Exhaustion:
Happiness:
Sadness:
News:
Thanks, Tumblr community, for helping me get through this amazing roller-coaster of a first year of teaching. It meant so much to me to know you were (and are) all behind me.
I will write more/reflect on the year later, but for now I’m utterly exhausted and redder than a tomato.
I’m going to cry. I already started to cry in the shower this morning. I’m so proud of my kids.
We’re going on a last-day-of-school hike- could there be a better way to end the year?
But yes. There will be tears. I’ve warned the kids already and resigned myself to my fate, although I will try to hold off as long as possible.
Reblogging for myself to refer to later. Thanks, PPT!
I have been hoping all year that next year I could move up a grade. With that hope in mind, I’ve been pinning on Pinterest Daily 5 and Cafe Strategies ideas. It doesn’t look like I’ll be changing grades, so I thought I would at least share what I’ve found.
The books are written by Gail Boushey and Joan Moser.
Here is what I’ve found:
Daily 5 Resources from 3rd Grade Thoughts
Zap It - Game for Word work from Indulgy
Daily 5 Work on Words and Freebies from 3rd Grade’s a Hoot
Guided Reading 101: Printables, Strategies, and Word Work $8.50 on Teachers pay Teachers
Working on Writing - What do Writers Write Free Printable from the Teacher Wife
Story Starters from The Frugal Teacher
Daily 5 / Cafe Bulletin Board example from The Frugal Teacher
Wondrous Word Work from First Grader… at Last!
Reading Stamina Chart from F is for First Grade
Spelling, Sorting and Mapping (see first idea) - from Montessori Work
Anchor Charts from First Grader … At Last!
Bloom’s Taxonomy for Guided Reading from Mrs. Saylor’s Log
Literacy Cafe Menu from Pbaker
Read to Someone Spinner from Mrs. Crowder’s Busy Bees
Free Daily 5 Posters to download from Kindertastic
Daily 5 Handbook from Second Grade is Splendid (Part 1, see side bar on blog for the rest)
Daily 5 Power Point - Free - on Teachers Pay Teachers
More Reading Buddies Questions from The Picnic Pals
Free Daily 5 Introductory Lessons from The Best of Teachers Pay Teachers
Great Daily 5 Ideas from Beg Borrow Steal
Dr. Seuss Daily 5 Anchor Charts - Mrs. Saylor’s Log
Great explanation of how one teacher runs Daily 5 from Mrs. Vansko’s Teacherweb
If you are trying out Daily 5 / Cafe next year (or thinking about it) and plan on doing some research of it over the summer, I suggest you bookmark or reblog this post!
A co-worker of mine posted this on our PD site on Edmodo, and I think it’s great. It seems so bizarre to already be thinking about these things for next year, but it’s true. We have to start the year gently and build relationships slowly with our new crew.
Email from a parent:
I can’t believe this year is almost over. Every time I talk to [name omitted] about summer and school being over he gets sad and says he will miss you not being his teacher. You have done such a great job with [name omitted] this year and I feel like he has grown so much. Thank you! You may have a hugger coming up to you next year when ever he sees you in the hall.
I was feeling pretty down on myself this week, but this email made all the difference. I love this student and his family. The good news is that he has a younger sibling.
These are pictures from the third grade crews’ service learning project. We installed an outdoor music area in order to build community for our school. Students did research about music and sound, then designed a music area for our outdoor learning environment (OLE).
The students broke into groups, researched materials that could work, designed instruments, and wrote proposals. They also wrote surveys to ask the other classes throughout the school what they would like to see in the music area. Then, they presented their proposals to the board in charge of the OLE. The OLE board chose three instruments to be installed.
Students did research about what materials they would need and the costs entailed. We did a mini-genre study on donation letters, which students wrote to local stores to ask for the materials we needed for the instruments.
Last Saturday, we had a work day to set up the frame for the instruments. Yesterday, we finally installed the instruments. The instruments chosen were gongs, chimes, and drums. The final picture here is our final product… and it looks almost exactly like what our students designed.
