Should the toughest kids be assigned to the best teachers?

Should the toughest kids be assigned to the best teachers?

You know exactly which kids I’m talking about here–their faces appeared in your mind’s eye as soon as you read the blog post title.  These are the kids who are violent and relentlessly disruptive in class, the ones who have a reputation throughout the school as being incredibly difficult to handle.Each spring, the teacher’s lounge is filled with speculation over who will get each of those kids the following year…and in many schools, it’s a highly predictable pattern. The teachers with the best classroom management skills get the toughest kids. And every year, those teachers say, “I don’t know if I can take another class like this one. I need a break. I can’t keep doing this year after year.”

Sometimes the principals listen and spread out the toughest kids among multiple classrooms in a grade level, but many times, they don’t, and the teachers who used to be amazing become mediocre because they have nothing left to give. They stop researching new activities in the evenings because all they have the energy to do at night is sleep. They show up at school early to plan meaningful learning experiences, and then get so disgusted with breaking up student fights all morning long that they put on a movie in the afternoon and call it a day. They don’t have the energy for the hands-on activities they used to do, so they pass out worksheets.

I’m not saying that response is right. What I’m saying is that it’s happening, in thousands of classrooms all across the country. Our best teachers are burning out from bearing too much of the burden.

I understand the need to place students with the best possible teacher for them. The problem is that teachers with strong classroom management skills often feel like they are being punished by getting the most challenging students year after year after year. It doesn’t matter that it’s not intended as a punishment. It feels that way when your job is knowingly made 100 times harder than the job of your colleagues simply because “you can handle it.” What happens when you can’t handle it anymore?

And what happens when the grouping of students interferes with the entire class’ education? I can think of two years in particular during my teaching career when I considered it a miracle that the rest of the class learned anything because my attention was so focused on the third of the class who had constant meltdowns. It absolutely broke my heart to see some of my sweet, hard working kids get less attention and assistance because I had to spend every spare second heading off their peers’ violent outbursts. No child should go to school each day in fear of being harmed by other kids in the class, or be unable to get the individualized learning they need because the teacher is constantly attending to severe behavior problems.

I don’t know of any clear cut solutions. I’m wary of principals burdening brand new teachers with students they know will be challenging–the teacher attrition rate is already astronomical. Some of these kids are so challenging that a new teacher would probably leave the profession before the year is out. I also don’t want to see high needs students suffer under the leadership of a teacher who is unable to handle them.

Maybe schools need to provide more professional development to teachers so they are equipped to handle a wide range of student needs and behavioral issues. It’s rare that a district acknowledges how much classroom management issues interfere with student learning: PD in most schools is centered around improving test scores and implementing curriculum. I did work in one district that allowed principals to identify teachers who struggle classroom management skills and provided extra training through CHAMPS, which is an excellent program, but the change in those teachers’ classrooms was negligible. Without ongoing, individualized support, the results are not going to be transformative. And some kids are just so disruptive that all the PD in the world is not going to prevent the average teacher from being exhausted by 9 a.m. on a daily basis.

Is the solution to get rid of teachers who aren’t able to handle their students? How would we identify those teachers in a fair way? Many of them are not “bad” teachers and are perfectly capable of educating the majority of the student population, they just aren’t prepared to manage the type of kids who throw desks when they’re frustrated and threaten to stab any adult who dares to correct them. Let’s be real: some of these students have no business being thrown into a general education classroom with little to no support. I don’t think it’s fair to blame the teacher for not being able to handle such extreme behaviors in addition to, you know, actually teaching the other 29 kids in the class.

So maybe this brings us to the heart of the issue: schools need to figure out how to meet  these tough kids’ needs, instead of tossing them in the classroom with teachers who are expected to manage on their own. These students deserve small class sizes, psychological counseling, ongoing social skills/coping strategies support through small group sessions with the school guidance counselor, and so on. Some of these students even need individual one-on-one behavioral aides. But these resources take money, and schools just don’t have it.

Where does that leave us? If all outside factors–teacher training, special services, class sizes, and so on–stay exactly the same, what should principals do? Should all the toughest kids go to the teachers with the best classroom management skills? How does this work in your school?

Wikipedia… a credible source?

