected to hear Thank you, Please, Excuse me, and You're welcome.  I wanted to hear those words, spoken appropriately, often during the course of our school day.  All of this radiated beyond the school walls and academic hours, too:  Parents and community members were impressed and appreciative.  People quickly got to know which students were Hoggatteers, and students were proud of themselves.  Their posture improved, they were more confident, and they were more intentional in their efforts to learn from mistakes and persevere in difficulties.

Dear Student Teacher, you can achieve these things in the first days of teaching, in the first year of your career. Just as your students need to practice, it's going to take your own consistent attention to details to get this right. Trust me, though, you're going to love the results.


Did you miss the first three of these commentaries?  Here they are again:
​
Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers I
Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers II
Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers III
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Bible Breakdown:  Luke 2:13f

2/27/2023

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Too often, we rush and we fail to slow down ​ ​and consider the common sense ​of a Bible passage -in context. 

Like a learner in a reading class, let's break down
​
a passage ​​to see if we can comprehend it better.​
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Luke 2:13f (NASB)
13 And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly army of angels praising God and saying,
14 “Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace among people with whom He is pleased.”
Some Questions:
  • ​Have the angels formed a military?
  • What is the purpose of this "army of angels"?
  • Could the angels have praised God from where they were?  Why do they appear at this specific point in time?
  • In their address to God, what do the angels say or ask?
  • With whom is God pleased?
Let's Think:
There are some things to notice in these two verses.  A single angel announced the arrival of the Savior - a baby lying in a manger - but now, an "army of angels" joins in.  We don't often read about a large group of angels visiting humanity on earth, so this occasion must be something different, something larger than usual.

Is this a group of militant angels?  Quite possibly so, in the sense that they are warriors in battle for the salvation of souls.  The large group must impress upon the shepherds that they have been drafted onto the battlefield, as well. the message being delivered is one they intend for the shepherds to join in spreading.  Otherwise, they might have confined their praise to the boundaries of Heaven.  Why else would they collectively appear to these men of the field?

While the angel in the first verses of the chapter addresses the shepherds, this group speaks to the Almighty. They bring a message of praise to God through their acknowledgement of His glory, and they ask Him to apply His glory to making peace on earth for a specific group.  Presumably, that group includes these shepherds, but in broader terms, the specific group the angels pray for is a group that includes people with who God is pleased.  It's important to note that God is not pleased with every person, and that this calling for a blessing of God's glory does not include all of humanity.  That being said, the blessing is offered to all of humanity, and God's glory is attainable by every individual living.  Our question then necessarily becomes:  "How do I please God and receive His great blessings?"
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Look

2/26/2023

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Some time ago, I preached this sermon at the church of Christ in Carthage, Missouri.
Titled Look​, it begins around the 28:00 mark in the video.

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Apply the Word:  My Hero

2/25/2023

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SOCIETY IS AFRAID.  Our culture has become a culture of fear.  Fear seems to be everywhere – Behind every news story.  

FEAR OF the unknown, terrorism, climate change, war, job security – failing economy.

WE WANT a hero to rescue us, to know someone is still fighting the bad guys, to know that, no matter how dangerous or big the threat is, someone can still restore order.

It's difficult to be unaffected by the culture of fear.  It surrounds us.  WE are uncomfortable.  We worry too much.  We speculate too much.  Our imaginations repeatedly focus on long list of what ifs.

What do we do with all this fear?  When the world seems so chaotic, dark, and dangerous, what do we do?

Isaiah 6:1; Isaiah writes about his commissioning as a prophet:  “In the year of King Uzziah’s death I saw the Lord sitting on a throne, lofty and exalted, with the train of His robe filling the temple.” (Isaiah 6:1).

King Uzziah reigned in Israel 50 years.  By all accounts, brought stability and a time of tremendous prosperity and growth.  Life had been good, but now the king was dead.  For the first time in 50 years, massive change was on everyone’s mind.  What was going to happen? Could they weather through?  Was life, as they knew it, over?

Read on in Isaiah 6: vision of God only seems to bring more anxiety to Isaiah (v. 5):  He says, “Woe is me, for I am ruined!  Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts.”

Isaiah’s vision of God seated on His throne in the temple may have shaken him, but it also put everything else into perspective.  King Uzziah has died, but God is alive and well.  Life is completely different, yet nothing has changed because God is still on His throne.

