Stay Positive

January 17, 2009

Here’s a shout out to my work community.

Lately, it seems like we’re all dressing better, buying tailor-made clothes and making recommendations on places to shop. We eat out together on a regular basis. We lift weights. We run. We play sports as a team of teachers against the students. We have a book club.

It’s a positive community. If you’re in one, appreciate it.


Alien Reads

January 15, 2009

Since my last expansion of the classroom library, I’ve had about 30 – 40 books signed out regularly and a higher turnover than usual.

Even better, I’ve had two reluctant readers come to me this week speaking about how greatly they’re enjoying their books.

Top of the pops:

  • Cormac McCarthy’s The Road.
  • Michael Crichton’s Jurassic Park.
  • Of course the Twilight series.

In-Class Debate

January 15, 2009

I have a method of debate that has worked well for me.

There is at least one judge / debate. Ideally there are six students per team and every student has a role (state your team’s argument, rebut the other team’s argument, conclude the case for your team). Each speaker is given two minutes.

The class starts with a resolution, such as “Romeo and Juliet could have prevented their deaths.” From there, the teams are given time to prepare their case and I use this time to train the judges and help them prepare for moderating a debate (ex/ make sure that you know what the person has said. Don’t be afraid to ask for clarification or to guide the student through introducing their points, citing evidence, and concluding. Be fair, polite, and confident).

The debate ends with a reflection period (What skills are necessary to do well in this activity? How do you feel about your performance in this activity?), which the debaters will reflect upon and share with the group. While this is happening, the judges prepare their comments (one note of achievement and one area for improvement).

Finally, everyone journals something they’ve learned during the activity. This activity tends to produce quality journal entries.

Much depends upon the character and social skills of the judge. The grade the judge has in your class is far less important.


One reason to hold steady on your assessment

January 15, 2009

Our school’s IT guru reports that her students often check their online grades for my class during her computer programming class.

The only thing that I’ve done to earn whatever level of student awareness is steady timing in feedback.

I tell students when I plan to mark their assignments, mark them during that time, and immediately post the scores.


Exaggeration and Farce Lesson

January 10, 2009

My lesson on exaggeration and farce (in preparation for The Brute) went well.

On the board, I’d written that students were expected to understand concepts “exaggeration” and “farce,” be able to identify ways to tell that an author is writing in a farcical tone, and analyze why we’re attracted to farce.

  • We started by distinguishing truth from exaggeration. I told two stories and asked students to vote whether I was truthful for exaggerating. We then shared our own stories in groups.
  • We then identified a list of human characteristics (ex/ confused, angry, and beautiful) and from there broke into groups of two. Each group had one person that represented the “true characteristic” and one person that represented the exaggeration. Then they switched roles (The best was tall, in which the shortest girl in the class was “tall” and then the tallest person in the class stood on a chair and looked down at her to represent exaggeration). I asked students to journal their definitions of exaggeration, inviting them to draw whenever possible. They were good notes.
  • There was a lot of laughter in our truth vs exaggeration activity, which worked well with my introduction to farce. We identified common jokes that can be found in farce and made connections to popular movies including Scary Movie 4 *.
  • From here we worked on ways that one expresses farce in written English by taking a statement made in MSN and then applying techniques of exaggeration. Sadly, there are no emoticons in The Brute, but we otherwise, we produced a solid list that we’ll be able to use while reading the text.
  • The class was open at this point and we came up with some theories about why people enjoy farce. Journal.
  • Review concepts as a class.

I felt that the lesson was successful, though I feel some guilt that there were few tangible resources in this lesson and in some ways it required very little preparation. However, it included student interaction through speaking, listening, and action. There were cultural references to frame student comprehension. Even my most reluctant readers took notes.

* I have not watched Scary Movie 4, but it was easy to pretend that I had.