Friday, March 30, 2012

Very Hunger Caterpillar Giveaway Winner!

I loved reading your comments and emails about your favorite seasons!


My favorite season used to be ~winter~, but since Uncle Sam moved us to Oz, autumn has really started to grow on our family: the beautiful colors, cooler weather and jewel-toned harvest bounty are a wonderful transition from summer into the winter holiday season.


Our winner for the Very Hungry Caterpillar Pack said:




Spring! I love that everything is in bloom!
Linda

Congratulations Linda!  I've emailed you, so check your messages and reply back with your snail mail address that I can provide it to the Carson-Dellosa representative.

*****


~ ... and while Pinterest could *easily* cut into my family and weekend time (cough cough), finding treasures like these are terribly fun:
Photobucket


Try as I might, I couldn't find the true backlink to whatever teacher, parent, or blogger shared this image/idea originally.  If any of you know his/her identity, please leave a comment or email me so I can link back and credit the wonderful person.


Small red and green poms with teeny tiny wiggle eyes can be glued using either a hot melt glue or E-6000 adhesive onto wooden clothespins backed with magnet disks or strips... very cute!



Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Spring-is-on-its-Way Giveaway!

Years ago as a teacher in Alaska, my students and I enjoyed working together to identify the seasons: autumn, winter, spring and summer.

Autumn in Alaska is when the leaves on the trees change color and fall, the temperature takes a noticeable dip and stays there, and the scent in the woods is much less green and ever more cranberry-ish.  If it's a rainy year, it's muddy.  Autumn lasts about two weeks, so try not to blink or you'll miss it.

Winter is rather straightforward and long-lived.  It's snowy, cold, and dark.  Each morning as the hair in your nostrils frosts over, you catch the distinct smell of wood burning stoves.  You might hear the slow crunch of tracks being made by a moose in your backyard.  Block scheduling at school includes an extra ten minutes before the bell, before and after recess, and before dismissal for students to either take off and store all of their cold weather gear or to put it all on before stepping outside.  Daylight stays on the horizon for a very short period of time each day, so try not to blink or you'll miss it.  Winter can stretch from October to March.

Spring can begin in March, but sometimes holds off its solid start until April or even early May.  Despite the snow melting and warmer temps, people know not to bother washing their vehicles no matter how mud covered they might become.  Students alter their layers of clothing, swapping out snowpants for jeans or even shorts though it's still only twenty degrees above zero.  With the sun's return, everyone purchases sunglasses and watches where they walk or drive to avoid puddles, lakes, and potholes.  You won't be inclined to blink but you'll certainly be squinting as you await summer, noticing the buds on trees and the tiny spots of green popping up amongst the rotten slush-ice and debris that needs to be cleared away on an annual clean up day.  Summer is just around the corner.

When summer arrives, mosquitoes have hatched from every water source imaginable, and bare legs, arms, necks and faces wear more bug repellant than sunblock.  Students wear shorts and light shirts to school, teachers wear sandals and prep their homes for summer visitors, and many families give their green thumbs the go-ahead to dig in the dirt, plant seeds, or arrange glorious plant and flower varieties in hanging baskets, whiskey barrels, or tires left lining the driveway.  Green explodes overnight.  Aluminum foil covers many bedroom windows to block out the twenty-plus hours of sunlight.  Neighbors might mow their fast growing yards at nine or ten o'clock at night, and children are tan from all of the time spent outdoors.  If it's a rainy year, it's muddy.  The school year ends in May, just in time for everyone to soak up as much sunlight as possible before autumn returns after the solstice.

My Stars in Oz observe a more evenly distributed progression of the seasons.  Though school begins in August, it's still rather summer-ish in its warmth and appearance.  Fall begins in October, and winter can be finicky when deciding whether or not to provide students and teachers with snow days right before or immediately after winter vacation.  Spring is one of our favorite seasons because with the return of warmer weather comes flower blooms on many trees, worms crawling across sidewalks, and the promise of Easter egg hunts on freshly mown lawns.  Summer is hot, and can deliver a bounty of produce from the garden, along with mandating several hasty moves to tornado shelters and safe rooms.  