Paul, of Jesus (Col. 1:16f), reminds us that “[f]or by him all things were created: things in heaven & on earth, visible & invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by Him & for Him.  He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.”

Are you ruled by fear?  Do worries worry you?  Is “panic” your middle name?  Do bullies kick sand in face & steal your girl?  Forget superheroes!  Focus on the One who has already defeated biggest villain of all.  If Jesus holds all things together, He can hold you together too.

Things can get scary – that’s expected – but God remains on His throne. Why not make the only secure investment there is?  Invest yourself in the unshakeable, unchanging, eternal plans of God.

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Quote:  Words

2/24/2023

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“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand;
they listen with the intent to reply.”
(Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People)
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Hoggatteer becomes School Spelling Bee Champ

2/23/2023

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I was honored with the opportunity to return to Cecil Floyd Elementary as the master of ceremonies of the 2023 school spelling bee.  I was in familiar territory on stage with 16 fourth and fifth grade students - two finalists from each classroom.

Happy was I to recognize two Hoggatteers - ANNA and RAMONA - who sat in my final fourth grade class, last year.  These were two of the final three on stage.  RAMONA battled it out with a gentleman for the championship title, and for that, she gains a hearty huzzah! from us all.  We will proudly support her as she competes in the regional bee in the coming weeks.

After the contest, I spent some time with former pupils in their classrooms, receiving some much needed hugs and handshakes from them and being reminded of the impact that a teacher has on his students.  It helps me recall this young lady (fourth from the right, below), a Hoggatteer named MICHELLE who topped the regional competition years ago and remains in the newspaper's banner on their Spelling Bee page.
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Enhance Your Teaching / Engage Your Class

2/22/2023

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I recently sent this to the student teachers I supervise for Pittsburg State University, but I think it is worthy of a grand place on this website, as well.  There are so many things to notice in this video that it takes a couple of times through to see everything there is to see.  No matter how long you have been teaching, no matter how recently you became a teacher, and no matter that you're still in training, this video packs a punch.

I talked to many of my student teachers about embedding callbacks, embedding praise, embedding celebrations, embedding differentiation, and embedding reteaching (In case you didn't pick up in it, the key word here is embedding.).  The best example of this that I can share is in this video from 2009, which demonstrates how a master teacher makes it all fit together.  The teacher here is Ron Clark from the Ron Clark Academy in inner-city Atlanta, Georgia. 

I sat in the same seat as the person taking this video, and I watched a different lesson in which many of these things happened as well.  I took the ideas back to my classroom and made them work for my own teaching style.

Suddenly, callbacks and praise were more comfortable and authentic when they were a natural part of the lesson.  They were no longer out of context and disjointed, and they kept things moving and energetic.  Suddenly, kids were more fully engaged and had a greater joy of learning!

Watch this video with all of this in mind.  Turn the volume all the way up and listen with earbuds or headphones if you can (Some of it can be hard to hear.).  It should be worth your while: there are so many great things to notice. 
​Now rewatch the video and take note of these points (You'll need to pause or rewind the video several times.):

