Friday, October 26, 2018

The Sequence of Literacy

Teachers,

Here is your weekly dose of “5-Point Friday

The Sequence of Literacy—
What do we teach first when there is so much that needs to be taught to a student that is missing so much? This is a question I had for years after I assessed students and found those that needed everything in literacy. Here is the sequence from beginning to end. If they are missing any of these pieces, the next steps might improve, but not in any way as much as if the beginning skills are mastered.
  1. Oral Language Development
  2. Phonemic Awareness
  3. Phonics Decoding
  4. Fluency
    1. Accurate Reading
    2. Appropriate Rate
    3. Suitable Expression
  5. Vocabulary
  6. Comprehension
As the first three are mastered, Fluency is the next step. Fluency is not a predictor of comprehension. It is fluency. Vocabulary is the most important factor in reading comprehension. There is no guesswork here. This is the research. This is literacy and eventual master of literacy. Starting at number 1 and mastering each area. We can’t skip any part of tis sequence. If there is a need, there needs to be instruction.

Quote I’m pondering —
“The truth knocks on the door and you say, ‘Go away, I'm looking for the truth,’ and so it goes away. Puzzling.” 
— Robert M. Pirsig

What’s Happening This Week —
Monday, Oct. 29 - Lexia Training (K-2 English Teachers)
Monday, Oct. 29 - PLC Day (DSU classes)
Wednesday, Oct. 31 - Halloween Parade. Staff Picture after school.
Friday, Nov. 2 - Utah Food Bank after school
Friday, Nov. 2 - PTA iParent Meeting at 8:15 am
November 12-15 - SEP Conferences

Favorite Article This Week —
Focusing our meeting to make them more effective will benefit our students and our focus. These are three great questions to use.

A Big Thank You —
Thank you 2nd and 3rd grade teachers. Thank you for taking extra time and working with your students that need a little extra attention. This has been a hard couple of months for you and we know how hard you are working. You are putting in a lot of extra time and effort to plan and work through the new program in two grade levels as well as work with very active students. Thank you for all you do for them. You are so important to our school and especially to our students.  Thank you for all you have done. Thank you.

I appreciate all of you and your hard work.

Friday, October 19, 2018

Revisiting a Previous Post “Planning for Substitutes”

Teachers,

Here is your weekly dose of “5-Point Friday.

Revisiting a Previous Post “Planning for Substitutes” —
I was talking with the Community Council on Wednesday afternoon and we were talking safety and concern came up about how substitutes will know what to do in case of an emergency in a classroom. So I thought about this. I would like for every teacher to put together a Substitute Information page that you can leave out whenever you have a sub. It is a page that will not include daily plans but will include information that a sub might like to know to help run your classroom better. Procedures that are used all the time and are not written into lesson plans. Topics like; procedures during an emergency fire drill or any emergency drill, How do students line up, How you deal with situation in your classroom, procedures for students using chrome books or iPads in the classroom, how you call on students, procedures for specials and PE, and any specific times students go to ELL, Resource, Speech, or other places, How you line up to go to iReady… There are many things that are procedures we see every day that you might like a sub to know when they come to your room. When you put this list together just print it and put it next to your sub plans when you have a sub. If you would send Anita a copy of the Sub Info also she can print it if there is ever an emergency. The biggest piece of information we would like on this page is what to do in an Emergency. Where to go, how to line up, who to they report to, and anything specific they need to know that will help them through an emergency. 

Quote I’m pondering —
“When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe.”
— John Muir

What’s Happening This Week —
Wednesday, Oct. 24 - 3rd Grade to Symphony
Thursday, Oct. 25 - Reflections Awards 6:00pm
Thursday, Oct. 25 - Jennifer Throndson Observation
Friday, Oct. 26 - Jennifer Throndson Training. 4-5: 7:45, K-1: 10:30, 2-3: 12:30
Friday, Oct. 26 - Red Ribbon Week Assembly
Monday, Oct 29 - Teacher Training Day (out at 12:15, sign up for your training at DSU)

Favorite Article This Week —
A thought about praising students for being smart. Here is an interesting definition of smart in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

A Big Thank You —
Thank you First grade for all the work you are putting into your “Power 50”. Thank you for all the work you are doing in putting the lessons together for each of your groups. We appreciate all the data you collected and how you used it to identify all the different needs of students and are moving them fluidly into other groups, as needed. Thank you for taking the time to spend time with all your students to get to know them. You have really taken the time to show your students you care for them. We appreciate your efforts for your students. Thank you for all you do. Thank you.