Over the years, Wikipedia has managed to create a chasm between educators. Some educators have preached that great evil resides in all things Wiki. Others, such as ourselves, have always said Wiki is a great place to begin research.

Wiki has many advantages over a standard dusty set of 10 year old encyclopedias. Obviously, the fact that it is probably more current is a huge one. Another is the fact that Wiki is searchable. That fact makes it extremely easy to find information that would otherwise be extremely tedious to find.

Wiki has stated that they are not a credible source, however, many educators in the K-12 and Higher Ed systems are beginning to accept Wikipedia citations.

We had the pleasure of presenting paperless classrooms at the Alabama Educational Technology Conference recently. While we were not presenting, we attended other concurrent sessions. One of those sessions was presented by Jeff Utecht. Jeff showed the audience things about Wiki that many of us were not aware of.

For example, all Wikipedia entries are ‘graded’. Entries that are ‘stubs’ or ‘starts’ are generally considered not accurate or credible. However, articles graded as a C level article could be considered credible, and A or B graded articles almost certainly are.

The key here is that you have to teach students how to tell what is credible. You can no longer just preach Wiki is bad, when in fact, it is often more up to date and more accurate than other sources.

So, the question is, how do we see what each article is graded?  It is far simpler than we think.

First, let’s start with the Wiki quality scale. An example of this can be found by scrolling down on the following page:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Cricket/Assessment#Quality_scale

Next, in order to find an articles rating, you just click on the TALK tab near the top of the article.

wiki talk link

You then see the screen that gives you some of the nitty gritty about it’s quality rating. This is where you see just how credible an article is.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/2bkbfkwtz9fevlw/Screenshot%202015-06-12%2009.01.46.png?dl=0

So, the answer to the question… Is Wikipedia a credible source?  The answer is changing over time… it could be credible.

todaysmeet.com, a way for everyone to participate

Have you ever had those students… you know, like that one, in the back. The students who rarely speak unless forced to do so? Of course you have, we all have.

In the classroom, discussion and debate tell us far more about how well a student grasps content than doing a multiple guess worksheet. Many teachers think that having students regurgitate answers in short answer format is much more meaningful… yet they give them the answers ahead of time, so all the students have demonstrated is how to memorize answers to test questions.

Enter todaysmeet.com. This is a format we use regularly. Students can discuss topics, silently via the website. They bill it as a backchannel, and it truly can be. Kids can discuss a movie they are watching as they are watching it, without bothering others. They can engage in debates about characters, motives, etc., and never disturb a soul.

The interface is about as easy as it gets. Go to www.todaysmeet.com and you find a screen like this:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/fsik5gqgg2xsx5y/Screenshot%202015-06-08%2007.08.36.png?dl=0

Simply type the name of the room you wish to create or enter, select how long you want the room to be ‘alive’ and you’re off and running. The interface is quite simple.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/55xrzm2lcdvl62f/Screenshot%202015-06-08%2007.19.34.png?dl=0

You can sign up in a couple of steps, and get a bit more control over who can enter your room and such, but that is not required.

All in all, todaysmeet.com is a great tool for classroom teachers who want to facilitate discussion and get everyone involved. Give it a try today!

Why Teachers and Students Should Blog

Reblogged from http://www.edudemic.com/how-and-why-teachers-should-blog/

Blogs have the potential to expand student creativity, not to mention their writing skills. Language Arts and Reading specialists will love that, right? But how do I convince them that their students are thirsty for the knowledge they want to share but not the same way that they themselves obtained it? These kids are 21st century students and are adapting to a digital world that they are eager to learn from.

Fortunately for teachers, blogs are surprisingly easy to use. They require minimum technical knowledge and are quickly and easily created and maintained. Students will be able to pick up how to use blogging platforms with minimal technical assistance and teachers will enjoy the ease in the initial setup. Unlike many traditional Web sites, blogs are flexible in design and can be changed relatively easily. Best of all, students and teachers will find them convenient and accessible via any computer or mobile device.

Why Blogging is Great for Students

1. Blogs Allow for Multi-Faceted Learning

Educators need to teach important materials in several ways because each one of our students learns differently. What’s more, we also need to provide students with multiple ways to engage with assignments, based on their individual talents. Blogging is one technique for doing so, as it can allow a quieter student, for example, to feel heard online. Those shy and quiet students feel less pressure when they need to “speak” in their blog or when giving peer feedback, as they are discussing the text on their own terms. Additionally, this journaling format works great with read-and-write learners as well as visual learners.

