Thursday, March 16, 2017

Learning Gestures

6 Hand Signals That Bring Learning to Life

    Editor's note: This piece is co-authored by Ellie Cowen and Megan Nee, a second-grade teacher at Brophy Elementary in Framingham, Massachusetts.
    Imagine that you're a student. Your class has just learned something new. Your teacher asks for someone to share his or her strategy for the problem that you've just solved. You're beginning to feel as though you understand the new concept, and you have a strategy that you could share, but something is holding you back. You're worried that your ideas aren't good enough to be voiced. You want so badly for your teacher and your classmates to know what you know, but the fear of embarrassment keeps you from raising your hand.
    Later, you're working in a group with your friends. Everyone else seems to have come to the same conclusion about a number pattern, but you've noticed a point where their reasoning goes wrong. Is it OK to tell your group what you noticed? You've been told that it's disrespectful to argue. How can you explain your thinking in a respectful way that is helpful and not hurtful to your group?

    The Power of Nonverbals

    One of the greatest challenges in teaching a classroom of diverse learners is determining what students are thinking and how they are feeling about the concepts being introduced or processed. Many of the thoughts that pass through students' minds would be of great value for their teachers to know, but opportunities to hear them can feel few and far between.
    In many classrooms, students use nonverbals to communicate certain thoughts when teachers introduce hand signals for bathroom breaks, "quiet" signals, and silent cheers. But teachers can look to nonverbals for more than classroom management. During discourse, visible and nonintrusive signals provide instant feedback for peers and valuable insight for teachers about students' moment-to-moment reasoning and comprehension of the content being discussed. Here are six handy hand signals to try (PDF):

    "Me, too!"

    The "me, too" symbol, derived from the ASL sign with the same meaning, is popular in American classrooms as an outlet for enthusiastic agreement. When a student hears a strategy or solution path that matches his thinking, he makes the "me, too" sign, acknowledging his classmate's reasoning, expressing that he had a similar idea, and communicating his understanding of what has been shared.

    "I have a point of interest."

    When students disagree with a statement that they've just heard or need to hear more so that they can follow the speaker's reasoning, they hold up a single index finger to express that they have a "point of interest."

    "I have something to add."

    The "build upon" signal consists of placing one fist on top of the other to represent the idea of "building." Students use this to express that they have something to say that will add to a classmate's idea.

    "I can paraphrase."

    Students make air quotes to express that they can paraphrase what they've just heard.

    "Complete the thought."

    This signal (made by touching the fingertips of both hands together in an "A" shape) can be used by teachers or students to remind a speaker that she needs to include a unit or a label, or to use a complete sentence to express her thinking.

    "I have a conjecture."

    After being introduced to conjectures (simple unproven statements about patterns in numbers or shapes), a group of second grade students devised their own "conjecture" signal: they place a fist, which represents an imaginary light bulb, on top of their heads to indicate that they have a conjecture to share.

    Focus on Reasoning

    Especially in early grades, sentence frames can help students articulate their thinking after they've used a hand signal. For example, sentence frames for the "build upon" hand signal may include, "I agree with _______ and would like to add _______," or "An example of what _______ is saying is _______." These sentence frames also direct students back to the classmate to whom they're responding, reminding members of the discussion that all are part of a community of thinkers and that their conversation is with one another, not just with their teacher.
    One word of caution: all nonverbals, including raised hands, are most impactful when they reflect a classroom focus on reasoning, not getting the answer. Teachers may have to monitor students' use of signals to ensure that their integrity as communicators of critical thinking is always preserved.
    Do you use signals in your classroom? What other academic purposes might nonverbal signals serve?

