Sunday, November 30, 2014

Week of December 1st

Week of December 1st


Courtyard
Brandon
Gym
Bettis, Fox (A.M. - Chrisenberry / P.M. – Gudgen and Christopher)
Amphitheatre
M.E. Williamson, Meacham
Outside Car Line
Dover
Bus Line
M. Long
Breakfast
Blain / Carlile
Computer Labs
Christopher and Dawson
MAGPI
Lothspeich, Walls, P Smith, Gudgen
Parking Lot (PM)
Griffith (PI)


Date
Event
Monday, December 1
G Day

Lesson Plans Checked

2:00 Dismissal

2:00 p.m. Science P.D. (library)/CAD (all others)

Tuesday, December 2
H Day

Coffee with the Principal @ 9:00 a.m.
Wednesday, December 3

Club Day

PTO Grants are Due

Thursday, December 4
A Day
TAC Meeting

PI Parent Night @ 6:00 p.m.



Friday, December 5
B Day


Thursday, November 27, 2014

Happy Thanksgiving!

http://happythanksgivingpictures-2014.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Thanksgiving-Pictures.jpg

On this day, I reflect on my colleagues and friends at Paine Intermediate, and find that I am beyond thankful for:

  • A staff who is a family concerned about and genuinely caring for one another.  A family who fulfills one another’s needs whether it be through prayers; Sinus medicine, requested AR books, the loss of a family member, mentoring/guiding the practice of others, or continuing to perfect your own practice.

  • A staff who puts their best foot forward every day, all day, for your students and each other, even when you may not feel like it.

  • A staff who can envision the possibilities!

  • A staff who comes together as a team when the going gets tough, and even when it is not tough!


  • A staff who can look back over the day, the week, the month, the school year with pride about a job well-done and the people in whose lives we made a difference.


  • Our new teachers.....their exuberance, willingness to learn, their tenacity.


  • Our veteran teachers....their willingness to learn and grow, to share, to become better throughout the years, to be constant beacons for why we do what we do in this business.


  • Our support staff (custodians, aides, secretaries, nurse, courtyard monitor, lunch ladies, resource officer) who always say, “Yes!” to whatever we ask of them.  They are the backbone of our whole operation!



  • Our leaders, those steady and forward-thinking people, both past and present, who encourage us and push us in our endeavors, never wavering in their belief that we can go higher, longer and stronger to achieve the best for ourselves and our students at all times.

I hope you all have a wonderful day with family and friends!  Thank you for enriching my life!

Kristi




Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Happy Thanksgiving Day & Happy Iron Bowl Weekend

As we embark upon the official beginning of the holiday season, I’d like to take a moment to tell everyone THANK YOU! You all are working very hard each day, you are committed to providing the most rigorous academic program possible for our students, you are diligent in on-going professional development for yourself, and most of all, you all believe in laughing, smiling and having fun while working!

I want to wish you all a pleasant Thanksgiving Day. Enjoy your family and friends, have fun out there shopping, be careful while out, and RELAX! *I’ll try not to send too many emails over the break, lol*

We are a family here at Paine and no matter what your position is in our building…you are appreciated!

So, from the PI Family to your Personal Family…Happy Thanksgiving Day, Happy Holidays & Happy Iron Bowl Weekend!!



Coffee with the Principal

Come out and enjoy time at your child's school by attending...

Coffee With the Principal



When: Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Time: 9:00 a.m.

Paine Intermediate School-Amphitheater

Topics: Math at Paine Intermediate School &
Your Child's Electronic Device: Staying Safe

Hope to see you there!!

Monday, November 24, 2014

Awesome Job!

We are so proud of Bennet Do, 3rd grade student in Mrs. Camara's class for really working hard to reach his AR goal!!  Bennet has met and achieved 62 points so far within AR and is the Top Reader for his class right now. He is well on his way to becoming a Millionaire!! 



3rd Grade is Bubbling About Their Research

3rd graders have been reading and researching about non-fiction topics of their choice.  I visited Jana LoPresti's class today.  Some of their research topics were: How tall is the tallest horse and how short is the shortest horse?; What was Babe Ruth's real name?; How much does a great white shark weigh?

