Saturday, July 30, 2011

Classroom Tour for Students

Do you have a web page for your classroom provided by your school district?  If so, take advantage of blog, photo, or announcement options that can help you communicate with not only your students' families, but your students themselves.

New kindergartners have registered at my school, and I've been sneaking in each day to arrange furniture, prepare bulletin board displays, clean tubs of manipulatives, and get that new-school-year magic mojo going.  Several shy students have come down to sneak a peek into their new classroom, but for those Super Stars who won't be able to visit until next week, I've prepared a photo-tour so they too, can get a glimpse of the fun things that await them!

Our school mascot, Buffalo Brad, offered to help:



I uploaded my photos to Photobucket so I could edit them and add "thought bubbles" so we'd know what Brad is "thinking."  Photobucket also has a slideshow tool where I'm able to select photos and put them in order, saving them with a simple *click* that copies the code that I can then just paste into the blog.

How do you use the web to communicate with families and students?

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In the comments:


gail said...


What a wonderful idea! I hope you don't mind if I borrow it. My classroom is still waiting for the floors to dry before I can put things in their places. Then I will take pictures. Do you have a favorite program for adding speech/thought bubbles?


Hi Gail!  Photobucket has the "thought bubble" as a text box option in its photo editing tools.  Once I've uploaded and saved a photo, I click on it, and scroll my mouse across the top of the photo.  A pop-up editing toolbar appears:  file, edit, resize, rotate, share, etc.  I click on "edit" and a new picture viewer opens up with photo editing tabs across the top of the picture:  Basic, Effects, Retro, Decorate, Animations, Beautify, Distort, etc.  Text or thought bubbles can be added by clicking the "Decorate" tab.  Stickers, Text, Glitter Text, Draw, Erase, Fill, Grab Color, Speech, Thought and several other options appear at the top of the photo.  Choose "Thought" and click on your photo in the area you'd like the bubble to appear.  You'll be able to select from some fun fonts, font sizes, select the color of your text, and can even make the background transparent if you'd like more of a "watermarked" effect (for Text, not Thought) on your photo.  Drag the text box to make it taller/shorter, narrower/wider to best fit in the photo.


You have to save the changes you've made to the photo, but I always "save a copy" (button below photo) so that I always have the original picture to work with at some later time, free of text or other edits.


Hope this helps!

Friday, July 22, 2011

Rethinking the Collegial Dynamic

Looking back at the photos from my very first classroom must have given my brain a bit of a jolt this week.  I've been reminiscing, remembering "new teacher" experiences, and rethinking the why's and wherefores behind my reasons for teaching, all while stapling up new bulletin board paper, trim, and thematic posters.  Despite my many years of experience, I'm yet again bruising my shins as I arrange short tables, chairs and learning center furniture.  Some things never change.

My thoughts have jumped between remembrances, a-ha's, criticisms, and affirmations.  Hindsight being what it is, I've even managed to come to an understanding about how important it is to continue to just be myself, despite changes at work.  My upbringing will always be that of a "teacher's kid."  I've taught in four different schools and districts in three different states, so my perception, interests and practice will be affected by those locales as much as the present one influences me.  Nothing will change my past work experiences, be they successes, bungles, or exercises in sheer endurance.  Most importantly, *I* have changed, and acknowledge that I am likely to continue to do so.

Like many new teachers, I didn't want to seek out help from my colleagues that first year out of college.  In fact, I didn't even want to admit that I wanted or needed input from a mentor!  I recreated the wheel, I stumbled, and I had to do everything myself, a hands-on learner to the very end.  I couldn't use a colleague's lesson plan template because I had to go through the motions of creating my own piece by piece. Yes, I lived at school, early mornings, late evenings, long weekends.  I had to learn by doing, not by taking the advice, patterns, or master copies from others.  It was a long year.  A long two years.  Three years.  Four.

