Thursday, February 23, 2023

Thursday Thriller February 23, 2023

 Thursday Thriller

February 23, 2023


Photos from the Field

Michelle was honored Tuesday night at the School Board meeting for passing her National Boards!  Congratulations, Michelle!




Nuts-n-Bolts

1. Please make sure and review this video in regards to your voice amp.  system safety feature.  Definitely one of the perks of the system.  Thank you to those of you who are consistently wearing yours. It is about CLARITY not volume.

2.  Refusal to Work -We are keeping students in for one day.  This is not a two-three day thing.  The goal is for students to understand that when they choose not to work AFTER reminders they lose lunch to complete what they didn't get finished.  There is a tab for each grade level.  I will do a better job of adding notes.

3.  Let's all remind students to dispose of their candy wrappers in the garbage and no eating in the hallways.  If you are allowing students to eat in your class, they need to put their food away before the end of class so they aren't eating in the hallways.  Thanks!

4.    Students are making growth!  Your collective efforts with iReady Wednesdays, class incentives, ELA and Math departments work on Wednesdays with data IS PAYING OFF!!! Great job!!!!


READING


MATH
We are closing gap!  This is only a half a year!
Instructional Usage (What students are doing during iReady Wednesdays this year)
22-22 Data
This year!!

Students are closer than last year to reaching their typical and stretch goals in math!!! The iReady Wednesdays plus attention to the promise standards, CFAs, Collaboration on Wednesdays IS MAKING A DIFFERENCE!!!


5.  March 31st we are going to do an assembly and activity 'day'; clumping it all together.  Scott worked out details with ASB.  This will be an assembly to recognize winter sports athletes, music students, and iReady growth.  The assembly will be 35 mins.  There are a few games planned as well.   
The activity hour will be for those students who complete their iReady lessons on the pink cards. 

6.  Collective Commitment Reminder-teaching bell to bell.  Students SHOULD NEVER be lined up at the door before the end of class.  Entry and Exit tickets

How to Make Use of those Last Minutes?

There is an additional benefit to class planning: you can now use the final minutes of class in an activity that not only can hold the students’ attention, but can help you significantly in understanding what they got out of the class and how you might want to begin the next class. Use the last 2-3 minutes of class time to have them write. They can write a “muddy-point” commentary, noting something that they didn’t understand or would like further discussed in the next class. They can focus on the 1-3 points that they learned from that class. Or they can look ahead: what are their preconceptions of the next class. (I have posted a very short article on this topic, “The Final Three Minutes with 100 Undergraduates,” by Robert Hampel, on CTIE’s Blackboard site. It appeared in the most recent edition of College Teaching 62 (2014): 77–78.) These short exercises have the advantage of focusing student attention on a very defined task for the last few minutes of class rather than on wondering when you will stop talking, giving you an important idea of what they learned (or didn’t learn) in the class, and allowing those who have more to say (and who have the time to stay) to spend a minute or two more than the others with their comments. (Of course, there’s still the next instructor assigned to the class looking through the door wondering when she’ll be able to get in!)

Something to Ponder

The power of  Learning from Mistakes and test Retakes.

While I am not a 'stand and deliver' type of teacher nor is it very effective way of teaching (lecture model, students take notes, answer questions at the end of the chapter), there are multiple ways to engage learners in the lecture through note taking.  How are we (Garrison) teaching students to take notes from 6th through 8th grade so the art of note taking builds upon itself?  Are you giving feedback on the notes students are taking? Is a consistent model being used throughout contents so students are familiar with the process?

Here is one strategy that promotes good note-taking but it also outlines how important it is to give feedback to students on their notes.

Quote



Smile

People are Amazing video. This put smile on my face as well as made me think of the hours of practice put into these feats!  Not to mention the number of times these people failed but kept on going and pushing.


CALENDAR of EVENTS

Thursday, February 23- District Strategic Planning at the WA HI commons, dinner at 5:00, planning 5:30-7:00.  The 'planning' portion is where community, parents, staff round table about what is going well and what we need to strengthen for the WWPS. 

Friday, February 24 -GC @ 7:45 in Agnes' room, Happy Birthday, Sydney!!!

Monday, February 27th -Scott and Kim at MS Admin meeting until 9:00, Scott and Kim at Admin meeting 1:15-3:30

Tuesday, February 28th Happy Birthday, Becky Jo!

Thursday, March 2nd -8:00 AM 8th grade SST


Thursday, February 16, 2023

Thursday Thriller February 16, 2023

 Thursday Thriller

February 16, 2023


Phots from the Field

Spirit Week has been SUPER FUN!!!



