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Lessons 8 and 9

3/31/2020

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Have I collected nine sets of lessons to keep you up to date with your studies?  Why, yes, I have. Each set begins with my favorite subject - history - but mixed within are art, music, reading, and writing activities.  I'm asking students to bring their own rigor to the table as they work through the videos, links, and work.  After that, there is a math lesson and some bonus content.
Don't worry if you haven't kept up.  You can work at your own pace and even work into the summer months if you like.
SET 8:
  • vocabulary
  • characters of the Revolution:  the John and Abigail Adams, and Joseph Brant
  • two locations:  Braintree and Quincy, Massachusetts
  • bullying and resilience
  • reading fluency
  • reading comprehension
  • creative writing
  • subtracting mixed numbers from mixed numbers
  • bonus content:  fitness, science, and read aloud​​
SET 9:
  • vocabulary
  • three characters from the Revolution:  Benedict Arnold, John André, and Peggy Shippen
  • American history review (chain activity)
  • a Revolutionary location:  West Point
  • ​subtracting mixed numbers
  • bonus content:  read aloud, science, and fitness

​All of these sets are freely available on our HOGGATTEERS@HOME website now.
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Positive Behavior Conversation:  The Steps to Success

3/30/2020

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"Have you ever thought about your success?"
Take a moment to watch this video:
Now for some questions:
  • What is your definition of success?
  • Who has helped you succeed?
  • Do you ever show your appreciation for the help you have received?  How?
  • Have you ever helped someone else succeed?  How?
  • Is it easier to succeed on your own or with help?
  • What are your dreams or plans for the future?  How will you achieve them?
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Lesson Sets 6 and 7

3/29/2020

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I see that these brothers are working together to keep their brains engaged.  They sent these shots of them working on logic problems and watercoloring.
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On Friday, our area schools announced that we are not going to be back until Monday, April 27.  Our HOGGATTEERS@HOME website will still be the primary method for me to distribute information, and I will try to make announcements on ClassDojo.

​You should have received the following statement from Joplin Schools:
All grades will be final as of third quarter. Next week, students and parents can expect to be contacted by their child's teacher(s) regarding the platform (i.e. FB page, Google Classroom, Canvas, class website, email, etc.) they will use to communicate and share learning activities. Beginning the week of April 6th, students can expect to find weekly videos and daily learning activities through the teachers' preferred platform. These learning opportunities will continue weekly during this closure period or until the regular school calendar concludes. Teachers have worked collaboratively this week to determine a few essential learning standards so we can best focus our lessons for your child. We want to provide a healthy balance for learning opportunities and family needs, understanding priorities in each home will vary during this unprecedented time.
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We're ahead of the curve in this, but everything we're doing on the HOGGATTEERS@HOME site can be considered enrichment.  Teachers meeting in the district have identified a couple of essential learning standards to focus on.  Those may look a little different from the items I'm continuing to put together, so be patient.  It will just be one more thing to keep us moving forward and getting ready for the fifth grade.
​​SETS 6 and 7:
  • a character from the Revolution:  Benjamin Franklin
  • discussion quotes
  • reading comprehension
  • two important documents:  the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution
  • reading fluency​
  • inventions
  • fact vs. fiction
  • the printing press and more
  • creative writing
  • adding mixed numbers​​​
  • subtracting fractions from mixed numbers
  • ​bonus content:  physical education, read aloud, and science
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Meet the Next Big Man on Campus

3/28/2020

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Since Mr. Stewart accepted a position as the new principal at Royal Heights Elementary School across town, our interview committee recently approached the task of finding his replacement.  The candidate who rose to the top of the crowd is Kris Garrett (pictured here).  Mr. Garrett impressed us with his gentle spirit and ready answers.  We know that he will be a change from Mr. Stewart, but Mr. Garrett will bring many different skills to our school.  He introduces himself:
I have been married to my wife KyLeigh for 15 years.  We have two children, our daughter Halleigh is eleven and son Ky is eight.  I have taught Science at JHS for 14 years and have coached HS Football at Joplin for 14 years as well.  I am currently the director of our HS Transitions advisory program and a coordinator of our HS Fusion program.  
     