  • ​0:09  Student provides the process, not just the answer. ​
  • 0:23  Embedded praise/callback - Teacher prompts classwide applause followed be callback which includes positive peer support. ​
  • 0:30  Teacher's voice changes, indicating that he expects an overt group response. 
  • 0:45  Teacher embeds reteaching, though I suspect he's just showing off for the visitors; it is still a demonstration of a good method. Again, notice his voice changes tone, speed, and volume. 
  • 1:15  Teacher does not allow a student to answer out of sync with the rest of the class. 
  • 1:23  Notice that student voices also change in response to the teacher's change of tone. 
  • 1:30  Where are the students' eyes?  Always in the speaker. 
  • 1:43  Embedded celebration - students are up, coordinated, and energetic. 
  • 1:54  Be impressed by how quickly students get back in their seats and the teacher picks right back up with the lesson. 
  • 2:11  Embedded differentiation - Teacher asks a student who needs the reinforcement of this rule. 
  • 2:15  This answer is almost like a callback, because it's a predetermined rule of math.  They have clearly practiced the answer many times in context. 
  • 2:24  Embedded praise - "I'm so proud of y'all."  This is broad praise to include the whole class. 
  • 2:31  This might be a small embedded brain break; at any rate, these add up to allowing students movement throughout the lesson, and the teacher doesn’t have schedule a separate time in the day for a break. 
  • 2:51  Here is another energetic callback of sorts:  they've done this before. 
  • 2:54  They don't miss a beat!  Be impressed again with how quickly the lesson continues, with nearly perfect eye contact on the teacher. 
  • 3:00  Suddenly, the teacher asks a girl (off screen) for a step to solving the problem, and she does not provide the correct response (This may be my favorite part of the whole lesson.). Notice, the teacher does not call on another student to give the right answer:  he stays with the one who needs more assistance.
  • 3:16  Another student raises his hand, wanting to show that he has a better answer than the first kid.  The teacher does not allow this. He doesn't even look at the kid; he maintains tight eye contact with the student who needs extra coaching. 
  • 3:36  She’s still giving the wrong answer, but the teacher doesn’t give up on her.  
  • 3:42  When the teacher walks closer to her, other students track the conversation with their eyes.  Their attention is not allowed to wander. 
  • 4:07  Student is still unsure of her answer. 
  • 4:17  The struggling student still gets applause and praise for working through everything and being put on the spot. 
  • 4:29  End of lesson - Embedded celebration like you’ve never seen. I couldn’t work out all the logistics, but we did do a form of this in my classroom (only when the class earned it).
  • 4:45  These desks are specially made, and this is a private school.  I recommend against you or your students getting on the desks and chairs in your classroom. 
  • 5:14  Teachers goes directly into the next lesson - American history - not letting a moment go to waste. Students quickly get back into place and reestablish eye contact (but not fast enough for the teacher - 5:18).​
It’s a lot to take in.  By all means, I am NOT suggesting that I expect to see this from students in their professional semester (Some things don’t work for some people anyway - and it might look very different in a special education class or a class with fewer students.), but you might get brave and experiment with some aspects of what you see here.  Many veteran teachers don't do these things either.  

Again, every bit of this requires practice with a class, so don’t expect it to work perfectly on the first try (though you may be surprised what can happen if you're brave).
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Accuracy and Impact of the Bible:  Piasa

2/21/2023

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The following is the first lesson in a historical and faithful study
beginning at 7:00 pm on Wednesday evenings.
at the church of Christ in Carthage, Missouri, south of the Ford dealership
PLEASE JOIN US!

Art Appreciation

Analyze this artistic portrayal of a 17th Century scene.  Check out the details.
  • What do you notice?
  • What do you think is happening?
  • What does this piece make you wonder?
  • What questions come to mind?
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Discoveries do not always present a complete picture of history.  This mural on a cliffside wall adjacent to the Mississippi River in Alton, Illinois, is one of those incomplete findings.  When combined with known history, ancient legends, and inference, a story begins to emerge.  What do you think?
The same is true when scientists discover a fragment of Scripture.  Only when combined with other known fragments and manuscripts do we get a complete picture of the accuracy and impact of the Bible that we read.  Each fragment, in combination, is further evidence that we have the Spirit-breathed Bible we are intended to have.
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​The Big Questions
Our focus for this study hinges on answering these two big questions.  The goal is to get closer to the answers each week in our class.
​​How did we we get the Bible?
Is the Bible accurate and dependable?
Introductory, Guiding Questions
  • From where did it originate?
  • When was it written
  • Who wrote it?
  • How was it written?
  • On what was it written?
  • With what was it written?
  • Where was it written?
  • To whom was it written?
  • Why was it written?
  • What is its purpose?
  • In what languages was it composed?
  • How has it changed through the millennia?
So how important is it to you that the Bible can be proven true?  Do you believe there is irrefutable evidence to its validity?  Is proof something that strengthens your personal faith in the existence of God?

Should faith alone be enough to drive you to drive you to your knees?  Is "blind" faith a stronger kind of faith?  If so, then why did God provide so much evidence?
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Our text - How We Got the Bible by Neil Lightfoot - is rife with discovery.  In chapter 11, we find all kinds of evidence for the accuracy of Scripture.  The chapter is leading us to the more complete discoveries made in March of 1948.  Then, in caves near the Dead Sea, scrolls were found, stored in containers.  Suddenly, more proof existed of the practice of Christianity in early centuries A.D.

