I'm a Wisconsin student working on an undergrad Early Childhood Education degree with an emphasis on Spanish bilingual and anti-racist education. I'm big on cute things, reading, children's literature, and social justice.

I post: helpful and fun elementary education related stuff; leftist political posts relating to Wisconsin, education, and advocacy; and personal posts about being an Education major.
June 2nd
3:07 PM
Via

12 Questioning Strategies that Minimize Classroom Management Problems.

toseealambatschool:

Teachers know from their training and experience that questioning plays an important role in today’s instruction.  Modern lessons are fast-paced and  interactive, with teachers asking a lot of questions. Questions account for [about] 80 percent of classroom talk and that some teachers ask more than 100 of them per hour! Because this instructional strategy dominates class time and because students are active during the lesson, there are more chances for management
problems to arise if teachers do not follow good questioning techniques.

Classroom management problems occur under two circumstances during question-and-answer sessions. First, if students are dissatisfied or bored, they may exhibit offtask behavior as a way to let the teacher know that the instruction is failing to meet their needs. Generally, students are not asked whether they like a lesson, so misbehavior is their only recourse for providing immediate feedback to the teacher. Second, students may misbehave if they are unclear about the expected behavior. Exchanges between teachers and students occur quickly during a question-and-answer session, and teachers seldom make explicit the way they want the class to respond. Thus, students act out because they are unable to “read the teacher’s
mind.”

1. Write out some questions when planning the lesson.  Generate questions that are clearly written, appropriate for the students’ ability, and sequenced in a logical way.  To go a step further in their support, teachers can project the planned questions on a screen using overheads or PowerPoint slides. By doing so, all students can see them on the screen and hear the teacher asking them.  In effect, the instruction becomes clearer and multisensory by providing both auditory and visual input.

2. Establish your expectations for behavior before beginning the questioning period.  Teachers may want to remind students to raise their hands, listen carefully to classmates’ comments, and respect one another’s right to self-expression. Clarifying the ground rules reduces confusion and helps everyone know how to act.

3. Call on a variety of students.  Teachers can keep students’ attention by calling on them randomly.  Because the learners are uncertain about on whom the teacher will call, they will remain attentive.  Effective educators know that they must interact with all children by the end of the lesson and that they must keep all children engaged for maximum learning to occur.

4. Cue students before asking the question.  Cueing the class before asking the question can minimize disruptive outbursts.  For example, call on a specific student before asking the question.

5. Ask questions that are the appropriate level for each student.  When students feel success, they are more inclined to persist with a task. To help them feel success, the teacher should tactfully ask questions at the appropriate level.

6. Ask questions that elicit positive or correct responses.  Students will remain motivated and more willing to remain intellectually engaged with the teacher if they feel positively toward the information and can answer the teacher’s questions  correctly most of the time. Students generally will not disrupt the lesson if they are feeling successful.

7. Provide students with sufficient wait time after asking a question and before responding to their comments.  Students must first hear the question and decide whether they understand it. Second, they must recall the information from their memories. Third, they must consider whether their response will be accepted; and, fourth, they must decide whether the teacher will praise or rebuke their response.  When teachers increase the amount of wait time, the length of the responses increases, the responses reflect higher-level thought, and the failures to respond decrease.

8. Vary the way students respond to questions.  Responding verbally is the most common way for students to answer the teacher’s question. An alternate approach is to ask everyone to jot down an answer before calling on a student. The act of writing makes the question-and-answer session more multisensory.  Requiring students to record their answers encourages wider participation by the class and reduces management problems because students are too busy writing and do not have time to misbehave.

9. Vary the person who responds to the questions.  Rather than the teacher always responding to the students, another variation is to ask classmates to respond to one another’s responses. This approach promotes positive social interaction by encouraging respectful listening.  It also involves more people in the lesson and creates a more interactive exchange between individuals.

10. Respond to every answer and correct errors.  Listen carefully to students’ comments and maintain a high ratio of positive to negative verbal feedback.  Respond to every answer and offer specific praise.  By doing so, teachers show their students that they value their ideas. As a result, students will be more inclined to behave because they know that they are respected.

11. Ask follow-up questions.  The goal of a question-and-answer session is to get everyone to talk, and one way to foster more discussion is to ask follow-up questions.  Teachers can elicit more discussion by asking students to justify or explain their reasoning. Asking “why” questions promotes higher-order thinking.

12. Encourage students to ask questions.  Teachers must take deliberate steps to get their learners to ask questions.  Once the classroom culture of questions has been established, students then will feel more comfortable asking them.

Excerpt from “12 Questioning Strategies that Minimize Classroom Management Problems” written by Nathan Bond.