Class sizes changed, curriculum materials changed, computers invaded the building en masse.  After a decade in the same school at the same grade with the same colleagues, I fell in love, married, and was relocated thanks to Uncle Sam.  I was called to interview for a job in a district I hadn't even submitted a resume or application to, and was hired immediately.  I learned that district's edu-acronyms, taught, and partnered with my only other grade level colleague, and learned first-hand what it meant to be part of a military family and what it meant to teach the children of our nation's armed forces.  I also learned to avoid taking the trash out at night because the sight of tarantulas cooling themselves on our walls creeped me out to no end.

Another military move and I found myself teaching in Oz while my husband was deployed.  The experiences from that year taught me I could endure just about anything with the right people at my side, and that despite hardship, I could still provide an excellent "first year of school" experience to kindergartners.  NCLB acronyms were added to my professional vocabulary, and I discovered online social media.  I began blogging.  I ranted, vented, and discovered an audience that commiserated with me, encouraged me, and helped me by offering ideas, resources, and counterpoint.  This new form of collegiality redefined how, when, and with whom I could interact and learn.  Teachers I'd never met began to dialogue with me, and they encouraged me to share with others.  Not only could I learn from them, I could teach them: kindergartners are a different breed, and not everyone has the knack that I apparently do.  I came to realize that what I know can help others beyond the walls of my own classroom, school building, district, state, and country.

Two more relocations and I found myself back in Oz, still in kindergarten, still teaching soldier's children.  Friendships and collegial relationships borne from the internet made the move with me, as did my blog.  If I wanted to recreate the wheel, I could, but even better, I could share it with others who were interested.  I found like-minded public, private, and home school teachers, and developed a strong appreciation for the professional reciprocity that was prevalent amongst those of us who "put ourselves out there."  Yet another district's edu-acronyms were added to my list, but by this time, it needed to be culled: is it a SIT team, a SWAT team, or the SEAL team?  You might be surprised at the kinds of looks you can get from new colleagues when you use the wrong acronym or term.  Even more entertaining are the mutterings about yourself you overhear when you work with colleagues whose experiences, though numerous, don't match your own.

I've been the new teacher, the brown teacher hired to maintain an affirmative action percentile, the affordable choice, the highly qualified, and the "best fit" for a district.  I've also been the square peg in a world of round holes, which colleagues come to grips with in their own way, in their own time.  Why would this observation make such an impression upon me after fifteen-plus years?  Because despite the semi-lengthy timeline of my own personal and professional changes and growth, my students and their parents have never seemed to need to make an adjustment when getting to know me.  We've laughed, shared, debated, and we've partnered, just as colleagues do.  Maybe parents and families have felt they have a more intimate understanding of my intentions as their child's kindergarten teacher.  Perhaps, out of necessity, I created a global professional learning network for myself upon which I continue to turn more often than the colleagues within my building.

Or I'm just an odd duck.

Something to ponder.

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(Image found here)

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Show and Share: My Very First Classroom

It's a good thing I found these photos and scanned them, because this classroom no longer exists:

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In fact, the school building that housed my very first classroom, and of course, my first group of Super Stars, no longer exists.  It was leveled to make room for a new building that bears the same name as its predecessor:

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Mis-matched tables and chairs, very little staple-board to think of (it's on the fronts of the metal sliding/swinging closet doors), and miles of green chalkboard.  This is where I first set up shop:

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The two doors with glass... those were my art supply shelves.  See the staple-board on the closed closet door?  Displays or posters had to be stapled on as flat as flat can be so that when the doors were swung open and slid into the closet, nothing would be ripped off.

Certainly edges were torn.  If the walls didn't snag the paper, the little fingers and hands of my students did as they opened and closed the doors each day to hang up snow gear and backpacks, or take it all down for recess or home time.

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Our single sink flanked by the classroom door and the only shelves available for my *then* non-existent class library.

Did you notice the baby carrier on one of the tables?  I was hired about three months after I had Dear Daughter, and after the school year had already started.

Dear Daughter will be seventeen years old tomorrow.

My first group of Super Stars are starting their senior year... of college.  Some are getting married.  Others have started families.

I don't feel old.  I feel... bowled over.

All I can think is... wow.


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Did you take photos of your first classroom?  If so and you've blogged them, link back in the comments section.  I'd love to come visit!