We're on our way to finding those Dead Sea Scrolls in the next chapter.  For now, the author presents a small collection of preserved fragments located in a variety of places, preserved by nature, and studied by science.  The first are the many papyri located beneath the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.  These fragments, though not Scripture, set the stage for the preservation of fragile papyri that would be found later, and the processes developed and perfected for the preservation and reading of those documents could later be used more safely to read the important documents that make up portions of our Bible.

The second location discussed in our text is Fayum.  There, papyri used in the wrapping of some Egyptian mummies was also preserved in the darkness.  These highly realistic images have been adjusted through the use of artificial intelligence to provide us with even more realistic pictures of what real people actually looked like in that time period.

A third preservation includes actual Scripture fragments.  Located in the trash heaps of ancient Oxyrhynchus, these fragments were preserved in the sand and, along with other, extrabiblical, treasures give us more and more accurate knowledge of the ancient world.


In some cases, destructive experimental practices were used on the library of scrolls in the Villa of the Papyri in the Herculaneum, Egyptian funerary art, and ancient trash heaps.  Might we consider that to be the Providence of God?  Were they intended to develop humanities skills for the safer study of more important Documents that would later be discovered?

Herculaneum

Fayum

Oxyrhynchus

Like the image of the Piasa bird on the banks of a mighty river cannot be understood without putting it together with further documentation, the fragments, too, must be combined with other findings to complete the current canon of Scripture.

Further discussion in this chapter refers to the Chester Beatty collection of papyri, the Bodmer collection, and other important fragments which reinforce the accuracy of the New Testament.

Chester Beatty Papyri

Bodmer Papyri

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End of 1 Peter 5:12 and 2 Peter 1:1–5 on facing pages of Papyrus Bodmer VIII

new Testament Papyri

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Application Question
​How important is it?
Is it important to you that the Bible comes from reliable sources, or is it just a collection of wise sayings and advice for living?  Many atheists agree that there is wisdom in the teachings of Jesus Christ, but they do not believe that Jesus is a Messiah, that He performed miracles, that He walked out of His own grave, or that He prepares a place where His faithful disciples will be rewarded for eternity.

We contend that the Bible and everything it contains is supported by:
  • textual claims
  • origins of the text
  • extrabiblical history
  • the faith of martyrs
  • ​logic
  • ​astronomy
  • archeology
  • geography
  • geology
  • astronomy
  • biology
  • history
  • chemistry
  • physics
  • mathematics
  • and more
​Go forward with us - or in this case, back to the beginning - as we continue our study next time.
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Hoggatteers on Stage

2/20/2023

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Today, I'm listening to my original vinyl copy of the Dr. Dolittle motion picture soundtrack.  I'm especially interested in the lyrics because of the recent production of Dr. Dolittle Jr. at Joplin's North Middle School.  The show starred some of my favorite people - former students like LIAM and BROOKLYN.  In fact, LIAM played the title role in this production.  This was a nicely done show with a large cast and crew to wrangle, and the final product was very nice.  I think the productions at NMS continue to get better each year.

I was also able to attend the presentation of Joplin High School's show choirs a couple of weeks ago as they hosted a show choir competition.  Sound Dimension and Touch of Class performed in exhibition for the standing-only crowd at the high school auditorium.  I was able to talk to KRISTA, who was sitting out on the injured list, and ALI, who along with sister SOPHIE shine on stage in the all-female Touch of Class presentation of 9 to 5.  Sound Dimension includes some Hoggatteers, as well, but with all of the zombie makeup, it's hard to determine who is who.  Things have changed since the show choirs of just a few years ago, and now they are putting out full-on live music shows.  A day at one of these contests might be exhausting, but it is also quite entertaining.

As always, it's great to see my former students in and around town.  Another couple of graduates have been spotted when I donate plasma.  Usually I hear something like, "Mr. Hoggatt, is that you?" and I turn to see an fully-grown adult staring back at me.  I make them introduce themselves to me, since it has been so long and they've changed so much.

​Keep truckin', Hoggatteers.  OOHAAH!

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God's Footprints

2/19/2023

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Here is a sermon I preached in Carthage, Missouri, about a year ago.
This one was titled God's Footprints, and it begins at around the 23:30 mark.

