Thursday, December 29, 2016

The New Year: A Time for Reflection


According to Assessment for Learning (from Education Services Australia), students who use self-assessment:
  • recognize that learning is associated with a very positive kind of difficulty, which increases motivation rather than destroying it
  • experience an increase in self-esteem
  • experience an improvement in their learning because they come to know how they learn rather than just what they learn

Teachers who encourage students to self-assess:
  • see the responsibility for learning shifting from them to their students
  • recognize an increase in student motivation and enthusiasm for learning and a corresponding decrease in behavioral problems
  • are able to use feedback from their students about how they learn to shape lessons to individual and group needs rather than teaching to the mythical class as whole
Strategies to Enhance Student-Self-Assessment
Check out these strategies to enhance student self-assessment: reflection activities, student-led and three-way conferences, rubrics, graphic organizers, learning targets, and time management.

“Be Sure To”: A Powerful Reflection Strategy
A video from the Teaching Channel: The new year is a great time for reflection and goal setting. Watch Julie Manley walk her students through the “Be Sure To” strategy, allowing them to think about what they learned in class and use that knowledge to plan for the future.

Daily Reflection
Here's a quick formative assessment that helps students reflect on a daily basis: The Stoplight Method from Teaching Channel.

Setting Goals Based on Peer Review
This video is filmed in a kindergarten classroom, but if these little guys can give and receive peer review suggestions and set goals so successfully, imagine how we can use these same strategies with older students!

Portfolio Assessments
A great way to encourage students to be metacognitive about their learning is to assign a portfolio assessment mid-year and end-of-year. Here is a model portfolio assessment and rubric that you are welcome to adopt/adapt:
Portfolio Assessment Assignment
"Dear Reader" Rubric

The Teacher's Role in Portfolio Assessment: An Article

Friday, December 23, 2016

Media Literacy

In a "post-truth" society, how do we teach our kids how to be critical readers of what they see? The News Literacy Project (NLP) is an innovative national education program that equips middle school and high school students with the tools to be smart, active consumers of news and information and engaged, informed citizens. Check it out here!
And check out an NPR story about it here.
Here's a great article from the School Library Journal about media literacy:
The Smell Test: Educators can counter fake news with information literacy. Here’s how.

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Crash Course Literature

I'm sure you've all heard of John Green, author of The Fault in Our Stars and other great Young Adult lit.
But have you seen his Crash Course Literature videos?
If not, click here and explore!
Great resource!

Monday, December 12, 2016

How To Ensure Students Are Actively Engaged and Not Just Compliant

8 qualities that indicate students are engaged:
  • Does the activity, strategy, task, or idea allow for the student to personalize his or her response? Can they bring their life experiences into the activity and make it their own?
  • Are there clear and modeled expectations?
  • Is there a sense of audience above and beyond the teacher and the test? Does the activity have value to someone else?
  • Is there social interaction? Do students have an opportunity to talk about the learning and interact?
  • Is there a culture of emotional safety? Are mistake valued because they are an opportunity to learn?
  • Do students have opportunities to choose within the activity?
  • Is it an authentic activity? This doesn’t mean it always must connect directly to the student’s world, but it should connect to reality.
  • Is the task new and novel? If kids are bored, it’s hard to see engagement
  • Click here to read the entire article from Mind/Shift.

    "Reading" Images

    Here is a very interesting “read” and deep analysis of the recent Time magazine cover:

    Friday, December 2, 2016

    Non-fiction text analysis worksheet

    Name: ___________________________________

    Non-fiction Analysis Worksheet

    Name of text: _____________________________________________

    Type of text: ______________________________________________

    Author: ____________________________________________________

    What is the purpose of this text? (circle one) 
    persuade,           describe/explain,          entertain

    How do you know? ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    What does the text say…

    Who?


    What?


    Why?


    Where?


    When?


    How?



    Style: A writer’s style is closely tied to tone, the writer’s attitude toward the subject. It is shown through his or her word choice. What adjective(s) would you use to describe the writer’s style in this text?

    ______________________________    _____________________________    _____________________________




    Text  Structure: Choose which text structure this text follows the best. Then pick a graphic organizer from below to draw on a separate piece of paper and complete.

    Screen shot 2012-07-31 at 11Screen shot 2012-07-31 at 11Screen shot 2012-07-31 at 11Screen shot 2012-07-31 at 11Screen shot 2012-07-31 at 11

    Sequence                       Compare-contrast          Descriptive           Problem-Solution           Cause/effect







    Consider the features above to complete the following sentences:

    1. General conclusion: The selection is mainly about ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________.                 

    2. Specific conclusion: The author uses ___________________________________________________ in order to                                                                                                                                                (text structure) ______________________________________________________________________________.
                                                                            (purpose)



    Wednesday, November 23, 2016

    Build a Culture of Reading

    Reading is to the mind 
    what exercise is to the body!

    You can help build a culture of reading here at Everett! 