Micah made Jami take her hat while they drove to school 😆

Connect Four in 7th Grade Math




Nuts-n-Bolts

1.  Thank you for your participation in Spirit Week!  Kids love to see the adults dressed up AND who would have thought the stick on tattoos would be a hit?  Awesome job, ASB!

2.    Kim Kelsay is going to sending out information about the WIDA assessment.  Identified students will be assessing in March.  I did ask if we could move this assessment to later in the spring. Answer was, "No."  Washington state sets the dates.

3.   Hopefully, you played the 4 min impromptu video I made at lunch yesterday.   I want to hammer home that opting out of learning is not an option.  We are not going to power struggle with students to get them to learn because we know how that ends up.  We will give them prompts, reminders, etc. to help them. The Google Sheet is for Refusal to Work at lunch time is there for you to place students name, what they need to work on and if in 7th grade which lunch.  I'm willing to try anything.

4.  Next week is our Garrison Family Night-Hidden in Plain Sight.  This company brings in a real bedroom, sets it up and speaks to the attendees about how and where students could be hiding drugs, vapes, etc. 

5.  We are working on the bells.  The school is divided into zones. Turning one part of the zone off or reducing the volume in one portion of the zone is not optional-it's either all or none.  We think in the gym we will be able to get a blinking sensor to signal beginning and end of class.  I appreciate your patience. We will work to problem solve the issues. This Friday we will have another song :D  If you have concerns related to the bell, please them here.

With our new system comes a safety feature.  Someday I will learn to make good videos.  Please let me know if you have questions.  The alarm is truly for imminent danger, student out of control and you are fearing for your safety and that of students, intruder, etc.



6.  Shout out to our Sunshine/Social/Fun Making Committee -Stephanie P, Shannon and Beth!  The potluck was AWESOME!! I hear the Karaoke was entertaining😆

7. Please FILL IN THIS DOCUMENT.  THANKS!!


Something to Ponder

Part VII  HOW to get students talking

More Analysis, Collaboration, & Engagement in Small-Group Discussions

    In this Cult of Pedagogy article, veteran ELA teacher Jessica Cannata (EB Academics)

describes how she transformed her students’ small-group discussions from “surface-level talks

that seemed like a waste of a class period into engaged, high-level analysis and collaboration.”

    Before, Cannata followed the common practice of assigning roles within each group –

discussion director, literary luminary, symbol sleuth, etc. But she increasingly found these

roles limited students to “shallow, perfunctory conversation;” as she walked around the

classroom, it pained her to listen to students “repeatedly review the main plot points without

really analyzing the author’s craft or making deep connections with the text.” To make matters

worse, other teachers told Cannata that her students were not demonstrating analytical skills

and deeper understanding in their classes. How could she get students to take more ownership

and engage in “more natural, fruitful talk”?

    Finally, Cannata hit on the idea of Real Talk Discussion. After a class read a short

story, an article, or a chapter of a novel, she had students focus on talking points that students

wrote themselves, then had students plan and engage in a natural conversation. Here are her

suggested steps:

• Practice – To introduce the new process, Cannata recommends orchestrating a one-

time discussion on a topic that has nothing to do with the text the class is reading so they can

practice the key skills:

- Sharing ideas;

- Building on each other’s thinking;

- Considering multiple points of view;

- Coming to a greater understanding of the topic;

- Accepting that the discussions don’t have to end in complete agreement.

    Cannata suggests having students discuss topics like: What is one thing that’s popular right

now but future generations will think is silly? What is the worst piece of advice a person can

give? If we ever find evidence of intelligent beings beyond Earth, should we try to contact

them? Students discuss the assigned question, sharing opinions and backing them up with

reasoning and examples that clarify their position. The teacher provides talk stems like these to

encourage listening, empathy, and respectful disagreement.

Generating talking points – Students read a chapter of a novel, a textbook chapter, a

short story, or an article, and then each student is asked to write on a single sheet of paper six

talking points about the text that they want to discuss with their group. These can be questions,

observations, interesting quotes, connections, vocabulary, or a stylistic choice made by the

author. Why ask for talking points? Cannata found that this prompt “often led to more organic

discussion than sticking to questions.”

Grouping and sequencing them – Next, each student chooses their four strongest

talking points and jots each on a sticky note. Members of each group look at their collective

sticky notes, group similar ones together, and decide on a logical order to discuss them. “The

possibilities are endless,” says Cannata, “and there is no one right way to do it, but the process

helps the group to be thoughtful about the discussion’s focus, organization, and direction.”

Discussion – Students then talk about each chosen point, urged by the teacher to keep

focused on the text and not rush or worry if they don’t get to all the sticky notes (sometimes the

entire discussion is about the first talking point). “This is way different from what they may

have been used to with lit circle roles or other small-group discussions,” says Cannata, “where

they may feel panicked to fit everybody’s notes into the conversation. With this ‘discuss, don’t

rush’ strategy, the conversation feels much more natural and relaxed.” She’s found that

students are more fully engaged in group discussions when they’re not constrained by one role.