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Quote:  Words

2/18/2023

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"You earn respect with your ears
and lose it with your mouth."
(unknown)
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Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers III

2/17/2023

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In the past few weeks, when visiting classrooms to observe student teachers for the local university, I have noticed that some have difficulties in common areas.  These student teachers are probably no different from all in their roles.  I also have to note that many experienced teachers never looked for some of the items that I'm trying to highlight to my students.  I often found myself finding little keys to teaching when I didn't know I needed them.  Only when stumbling into something that I didn't know I was missing was I able to raise the bar for myself and feel the professional improvement that I longed for.

So let me put a little more wisdom into your world.  I never figured out every secret to mastering this craft, but I did often reflect on these things that are common needs among the student teachers in the world.
​
  • Stop helping students to completion.  We are, by nature, people who want the best for children.  We want to to help them - even at great expense to our own time and patience.  However, there is such a thing as addiction to a teacher's help.  Certain students will drain a teacher of these things by constantly shooting their hands in the air to get her attention and ask for help - even before they have even tried to work out a solution for themselves.  Shame on us for falling for this!  Students should not be allowed to hog a teacher's attention and time at the detriment of others in the classroom.  So, stop letting them do it.  I don't mean stop helping them; what I mean is this:  acknowledge when they have don't part of a problem correctly, get them to the next step, and step away.  Help someone else and someone else.  Work the room before coming back to them.  It's likely that they will actually look at the problem for themselves, this time, and figure out where they need to go to complete it for themselves.  Instead of enabling them to rely on you for answers, give them opportunities to work on it independently for while.
 
  • Get out of the text and off the script.  Too often teachers stand before a class with a teacher edition in hand, reading someone else's lesson to a class rather than engage students in honest, raw conversation. Students might refer to this as "calling it in".  Wouldn't you rather be creative with your lesson, work something out that might just be better than the textbook, and make your class special?  The bottom line here is this:  your class will never stand out or be better if all you do is the same as the teacher across town.  Students will be less likely to thing your class is magical and special if you don't do something to set it apart.  I always wanted kids to beg to be in my classroom.  The reputation that I had as a classroom teacher was one of structure and serious, interesting, hard-working fun.  Oft times, the principal would receive written and verbal requests from parents to place their children in my classroom.  That reputation is one that I worked hard to get...but I would have never achieved it if I hadn't gotten away from the textbook and taught the standards and objectives in brand new ways.
 
  • Use callbacks to maintain attention.  I hated callbacks.  For years, I had only one:  I would say, "I'm talking," and students would echo, "I'm listening."  They weren't, by the way.  I thought callbacks were only used to get attention when students made mental explorations into la la land.  A teacher claps a pattern and the students mimic it in return.  A teacher shouts, "Class class," and the students come back with, "Yes yes" (That one is a particular pet peeve of mine in that it is only a portion of a teaching method that is much more complicated...but teachers only use this simple section of it, because the rest is too difficult.).  However, I discovered late in my career that callbacks can be embedded into lessons to keep attention rather than to get attention.  They never worked for me in the latter, but once I discovered the former, magic started to happen.  Students listened with sharper ears when they knew they needed to be ready for an energetic, fun, and unique callback.  We worked out actions to go along with the words, and suddenly we had embedded brain breaks in our lessons, as well.  It takes practice and constant tweaking, but you'll feel it in a big way when it works so smoothly in your class.


Did you miss the first two of these commentaries?  Here they are again:
​
Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers I
Takeaways from Observing Student Teachers II
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The Accuracy and Impact of the Bible:  Gullah

2/16/2023

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Here is the next lesson in a historical and faithful study
beginning at 7:00 pm on Wednesday evenings.
at the church of Christ in Carthage, Missouri, south of the Ford dealership.
PLEASE JOIN US!
The Big Questions
​

Our focus for this study hinges on answering these two big questions.  The goal is to get closer to the answers each week in our class.
How did we we get the Bible?
Is the Bible accurate and dependable?
Introductory, Guiding Questions
  • From where did it originate?
  • When was it written
  • Who wrote it?
  • How was it written?
  • On what was it written?
  • With what was it written?
  • Where was it written?
  • To whom was it written?
  • Why was it written?
  • What is its purpose?
  • In what languages was it composed?
  • How has it changed through the millennia?
So how important is it to you that the Bible can be proven true?  Do you believe there is irrefutable evidence to its validity?  Is proof something that strengthens your personal faith in the existence of God?