I appreciate all of you and your hard work

Friday, October 12, 2018

The Magic Formula

Teachers,
Here is your weekly dose of “5-Point Friday

The Magic Formula—
A couple weeks ago I was talking with Bob Sonju and I notices a huge math formula on Poster paper in his office. I asked him about it and he told me there is a formula for knowing if a student will be successful in school and get a bachelors degree in college. There were many things on it about what courses they are taking and the overall achievement of the student’s cohort and other factors like that. But the biggest factor was the quality of the teachers a student has each year. It also depended on the cumulative effectiveness of teachers in the student's life. High-quality teachers, year after year, is strongly related to student achievement and increase the probability that a student will go on and obtain a Bachelor Degree. Teachers are the number 1 determination that students will be successful. You are the difference in each students life. Teachers put in so much work and worry over students and in the end, it does pay off. We might not see it in the numbers, but we can see it in the attitude and how comfortable they are with being in school. It is amazing how a student relies on the safety and security of a school. It is not the building, it is the teachers. Teachers are the magic formula in education. The math formula proves it. But we already know you are the magic formula. Thank you for all you do.

Quote I’m pondering —
Worrying does not take away tomorrow's troubles, it takes away today's peace. -- Anonymous

What’s Happening This Week —
Monday, Dec. 3 - First Grade Activity
Monday, Dec. 3 - Jennifer Observation Day
Tuesday, Dec. 4 - Jennifer Training Day
Wednesday, Dec. 5 - Dental Presentations 3rd, 4th, 5th grades
Friday, Dec. 7 - Utah Food Bank at 2:15
Friday, Dec. 7 - Staff Christmas Party

Favorite Article This Week —
There is a sentence in the end that says “Fear leaves us trapped, but it oddly squashes future fear about giving things a shot.” Don’t let fear prevent ourselves from doing things in that might make us better. Mistakes are ok. 

A Big Thank You —
Thank you fifth grade for all you have done this year. Power 50 in the upper grades can be frustrating because of the learning spectrum from Pre-K to above 5th grade. Thank you for taking the time and working through the best way to differentiate and work with your students. I also want to thank you for letting Oyunn work with you as groups are identified and lessons are planned. Thank you for all your hard work out in for the students. Thank you for all you do for your students. Thank you for all you do. Thank you.

I appreciate all of you and your hard work.

Friday, October 5, 2018

What’s your Motivation

Teachers,

Here is your weekly dose of “5-Point Friday

What’s your Motivation—
How do we get our students motivated to learn? Each class has a student or two or more that seem like they don’t feel what we are doing will matter to them. They feel unmotivated by education or anything in front of them. This is a tough situation.  I found an article that talks a little bit about how to motivate people in general. It is not what we might think would motivate someone. Sometimes we think that finding someone successful and trying to do what they do will get us to where we want to be, but a couple leading psychologists did research on motivation and tried something a little different. Instead of having the unmotivated listen to advice or someone that knew the concept, they had the person teach the concept to someone else and give advice to them. They found that giving advice or teaching increased the person's confidence and gave them a little more motivation in their lives. I wonder how this would work with students? If an unmotivated student can, in some way, help another student learn a concept it might give them a little more confidence to keep learning and teaching. Interesting thought about motivation. 

Quote I’m pondering —
“If your compassion does not include yourself, it is incomplete.”
— Jack Kornfield

What’s Happening This Week —
Mon., Oct. 8 - Ballet West Assembly
Wed., Oct 10 - Vision Screening
Thurs.-Fri.- Oct. 11-12 - Fall Break
Oct. 18 - Dance Festival
Oct 25-26 - Jennifer Throndson Training

Favorite Article This Week —
We are finishing up our Wellness Center and hope to have it ready to go right after Fall Break. 

A Big Thank You —
Thank you Heather B.for all you have done this week. Working two jobs (yours and Stephanies) to keep the Power 50 and Sped going at the same time. You have done an amazing job keeping the groups up as we search for a replacement sped aide. You are so positive with students, so helpful with teachers, and so flexible in your job to make sure everything is in place. And then to be planning for a wedding, what an amazing person you are. Thank you for all you do for students. Thank you for all you do for our school. Thank you for all you do. Thank you.

I appreciate all of you and your hard work.