    If you haven’t built independent reading into your classes yet, consider doing so, even just once a week. Require students to have a book on their desk so that when they’ve finished a task, they can open up the book instead of the phone. Read aloud - not just for academics, but for enjoyment. Talk up books you are reading or books you recommend. Don't forget to be a good reading role model - you may be the only adult your students see reading.

    If you don’t have a little classroom library, I encourage you to start one: library book sales are a great place to stock up cheaply, and https://www.donorschoose.org/ is another great source of support. Search for Everett on Donors Choose and you’ll see some of your colleagues’ requests out there!

    There is a lot of research on the benefits of free reading:

    Vocabulary development: The major determinant of vocabulary growth from about 3rd grade on is free reading.
    Background knowledge: Differences in background knowledge account for differences in text comprehension, especially for low- and middle-income children. However, reading helps students develop background knowledge.
    Reading achievement: Amount of free reading is correlated with reading fluency and comprehension.
    Success in school: Student success in school is correlated with the amount of independent reading they do.
    Attitude and motivation: Students who do a substantial amount of voluntary reading demonstrate a positive attitude toward reading and school than students who do not.


    You can read this article about the value of free reading from Language Arts, RealTeachers’ Classroom IndependentReading Practices by Sherry Sanden.

    You can read the entire book Revisiting Silent Reading: New Directions for Teachers and Researchers by Elfrieda H. Hiebert & D. Ray Reutzel online for free.

    Happy reading!

    Plagiarism: Some Resources and, I hope, an Ongoing Conversation


    “An act of plagiarism would seem to be easy to recognize based on simple criteria: Is the work the author’s own creation and written in the author’s own words? If not, does the writing provide appropriate credit to previous work? Increasingly though, the lines of what constitute plagiarism are blurring as the Internet reshapes culture and education.

    The Web’s more interactive “Web 2.0” evolution has created an environment that encourages information sharing and values the remixing and remaking of original content. In this environment, plagiarism is easier to commit and originality more difficult to define.”

    From a great resource you can find here:
    "The Plagiarism Spectrum: Tagging 10 Types of Unoriginal Work"
    Download the full report on this page to read the full study behind the resource.

    And here is a good read for parents/guardians:



    Tuesday, November 22, 2016

    MCAS 2.0

    Click here to access information about the "Next Generation MCAS" test this year!
    Just grades 3-8

    Thursday, November 17, 2016

    If students are given many opportunities to read and write without direct instruction or feedback, will that make them better or worse readers/writers?

    This question most directly relates to how I teach my Sports Writing elective, a class that every year presents extreme classroom management challenges due to its appeal to, and high concentration of,  "reluctant readers and writers" (a bit of a euphemism on my part), as well as the perceived appeal it presents to guidance counselors looking for places to put "reluctant readers and writers."

    Somewhere along the line, I got this theory of "miles on the page" in my head, referring to the idea that, simply put, the more students read and the more students write, the better they will get at reading and writing.

    And in order to make as much room as possible for students to read and write, assuming the tough ones, at least, will do little to no reading and writing outside of class or school, I as the teacher needed to clear as much space as possible for them to do this.  This has resulted in a routine structure that includes little to no lectures or direct instruction, and in which, on one day, students do SSR reading from recent Sports Illustrated articles on topics they choose, for 20 minutes, followed by a generic set of reading response activities, and on another day, students write their own sports article, on a topic of their choosing, and are graded purely on their word count at the end of class. Rinse and repeat.

    Easy to plan for me, and gets the students doing reading and writing as much as possible.  Under this system, Sports Writing students (some of whom are "extremely reluctant") have on average (I have data to support these numbers) spent 500 minutes reading high interest nonfiction and have written 5,000 words of expository writing.  That sounds really good to me.

    I figure, there's no way a person could spend 500 minutes reading and not be a better reader, right?And there's no way a person could write 5,000 words and not be a better writer, right?

    Then I listened to a bunch of interviews with athletes, Tom Brady most recently, but also a host of professional basketball players, who insist that if they are practicing something wrong, that if they have "bad form", that the more they keep doing it, they are actually getting worse, not better.  Which also makes total sense to me.

    So does this analogy apply to reading and writing?  If a student writes 5,000 words poorly or without a lot of guidance and correction, is that better than writing significantly less (say, 1,000 words, but with a lot of teacher talk and rules and corrections and feedback and down time and chatter included that reduces their total "miles on the page"?

    How much credence (I put a lot) do you put into that theory of "miles on the page"? Your thoughts?

    Group Work

    I had been struggling with figuring out the best way to make all students accountable for group work.   After yesterday's Write Boston session, I was able to collaborate with my group and get some fantastic ideas.  One idea that I loved was to include the daily process work on the rubric, which will contribute to the final project grade.  This would make sure that students are held accountable for both their group and individual participation on a daily basis.

    I am going to crackdown on plagiarism after yesterday's PD

    Dear English Department,

    I had a good talk with my group yesterday at the Write Boston PD. I presented the problem of plagiarism to my group; I wonder sometimes if my students even know they are doing it.  My group advised me to maintain zero tolerance for copying and to do some explicit instructions on what constitutes plagiarism.  Those people are rockstars.