I enjoy hanging out with my kids and occasionally playing golf.  I am excited for the opportunity to work with all Cecil Floyd staff and students.  My wife KyLeigh teaches kindergarten in the district so I know how hard elementary teachers work.  I am thankful for this opportunity and excited to get started.

Welcome to the family, Mr. G!
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Another Lesson Set Ready to Go

3/27/2020

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Good leaders are self-motivated like the fine students in these pictures.  They are not deterred by problems and issues; instead, they tackle those issues and make any positive response they possibly can.  They are not negative, but positively stay on top of things because they have the mettle and the spirit to do so.

We have a number of students who are not neglecting their education because of a pandemic.  They look forward to busting out and getting started with normalcy again, and they are willing to work now and not only flatten the curve, but to stay in front of the curve.  These are the kids who will be ready and find things easier when things get back to normal.  I hope more jump in.

That doesn't mean spend every waking moment working through the lesson sets I have posted, but it does mean tackling things in chunks.  As long as you pace yourself, these lesson sets shouldn't be more than you can handle. Throw yourself into one every day or two.  Some parents are enjoying learning right along side their kids.
​Anyway, here is Set 5, where we cover the following:
  • vocabulary
  • two characters from the Revolution:  George Rogers Clark and Bernardo de Gálvez
  • the Louisiana Purchase
  • two locations:  Vincennes and Galveston
  • the economy of war
  • the Great River Road
  • reading comprehension
  • adding a mixed number and a fraction
  • bonus content:  read aloud, science, fitness, and reading fluency
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Meet the New Kid on the Block

3/26/2020

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Folks, this is Molly Graham, a student at Pittsburg State University, and she is joining our team in the fall.  The fourth grade team interviewed Miss Graham a few weeks ago, and we are excited to welcome her aboard.  She is going to be a fantastic addition to our Cecil Floyd family.
​Molly recently posted this picture along with this statement:
I am so excited to finally say I accepted a fourth grade position at Cecil Floyd Elementary! As soon as I entered the building and interacted with staff earlier this month, I knew Cecil Floyd was exactly where I wanted to be. Already, I have felt so welcomed, and I know this is a position handpicked for me.

I feel so lucky to have this opportunity, and even luckier for the amazing people who supported me along the way. I am so eager for August!🥳❤️

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Four Home Lesson Sets Now Available

3/25/2020

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Have you checked in on the HOGGATTEERS@HOME page yet?

Two more lesson sets (a total of four so far)
are now available with the topics I've listed below.

In the meantime, if you are spending time on the site,
please share a picture of yourself doing the work
like this sweet young lady from Mr. Culbertson's class.

​I'd love to hear that you are enjoying yourself.
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​Lesson Set 3
  • ​freedom of the press
  • fake news
  • beautiful wildernesses of the United States
  • reading comprehension
  • reading fluency
  • solving word problems with line plots
  • Exact Path ​math
  • bonus content:  read aloud, science, and fitness
​Lesson Set 4
  • ​character from the Revolution:  John Paul Jones
  • Growth Mindset
  • reading comprehension questions
  • reading fluency
  • signal flags
  • estimating sums and differences using benchmark numbers
  • bonus content:  read aloud, science, and fitness
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Book:  24 Hours in Nowhere

3/24/2020

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I had high hopes for this one.  The book, 24 Hours in Nowhere, was written by the same author as Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus, one of my two favorites on last year's Mark Twain Award nominee list.  This one, however, seems like it might have been rushed to publication.  In addition to some typographical errors, there are some loose ends in the tale that needed to be tied up to avoid fraying.  Additionally, the comparisons to Louis Sachar's Holes on the cover are highly misleading.  Other than occurring in a hot desert, there are no similarities with that novel.
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From Goodreads:
When you come from Nowhere, can you ever really make it anywhere? Author Dusti Bowling (Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus) returns to the desert to create a gripping story about friendship, hope, and finding the power we all have within ourselves.​
 
