Saturday, August 30, 2014

Developing Good Listening

How To Develop Good Listening The First Month Of School


By Michael Linsin
Listening is always a problem with a new group of students. You can count on it. Dwelling on it or complaining about it—as many teachers are wont to do—is a waste of time.  The effective teacher is only concerned with what they can control. They’re only concerned with the actions they must take to fix the problem. They meet their students where they are, and then show them the way up.  When it comes to developing good listening, the key is to speak in a way that will cause your students to tune in naturally.  It’s to make the act of listening to you a habit.

Here’s how:
Stand in one place.
Standing in one place encourages your students to focus on you. It settles restlessness. It calms excitability. It removes many of the distractions and obstacles that interfere with listening, so that your highlighted voice becomes the most prominent stimuli in the room.

Soften your voice.
Most teachers talk too loud, believing that it helps students pay attention. But the truth is, it does the opposite. It makes them passive and disinterested. It discourages them from looking in your direction and tuning you in.  Good listening is active. It requires students to lean in and follow your lips, facial expressions, and body language. It requires them to meet you halfway, to do their part, and to seek out meaning and understanding. The good news is that students do this intuitively when you soften your voice.

Stop repeating yourself.
Repeating yourself effectively removes any reason for your students to listen to you the first time. It grooves the habits of passivity and learned helplessness and weakens the power of your words.
When you say it once, on the other hand, and expect them to get it, you encourage active listening, engagement, and relevant, pointed questions.

Cut the fat.
The fewer words you use, the better your students will listen. This underscores the importance of staying focused and on topic, of providing only what your students need to be successful.
Keep your thoughts, fillers, and digressions to yourself. They only water down your message and lessen its impact.

Pause often.
Remembering to pause will give your students a moment to download the previous information. It also makes you more interesting. It infuses your words with depth, importance, authority, and when needed, drama.  Pausing also allows you to check for understanding. In time, you can become remarkably accurate assessing comprehension simply by pausing to take notice of their expressions.

Focus on doing.
When speaking to your students, as much as possible, focus on what you want them to do. This is inherently more interesting to students and immediately activates their visualization powers. They automatically see themselves in their mind’s eye doing what you ask.  Furthermore, successful classrooms are action-oriented. They’re productive and active and locked-in on completing their objectives. Even lining up to leave the classroom is an opportunity to do something well.

It’s About You
Many teachers can be overheard lamenting the poor listening in their classroom, but their solution to the problem rarely has anything to do with them. In their mind, their students are the problem.
So they harp on the importance of good listening. They put their frustrations on display. They show a complete lack of faith in their students by incessantly moving about their room, increasing their volume, and repeating their words.  But good listening isn’t about the students. It’s about the teacher.
It’s about speaking in a way that leaves no one behind, that empowers students to tune in, that provides the conduit through which active, tenacious listening becomes a habit.

Friday, August 29, 2014

Creative Way to Chart Progress

Notice that student stars move up the wall as their percentages of AR points increase.  This is a nice way of rewarding progress.  No one but the student and the teacher know what the point goals are.  They just see who is on target for getting to 100% or higher.

Understanding Place Value

Fourth graders are learning about place value.  Mrs. Wessel gave out numbers to students and had them stand in place with student "commas" separating the numbers at the appropriate place.  She had students move around to show that the numeral being held by that student changes in place and in value when moved.

Really Good Anchor Charts



Thursday, August 28, 2014

State Testing 2015


We received new testing information from the State Department this week.  Two significant changes are:

  • The Alabama Science Assessment for 5th and 7th grades will be replaced with ACT Aspire Science Test for 5th and 7th grades.  
  • Schools who administer the paper and pencil version of ACT Aspire are required to do so within the first three weeks of the testing window.  Because of this change, our dates for ACT Aspire will now be:
    • April 16 - Math
    • April 17 - Reading
    • April 20 - Writing
    • April 21 - Science (5th Grade only)

Throw Back Thursday





Week of September 1

Duties for Week of September 1

Courtyard
McLaughlin
Gym
Lincoln, Fox (A.M. - Chrisenberry / P.M. – Gudgen and Christopher)
Amphitheatre
Windham, Meacham
Outside Car Line
Felts
Bus Line
Bettis, Dawson
Breakfast
Blain / Carlile
Computer Labs
MAGPI
Parking Lot (PM)
Griffith (PP)

Date
Event
Mon, September 1
Labor Day

Schools Closed

Deadline for logging in to Educate Alabama

Tues, September 2
C Day


Wed, September 3
D Day
Technology Committee Meeting 3:15

Thurs, September 4
E Day


Fri, September 5
F Day


Sat, September 6

EdCamp PD @ Hoover High School
8:30-3:00
Click here to register:


Happy Birthday!
August 30                   Kristy Windham
                                   


DreamBox Training for Students

Teachers, I encourage you to attend computer class with your students when they have computer class starting today.  For the next 8 days, Lauren will be providing a detailed explanation of DreamBox.  I attended this morning, and I learned so much!  I know that our students are going to benefit from this information, but I think it is very valuable information for teachers, too.  I appreciate Lauren and Lisa for spending the time to build capacity among our students.
Lisa opened her lesson by showing the students a copy of her 6th grade math book which did not include illustrations, tools, nor support.  Just problems to work!  She explained that DreamBox provides lots of support.  It isn't just another practice sheet.  