Research: Mixed-set Assignments, May Boost Test Scores

Studying for the Test by Taking It



PROTESTS are flaring up in pockets of the country against the proliferation of standardized tests. For many parents and teachers, school has become little more than a series of workout sessions for the assessment du jour.
And that is exactly backward, research shows. Tests should work for the student, not the other way around.
In an experiment published late last year, two University of Texas psychologists threw out the final exam for the 900 students in their intro psych course and replaced it with a series of short quizzes that students took on their laptops at the beginning of each class.
“They didn’t like it, at least at first,” said one of the professors, James W. Pennebaker. The other professor, Samuel D. Gosling, added, “For the first few weeks, every time their friends went out drinking, they couldn’t go — they had yet another quiz the next day.”
But they did significantly better than a comparison intro psych class, both in their grades and on a larger quiz that included 17 of the same questions that appeared both in the quizzes and on the other class’s midterm. The quizzes were especially beneficial for the type of students — many from low-performing high schools — who don’t realize how far behind they are until it’s too late.
One leading researcher in this field, Henry L. Roediger III of Washington University in St. Louis, argues that tests of varying scale and intensity can deepen learning. “We now know that testing, including self-testing, is an especially powerful form of study,” said Dr. Roediger, co-author of the book “Make It Stick.”
How so? Because retrieving facts, formulas or concepts is a threefold mental act: finding the sought-after information in the vast catacombs of the brain; bringing it consciously to mind; and finally, storing it. That newly stored memory will be embedded in a host of additional associations and connections and be much easier to recall later than if you’d merely read it again.
Testing has so many dimensions that it can often be easily disguised. In a study published last month, the cognitive scientist Doug Rohrer of the University of South Florida made a clever change in the math homework of middle school students in Tampa, Fla. Working with teachers, he essentially gave each student two types of assignments. To test some skills they got so-called blocked practice — concentrated drills on a single thing, like solving for X. On other skills they got mixed practice, that is, blending certain skills — say graphing — with other types of problems from the course.
The rationale was straightforward. Practicing skills in isolation leads to noticeable improvement, but students do not have to shift gears. They know how to proceed because the assignment says “graphs” or “solving for X” at the top of the page.
Yet at the end of the term, on a surprise test, the students solved 72 percent of the problems that they’d studied in mixed sets, compared with 38 percent of those in blocked, homework-as-usual sets. The problems and teachers were the same, and the classes were taught as usual. The only change was in the homework.
In the jargon of the field, this strategy of mixed problem-sets is called interleaving. It is distinct from the end-of-unit reviews that teachers commonly give, because it’s self-guided and continual. It mimics a test in a crucial way, in that it forces students to distinguish between types of problems and decide which strategy is appropriate.
The beauty of broadening testing beyond basic assessment is that the approach can be applied at home, easily, for students of all ages. Most young children squirm through their homework, but many love to play teacher. By cutting short “study time” and asking them to be the teacher, parents can make the session more fun, more interactive and a richer learning experience. Teaching is self-testing of an especially potent kind.
Ditto for making an outline of a chapter (with the book closed), or discussing the material with a friend or roommate. One reason scientists suspect that studying in pairs or groups can be helpful is that students are forced to talk to one another about the material — or better yet, argue about it. These are all forms of self-examination, and as such deepen learning more than passively rereading or reviewing the material.
The brain is an exotic learning machine, to put it mildly. It does not take orders well. You can tell it to remember the major players in the settling of Manhattan, stress how crucially important that is, and on the test a week later very little comes back. And yet you might remember nearly every play in the San Francisco Giants’ Game 7 World Series victory. Why? Because the brain doesn’t listen to what you say; it watches what you do. And thinking often about Madison Bumgarner pitching, talking about the game, arguing about it: These are mental actions, as well as subtle forms of testing knowledge.
Testing in all its permutations, subtle and otherwise, convinces the brain that the knowledge is useful, and important. And by varying one’s testing strategies, the actual final exam — the dreaded assessment — isn’t nearly as scary.


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/23/sunday-review/studying-for-the-test-by-taking-it.html

Thanksgiving Food Drive

Thank you to all of our PI Family and Friends for giving and donating toward our annual Thanksgiving Food Drive. We collected a total of 3,139 food items to be given to those in need. 





Chess at PI

Students enjoying and learning Chess during Paine Intermediate's Club Day! 








Sunday, November 23, 2014

Family News

Please keep Debby Meacham (library aide) and her family in your prayers.  Her father had a stroke last week.  He is recovering from the stroke, but some other health issues are hindering his recovery.  His doctors are continuing to evaluate him and determine when he is healthy enough for surgery on his carotid artery. 