2. Blogs Promote Literacy and Sharpen Writing Skills

Blogging gives students an opportunity to become published authors and showcase their writing skills. In addition, blogs give students the ability to improve communication and collaboration through the commenting feature. Peer review and feedback become an invaluable part of the writing process. Students from other parts of the world can also comment and provide a new cultural perspective to our own students’ thoughts and opinions. Students’ writing skills are vastly improved through the blogging process, since they have to work harder to hold the readers’ attention. To do that, every word, phrase, sentence, and even punctuation mark must add something to the posting.

3. Blogs Are Accessible and Engaging

With the availability of blog apps, blogging has become very simple and accessible to our students. They can blog from anywhere about anything whenever they are in the mood to reflect. They are not tied down to a desk and feel more free using this writing media. Also, in the age where every person has a camera in their pocket, we have become a society that journals through photography and video. Along with other multimedia artifacts, blogs become more engaging and almost interactive for the readers.

4. Blogs Can Serve as a Classroom Management Tool

When used as an in-class assignment, blogs can keep your students on task and focused. The more blogs students post, the more opportunities they have for others to comment on their blog. It’s an exciting feeling for students to see proof of someone reading their published work, taking time to reflect on it, and posting their opinion or question. Creating a classroom blog instead of individual blogs fosters an online community for your students to extend the classroom beyond the 4 walls. The learning continues wherever they go and their thoughts and conversations keep going.Blogging is a great tool to create student portfolios, as it can be used both as a “learning portfolio” and a “showcase portfolio”.

5 Tips That Will Make Blogging a Breeze

1. Use a simple blog application

Look for popular classroom blogging apps that have been tested in classrooms and made simple even for early elementary students. Blogger is a Google app and is completely free. It is easy and simple to use if you have a Google account you can set up your blog in minutes from a computer or mobile device. Edublogs lets you easily create and manage student and teacher blogs, customize designs and include videos, photos and podcasts. Kidblog provides teachers with the tools to help students publish writing safely online. Students exercise digital citizenship within a secure classroom blogging space and teachers can monitor all student activity. Other great options include WordPress, Weebly, and Tumblr (for photoblogs).

2. Start with a specific writing prompt

If you’re beginning with a class rather than an individual blog, you’ll be responsible for those initial posts, while the students will respond in comments. As students demonstrate both keenness and responsibility, give them more freedom where they earn the right to write posts on the class blog and/or get their own student blog. You can start with Sentence Starters like “Today was the best day ever…” Image-based prompts that can also be incorporated into daily and/or creative writing activities whether they are pictures you took or random ones from a web site or app. You can also invite students to create prompts for the class and use these prompts whenever possible.

3. Create a rubric

Providing detailed explanations of an assignment using a rubric can help students in both completing tasks and thinking about their performance. Be sure to include expectations for the first post as well as for commenting on another student’s post.

4. Know your audience

The audience makes the work matter to students as they have an opportunity to showcase their writing and respond to real feedback. Initially, the teacher and classroom peers are the major audience that provide the feedback. However, you may want to consider sharing the blog details with parents through the school website and newsletters to grow the audience to family members and other parents. This can have unexpected practical use. For instance, if a student is writing a piece on the topic of technology and one of the parents in the classroom is an engineer, that student may be eager to produce quality work to get real feedback — and they may find themselves a great interview source, too.

5. Make content concise

Tight, concise, easy-to-read pieces are ideal for most online readers. Long, complex, convoluted ones are just confusing. Very often, the longer a piece is, the less the writer holds a reader’s interest — all the more so on small screens. As such, your students would do well to get right to the point — a skill they’ll find valuable as they continue up the academic ladder

Takeaways

Educators know that students write better when they have a real audience. But with blogging any student can write for the world to see. Students have an authentic audience for their writing and that has an impact on the quality of their posts and comments. Encouraging students to blog about all sorts of topics helps them see connections among subjects and different aspects of their life and realize that writing is a worthwhile skill in any field.

Want to learn more? Visit my blog here.

Editor’s note: This is an update to Hanna Shekter’s original post on this subject, which first ran on January 5th, 2013. A lot has changed since then, so we invited Hanna back to update her wonderful tips.