Sixteen Things Calvin and Hobbes Said Better Than Anyone Else

amandaonwriting:

On life’s constant little limitations

Calvin: You know, Hobbes, some days even my lucky rocket ship underpants don’t help.

On expectations

Calvin: Everybody seeks happiness! Not me, though! That’s the difference between me and the rest of the world. Happiness isn’t good enough for me! I demand euphoria!

On why we are scared of the dark

Calvin: I think night time is dark so you can imagine your fears with less distraction.

On the unspoken truth behind the education system

Calvin: As you can see, I have memorized this utterly useless piece of information long enough to pass a test question. I now intend to forget it forever. You’ve taught me nothing except how to cynically manipulate the system. Congratulations.

On the cruel reality of commercial art

Hobbes: Van Gogh would’ve sold more than one painting if he’d put tigers in them.

On the tragedy of hipsters

Calvin: The world bores you when you’re cool.

On the tears of a clown

Calvin: Isn’t it strange that evolution would give us a sense of humour? When you think about it, it’s weird that we have a physiological response to absurdity. We laugh at nonsense. We like it. We think it’s funny. Don’t you think it’s odd that we appreciate absurdity? Why would we develop that way? How does it benefit us?

Hobbes: I suppose if we couldn’t laugh at things that don’t make sense, we couldn’t react to a lot of life.

Calvin: (after a long pause) I can’t tell if that’s funny or really scary.

On the falling of sparrows (or providence’s lack of a timetable)

Calvin: Life is full of surprises, but never when you need one.

On why winter is the cruellest of seasons

Calvin: Getting an inch of snow is like winning 10 cents in the lottery.

On the gaping hole in contemporary art’s soul

Calvin: People always make the mistake of thinking art is created for them. But really, art is a private language for sophisticates to congratulate themselves on their superiority to the rest of the world. As my artist’s statement explains, my work is utterly incomprehensible and is therefore full of deep significance.

On playing Frankenstein with words

Calvin: Verbing weirds language.

On realising God is more Woody Allen than Michael Bay

Calvin: They say the world is a stage. But obviously the play is unrehearsed and everybody is ad-libbing his lines.

Hobbes: Maybe that’s why it’s hard to tell if we’re living in a tragedy or a farce.

Calvin: We need more special effects and dance numbers.

On why ET is real

Calvin: Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.

On looking yourself in the mirror

Hobbes: So the secret to good self-esteem is to lower your expectations to the point where they’re already met?

On the future

Calvin: Trick or treat!

Adult: Where’s your costume? What are you supposed to be?

Calvin: I’m yet another resource-consuming kid in an overpopulated planet, raised to an alarming extent by Madison Avenue and Hollywood, poised with my cynical and alienated peers to take over the world when you’re old and weak. Am I scary, or what?

On the truth

Calvin: It’s a magical world, Hobbes, ol’ buddy…Let’s go exploring!

2:59 PM
Via
"

Is it right that Scott Walker made the largest cuts to public education in Wisconsin history while giving $2.3 billion in tax breaks to big corporations over the next 10 years?

Is it right that Scott Walker buddies up with billionaires while Wisconsin families suffer the worst record of job loss in the country?

Is it right that Scott Walker needs a criminal defense fund worth more than the average Wisconsin worker makes in a year, but does not think we deserve to know the truth about why he needs it?

"
—  Mahlon Mitchell asks three questions every Wisconsin voter should consider. (via wisconsinforward)
2:58 PM
Via

How to improve classroom management: Doing less equals more control

life-and-light:

Take a deep breath…

If you slow down, move less, talk less, and at times do absolutely nothing, you will gain more control.

And classroom management won’t be such a challenge.

Here’s how to do less:

Slow Down

It’s always smart to take your time. If you rush or get ahead of your students, you’ll lose them—and control of your class. By slowing down, you’ll cover more material, get more done, and have better behaved students.

Move Less

You’ve probably been told that teachers should move around the room a lot and avoid staying in one place. But unless you’re checking in on students working independently, this is poor advice.

Your students need to focus on you and your instruction and nothing else. This is best accomplished by staying in one place. There should be no misunderstanding about where their eyes, ears, and thinking ought to be.

Talk Less

Most teachers talk too much. The reality is, the more you talk, the less your students will tune in and the more likely they are to misbehave.

If you want your words to have meaning, be brief, get to the point, and move on. Save your voice for inspired lessons, readings, stories, and activities.

Pause Often

When giving directions or providing information, pause often. Allow a beat or two of silence between sentences.

This helps students focus on your message, allows them to process what you’ve told them, and gives you a chance to see how well they’re following along.

Do Nothing

If your students aren’t giving you what you want, stop whatever you’re doing. Stand in the most prominent place in the classroom (I like to stand on a chair) and do nothing.