Should faith alone be enough to drive you to drive you to your knees?  Is "blind" faith a stronger kind of faith?  If so, then why did God provide so much evidence?
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In the early 1700s, a different culture was brought to South Carolina shores.  The Gullah culture still exists in pockets, but their unique experiences with slavery and survival are present in much of today's African American culture.  It has been said that the Gullah people are the nearest link to Africa we have in the United States.

This culture was well established and still developing in the cotton and rice fields of South Carolina while Francis Marion was mounting his surprise attacks on the British during the latter half of the 18th century.  Brought to the U.S. for their expertise in the rice fields, these people continued to survive in the islands for many years, but slowly the culture is dying out.
In 2005, the first full translation of the New Testament into the Gullah (also called Geechee or Sea Island Creole) language was produced.  I received my copy two years later.  It can be purchased online, but it also available in your browser at the Gullah Bible website.
You are probably familiar with at least one Gullah song:  Kumbaya:
Kumbaya, my Lord, kumbaya
Someone's singing, Lord, kumbaya

Someone's crying, Lord, kumbaya
Someone's praying, Lord, kumbaya
Come by here, my Lord, kumbaya
The preface includes this information:
This translation should not be seen as a Gullah version of any specific English translation, but rather is based on the original Greek manuscripts.  Several English Bible translations were used for reference in the translation process, but the foundation of this translation is the Greek text, according to our best understanding today as to its original form.  The goal has been to make a translation from the original language into Gullah that is clear in meaning, accurate, and natural in its expression.
It can be understood by English speakers.  In fact, someone unfamiliar with the language is forced to slow down and consider each word and its meaning.  It is not often that one can read an unfamiliar language and understand it.  Try for yourself with this passage from Matthew 14:
​25 So late een de night, sometime atta shree o'clock, Jedus gone out ta e ciple dem. E beena waak pontop de wata. 

26 Wen de ciple dem see Jedus da waak pontop de wata, dey been scaid ta det. Dey say, “Dat a haant!” An dey holla loud cause dey been so scaid.

27 Jedus speak op fast. E tell um say, “Study yasef! Dis me! Mus dohn be scaid!”

28 Den Peter tell um say, “Lawd, ef dat ya fa true, mus chaage me fa come out pontop de wata fa meet ya.”

29 Jedus say, “Come!” So den Peter git out de boat an waak pontop de wata ta Jedus. 

30 Bot wen Peter feel de scrong wind, e been scaid. An e staat fa sink down eenta de wata. E holla say, “Lawd, sabe me!”

31 
Jes den Jedus scretch out e han an grab hole ta Peter. E tell Peter say, “Ya ain bleebe pon me no mo den jes a leetle bit! Wa mek ya doubt?”

32 
Den de two ob dem git eenta de boat an de wind stop. 33De ciple dem een de boat woshup Jedus an say, “Fa true, ya God Son!
Interested in learning more about this incredible culture?  Check out the Ultimate Gullah website.
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Chapter 10 of Neil Lightfoot's book, How We Got the Bible, is titled Restoring the New Testament Text.  The introduction to the chapter explains that by consulting "a number of manuscripts and authorities and by comparison reconstruct a text which we feel is like the original":
...[W]e will be assured of getting much closer to the original New Testament autographs.  For this reason [this] course has always been followed in the printing of the Greek New Testament.  This means that our modern text is an edition of the New Testament text restored through all the aids of textual criticism.
What are the sources used in restoring the primitive text?
  1. Manuscripts
  2. Versions
  3. Early Christian writers
These will be discussed in class, along with some of the history involved in bringing the New Testament in print to the people.
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Application Question
​How important is it?
Is it important to you that the Bible comes from reliable sources, or is it just a collection of wise sayings and advice for living?  Many atheists agree that there is wisdom in the teachings of Jesus Christ, but they do not believe that Jesus is a Messiah, that He performed miracles, that He walked out of His own grave, or that He prepares a place where His faithful disciples will be rewarded for eternity.

We contend that the Bible and everything it contains is supported by:
  • textual claims
  • origins of the text
  • extrabiblical history
  • the faith of martyrs
  • ​logic
  • ​astronomy
  • archeology
  • geography
  • geology
  • astronomy
  • biology
  • history
  • chemistry
  • physics
  • mathematics
  • and more
​Go forward with us - or in this case, back to the beginning - as we continue our study next time.
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Professional Pet Peeve:  Stop Begging

2/15/2023

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I assure you:  if I, a teacher, am tired of other teachers fleecing their friends and community members, so are others.  I am not estranged from the idea of having a wish list on Amazon:  as a classroom teacher, I developed a unique list that I placed in the margin of this website.  Anyone willing to contribute to the cause was able to point their browser in that direction to find ideas that would support our classroom, and I made it a point to have items from a variety of price points on that list for people of varying incomes to purchase if they were so inclined.