Monday, July 18, 2011

Identifying Learning Disorders by Looking at the Brain

Dr. Aditi Shankardass offers a second opinion on diagnosing learning disorders, suggesting that physicians actually "take a look at the brain" of a child who demonstrates communication and/or learning difficulties.  At this point, teachers and parents are simply able to observe a child's behaviors, making an educated guess as to what direction to move in to seek out remediation or interventions.  I'm fascinated and intrigued: could this specialized EEG accurately identify the cause of a child's behavior, removing the guesswork and substantially reducing the risk of potential misdiagnoses and their subsequent inappropriate interventions? 


Take a listen, and let me know what you think.


Kindergarten's 3 R's on Facebook

Click here to find Kindergarten's 3 R's on Facebook!  Comments, links, tips, questions and ideas that you'd like to share regarding kindergarten, early childhood education, and developmentally appropriate practice are welcome.

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I found some photos that I'm going to scan and blog for you tomorrow: my very first classroom!

Bare walls, mismatched furniture, and *gasp*, very few stapleboard surfaces... which just goes to prove we all start somewhere.

After looking at the photos, it appears I've come a long way since 1993.

As it should be.

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Saturday, July 16, 2011

Re-Thinking Learning Spaces

Any classroom teacher can tell you about the hunt: the hunt for the perfect classroom theme, the hunt for perfect room decor, the hunt for the boundaries that we use to help give structure to our students' learning spaces and activity areas.

We like to find a positive theme or character, or utilize elements from our state standards (remember, many of us are already making the transition to the Common Core) to create the environment we feel is most conducive to meeting diverse learning styles and engaging our students into as much active participation as possible .  Certainly teachers also decorate to make their room inviting and safe.

B-u-t...no matter what bulletin board display, pocket chart, potted plants, or seating arrangement we use in our classroom, typically there is one constant boundary that cannot be ignored, no matter how much butcher paper we staple over the top of it in an attempt to transform the space:  the four walls.

Teachers maneuver around the wall problem by going on field trips, utilizing videos, or going outside for a neighborhood walk, but these options have their drawbacks.  Field trips often require transportation and present a financial cost to families or the school.  Videos, while interesting and engaging, keep students as voyeurs, instead of providing them with hands-on experience.  Some neighborhoods simply aren't safe areas for children, no matter how many adult chaperones they might have walking with them.

So much has been said for making technology invisible, for making it as standard a classroom tool as books, pencils, Play Dough, unifix cubes and instruments, and for introducing and seamlessly integrating it into the classroom environment exactly the way it has been adopted and utilized in most of our homes.  As a teacher of young children, I know that the entire world is an experiential classroom for my students.  Why shouldn't more of our outdoor areas be recognized and utilized as daily learning spaces, integrating nature, healthy living, social awareness, play and curricular concepts?  Can students only learn effectively when they are contained within a building's walls, our own version of a styrofoam tabletop ant farm?

 Take a look at these, and let me know what you think.

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 (Photo by Katsuhisa Kida)

This is a kindergarten learning space encircling a tree in Japan- go here for the article and additional photos~

In addition to blacktop and gross motor playground equipment, why not provide students with a sensory garden/activity area that facilitates imaginative play while incorporating mathematical elements such as geometry (mosaic tiling) and organic science (wood, greenery, decorative and edible plants) into its design?  This sensory playground was designed and created by School Playground Designers in the UK with photos found here:



Like you, I'll certainly be selective about the paper I use on my bulletin boards this year, and I'll delineate my students' indoor spaces into safe and engaging activity centers, but I'll also be looking for ways to expand our learning environment past the staple boards, concrete, brick, and windows.

Want some more ideas?  Head over to Teacher Tom and check out his preschoolers' outdoor play area~

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Pieces of Flair: Teacher Humor and Truth

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...are you singing now?

(found here)


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... especially when the principal walks in and wonders if your lesson took a little detour!

(same Etsy shop, but here)

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... share this one with your librarians.

(here)

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(H-E-R-E)

...and ~cough cough~:

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(found here)

Thanks BeanForest!