When your students are silent and looking at you, wait some more. Gather your thoughts. When you’re ready, tell them again precisely what you expect and then have them do it again.

Lower Your Voice

When you raise your voice, you train your students to listen to you only when you get loud and to tune you out the other times. It says, “Okay, I’m yelling because I really mean it this time!”

If you want your students to listen, speak softly. They should have to lean forward ever so slightly in order to hear you.

Trust Your Classroom Management Plan

You created a classroom management plan for a reason. So use it. Let it do the heavy lifting. Pull yourself away from the drama and frustration of trying to plead, persuade, counsel, manipulate, intimidate, bribe, and will your students to behave.

These methods, all examples of trying to do more, don’t work.

June 1st
5:15 PM
Via

sesamestreet:

So Jon Stewart was at our gala. And someone put this together. And we liked it.

May 31st
4:29 PM
Via

Selling out public schools

holtthink:

Good read. Please share with anyone that thinks privatizing schools is a good idea.—tbh

From the article:
Here in the industrialized world’s most economically unequal nation, public education is still held up as the great equalizer — if not of outcome, then of opportunity. Schools are expected to be machines that overcome poverty, low wages, urban decay and budget cuts while somehow singlehandedly leveling the playing field for the next generation. And if they don’t fully level the playing field, they are at least supposed to act as a counter-force against both racial and economic inequality.

That vision, however, is now under assault by both political parties in America. On the Republican side, the Washington Post reports Mitt Romney just unveiled “a pro-choice, pro-voucher, pro-states-rights education program that seems certain to hasten the privatization of the public education system” completely. On the other side, Wall Street titans in the Democratic Party with zero experience in education policy are marshaling tens of millions of dollars to do much of what Romney aims to do as president – and they often have a willing partner in President Barack “Race to the Top” Obama and various Democratic governors.

May 30th
2:09 AM

a message from Anonymous


Thanks for the kind response! I'm blushing! I think you're totally right that the everyday racism is dangerous. A lot of people seem to think that the fight against racism is no longer as necessary now that we've gotten rid of segregation and that we've had the civil rights movement. While it's true that the civil rights movement was huge progress, that doesn't mean we don't still have issues to combat today. If we don't recognize that the subversive racism as an issue, it will only get worse.

You’re right, we don’t live in a post-racial society.  Subscribing to perspectives that are supposedly “colorblind” or merely paying lip service to multiculturalism (in the form of stereotypes, cultural costumes, or other shallow means of “ethnic appreciation”) only serve to perpetuate systems of injustice.  The fight against racism isn’t just fought through legislation or against racial violence, but in the simple acknowledgement of privilege, in the recognition of subversive racism, and words and actions large and small which we say and commit every day.

Keep fighting!

2:04 AM
Via

leah-adventuresinteachingart:

Working on a school-wide assessment initiative with our 2nd Graders in art class. We set up a full-blown Critique session to give them a chance to assess their intentions and craftsmanship. Big thanks to RON BERGER and his guiding rules for Critique: Be Kind. Be Helpful. and Be Specific

May 28th
5:01 AM
Via
itssnix:

This document was the back page of an application for a school I looked at in my job-hunting stage. I don’t know where it originally came from, or why it was part of the packet, but I found the right two columns particularly helpful when anticipating interviews.
Since there are a lot of recent graduates looking for jobs, I thought it would be a useful resource to throw out there.
Click through to download the .PDF!

itssnix:

This document was the back page of an application for a school I looked at in my job-hunting stage. I don’t know where it originally came from, or why it was part of the packet, but I found the right two columns particularly helpful when anticipating interviews.

Since there are a lot of recent graduates looking for jobs, I thought it would be a useful resource to throw out there.

Click through to download the .PDF!

May 27th
2:08 PM

a message from Anonymous


This is the eighth grader again (I'm really sorry if I'm overcrowding your blog!) I just thought I would share that I also love your emphasis on Spanish bilingual. I think the more that we learn about other cultures (including their language), the more the prejudices go away. I also see people who feel like Mexicans are a huge threat to their white culture and that their livelihoods are being swept away from them. If we could learn about each other then maybe it wouldn't be so bad.

You are not overcrowding at all!  I agree that education is a necessary step toward acceptance, especially education which does not frame our perspective as that of the default white superior and anyone else as the inferior exoticized Other.  Bilingual and multicultural education is about encouraging everyone to become critically conscious global citizens.  While I don’t know if we can ever simply erase those prejudices which are thrust upon us by an inherently unjust system (and which we perpetuate consciously or unconsciously), it definitely is vital to creating the kind of understanding we hope for and should work toward.  

Thank you so much for your messages.  They reaffirm for me exactly why I want to teach. :)