However, I don't think I advertised that wish list other than to put it there and make it available, or to refer to it when someone asked what they might do to help out.  These constant social media requests for friends and relatives to fund a wish list or to adopt a classroom and match the funds of a corporate sponsor on a site like Donor's Choose can get to be too much.  And in some cases, they may even get to be astronomically high-priced projects that just aren't necessary for doing the job.

I never found myself lacking the funds to purchase just about everything I thought could enhance my classroom. Between the district's own allotment and the PTO/PTA's generous support, I seemed to have what I needed, and then some.  Oh, there's always something shinier that appeals to me out on the horizon, but it might just be something that I could put off until next year.  No reason to spend my own cash or beg my relatives for money.  I learned that with a little creativity, I might be able to replicate what I needed out of the school's butcher paper supply.  Maybe that's a result of growing up in Central Oklahoma, where I always heard about things being held together by bailing wire and duct tape (and if it needed to be loosened up, WD40 was the way to go).

The constant requests for donations, however, make us look desperate, and I can only imagine that our friends get tired of buying markers and glue when they could actually donate to a cause that supports rehabilitation for homeless people or foster care for orphans.  There are many causes to donate to in this life without buying wobbly chairs for kids who wobble too much already.  And besides, there is just something about professionals asking for handouts that seems unseemly.

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Bible Breakdown:  Luke 2: 8-12

2/14/2023

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Too often, we rush and we fail to slow down ​
​and consider the common sense
​of a Bible passage -in context. 


Like a learnerin a reading class,
let's 
break down a passage ​​to see if we can
​comprehend it better.​
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Luke 2:8-12 (NASB):
8 In the same region there were some shepherds staying out in the fields and keeping watch over their flock at night. 

9 And an angel of the Lord suddenly stood near them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them; and they were terribly frightened. 

10 And so the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of great joy which will be for all the people; 

11 for today in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior, who is Christ the Lord. 

​
12 And this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”
Some Questions:
  • Why shepherds?
  • Since when will the Savior of God's people be for "all the people" (verse 10)?
  • Is the birth of the Christ in David's city a coincidence?
  • ​Which is more surprising - the anger shining all around them or hearing that the Messiah is born in a manger?
  • What is a Christ?  Who is the Lord?

Let's Think:
So here we go:  in this section of Scripture, the angel of the Lord announces the birth of Christ the Lord.  Is it even possible the angel of the Lord to know about the Lord if the Lord has just been born?  This speaks to the timelessness of Jesus.  He is the Lord.  He is present since before the genesis of creation, and He continues past the end of time.  The angel, His messenger, announces the King's earthly, human arrival just as a court officer announces the king of England when he arrives in a room.

But the angel does not announce it to the royal court or even to a bunch of knights and ladies in waiting:  the angel announces Jesus to lowly, smelly, sweaty, dirty shepherds in the field.  They haven't washed.  They aren't dressed in their Sunday finest, but the angel is sent to them first - to announce the Savior.  Had they been expecting the Savior to come as a baby?  Had they expected the King to be lying in the straw of an animal's feed trough?  I doubt it.

The fact that the Bread of Life (That's one of the titles by which Jesus refers to Himself.) is born in the the city of David should not be lost on us, either.  Bethlehem literally means City of Bread.  The Christ (also known as the Messiah) is born in the most humble of ways to a couple of humble people and is announced to humble shepherds.  There is nothing regal about the account.  Perhaps God wants us to regard these shepherds with an eye that says, if these can respond to "good news of great joy", anyone can.  And maybe the image of the Great Shepherd (again, Jesus) is announced first to a bunch of shepherds amidst the bleating of their flocks of sheep is one of deeper meaning, as well. 

Jesus is the Christ, the Anointed One, the One sent by God and Who is God in the flesh.  No wonder the glory of the Lord shone around them.  Make no mistake:  that's not the angel's glory that's shining in your eyes!  It is the Lord's glory.  No angel ever shone with that kind of light.
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