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Week of November 24

Duties for Week of November 24th 

Courtyard
Bramlett
Gym
Field, Fox (A.M. - Chrisenberry / P.M. – Gudgen and Christopher)
Amphitheatre
Childs, Meacham
Outside Car Line
Dahlke
Bus Line
Summers
Breakfast
Blain / Carlile
Computer Labs
Christopher and Dawson
MAGPI
Lothspeich, Walls, P Smith, Gudgen
Parking Lot (PM)
Griffith (PP)

Date
Event
Monday, November 24
E Day

2:00 Dismissal

2:00-2:30 p.m. Faculty Meeting (library). 2:30-3:30 p.m. Technology Training (various rooms)

Tuesday, November 25
F Day


Wednesday, November 26
School Closed

Thursday, November 27
School Closed

Thanksgiving Day

Friday, November 28
School Closed

*Happy Black Friday Shopping*



Tuesday, November 18, 2014

PI Information-Field Trip Canceled

Due to the extreme temperatures expected for tomorrow we are going to cancel the Sports and Fitness Club walking field trip.  

Copyright Conversations

There has been a lot of conversations recently among technology coordinators assisting schools and teachers in understanding copyright law especially as it relates to movies in a classroom, common area, etc.  Below is information that has been shared.  Please assist your teachers in understanding.

A school may show copyrighted movies under the "Educational Exemption" only if all criteria are met:
* A teacher or instructor is present.
* The showing takes place in a classroom setting with only the enrolled students attending.
* The movie is used as an essential part of the core, curriculum being taught.

There has been rumors for many years that Disney has sues teachers for showing a Disney movie in its entirety.  After much research, I have not found a case, but many state that Disney has sent cease and assist letter to notify of questionable action.

ISSUES OF U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW RELATING TO THE USE OF MOVIES IN THE CLASSROOM

*Classrooms in Public Schools and Nonprofit Educational
Institutions: Rented or Purchased Movies May Be Played By Teachers Without a License*

Section 110(1) of Title 17 of the United States Code grants a specific exemption from the copyright laws for:

performance or display of a work by instructors or pupils in the course of face-to-face teaching activities of a nonprofit educational institution, in a classroom or similar place devoted to instruction, unless, in the case of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, the performance, or the display of individual images, is given by means of a copy that was not lawfully made under this title, and that the person responsible for the performance knew or had reason to believe was not lawfully made ....

This means that no license from the copyright holder is required when a teacher at a public school or non-profit educational institution uses a lawfully purchased or rented copy of a movie in classroom instruction. It doesn't matter who purchased or rented the film, so long as it was legally obtained. The exemption is granted for "face-to-face" teaching activities only. This means that the teacher (or a substitute teacher) must be present. The exemption covers a "classroom or similar place devoted to instruction." This gives teachers some flexibility. For example, it is likely that a gymnasium used for large educational presentations in which several classes are convened together would be covered so long as a teacher presented the film. Note that remotely accessing a film from a central memory storage facility is probably not permitted. See 17 U.S.C. § 1201(a).

*It is illegal to circumvent technological measures that effectively control access to copyrighted works, such as digital locks, to make compilations of scenes from various movies.*Title 17 U.S. Code § 1201(a)(1)(A). However renting or purchasing a movie and showing a small portion of it and then taking it out of the DVD or VHS player and putting in another does not involve circumventing any type of lock.


If you have any questions, please email me so we can find the answers together.


Sincerely,
April Chamberlain
Technology Coordinator
Trussville City Schools
Trussville, AL  35173

205 228 3044

Club Day Reminder

Hello Everyone:

Our next Club Day/Teacher Professional Development is scheduled for Wednesday, November 19th! We understand that next week will be very busy for some, and a few of you will possibly miss your club day time due to a previously scheduled conference.

Having said that, below you will find the Club Day plan for Wednesday:

We will have blended professional development next week for club day. Each content area will receive an email from your academic coach outlining specifically what should be completed during your allotted club day professional development time. We will not meet as a joint group, instead, you will engage in your P.D. activities for the day in your classroom. I ask that everyone stop by the counseling suite to sign in, then head back to your room to begin working!