Wednesday, August 27, 2014

More Intervention Walkthroughs

New teachers, along with Kelly, Lisa, Kristi, Autumm, and Beth, observed math intervention today. Takeaways included the use of focused direct instruction, manipulatives, specific WILFs for intervention, outstanding classroom management and high expectations for students during this time. Thank you to everyone for graciously allowing colleagues to observe and learn from you.





Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Intervention Walkthroughs

New teachers are taking advantage of opportunities to observe colleagues during intervention.




Quote of the Day

“Waste no more time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one.”
—Marcus Aurelius (121-180)
Roman Emperor, Stoic Philosopher

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Throwback Thursday




Congratulations!

Congratulations to Dr. Phyllis Faust for having her research published in September in The Alabama Journal of Educational Leadership.  For more information, check out the article in the Trussville Tribune.



Week of August 25

Duties for Week of August 25

Courtyard
LoPresti
Gym
Deneke, Fox (A.M. - Chrisenberry / P.M. – Gudgen and Christopher)
Amphitheatre
M Waits, Meacham
Outside Car Line
A Moore
Bus Line
Kuhn, Dawson
Breakfast
Blain / Carlile
Computer Labs
MAGPI
Parking Lot (PM)
Griffith (PI)

Date
Event
Mon, August 25
F Day
2:00 Early Dismissal and CAD
2:00 Specialists Meet

Boy Scout Roundup during P.E.

Tues, August 26
G Day
Boy Scout Roundup during P.E.

Drama Auditions 3:00-4:30

Wed, August 27
H Day
Drama Auditions 3:00-4:30

Special Ed Meeting in Fran’s Room @ 3:00

Thurs, August 28
A Day
Boy Scout Roundup Meeting in Paine Primary Lunchroom
6:00-8:00

Fri, August 29
B Day

Friday Freeze 2:15

Happy Birthday!
August 30                   Kristy Windham

Field Trip Information

As you plan field trips, keep in mind that buses must arrive no LATER than 2:15 P.M. to unload and move buses, or arrange to arrive after 3:00 P.M. ( charter buses) or later.  With the bus stacking, we will have to have trips back on campus earlier than last year.
Thanks in advance.


Chuck Bradford
Trussville Police
Paine Intermediate SRO

205-228-3412


Husky Pride Schedule

 This year our theme for Husky Pride will be Growing our Garden. We have such a beautiful garden, and would love every student to have a hand in making it a beautiful space. When it is your week for Husky Pride, we would love for your class to do something great for our garden.  This can be as simple as pulling weeds, or you could take on a bigger task, such as making a window box. The choice of what to do is up to you. We just want our kids enjoying our garden as much as possible. Here are some ideas for your class:

Trellis- climbing roses
Window Boxes
Outdoor Art for Wall
Posts to hang Wind Chimes or Hanging Baskets
Bird Baths
Wind Chimes
Concrete Statues
Benches
Hanging Baskets
Iron Sculpture
Fairy Garden
Pulling Weeds
Anything you can think of to enhance our garden.
When it is your class’ husky pride week, please send 5-6 different kids (no more) to the WPIN Lab by 7:55 am to say the Pledge. Make sure that each student gets a turn to go.  A suggestion would be to send them in number order. :) On Friday of your week we will include a slide and 2-3 pictures, if you have them, showing what you did. Please find your week on the schedule attached. You will notice, some weeks two classes will go together due to assemblies or holidays. This ensures everyone gets equal time, hopefully.


Dates
Class
Aug. 25 - 29
Wright
Sept. 1 - 6
Lewis
Sept. 8-12
Bramlett
Sept. 15 - 19
Summers
Sept. 22 - 26
Moore
Sept. 29- Oct. 3
Darnell
Oct. 6 - 10
Almon
Oct. 13 - 17
Perry
Oct. 20-24
Brasher
Oct. 27 - 31
M. Long
Nov. 3 - 7
Dahlke
Nov. 10 - 14
Brandon/McLaughlin
Nov. 17 - 21
Minisman
Nov. 24 - 28
Felts/Smith
Dec. 1 - 5
Felts/Smith
Dec 8- 12
Higg
Dec 15 - 19
Bettis
Jan. 5 - 9
Dover/Deneke
Jan 12 - 16
Dover/Deneke
Jan 19 - 23
Davis
Jan. 26 - 30
Aldrich
Feb 2 -6
Walls
Feb 9 - 13
Waites
Feb 16 - 20
Wessel
Feb 23 - 27
Hendrick
Mar 2 - 6
Feild
Mar 9 - 13
Childs/Waits
Mar 16 - 20
LoPresti/Moore
Mar 23 - 27
Owens/Ekonen
Mar 30- Apr 3
Spring Break
Apr 6 - 10
Horn/Woods
Apr 13- 17
Kuhn/Williamson
Apr 20-24
Camara/Wright
Apr 27 - May 1
Peters/F. Smith
May 4 - 8
Windham/Sulser