Assessment – Up front, students see a rubric describing the characteristics of an

effective group discussion (what it looks and sounds like) and how they will be graded. The

teacher listens in on discussions, scores each group, and collects the sticky notes to get a sense

of the kinds of questions students are asking. When small-group discussions are finished,

students write a reflection on their favorite talking point, rate their discussion, and assess their

own contributions.

• Whole-class reflection – This pulls the strands together and allows students to reflect

on the talking points they spent the most time discussing and go deeper on their collective

analysis and appreciation of the text.

Authentic Group Discussions with the Real Talk Strategy” by Jessica Cannata in Cult of

Pedagogy, February 5, 2023

Hope you find a gold nugget to try within one of your classes.

Part VI-  Do expect much, just as you would of your own children, nieces, nephews, etc.

Part V -Targeted Questioning -If we are rejecting students to passively answer 'yes' or 'no' to our rhetorical questions, then what types of questions do we ask?  Ask a series of open-ended questions, to targeted students.

Part IV Replace rhetorical questions with more objective forms of impromptu assessment 1:11 video clip on a teacher modeling how she does the self report on a scale of 1 -5.

Part III:  My job is to create a classroom environment that maximizes opportunities for students to get

Part II:  My job is no longer to say smart things.  It is to get my student to say smart things.

Part I: My Job is to increase student learning in the most efficient way possible

Quote

“Self-reflection is a humbling process. It’s essential to find out why you think, say, and do certain things…. then better yourself.” – Sonya Teclai

Little Humor

I still get asked, "What's for dinner."  I'm going to use this line.  Guess I won't need to cook LOL



Calendar of Events
Friday, Feb. 17th Garrison Swag day, GC @ 7:45 in Agnes' room

Sunday, Feb. 19th Happy Birthday, Luciano!!!

Tuesday, Feb. 21  Hidden in Plain Sight parent night, 6:00-8:00

Wednesday, Feb. 22 Garrison Almost Spring Concert @ 7:00

Thursday, Feb. 23    District Strategic Planning Community Event

Friday, Feb. 24th  Happy Birthday, Sydney!!!

Thursday, February 9, 2023

Thursday Thriller February 8, 2023

 Thursday Thriller

February 8, 2023

Photos from the Field

Our students did AWESOME today at WA HI and SEA/Tech!!! Stephanie, Mike and Terri did a superb job planning!!!


Nuts-n-Bolts

1.    Tomorrow there may be 'littles' in the building.  Elementary had conferences this week so no school today and tomorrow.  Rather than having to take a day off work it is "Bring Your Child to Middle School" today. :D

2.    Please complete the EES and Vektor surveys if you have not already

3.    I'm going to ask that by the end-of-day tomorrow, Feb 10th that you share your Google classroom with Tobi, Charlie, Agnes, Brooke, Nate C and Nate F.  These are the teachers who are working with students to complete assignments, tutor and/or help students make a plan to get caught up.  Also, if you have a student in an Academic Support class it is IMPERATIVE that your grade book be up to date.  Students can't make a plan to raise their F or D if they don't know what is missing.  Please help these students and teachers out. 

4.  Have you added when you send progress reports to the Google doc?

5.    Spirit Week Next Week!!!!

6. 

Something to Ponder

"Back to the Basics" series continues this week with an article from one of my favs Dave Stuart Jr. Underdemanded v. Overdemanded  

“Young people should not be overdemanded. However, we have also to consider the fact that at least today, in the age of an affluent society, most people are underdemanded rather than overdemanded.”
– Viktor Frankl, emphasis mine (1966)

In the excerpt above, Frankl touches on a timeless educator challenge: for the folks we teach to optimally grow, they need to be optimally challenged.

 This article calls out some poor teacher behavior so don't be alarmed. 

Hope you find a gold nugget. :D

Part VI-  Do expect much, just as you would of your own children, nieces, nephews, etc.

Part V -Targeted Questioning -If we are rejecting students to passively answer 'yes' or 'no' to our rhetorical questions, then what types of questions do we ask?  Ask a series of open-ended questions, to targeted students.

Part IV Replace rhetorical questions with more objective forms of impromptu assessment 1:11 video clip on a teacher modeling how she does the self report on a scale of 1 -5.

Part III:  My job is to create a classroom environment that maximizes opportunities for students to get

Part II:  My job is no longer to say smart things.  It is to get my student to say smart things.