Welcome to Nowhere, Arizona, the least livable town in the United States. For Gus, a bright 13-year-old with dreams of getting out and going to college, life there is made even worse by Bo Taylor, Nowhere’s biggest, baddest bully. When Bo tries to force Gus to eat a dangerously spiny cactus, Rossi Scott, one of the best racers in Nowhere, comes to his rescue—but in return she has to give Bo her prized dirt bike. Determined to buy it back, Gus agrees to go searching for gold in Dead Frenchman Mine, joined by his old friends Jessie Navarro and Matthew Dufort, and Rossi herself. As they hunt for treasure, narrowly surviving everything from cave-ins to mountain lions, they bond over shared stories of how hard life in Nowhere is—and they realize this adventure just may be their way out.
 
The book was enjoyable enough in parts, but like so many, it ended up being just a series of hurdles for the characters to jump, never really building to a climax, but merely hopping toward one repeatedly.  The bookends of the storyline - the whole dirt bike premise - was merely that, and just seemed to lie flat in the end.  I'm really sorry that I didn't like this one more than I did, because the author had won me over quickly on her first novel.  Hopefully, she can redeem everything with future attempts.
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Second Hoggatteers@Home Lesson Set Now Available

3/23/2020

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I've completed uploading and organizing lessons for the second set in our remote learning series.  This one, much shorter than the first, covers the following topics:
  • ​vocabulary
  • an important document:  the Articles of Confederation
  • three characters from the Revolution:  Henry Laurens, George Washington and Charles Lee
  • ​reading comprehension questions
  • reading fluency
  • comparing fractions greater than 1 by creating common numerators or denominators
  • bonus content:  fitness, science, and read aloud
​
​Please share your interactions with the site with me, and I'll be sure to add your photos and/or comments to a future post.  It does my heart good to see pictures like this one from a delightful young lady in Mr. Culbertson's class.

More lesson sets are on the way as we continue to navigate these unusual waters.

Click to go to the HOGGATTEERS@HOME webpage now.
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Monticello Teacher Institute:  Contributions

3/22/2020

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Here is one response for the Monticello Teacher Institute that I did not revise in my application submission.  The question asks for what I can contribute to the group of attendees at the institute if selected myself.

The question asks, MTI has a collaborative, hands-on environment where participants work closely with their peers.  How do you hope to contribute to the group's experience?

I happily got to focus on my personal strengths in this response which follows:
​I cringe when people say that we don’t need to reinvent the wheel.  We can still move forward on our old rubber wheels, but I like to imagine that there is something better – more durable and more efficient – waiting for our discovery and invention.  The same must be true of education.  If we want our education system to remain stagnant, then we should just accept the status quo.  We can continue to read the chapter and answer the questions at the end.  We can watch students fill in the same tired worksheets, but I like to imagine there is something better.
 
I challenge my peers to think outside of their teacher edition.  I urge them to deviate from the easy script.  I am never satisfied with leaving lessons as the status quo.  My natural position in a group of collaborating teachers is to find applications and connections that no one else has considered and then make the best of them.  I want educators to bring events to life for their students, surrounding them with the learning, and motivate them to seek more and more on their own.
 
That is where, when called upon to do so, I encourage teachers to think differently – to declare their independence!  There are too many educators who are running on flat tires, still assigning the same old word searches and not challenging their students to think for themselves.  In American history, they read biographies, but they fail to break our founders out of the two-dimensional textbook.  I would rather find ways to invite Thomas Jefferson and his contemporaries into my classroom.  I want my students to meet them and share conversations with them.
 
We can bring art and drama into a history classroom.  We can allow students the leeway to blaze their own trails and harvest gems of wisdom along the way.  We measure, we experiment, and we analyze.  We find humor, we cry, and we genuinely wonder at the tremendous sacrifices that laid a foundation for the freedoms we still enjoy.  It is difficult to get that level of connectivity and authenticity by looking at the illustrations in a text.
 