Gutenberg.org A plethora of free resources

Anyone making an effort to go paperless will, sooner or later, as the question…

What will my kids read if we have no books?

My answer to that is one that has been around for quite some time.  www.gutenberg.org has a wealth of classic literature, free for the taking. We are going into our third year of being paperless, and gutenberg has made the transition much easier.

Head over to www.gutenberg.org and search for your favorite classic. When you do, you get a screen that looks remarkably like…

https://www.dropbox.com/s/j85eqmn1t90a7p3/Screenshot%202015-06-06%2020.24.05.png?dl=0

Click the text you want, and you will see some options.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/tbqp955ulc2c3ac/Screenshot%202015-06-06%2020.26.38.png?dl=0

You can download the format you wish, send it out to students to put on their devices, or you can click more options and download it as a text file.  The text file is by far one of our favorites. We copy the text into a Google doc, then send it out via Google Classroom. Students can then comment and collaborate inside the document they are reading.  What more can you ask for!?

Groovy Grader

Remember way back when? Back when we used that wonderful little greenish colored EZ Grader? Do you remember when you went without it for some reason? Granted, it was not difficult to figure out grades without one, but they made grading so… well… EZ, hence the name.

Now, here we are in the Age of the App (yes, that is my official designation for this era). Now, we have options. We have iPads, Android Tablets, smartphones, laptops, etc. With Groovy Grader, you have all the wonders of your handy old EZ Grader at all times.

Give it a look, it is a small app, so it doesn’t take much space at all.

Available through iTunes/App Store.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/groovy-grader/id376433959?mt=8

For the Android folks in the world, here is a similar app:

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.prestongriffith.easygrader&hl=en

Need a great way to get feedback? Try Socrative.com

As teachers, we have used many ways to gauge student understanding and attempt to hold the interest of students throughout an entire day. In the early days of our teaching, we used everything from little popsicle sticks with red on one end and green on another. Not much later, we were introduced to clickers, by eInstruction. We got a couple of sets of those, and they were the best thing since sliced bread. After several evolutionary cycles of clickers, we have now progressed to a 1:1 classroom.

We are blessed to have a great group of administrators who support us, and keep us well stocked on tech to make our paperless classrooms go. We have class sets of chromebooks, and that has enabled us to make use of a great website….

www.socrative.com

There are many advantages to using socrative. You get real time feedback from students, and it is more than just multiple choice. You can throw questions out there via computer, ipad, etc. and have kids answer.  The sky is the limit. You can get reports sent to you to use later. You can even use it as a toaster! (ok that one may be a stretch)

If you have not tried www.socrative.com, and are in a situation where the tech is there, you need to.  Even if you are not 1:1, it has value. Students can work in groups and formulate answers to post.

There are tons of great resources out there for you, and many are free. Take a look around, and share!

Twitter “Chats”

For some time, there has been a phenomenon referred to as the TwitterChat. A Twitter chat is basically a time where people with a common interest use Twitter to discuss a topic, or a series of topics.  Users keep track of the discussion by using and following a certain hashtag, for example, #edtechchat.

For people who are new to TwitterChats, they can seem daunting. Trying to follow a discussion on the phone app might prove difficult, if not impossible, depending on the chat you are following. Spend some time watching the chat roll by, and don’t feel like you have to catch everything that is said… catch what you can.

Many people (myself included) find that using a program such as Tweetdeck (my choice), Tweetchat, or Hootsuite helps a great deal. The key is to learn your program, and how to set it up.

TwitterChats have certain formats that they follow for questions/topics, so take a minute or ten to familiarize yourself with the working of the TwitterChat you wish to jump into.

Be sure mention the hashtag in each post that is a part of the TwitterChat, otherwise, people following the chat will likely never see your moment of profound wisdom!

Spend a little time on Google, Bing, or your search engine of choice looking for topics that interest you.  My current favorite is below, take a look. If you find any cool ones you are willing to share, please, let everyone know.

#edtechchat: is all about Education Technology, it takes place Mondays from 8 to 9 pm Eastern Time. If EdTech is your thing, as it is mine, this one is for you. It moves fast, so be ready. They archive the chat at edtechchat.wikispaces.com