I want to break that habit and spend some time reflecting on the things that I did well. Some things, as I think back, are very small and some are pretty significant. But regardless, it's fun to celebrate the successes!
- Classroom Set Up
I've taught three different grade levels in the past fifteen years, in four different classrooms, including a trailer. Classroom set up has always been fascinating to me. This year, for the first time, I got rid of my teacher desk. Looking back I can see a slow evolution as the classroom became less mine and more my students. They own the space and feel comfortable in all of it. I have a hard time keeping them out of my little corner where I keep my purse and lunch and stuff! I do need a little space that's just mine.
We've got lots of little tables, a low table, a high table, different kinds of chairs (including some bean bags), a couch, and various nooks and crannies. I hope the room is as open as it feels to me and as welcoming and comfortable.- Use of Pens
- Communication with Families
- For homework every night my students must share about something from our day. I tell them what to share about (although they are welcome to share about more, of course!). Their homework is always three things: read, S.A. (share about) a part of our day, bed by 8. So they should be talking to their families about school every day.
- Our class blog. I, and the students, try to write on the blog and post pictures about three times per week. That doesn't always happen but we're pretty consistent. I take pictures all the time, including art, P.E., music, library, lunch, recess. So this should give a pretty clear sense of our days.
- Postcards home - I try to write to every student once each quarter. When they do something fabulous, academically or socially or whatever, I grab a postcard and write to them about it. I write to the kid because getting mail is super fun when you're six and I'm sure the parents will see it too. It's a win-win.



5 comments:
For a few years, I've been trying to post before the semester starts about what I want to keep, what I want to add in, and what I want to change. It feels like a great way to prepare for a new school year.
I love how calculus worked out last year. I departed from the textbook dramatically, but still gave them homework from the textbook (it's college - they need to do more homework than I can otherwise provide). I changed the order of the topics, so it made more sense, and I introduced ideas with activities instead of lecture.
I used visualpatterns.org in my precalc class. That worked well.
I continued to allow students to retest, and I think the fact that I was giving them that gave them more courage to face a class that was doing math very differently. (In the past, students have complained when I ask them to figure things out. They're used to learning a procedure, and practicing it. That's not what math is about.)
Wow, this so neat! All my elementary classrooms teachers had fairly traditional set-ups. I think I would have loved your classroom as a first grader.
Nothing constructive to add just a thank you for giving us a glimpse inside your classroom :-)
Sue, it is a great way to prepare for a new school year! I love that you've set your students up to take risks and feel confident in doing so. I certainly didn't have that in college.
sehauser, I think I would have loved it then too. That might be why I love it now!
Great success and nice strategies. Thanks for sharing! Hope you'll have another great successful year :)
Joe
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This is fantastic!
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