    Alternates to Popcorn Reading

    11 Alternatives to "Round Robin" (and "Popcorn") Reading


    Round Robin Reading (RRR) has been a classroom staple for over 200 years and an activity that over half of K-8 teachers report using in one of its many forms, such as Popcorn Reading. RRR's popularity endures, despite overwhelming criticism that the practice is ineffective for its stated purpose: enhancing fluency, word decoding, and comprehension. Cecile Somme echoes that perspective in Popcorn Reading: The Need to Encourage Reflective Practice: "Popcorn reading is one of the sure-fire ways to get kids who are already hesitant about reading to really hate reading."

    Facts About Round Robin Reading

    In RRR, students read orally from a common text, one child after another, while the rest of the class follows along in their copies of the text. Several spinoffs of the technique offer negligible advantages over RRR, if any. They simply differ in how the reading transition occurs:
    • Popcorn Reading: A student reads orally for a time, and then calls out "popcorn" before selecting another student in class to read.
    • Combat Reading: A kid nominates a classmate to read in the attempt to catch a peer off task, explains Gwynne Ash and Melanie Kuhn in their chapter of Fluency Instruction: Research-Based Best Practices.
    • Popsicle Stick Reading: Student names are written on Popsicle sticks and placed in a can. The learner whose name is drawn reads next.
    • Touch Go Reading: As described by Professor Cecile Somme, the instructor taps a child when it's his or her turn to read.
    Of the thirty-odd studies and articles I've consumed on the subject, only one graduate research paper claimed a benefit to RRR or its variations, stating tepidly that perhaps RRR isn't as awful as everyone says. Katherine Hilden and Jennifer Jones' criticism is unmitigated: “We know of no research evidence that supports the claim that RRR actually contributes to students becoming better readers, either in terms of their fluency or comprehension." (PDF)
    Why all the harshitude? Because Round Robin Reading . . .
    • Stigmatizes poor readers. Imagine the terror that English-language learners and struggling readers face when made to read in front of an entire class.
    • Weakens comprehension. Listening to a peer orally read too slowly, too fast, or too haltingly weakens learners' comprehension -- a problem exacerbated by turn-taking interruptions. 
    • Sabotages fluency and pronunciation. Struggling readers model poor fluency skills and pronunciation. When instructors correct errors, fluency is further compromised.
    To be clear, oral reading does improve fluency, comprehension and word recognition (though silent/independent reading should occur far more frequently as students advance into the later grades). Fortunately, other oral reading activities offer significant advantages over RRR and its cousins. As you'll see in the list below, many of them share similar features.

    11 Better Approaches

    1. Choral Reading

    The teacher and class read a passage aloud together, minimizing struggling readers' public exposure. In a 2011 study of over a hundred sixth graders (PDF, 232KB), David Paige found that 16 minutes of whole-class choral reading per week enhanced decoding and fluency. In another version, every time the instructor omits a word during her oral reading, students say the word all together.

    2. Partner Reading

    Two-person student teams alternate reading aloud, switching each time there is a new paragraph. Or they can read each section at the same time.

    3. PALS

    The Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS) exercises pair strong and weak readers who take turns reading, re-reading, and retelling.

    4. Silent Reading

    For added scaffolding, frontload silent individual reading with vocabulary instruction, a plot overview, an anticipation guide, or KWL+ activity.

    5. Teacher Read Aloud

    This activity, says Julie Adams of Adams Educational Consulting, is "perhaps one of the most effective methods for improving student fluency and comprehension, as the teacher is the expert in reading the text and models how a skilled reader reads using appropriate pacing and prosody (inflection)." Playing an audiobook achieves similar results.

    6. Echo Reading

    Students "echo" back what the teacher reads, mimicking her pacing and inflections.

    7. Shared Reading/Modeling

    By reading aloud while students follow along in their own books, the instructor models fluency, pausing occasionally to demonstrate comprehension strategies. (PDF, 551KB)

    8. The Crazy Professor Reading Game

    Chris Biffle's Crazy Professor Reading Game video (start watching at 1:49) is more entertaining than home movies of Blue Ivy. To bring the text to life, students . . .
    • Read orally with hysterical enthusiasm
    • Reread with dramatic hand gestures
    • Partner up with a super-stoked question asker and answerer
    • Play "crazy professor" and "eager student" in a hyped-up overview of the text.