It is really hard for many educators to drive in the ruts.  We have too often accepted the shackles of the status quo.  Without leadership from administrators and set-in-stone pacing guides, some do not feel comfortable with finding their own pathways to success, creating their own materials, and making uncommon connections.  That is where Thomas Jefferson and I are similar:  both of us step a little outside of the lines to encourage and inspire others to be bold.  If the teachers the Monticello Teachers Institute are willing to reinvent things, they can bring Monticello into their schools in new and exciting ways.
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Learning from Home

3/21/2020

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We are living through a major chapter in world history. Our response to our situation will determine how history documents 2020.  Will we seize the day and come out on top, or will we sit idly and let ourselves fall behind?
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If you have a computer at home with internet access, I am putting together some lesson sets on a new site. The first lesson set is already complete and available if you want to get the kids something organized to focus on. This site is separate from our original website: instead, you can find it at HOGGATTEERS@HOME. 

​​While we are all "busy" flattening the curve, let us stay ahead of the curve, as well, and not waste this moment.  Please visit our new site and stay in your learning routine.
​This lesson set covers a lot of ground (Most will not be as extensive.) and features much of the material we would be addressing in our regular classroom:
  • vocabulary
  • the alliance of France and the fledgling USA
  • three characters of the Revolution:  John André, Peggy Shippen, and Moses Michael Hayes
  • the First Amendment:  the Freedom of Religion
  • three locations:  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Newport, Rhode Island, and Paris France
  • reading comprehension questions
  • reading fluency
  • comparing fractions greater than one using benchmarks
  • bonus content:  physical education, read aloud, and science
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Our Greatest Challenge and Our Finest Hour

3/20/2020

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Americans have always been called to be resilient.  Because of the trials of previous generations, we have more and do more than ever before.  Today we are wealthy beyond the standards of most people in the world.

But we are being called to be resilient in our own generation as well.  Today we are being challenged to live life beyond the dreams of yesterday.  We are being called to show our mettle.
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We didn't have air conditioning in my house when I was a kid.  Sometimes we lived on bologna sandwiches.  My grandparents lived through the Great Depression.  My grandfather told me stories about coming home with four flat tires during that time, driving on the rims because they couldn't afford to replace the tires.  My other grandfather was in World War 2, away from his wife and two sons for a long time as they endured some of the scariest times in recent history.

We've endured tornados, terror attacks, wars, political maneuvers, trade wars, gas shortages, hostage crises, and school shootings, but we have always endured.  We have the faith in our system of life.  We have faith in our daily routine.  We have faith.

When George Washington was called to lead, he humbly accepted the challenge.  When Abraham Lincoln was called to write a speech, he peppered it with a challenge to his nation.  When Martin Luther King had a dream, he knew it would not be easy to make it reality.  Each sacrificed for the good of the cause.

That's where we find ourselves today.  Sure, there are uncertainties ahead of us, and as humans we do tend to look for the worst-case scenario as the most likely reality, but friends, let us meet the challenge.  May this be our finest hour.  May our approach to life in this season be a legacy to our country and a blessing to one another.

We have been thrust through the heart with the challenge of survival.  May we respond by thrusting our hearts and souls into the world for all to see.  We are American citizens, and we have the blood and spirit of our ancestors coursing through our veins.  This may be our greatest challenge, but we will not be beaten.
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First Day of Spring

3/19/2020

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Remember the good ol' days,
     When Spring Break was full of freedom and glee,
When we looked forward to a summer of fun and joy,
     When our biggest problem was deciding what to do each day?

Remember the good ol' days, 
     When we could visit our friends,
Hang out at the creek and play in the mud, ride bikes,  and play hide-and-seek
     When we could talk for hours under the starry skies?
How about those good ol' days,
     When we could go back to school and learn,
When we could find everything we needed at the store,
     When we could see each other face-to-face?

May we once again enjoy the flowers of springtime,
     Run and laugh with one another without a care,
Travel to far-off places and see the world,
     May we once again shake each other's hand.
Life is an adventure!


So all of our area schools are keeping students home for at least two more weeks after Spring Break, but it's not a vacation.  We're being told to stay home, stay at least six feet away from others, not touch our faces, and to wash our hands frequently.  Some schools in our country have dismissed classes for the rest of the school year. Teachers are making lessons available electronically.  School meals are being delivered or offered for pickup.