Part I: My Job is to increase student learning in the most efficient way possible

Little Humor
As I age😒, I am trying to do it gracefully.😆  Kimberly Barry at Pioneer sent me liquid collagen sampler. The other night I opened it rubbed it on my hands andput it on my face.  My face felt sticky and I couldn't really move it.  I looked at the package.  Ummmm..you DRINK it not put it on your face.  Insert:  dumbass!  If you are laughing out loud...you're welcome!  I'm not quick but I'm slow😉

Quote

In karaoke, you don't choose the song; the song chooses you!

                                                                  - Aisling Bea

Karaoke is at 8:00 on Saturday night.  I will try my best to be there; it is an hour past my bed time...just saying😁

Calendar of Events

Friday, Feb. 10th     AMPHED Math Class Presentations for 8th grade
Saturday, Feb 11th Happy Birthday, Brian Casey!! Karaoke at 8:00
Monday, Feb. 13th First day of spirit week,  Scott and I will be at MS Level meeting in the AM return by 9:00
Tuesday, Feb. 14th  Happy Hearts Day💓






Thursday, February 2, 2023

Thursday Thriller Feb 2, 2023

Thursday Thriller

February 2, 2023

Photos from the Field

STEM in 6th Grade!


Morning practice!




Nuts-n-Bolts

1. Thank you for helping your students through the EES survey yesterday.  I know it was painful. 

2.    Friday is a half day.  Staff will meet in the library at 1:00.  We have some data from iReady to share.  Then Dr. Smith arrives at 1:30 to speak to us.

3.    Next Thursday the 9th is the 8th grade field trip to both SeaTech and WAHI.  It's pretty cool!  Students get to see both campuses and eat lunch in the new WA HI Commons. Mike Bertram, Stephanie P, Terri and Scott are handling the details.

4. Slowly closing in on those students who have yet to complete their 8 iReady lessons from Dec. 20th.  Students should be staying after school Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays in room 134. 

5.    Chad H had sent out an email in regards to progress reports.  Attached is the Google doc you can enter your information onto.  This is about SUPPORTING you.  When a parent calls, admin always refers them to the teacher.  Having this documentation we, admin, can also say, "Please talk with teacher as they can give you more information regarding their classroom grading policies AND they send progress reports every two weeks have you checked your email?" 

6.  SHOUT OUT TO ALL OF YOU!  Your presence in the hallways during passing time is STELLAR!! Thank you!!!

7.  From the Social Committee:  Valentine's Day potluck on Feb 14. There are two sign up sheets taped to the cupboard in the staff lounge (one for first lunch and one for second lunch).   Saturday, Feb. 11 at 8 pm at the Karaoke Palace, located at 16 S Colville St. Please email Beth if you plan to attend. 


Something to Ponder

"Back to the Basics" series continues this week with an article from one of my favs Dave Stuart Jr. To recap from the past four weeks:

Part I: My Job is to increase student learning in the most efficient way possible
Part II:  My job is no longer to say smart things.  It is to get my student to say smart things.
Part III:  My job is to create a classroom environment that maximizes opportunities for students to get
Part IV Replace rhetorical questions with more objective forms of impromptu assessment 1:11 video clip on a teacher modeling how she does the self report on a scale of 1 -5.

Part V-Targeted Questioning -If we are rejecting students to passively answer 'yes' or 'no' to our rhetorical questions, then what types of questions do we ask?  Ask a series of open-ended questions, to targeted students.

Planning the questions in advance and who you are going to call on can give you invaluable data!!!  I think sometimes as teachers, I am guilty as a teacher and admin, that planning questions in advance and who you are going to call on takes away the organic discussion that happens within class.  While you think, "I  don't have time to plan this and it would add time to my lesson which I don't have." It may take longer in the beginning BUT it will save time since you are getting it right the first time and not having to circle back. 






Hope you find a gold nugget, reflect on recent questions you asked in class and what data you got from those answers.

Quote

To be inspired is great, but to inspire is an honor!

                                                                        -Stacey T. Hunt


Calendar of Events

 Friday, Feb. 3rd 1:00 in the library, 1:30 Dr. Smith

Monday, Feb. 6th  We Are WA HI 8th grade students can attend this event to learn more about the high school

Tuesday, Feb. 4th Kim and Scott at DO for Ad Council 8:30-10:00

Thursday, Feb. 9th  8th Grade students on field trip to both CTE and WA HI

Friday, Feb. 10th   GC @ 7:45

**Please remind students that grades 6th-12th STILL HAVE school on Feb. 9th and 10th.  Elementary has conferences next week with no school on the 9th and 10th.







FINAL TT for 24.25

 Thursday Thriller June 5, 2025 Celebrations THANK YOU, Nancy!!!! Congratulations on your retirement!!! Congratulations, Beth! Recognition 2...