    9. Buddy Reading

    Kids practice orally reading a text in preparation for reading to an assigned buddy in an earlier grade.

    10. Timed Repeat Readings

    This activity can aid fluency, according to literacy professors Katherine Hilden and Jennifer Jones (PDF, 271KB). After an instructor reads (with expression) a short text selection appropriate to students' reading level (90-95 percent accuracy), learners read the passage silently, then again loudly, quickly, and dynamically. Another kid graphs the times and errors so that children can track their growth.

    11. FORI

    With Fluency-Oriented Reading Instruction (FORI), primary students read the same section of a text many times over the course of a week (PDF, 54KB). Here are the steps:
    1. The teacher reads aloud while students follow along in their books.
    2. Students echo read.
    3. Students choral read.
    4. Students partner read.
    5. The text is taken home if more practice is required, and extension activities can be integrated during the week.
    I hope that the activities described above -- in addition to other well-regarded strategies, like reciprocal teaching, reader's theater, and radio reading -- can serve as simple replacements to Round Robin Reading in your classroom.
    Tell us your favorite fluency or comprehension activity.

    Friday, February 10, 2017

    In an effort to help cast a vision of Service and Compassion for our 4th/5th graders here is a project they are working on for Valentines Day!




    Dear Parents and Guardians,
    Recently, it was reported in the news that Valentine’s Day is a day that affects our elderly community in the most sorrowful way. This is due to the elderly who have lost their significant others, and they feel the loss again at this time of year.  💔
    We would like to approach Valentine’s Day as an opportunity to bring joy to some members of our community who may be forgotten or need a little cheering up.  In lieu of a classroom Valentine’s Day party, we would like to make Valentines for residents of the Heritage House in Buckley. The Valentines will be delivered💌 to Heritage House, by staff, after school on Tuesday.  
    We will provide some of the materials to make the Valentines, but if parents would like to send in supplies or prepackaged goodies🍫 to go with the Valentines, we welcome them.
    If students have already purchased Valentines for each of their classmates, they are welcome to bring them to school to distribute. We will send home a class list. Please remember we are not able to have homemade treats and there will not be time for a party that day.  ❤
    We are also hosting Jeff the Whale Tale guy for workshops and an assembly that day. 🐋 
    💓Thank you for supporting our efforts in helping kids serve their community.

    Mrs. Grace, Mrs. Thompson, and Mrs. Ward 💟

    Tuesday, January 10, 2017

    Weeks of 1/9 - 1/20

    DATES and Details
    1/11 - 1/13 - Winter Benchmarking
    1/11 - Principal/BLC AM Mtg
        Carla Out for Training
        3:35 - BLT Rm 32
    1/12 - WREA Rep Mtg with Nick
             ELA Gr 1-2 Team Mtg DDC (8:30)
             ELA Gr 3-5 Team Mtg DDC (12:55)
             Native American Field Trip 9 - 3
    1/13 - Schedule A
             Blue Friday
             2:15 Assembly Canceled

    1/16 - No School
    1/17 - Deb Out
             9:15 - 9:45 - 5th Gr GMS Counselors (Thompson’s Class)
             3:55 -PD 55 Min Mtg - Trauma Informed Schools Continuation- Stephanie Dann
             6:30 - PTA Meeting
             7:00 - “The Snowy Day” Play for Teachers- Seattle Children’s Theater

    1/19 - 9:30 - 1pm - WR Dist Choir Festival
    1/20 - Kathy Out
        Schedule B
        5:30 - Family PTA Bingo

    1/23 - RTI January Benchmark
             12:55 ELA 5th Gr Leveled Mtg
    1/24 - 8:30 ELA 1st Gr Leveled Mtg
             12:55 ELA 3rd Gr Leveled Mtg
             3:40 - Staff Meeting