Several years ago, my attempt at an after school book club at our middle school was a rather spectacular failure. I didn't have one the next year; but never one to give up, I held the hope of a second attempt in the back of my mind.That year, our 6th graders had the good fortune to experience a week-long outdoor education experience at North Bay camp in Northern Maryland. They were put in same gender groups and boys and girls did not mix for the entire week. The dynamic was so interesting that I wondered if maybe it could be the answer to my book club dilemma.Thus, the Guys Read and Readergirlz clubs were born. Each group has their own meeting once a month. They read different books and have very different meetings.
How did I entice boys to come to a book club? Food, messy science experiments and shameless promotion. Each meeting starts with food and social time, much of which is spent with much "Can you top this?", jumping around and seeing how much food each guy can fit in his mouth all at once. After the guys refill their food and drinks, we discuss the book we've read for the month. Everyone participates unprompted and the conversation is startlingly honest - boys are not afraid to call each other out. After the discussion, I introduce the book for the next month by reading a portion of the first chapter aloud. Then we make some sort of huge mess in the name of science. We've made our own silly putty, put LOTS of Mentos into diet soda for a geyser contest and videotaped the results, made baking soda and vinegar bombs with balloons and launched them in the parking lot and played with oobleck (cornstarch, water, food coloring) in assorted colors. Today we made magnetic super putty using fart putty and iron shavings, then played with it using magnets. You can not imagine what a hit this was, though I had to allow about 10 minutes of fart putty play time before we started magnetizing it.
We have only two rules in Guys Read:
1. Respect one another - This means no mockery and you listen when someone is talking during book discussion.
2. Don't spill your soda on the carpet
So far this has worked. The boys seem to appreciate that I trust them and don't mind how loud and boisterous they get. Though sometimes they need to be reminded we have the two rules, they've been remarkably good. Our band director started coming to our meetings last year, and as he is an actual guy it adds much to our meetings in fun, point of view and modeling how to misbehave within limits.
This month we are reading A Tale Dark and Grimm by Adam Gidwitz. The Guys seem excited and so am I.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
If the first plan doesn't work, be flexible!
The art teacher in our building and I have been trying to plan a collaborative lesson that combines art and technology. We had reserved the library for her classes to come in tomorrow and the next day; but today discovered some glitches in our original plans. So what do you do when the photography software has not been installed (plan A), the search terms for images to complete the project might possibly bring up items that are not school appropriate (plan B) and you have no common planning time?
Lunch!
Thankfully, the Unified Arts team has a common lunch time so the art teacher and I could sit down and brainstorm a plan D. Over our lunch bags, we grabbed a couple of iPads and together came up with an activity that uses the photo capabilites of the iPad along with the ColorSplash app to complement her lessons on Keith Haring. As a bonus - the color printer to publish the students' finished projects for display and USB adapters that will allow students to save their completed projects to a jump drive. We'll have to delay our lesson another week or so to allow her to complete the unit she's currently teaching, but it will allow us to have a lesson that will integrate technology in a meaningful manner.
Technology is a wonderful, but not always dependable. Today's lesson: be prepared, be flexible and be ready (and open) to modify your plans on the fly.
Lunch!
Thankfully, the Unified Arts team has a common lunch time so the art teacher and I could sit down and brainstorm a plan D. Over our lunch bags, we grabbed a couple of iPads and together came up with an activity that uses the photo capabilites of the iPad along with the ColorSplash app to complement her lessons on Keith Haring. As a bonus - the color printer to publish the students' finished projects for display and USB adapters that will allow students to save their completed projects to a jump drive. We'll have to delay our lesson another week or so to allow her to complete the unit she's currently teaching, but it will allow us to have a lesson that will integrate technology in a meaningful manner.
Technology is a wonderful, but not always dependable. Today's lesson: be prepared, be flexible and be ready (and open) to modify your plans on the fly.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Ideal Classroom Grant
Last year I was selected, along with two other teachers in my school, to be a part of our county's team for the state STEM initiative. Over the past year and a half we've attended 12 days of training in Discovery Streaming, GPS, GIS, Google Earth and project-based learning, participated in 40 hours of online and face-to-face professional development and had the opportunity to attend state and national conferences. We designed and implemented lessons using the technology we'd be learning and shared them with teachers from other counties in our state.
As part of the STEM initiative, we had the opportunity to apply for an Ideal Classroom grant. This grant asked us to choose technology that we would like to have in our classroom and specifically describe how we would integrate this technology into our teaching. I was thrilled to find out last June that one of the other teachers in my building and I had our grant requests fully funded. Although our grants were individually done and we received items unique to our subject areas, she teaches science and I am a media specialist, each of us requested and received a class set of iPads (30) with a mobile charging cart, a wireless color printer and funding for apps. These arrived in our classrooms the day before the students did and it has been a time-consuming (in a good way) process to familiarize ourselves with the technology and find ways to integrate it into our respective curricula. I feel fortunate that there are two of us going through the process in our building as it gives us someone to bounce ideas off of, another mind to help with troubleshooting, and a second set of eyes to critique lessons when possible.
Dynamic? Yes! The iPads have been an incredible addition to the media center. They serve to motivate and engage my students and have caused some of the teachers with whom I work to start looking at their curricula differently. I will be sharing some of the lessons on which we have collaborated and how these collaborations have impacted student learning.
As part of the STEM initiative, we had the opportunity to apply for an Ideal Classroom grant. This grant asked us to choose technology that we would like to have in our classroom and specifically describe how we would integrate this technology into our teaching. I was thrilled to find out last June that one of the other teachers in my building and I had our grant requests fully funded. Although our grants were individually done and we received items unique to our subject areas, she teaches science and I am a media specialist, each of us requested and received a class set of iPads (30) with a mobile charging cart, a wireless color printer and funding for apps. These arrived in our classrooms the day before the students did and it has been a time-consuming (in a good way) process to familiarize ourselves with the technology and find ways to integrate it into our respective curricula. I feel fortunate that there are two of us going through the process in our building as it gives us someone to bounce ideas off of, another mind to help with troubleshooting, and a second set of eyes to critique lessons when possible.
Dynamic? Yes! The iPads have been an incredible addition to the media center. They serve to motivate and engage my students and have caused some of the teachers with whom I work to start looking at their curricula differently. I will be sharing some of the lessons on which we have collaborated and how these collaborations have impacted student learning.
Friday, October 21, 2011
The Dynamic Library
If you type define:dynamic into Google, you receive the following definition:
This blog will chronicle ventures that are successful and those that are, well... less-than-successful, as I strive to keep the media center at my school dynamic. Feel free to post your comments and suggestions.
dy·nam·ic/dīˈnamik/
| Adjective: |
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