I'm looking forward to reading your reactions to the articles.
Please feel free to go back through the other discussions and put in your two cents. Especially your reactions and responses to some of the previous blog questions.
Also, here are couple issues that need addressed from this week.
1. At what point should a teacher get help in a situation like getting another teacher or the administration involved? Great question....what do you all think? The obvious part is if there is any violence you immediately get assistance. Other than that.......what do you guys think? How far do you let a problem go before you get help if it's a student disrupting class? What if they just refuse to do anything? What about just being annoying - won't be quiet - pushing your buttons...???? Inappropriate behavior - language - actions - etc.???
2. What kinds of 'fillers' can be done with language arts and social studies? Let me see what can I think of off the top of my head.....hmmmm.
Language arts - 1. part of my grammar teaching included diagraming sentences - they loved to do diagram races or challenges....we'd break into teams and one team member from each team would do the diagram at the board while the rest did it at their seats - whoever got it right got points for their team...then new competitors would head for the board. 2. Create group stories.....break into groups and use a story starter. Then pass the story around the group and each person adds one sentence. It can go as long as you want and can be really good or really funny. 3. You can use 'spelldown' style games for anything....parts of speech, grammatical checks, definitions, books and authors.....
Social studies - 1. There's a game they loved called "guess it". I would pull down the world map, and tell them I was thinking of a county. They could ask me Yes /No GEOGRAPHY questions to try to determine the country in my thoughts. If they got a certain number of NO answers from me before they guessed the right county - I WON!!! If they got ....they won. I'd have quick little prizes sometimes - but most of the time the person who figured out the answer got to come up front and to they next country. The harder the country - the more 'no' chances I'd give them...but never over 10. 2. ONce again - the spelldown format asking question about the current or previous social studies topic. I'd often throw in an extra point option if they could shoot my blow up globe into the waste basket and make the basket. It seems like most anything you can tie to a ball is just more fun for them. 3. I had several pre-made jeopardy games - always a hit. 4. Brain teasers based in social studies are available. 5. All kinds of little social studies games are out there in the teacher stores.
Hope that helped.
3. How do you focus your attention on the class as a whole and still not give up on that one problem kid? The 'never give up' is for the child who is having learning problems or personal problems that are affecting the learning, etc. Kids who misbehave are, in my opinion, a different issue. They are choosing to misbehave so they are choosing the consequences of their actions. I wouldn't put up with someone disturbing my class for very long. My consequences were warning, detention, principal...... and then the principal usually made them call home. My principals knew that the only way I'd send then to the office was if I had done everything humanly possible to get them into shape. I was firm and consistent and the had the principal's total cooperation. Kids learned very quickly and passed the word to then next group coming up that there would be no nonsense put up with....... so they usually didn't try. The fact that I was consistent and fair ...... meant I was being fair to both the kid misbehaving and my other students.
4. For those of you in the 9:30 who asked....no, the presentation was not really a simulation. Look at the definition and you'll recognize it was group work.
Have a great week!!
Diann