Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Morning Meetings Pt. 2

In class we do a morning meeting each class period. There have been many great ideas for morning meetings. As I experience morning meetings and collect ideas, my gears start to turn in my head at how I can use morning meetings in my classroom. Some may think morning meetings are a waste of precious time since there is so much to do in a day, but I think morning meetings are an addition of a way to enrich every aspect of the class, students learning, and students feeling accepted. Today my group did our morning meeting with the class. We did it around a theme and it turned out great. Our theme was Disney! I will outline what we did for you:

As students came into the classroom there was a poster waiting for them to read. The poster said, if you could live in any one of these ecosystems, which one would you choose? Listed were four different ecosystems. Ocean, Desert, Jungle, Forest. Students made a tally mark for whichever ecosystem they would choose. This poster was used for the end of the morning meeting.

We started with our greeting by standing up and singing one verse of the song "You've Got A Friend In Me" while patting our legs and clapping to beat. Each student would say, "Good morning _______" and whoever they said good morning to would respond, "Good morning _________". After each student was greeted they would sit down until everyone was seated. The last person would say, "Good morning friends!" and everyone would respond, "Good morning __________" Then we ended the greeting by singing the song one last time.

Here are the lyrics to the portion of the song we sang:

You've got a friend in me
You've got a friend in me
You've got your troubles, I've got em too
There isn't anything, I wouldn't do for you
We stick together and see it through
Cause you've got a friend in me
Darling, you've got a friend in me


We went to the next portion of the morning meeting which was share. For this we did a lightning share asking, "What is your favorite Disney movie?" After the lightning share we had three people sign up to share. We asked the question, "If you could be a character from any Disney movie, who would it be? and why?" Each person shared. After they shared they would say, "any questions?" After three people asked them a question and they responded they would say, "thank you! That was three." 


The third portion of the morning meeting was the activity. We played the game "Celebrity" with Disney character names. We prepared the slips of paper ahead of time with well known Disney character names folded up and placed into a bowl. 


Rules:

Each team has gets to perform for one minute increments.
Gameplay - Round One
In the first round, the clue-giver has few restrictions. He can say anything, as long as it's not part of the name, or a direct reference to the name.
Whenever a name is guessed correctly, the clue-giver sets that piece of paper aside and draws another from the hat, continuing until time expires or there are no names left in the hat. If an illegal clue is given, that piece of paper is set aside and another name is drawn.
When time expires, the team is given one point per correct guess, which can be marked simply by collected the correctly guessed names. Some players also like to subtract one point for each illegal clue.
Keep all of the correctly guessed names out of the hat, but return any that were set aside due to illegal clues. The next team then picks a clue-giver, and play continues until there are no more names in the hat. (Each member of a team must be the clue-giver before anyone is clue-giver for the second time.)
When the last name is guessed, make a note of which team is guessing and how much time remains.
Gameplay - Round Two
After the first round ends, the scores are noted and all of the names are returned to the hat.
Starting with the team whose turn was interrupted at the end of the first round, the second round proceeds in the same way as the first with one major exception: The clue-giver is limited to only one word (which can be repeated). Gestures are also permitted, as are sound effects.
Gameplay - Round Three
Starting with the team whose turn was interrupted at the end of the second round, the third round proceeds in the same way as the second with an additional exception: The clue-giver now cannot speak at all. Only gestures and sound effects are permitted.
Winning
After all the names have been guessed in the third round, the scores from all three rounds are added together. The team with the most points wins.
We did not do all three rounds due to time, but it was fun nonetheless. 
The last part of the morning meeting was news and announcements. We read the poster and made a bar graph using the tally marks from the poster. We talked a bit about ecosystems and which movies took place in which ecosystems. Overall, the morning meeting went well. 

Monday, September 9, 2013

What is Differentiation?

I am taking a class about differentiation. One of my big questions has been, "what exactly is differentiation?" Differentiation is a teacher reacting responsively to a learners needs. It means tailoring instruction to meet the needs of each of your students. Differentiated instruction is exactly that. Tailoring instruction to meet the needs of each individual, which are different for each student. The reading from this week came from a book called, Differentiation in Practice, a resource guide for differentiating curriculum. Part one of the book gives a great example of differentiated instruction, or parenting. It talks about how parents differentiate their parenting for their children because most children are not identical in the ways they approach life. Because each child has different needs, the parents work with each child differently to help them each succeed. We as teachers need to do the same. Each of our students will be different. Some students will be learning English as a second language. Other students will be amazing readers. Some will be struggling readers. Some students will excel in math while others will not understand even the concept of different operations. It is our job to know the needs of our students and help meet their needs so they can each grow and excel. Differentiating instruction will be harder than teaching straight from the book, but you will make a much bigger difference in the success of your students as you differentiate your instruction. Another book we read from this week was titled Fulfilling the Promise of the Differentiated Classroom. It suggests that a differentiated classroom can help all. Students who are learning at a faster pace, students who have difficulty learning, ESL students, students who have "given up", and students whose culture may be different from the norm. The book says that teachers need to take into account WHO they are teaching as well as What they are teaching. Differentiation takes active and consistent planning to help each learner move as far and as fast as possible along a learning continuum. Differentiation is definitely something I look forward to learning more about and hopefully become a teacher that will use it in my classroom!

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Morning Meetings

We had a guest speaker come to our class this past week and talk about morning meetings and what they have done for her and her students. I have seen morning meetings be done in a class and saw much success. One thing I really enjoyed about the guest speaker was something she said that really hit me and made me want to use morning meetings in my classroom because of the truthfulness of the statement. She said morning meetings are the only time throughout the day where 100% of her students are successful. Other areas of the curriculum you are going to have struggling students, but morning meetings make it possible for all your students to be successful in something. I will write more about morning meetings in another post.