What observations do your students make as they track the change of seasons?  

*****

To welcome the return of spring, Carson-Dellosa is celebrating Very Hungry Caterpillar Day with a giveaway!  Check out the prize pack below:


Photobucket

To enter, please leave a comment *on this post only* telling me which season is YOUR favorite.  Please remember that I must have a way to contact you if you are the winner, so either leave a link to your own blog or an email address with your comment.  I'll pick a winner on March 30!


Good luck!



Saturday, March 03, 2012

Painful Perspective

Since my teacher of the year nomination, I've had the opportunity to not only host a tour of my school district, but to visit other districts here in Oz as well with KTOY nominees from our region.  Earlier this week our team visited two districts in towns only fifteen or so miles apart from one another.  As a kindergarten teacher, I greatly enjoyed sneaking peeks into other early elementary classrooms, but also experienced some revelatory and emotional moments in the middle and high schools we toured as well.

In my career I know I've been fortunate to teach students with the help of not only experienced and highly qualified colleagues, but with the involved support and encouragement of my Stars' families.  No, not every year was ideal.  Inexperience was a problem.  Horrific "parenting" made for long sleepless weekends and holiday breaks as I worried about whether or not my students were eating or escaping abuse or neglect.  Budget considerations always seemed to be the bottom line, no matter how much of a PR spin was fed to parents and other community members.  Like many teachers, I learned how to beg, borrow, steal, reuse, recycle, and creatively problem-solve to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear for the benefit of my students.  I've been rewarded for my efforts, being hired in each state we've moved to every time Uncle Sam had our family relocate.

For the past three and a half years I've worked in a district often referred to as "La-La Land."  I'm partnered with experienced colleagues and supportive administrators, and though we don't see eye to eye one hundred percent of the time, we can agree to disagree and try to compromise in the best possible way for our students.  Additional grade level colleagues or specialists are only a phone call, email, text, or two minute car drive away.  My classroom is equipped with most of the materials my students need each year for math, reading, science, social studies, music and movement and other creative explorations and constructions.  I have a SMART Board, iPad, laptop, five desktop computers, and share twenty four iPads for students.  Technical assistance is readily available when needed and professional development regarding technology happens regularly.  Our district has its own planetarium housed at my school.

The grass isn't just greener on our side of the fence, it's saturated technicolor GREEN in our neck of the woods.

We're not sipping lattes on lawn furniture for recess duty though. We're often caught in a whirlwind of change not only because of our exceptionally high student turnover rate (over half of our population relocates after one year) but because our district is always looking for the newest learning tool, effective/efficient program, or paradigm shift that will continue to give our students an edge.  Doing what we can to stay abreast of best practices, while well-intentioned can be exhausting.  Re-evaluating curriculum materials and curriculum-delivery-tools annually, mapping, flexing, PLC'ing, grade level planning, intervening, preparing and attending professional development, learning new SOP's for technology integration and usage and constantly updating those SOP's as we go along makes for a dynamic environment full of fast-paced evolution and change.  Toss in the shift to the Common Core and it's safe to say it's been difficult to find time to stop and smell the roses, much less maintain a regular family schedule.

Visiting other schools in the state, I've seen and been told about each district's issues, concerns, and strengths.  Visits will continue through May, as our team observes how each district interprets today's public school requirements for data, intervention and instruction, and how their resources, pace, and pedagogies compare to one another.  While inspired by the creativity and caring for students that I've seen, I have to remind myself to bring my bottle of Exedrin.  Seeing the struggles, hearing the concerns, and witnessing the cost to students and teachers as many schools struggle to stay afloat is migraine and even guilt-inducing.  I remember being in the thick of a constant battle zone when I taught in districts elsewhere.

Though grateful for my job, it's still difficult when I realize I'm feeling like some sort of survivor who made it out alive and intact, on parade in front of fellow educators still down in the trenches.

Friday, March 02, 2012

Today's the Day!

Thank you Dr. Seuss, for your wonderful stories and ~messages~.

Sure, I'm a Star Bellied Sneetch this year (and every year) partly because my students are Super Stars.

But I'm also a Sneetch because we should all be able to live without discrimination.