    Writing Revision Rubric

    I mentioned in some of your groups last night a Writing Revision Rubric that I developed to try to give credit for the revision process. I'm not 100% sure it does what I want it to, but you are welcome to try it out/adapt it/use it as a starting point. You can find it here.

    Wednesday, November 16, 2016

    Write Boston dilemmas

    Dilemma: students should be engaged with interesting work as many days as possible--not busy work to keep them occupied--but keeping up with timely feedback and grading is a challenge.

    Some solutions:
    • Allow students to select works for grading after revising.
    • In order to hold students accountable for all assignments, directly state "Some writing will be selected at random"--so students do not 'check out' on assignments. 
    • Make daily classwork effort a 0/1 assessment grade.
    • To expedite the grading process, print a mini rubric in the footnotes of assessments; check off boxes that fulfill criteria or address common problems of practice. 
    Other interesting ideas:
    • Model what good peer feedback looks/sounds like, using direct instruction and think-alouds.
    • Students should have a separate assessment grade for final products vs. rough drafts--so lack of significant revisions counts against them. (Process Grade vs. Product Grade)
    • Have students share Google docs with peers for feedback.
    • Have tiered prompts for students to prompt differentiation. (For example: Is Macbeth a tragic hero? vs. Is Macbeth a sympathetic character?)
    • To prevent plagiarism, give direct instruction on embedding quotes and paraphrasing.




    Ideas for Revision (from WriteBoston)

    As a follow-up to tonight's WriteBoston PD (Nov. 16):


    The dilemma I shared with my colleagues was with the writing process, and the constant desire to get more out of revisions. Like all of us, I struggle with how to receive a draft, offer advice, and then have students revise their papers in a timely manner (and without having to grade 600 drafts). Often I just grade and say, “Do THIS better next time.” Thankfully I got some great advice through our Consultancy Protocol activities tonight. 

    I think I’d definitely like to start utilizing Google Docs more in the peer revision process. I use it quite extensively to grade papers myself, but the idea of having students offer feedback TO each other – which I can then view – sounded pretty appealing. In addition, I like the idea of modeling peer revising (I’d always passed out a sheet and told them to just go at it!), then explicitly teaching to patterns. If I’m noticing that most of my students are struggling with intros, then I’m going to model a sample intro (likely a student from another class) and have students work in class to create or revise their own. I get worried about keeping pace with the curriculum, but the feedback I received tonight made it more likely that I’ll take a week or two-week chunk of time to address writing mid-unit. Who says I can't stop in the middle of "Julius Caesar" to work on those papers analyzing Brutus' funeral monologue? 

    Overall, tonight was very valuable to me, and I think I’ll employ a few different strategies to help my students improve throughout the process. Thanks everyone!

    Wednesday, October 26, 2016

    Help Students Toward Reading Complex Texts Independently: No More Training Wheels!

    Lately there is a ton of buzz around increasing students' capacities to read texts that are considered complex and challenging for their age groups. I'm observing this unfold in various spaces with a critical eye. How exactly do we help students be able to read more complex texts independently? Do we give them texts that are well above their reading levels and apply as much scaffolding as we need to get students through it? Or do we meet readers where they are with more accessible text selections first and build their independent reading skills?

    Click here to read the rest of this great little article!

    Thursday, October 20, 2016

    Educator Goals

    Educator Goals
    Click on the link above to see your colleagues' goals for the year. If you see a goal that you think you can help a colleague reach through your support or materials or consultation, please let them know that you can help! This is called Professional Collaboration, which is under the Professional Culture standard on the Educator Rubric. And it's good practice!

    Wednesday, October 19, 2016

    Literacy Skill: Annotation

    I noticed that some of the baseline assessments had instructions that asked students to annotate the text. And yet, we also told them not to write on the test! Well, this is a contradiction, isn’t it? As good readers ourselves, we know that annotating a text is an important way to be active readers.

    But do we give our students opportunities to annotate texts? One way to make annotation possible when students don’t have their own books is to give students photocopies of articles or short stories or poems or sections of texts that we want them to read closely.

    And do we teach our students how to annotate? Check out these links for some great resources on teaching annotation skills! And please feel free to post in a comment below some great resources YOU may have on annotation skills that you would like to share!

    Thinking Notes (video)
    Purposeful Annotation: A “Close Reading” Strategy that Makes Sense to My Students (blog post)
    I'll Have Mine Annotated, Please (article)
    Beyond the Yellow Highlighter (article)
    Teaching Student Annotation (lesson plan)
    Back to School with Annotation: 10 Ways to Annotate with Students (online article)
    Annotation Rubric (borrowed from apsaunders.wikispaces.com)

    Try this experiment in the next week: Give your students in one class a text of any kind and ask them to annotate it. See what they do. Give your students in another class the same text and teach them a strategy for annotating the text and see what they do. Let me know how it goes!