Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Individual Conferences

Just the other day I had a conversation with a colleague that in a typical classroom, there is generally a four-year span in terms of ability levels between the lowest and highest performing students.  Of course, everyone else is sprinkled somewhere between those two outliers.  Are most of them clustered in the middle?  Likely.  Are they all?  We couldn't be that lucky!

So, how do teachers meet the needs of those students who are at the opposite ends of the spectrum and/or who are not performing at that middle, grade-level area?  Differentiating instruction and activities is certainly one way to address that huge gap. 

However, before a teacher can differentiate instruction, she must first truly understand her students as learners in order to best meet their needs.  Holding individual conferences is one way a teacher can gain this understanding.  Having that one-on-one time to meet with students is invaluable.  This is an opportunity to do informal assessments, give individualized instruction, and have conversations with students about their learning!

Like many things in education, individual conferences can look 100 different ways, depending upon how the teacher is choosing to use them.  For example, 
  •  Reading conference:  Teachers may...
    • have students read their independent reading book, followed by discussions around specific components of the book
    • have students read their independent reading book, followed by discussions around an area of need
    • complete a running record 
  • Writing conference:  Teachers may...
    • revise and edit a piece of writing with the student
    • analyze student's writing to determine area of need, followed by instruction/discussion with student (basically an individual mini-lesson)
    • analyze student's writing and discuss writing ideas
    • analyze spelling in writing and discuss specific components of word work
  • Math conference:  Teacher's may...
    •  analyze a piece of student work, giving individualized instruction based on student need
    • analyze a piece of student work, questioning students to better understand their mathematical thinking
    • informally assess a specific skill/concept
    • Individualized mini-lesson on area of need
A teacher can hold an individual conference for just about anything that she sees a need for.  The purpose of the conferences may change depending upon the need of the students.  Even when I have writing conferences, they may change from what I plan based on something I discover through looking at a student's writing piece and/or having a discussion with the student.  Our professional judgment is often a guide in terms of what happens at that conference.

Many teachers have specific forms they may use when holding individual conferences with their students.  Others, including me, typically take anecdotal notes during the conferences.  There is no right or wrong way...it's what the teacher finds most useful to record her students' learning and understanding!  

Individual conferences are some of my favorite parts of the day!  I love being able to give students that one-on-one attention and take time to only think about their specific learning needs.  It's a great opportunity to really get to know your students, which also fosters that  relationship building that we know is so important!

 

  

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Sympathies Sent

I can't have a teaching blog and not take a minute to acknowledge and send my heartfelt sympathy to our colleagues at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut.   My prayers are with the families of the precious young children and the beloved staff whose lives were taken so senselessly Friday. 

 

The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Move Beyond Worksheets and Workbooks

Many adults' school experiences consisted of lots of  worksheets and workbooks!  Blah!  Oh, what fun those were, relentlessly filling in the blanks, rewriting the sentences, writing down the answer to the problems, drawing lines to match words with definitions...the list of monotonous activities could go on and on!

Most engagement that came from the worksheets I remember doing, may have involved solving a puzzle when you get all the answers correct or getting to color in pictures with specific colors based on my answers.  Kind of makes me cringe thinking of that as engagement.

As educators, we need to give students access to the curriculum in ways that make them want to take part in the learning process.  By increasing that engagement piece, the students will be more involved in what they are learning, which in turn will likely increase their understanding of the skill.

So, what to do if we don't use worksheets and workbook pages?  Here are just a few ideas!
  
Games!  You can often accomplish the same outcome you do with a worksheet through the use of a game. 
  • Instead of having students fill in a bunch of antonyms on a worksheet, have them play a memory game, where they have to find antonym matches and then record them on a recording sheet or in a journal
  • Have students play the Product Game, where they have to use logical reasoning to choose factors in order to get four products in a row or to block their opponent from getting four products in a row, instead of filling out a page full of multiplication problems
  • Do a vocabulary match game with word cards and definition cards in social studies or science instead of having students sit and write definitions of words or doing a match worksheet
  • Have students play Fact and Opinion Kaboom, where they have to identify statements as fact or opinion (unless they pull a Kaboom! strip, which means they have to put  all their statements back into the container
Scavenger Hunts!  A scavenger hunt can be incorporated into most subjects!
  • Put informational texts in students' hands, such as newspapers, magazine articles, books, or websites and have them look for:  antonyms, synonyms, homonyms; cause and effect relationships; facts and opinions; possessive nouns; figurative language; etc.  This allows students to see how their learning fits into the world around them
  • Have students look for geometrical concepts in their environment:  types of angles, 2-D shapes, 3-D shapes, types of lines, etc.
  • Students can find examples of arrays around them when working with multiplication
Projects!  Especially when you want your students to demonstrate their understanding of a skill, have them use their creativity to create some type of project!
  • Replace a worksheet about the types of nouns by having them create their own informational text that describes and gives examples of common, proper, possessive, and plural nouns.  They can also show their understanding of the components of an informational text by including a table of contents, chapters/section headings, a glossary, and an index
  • Allow students to create a project of their choice (brochure, poster, Power Point, book, song/rap, diorama, model, mobile, etc.) to demonstrate their understanding of a concept in any curricular area
  • Create a Geometry Town that must contain specific geometrical concepts
  • Have students measure different body dimensions (arms, legs, shoulder to shoulder, shoulder to hips, head, neck, etc.) and then shrink their dimensions by a certain amount (fractions can be differentiated:  1/2, 1/4, 1/3, 1/8).  The students record the shrunken measurements (helps students apply understanding of skills such as measuring linear units, finding fractional parts of a number, fraction equivalences, and multiplying fractions).  They then use those measurements to create a shrunken version of themselves on tag board.  We even connect this activity to writing by having them write a story about their experiences as their shrunken selves
  • Students can build actual square or cubic units (inches, feet, yards, etc.), determine what they can find the area or volume of using those tools, and then use the tools to find the area or volume of those objects
Hands-On Activities!  There are also plenty of simpler activities to replace those monotonous worksheets that may not be considered projects because they are not the multiple-step, lengthier activities.
Honestly, the list of alternatives to worksheets and workbooks could go on and on and on and on!  I encourage everyone to think about what skill they want their students to practice or apply, and then think of how they can make that practice or application more engaging!  It may take some time at first, but once you create the activity/project/game/scavenger hunt/etc, you have it to use each year!  :-)