I don't know what this all means for the next few weeks and months, but I know this:  after the tornado ripped through Joplin in 2011, one of my friends emerged from his destroyed apartment and told me he had nothing.  My response to his despair was to let him know that he had everything, but now that it was all in front of him.  Perhaps it is time for us all to look ahead to what will be, rather than look at the present and see what we're missing.

Things are going to be interesting.  None of this seems real.  One thing is for sure:  life is an adventure.
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Monticello Teacher Institute:  Research

3/18/2020

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In applying to participate in the Monticello Teacher Institute for next summer, I had to answer some leading questions.  These took much thought on my part as I considered the seriousness of the goals for the institute.  As a conscientious person, I must realize that if I apply for a scholarship, including travel expenses, meals, and lodging, and if someone is willing to award me with such, then I must be respect that generosity by taking the award seriously.  In other words, I expect myself to put forth great effort to do the best I can if given the opportunity to visit Monticello on somebody else's dime.  That also means, in the second year of applying, I must consider revising or rewriting my answers.  This response was one that needed a complete overhaul.  I tried to make it apply in a more personal manner.
One of the questions on the application addresses research as a part of the institutes.  Here's the question (My answer follows.):  MTI gives teachers a chance to step into the role of historian and engage in research.  Provide a description of your proposed research focus.
​When Thomas Jefferson wrote, “I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical,” just what sort of tomorrow did he expect?  When he penned, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants,” and claimed, “It is its natural manure,” what was he predicting for the future? 
 
There are so many aspects of Thomas Jefferson’s life that intrigue me, but at the moment, I wonder what kinds of events would warrant rebellion.  For example, did Mr. Jefferson ever wonder if his writing would inspire a terrorist?
 
I taught five miles from the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City when Timothy McVeigh, wearing a t-shirt displaying the latter quote above, detonated a chemical bomb that killed 168 people.  I doubt Jefferson would have considered McVeigh’s actions an acceptable interpretation of his thought, but at what point would Jefferson lend his support to rebellion?
 
The answer may lie in Mr. Jefferson’s bolstering of the United States Navy to combat Barbary Pirates.  It may take time to trace writings and track changes in the third president’s tone and opinion concerning a larger naval presence on the seas.  I am confident that primary sources exist to support fundamental changes in Jefferson as he changed roles from ambassador to secretary of state to president to citizen.  At what point did he justify violent action?  At what point did he substantiate using offensive force?  At what point did he warrant putting American lives in harm’s way?  Returning to Continental Congress, at what pivotal point did Jefferson take sides against King George III?
 
His transformation in combatting piracy may reveal Jefferson’s Growth Mindset – something I would love to highlight to students.  Understanding that grit and open-mindedness carry us forward – even through ugly moments, historic failures, and tragic missteps – is an essential part of what I instill in my fourth graders every day.  To see our third president experiencing those struggles between diplomacy and combat, and to note any changes in his character, is to understand that the path forward, for any of us, will not always be smooth.  Not only that, but we must also recognize that understandings and opinions evolve as we encounter new information and events.
 
Every year, I present my personal account of the Oklahoma City Bombing to all of the fourth graders in our school in Joplin, Missouri.  Evidence tells me that McVeigh believed his actions fulfilled Thomas Jefferson’s prophecy of drawing the blood of tyrants, but I do not believe that Jefferson’s warning of rebellion was properly applied in the bombing.  Perhaps my curiosity will never be fulfilled, but studying the actions he took against the crown and against piracy may get me a little closer to what he really meant when he penned those particular thoughts.
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Third Quarter Honor Roll

3/17/2020

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Congratulations to the following students for earning Honor Roll accolades for the third quarter.

SERGIO
DAVID
CADYN
CAROLINE
AMELIAH
MATTHEW
LANDON
NICHOLAS
LACOTA
ELLA
JAH-KORI
BREANNA
LIAM
KARLIE
HUNTER
ABIGAIL

Look at our progress:
​
For the first quarter, we only had six on the Honor Roll list, with just two students having straight A's.


For the second quarter, there were nine on the list, four of these students with straight A's.

For this, the third quarter, we have sixteen students on the Honor Roll, with five displaying straight A's!
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