These ladies are working hard on their writing lessons, incorporating HM anthology readings and mentor texts. I loved teaching at the ASD academy with my new, dear friend Cindy. She is a gifted educator and I learned so much!
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Read to Write
These ladies are working hard on their writing lessons, incorporating HM anthology readings and mentor texts. I loved teaching at the ASD academy with my new, dear friend Cindy. She is a gifted educator and I learned so much!
Friday, June 11, 2010
The Show Must Go On
I was invited to watch this fifth grade class perform a musical version
of Little Red Riding Hood. It was wonderful - the actors knew their lines,
projected their voices, danced and sang with enthusiasm and looked
like they were having a ball! This teacher has created memories for
her students that will last their whole lives. I can just picture them as
little old men and women telling their grandchildren about the time
they were stars on the grade school stage. :)
Moving on...
Here are three of my work colleagues who are moving on in life -(see my entry below about their retirement party). Jane is going to be a state-wide mentor, traveling all over Alaska to work with teachers and Ann and Colleen are both retiring from teaching. Ann is going to be a snowbird - flying between Alaska and Arizona and Colleen has decided to study to become a preacher, spreading the Good Word to everyone she meets. I wish them all well!
Author! Author!
A kindegarten teacher shared these self-published books created by her students in the last few weeks of school. They are going to have an author's tea and read them to their parents. Look at the detail on the covers! Doesn't it just make you want to crack one open and read it?
Sunday, May 16, 2010
A time to say goodbye
Two of the six elementary literacy team members are retiring at the end of this school year. One is going on to be a state-wide mentor. Only three of us will still be here. In addition to saying goodbye to teammates, we're saying goodbye to business as usual- next year our job title and job description is going to change - probably in good ways - but still it will be new, different and a little uncomfortable at first. Goodbye dear friends - I will miss you! Please don't be far away, I know I'll be calling on you for advise and wisdom as I face new responsibilities and new adventures.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Written in Ink
Squids and poetry - a vivid literacy connection! This creative first grade teacher had me assist her during a squid dissection
project and a lesson on poetry. The highlight of the morning was when the kids wrote their names in squid ink retrieved from the ink sac in their squids innards. In between helping kids pop their squid's beaks out and locate the underside of the eyeballs, I wrote down their comments. Later, I read the "found" poetry aloud to them. My poem ended with the teacher's cheery question, "Who wants squid for lunch?" After we cleaned up the slime and disinfected the desks, I started working on a squid poetry link with the kids. The students were just starting to brainstorm sensory words when half the class from next door was shuttled into the room, due to an emergency involving the next door teacher's mother. (Real life - it happens.) So, I didn't get to see the actual poetry get written, but I do have a small slip of paper with my name written in squid ink. (Is that cool, or what?)
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
What's in a Name?
Monday, April 5, 2010
He who has the most words, wins!
A colleague and I just finished teaching a graduate class on robust vocabulary instruction, which we called, "Words, Words, Words." The feedback was so positive! Besides professional reading and exploring a number of on and off-line resources, we designed the class with some work time so that teachers could research and create vocabulary practice games and activities to use in their own classrooms. (I love the idea from a first grade teacher shown above- the kids throw a squishy ball into a grid and attempt to read the vocabulary word or use it in a sentence. If they are correct, they get to "keep" the word. The student with the most words wins. )The teachers were so appreciative. Teachers never have enough time!
Friday, April 2, 2010
Portland IRA Regional Conference
In February, I was very lucky to able to go to the IRA Regional Conference in Portland, Oregon, this year. The authors, literacy leaders, books, green grass and temperatures above zero were a big boost to overcome my winter doldrums. I've been sharing the latest literacy news with colleagues, friends and even my family!
Demonstration Classrooms
A huge bonus in my job is helping to arrange and facilitate demonstration classroom visits. I love the professional conversations that these visits inspire.
Syllables are my friends
I'm afraid students at some schools think of me as "the syllable lady," because I've been teaching so many model lessons about the six syllable types, syllable division patterns, affixes, roots and base words, lately. I do enjoy delving into words, disecting them and putting them back together again. I like giving kids tools to figure out those multisyllabic words that they usually just skip or "read around."
Thursday, April 1, 2010
A Place to Learn
As far as I'm concerned, the classroom environment is critical. I think children learn better when they feel safe, cared for, and know where to find stuff. There are lots of wonderful examples of encouraging classrooms in my district. Fun, happy places that children look forward to coming to every day.
Blah, blah, blah
Here's the sample butterfly blabber I created the night before I tried it in first grade. Sadly, I couldn't get it to work in the classroom...(read story in the previous post)
The Butterfly Effect
Butterfly Day in first grade. Here's the oral language project I designed: Wearing my butterfly sweater (a la Ms. Frizzle), I helped teams of students brainstorm, write and record butterfly "talk." They practiced and polished their lines while I wrestled with the technology demons. My goal was to publish the short blurbs on Blabberize, so that a "talking" butterfly would deliver their speeches. Alas, I could not get the bugs to blab - so we recorded them on Garageband, instead. We didn't get the cute butterfly pictures, but hearing their own voices still had a magical effect on the students.
The Office
Second Grade Writers

Second grade was the last grade I taught before becoming a literacy support teacher. They loved to write! - small moments, poetry, science notebooks, songs, stories, friendly letters (we had penpals) animal reports, fables and how-tos. The photo in my blog title shows former students performing a reader's theater written by one of the girls.
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