After we installed it yesterday, students came up with norms that we delivered to the other crews in the school… and then it was open for business. It is loud (video is coming soon), but the kids are so proud. We are looking forward to developing and maintaining the music area as part of third grade’s service learning in the years to come!
Remember. Remember. You were so happy and so proud and loved all your kids.
So happy, so proud.
[Repeating until I forget how trying today was.]
Today, I was a part of something amazing at my school. I am the happiest, proudest teacher you could imagine tonight. My students (every single one of them) spoke eloquently and thoughtfully about their learning and growth to panels of adults this afternoon.
In the expeditionary learning model, students create portfolios of their work over the course of their school careers. They present these portfolios to panels of adults (teachers and members of the community) in third grade and sixth grade. It is an opportunity for students to reflect on their strengths, look back on their learning, and see where they can go next. Reflection is where much learning and growth happens, so it is an extremely valuable process for our students to go through. They have to articulate what they have learned, how they have grown, and what their goals are. After they present, the panel fills out a rubric for their portfolio and presentation. They also write a letter to each student, detailing what they noticed about their presentation and naming their areas of strength.
Over the last few weeks, we have spent a lot of time in our classroom practicing for these showcases. We practiced greeting the panelists, shaking hands, making eye contact, and reflecting aloud on their work and the culture of our school. This afternoon, between 1:45 and 4, all 70-some third grade students presented their portfolios to panels of 2-3 adults.
Some students were nervous; some were excited. Some had trouble preparing and weren’t sure they could do it. Today, every single one of my students had their moment to shine in front of a panel. They spoke eloquently about their work, answered reflective questions, and held their own in a situation many adults I know would panic over. Each of my students came out of their panel excited, happy, relieved… some were bouncing off the walls and others had a quieter aura of accomplishment. It was a true celebration of the students’ learning.
Everyone was smiling. Parents were cheerful; kids were beaming. Teachers, parents, and other panelists were complimenting the third grade teachers and our students. I am so thrilled to have the opportunity to celebrate students this way. It is rare for students to have so much individual attention, or so much time to reflect and grow.
In a few weeks, I will have the chance to sit on the panels for our sixth graders, and I could not be more thrilled. I wish more schools valued this kind of experience and built in time for it.
In short, I am so, so proud today.
So I’m sending emails to my old teachers to tell them that I appreciate them.
We’re talking a long time ago. Like 5th, 6th, 7th grade.
But seriously, they were awesome. So awesome.
Came in to this, courtesy of my crew parent, this morning. It is right outside my door- what a way to start Teacher Appreciation Week!
It was from a kindergarten teacher at our school. She’s been teaching for a long time and had one of my students in her kindie crew. He visits her kindergarten crew each afternoon. He helps out in the classroom and works with the little ones. It improves his mood and provides all of us a break from one another. It’s great.
Anyway, she caught me in the office and told me she had filmed this student reading aloud to her crew today, and that I need to see the video. She said that I must be doing some great reading teaching because while he was reading the book aloud, he stopped and asked the kindies to make predictions or share their thinking about the book.
I almost started to cry right there in the office. It is so nice to hear good things about your students and to have those nice things attributed to your teaching. Especially from someone experienced, whom you respect.
It was a good day.
Great little article on how the world views teachers. What does a teacher look like to you?
Interesting read. I’ve been told I look like a teacher for most of my life. Even when I was in middle school and said I wanted to be a teacher, friends and adults alike would tell me that I should— that I looked like I should be a teacher.
Even now, I’m very conscious of how I’m viewed. I take pride in saying that I’m a teacher, but I also say it with some trepidation. Everyone has an opinion about my job and how I should do it… even though I’m the professional and went to school for this stuff. Does anyone else feel this way? Proud- incredibly proud and gratified- to say that you teach, but also wary of admitting such a thing for fear of inciting the dreaded education discussion? Or people’s assumptions about teaching?
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