Literacy teachers will view tutorials offered from Renaissance-U and AR360 and Math teachers will spend half of their P.D. time working on your specific curriculum guide. There will be follow-up of the assignments that you complete on Wednesday, 11-19-14, during our next club day. Lisa and Kelly will email you a more detailed club day outline for your content area, but I’ve provided a general overview. Feel free to email us with any questions. 

Coffee with the Principal

Come out and enjoy time at your child's school by attending...

Coffee With the Principal



When: Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Time: 9:00 a.m.

Paine Intermediate School-Amphitheater

Topics: Math at Paine Intermediate School &
Your Child's Electronic Device: Staying Safe

Hope to see you there!!

Veteran's Day Photo Collage

Below you will find the link to the Shutterfly site with all of the Veteran's Day pictures that we captured. The day was so beautiful and meant so much to so many people. Feel free to download the pictures as you'd like!

Veteran's Day Shutterfly Site


Monday, November 17, 2014

Happy Birthday Thank You!!

Thank you to everyone for the Happy Birthday well wishes and the gift! I truly appreciate you all for thinking about me on my birthday!!

I wanted to share this special Happy Birthday I received from a group of my PI friends and their teacher!





Quote for the Day

“Do all the good you can. By all the means you can. In all the ways you can. In all the places you can. At all the times you can. To all the people you can. As long as ever you can.”
—John Wesley (1703-1791)
Theologian

Beth Bruno
Interim Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction
Trussville City Schools
113 North Chalkville Road
Trussville, AL 35173

205-228-3026

Sunday, November 16, 2014

T.A.C. Questions and Responses (October)

Below you will find the TAC submissions and responses. They are also emailed to Dr. Neill and housed in the TAC binder in the main office.

Thank you,

TAC-October
1.                   Could we please consider some CAD or Club Day time to work on entering grades and preparing for report cards?  
This has been cleared up earlier via email.
2.                   Students are overly excited on Club Day.  It takes at least 10 minutes when they return to the classroom to calm down.  Could we reconsider allowing some recess time on Club Day?  We have told parents that students are receiving their PE instruction through recess.
This changed last year, so you may go to recess using the Wednesday recess schedule for 15 minutes or, if it is being used by a Club, find an empty spot.
3a. In the event that a teacher has an emergency or is too sick to contact a sub, who is responsible for finding one?  Is there a set protocol in place for this type of situation?
This is a copy of the protocol on page 7 of the Teacher Handbook:
Teachers are responsible for securing a substitute teacher for their classroom during an absence.  A list of sub teachers and their phone numbers will be regularly updated and emailed to each teacher.  Please discard all old substitute lists and use ONLY the updated one.  Occasionally a substitute’s name is deleted from the list because the school or school system has found their performance to be unsatisfactory.  Should illness or other circumstances prevent anyone from contacting and securing a substitute, he/she should ask another teacher on your team or grade level to do this task. This increases the likelihood of getting a reliable substitute in a teacher’s absence.  You will be emailed a substitute distribution list to aid you in locating a substitute for your leave days. Please update your distribution list as updates are emailed to you.   

3b. Can we get a sub-finder system instead of using that current e-mail system?
This was discussed in a Principal’s Meeting recently at the BOE and the present cost and personnel required for the system are major factors at this time (as far as we know). A decision such as this would be made at the Central Office level.  
3c.  When teachers need to be absent at the last minute due to illness or sick children, could someone in the office be responsible for finding a sub for us?  There are times teachers may have a stomach bug or such and it is so hard to continue calling and calling to find a sub when you are ill.  The office would know who has already accepted a job and could avoid calling those subs.  I understand that sub finder is a financial burden.  When we know days in advance that we will be out, that is a different situation and we will continue to be responsible for locating a sub for those days.  I am asking for help finding last minute subs.
The office staff doesn’t know what subs are working until subs have signed in for the day.  In the past, the office has always helped to find a sub at the last-minute after your partner teacher has been unsuccessful, unless they are unable to assist.  Frequently someone from the office will cover a classroom; but that leaves the office short-staffed and unable to make calls.  Mrs. Phillips also helps locate someone else in the building to temporarily cover your class if you are ill.  Specialists will partner up to aide each other in securing a sub due to teacher illness, but it has always been the rule that partner teachers help find each other’s sub.

3d. Also, is it possible for the office to highlight the changes made to the sub list?  Please list deletions and additions so we can tell what changed.  Then, if we’ve lined up a sub that was taken off the list, we can find an alternate.  When it is a planned absence and we line up a sub in advance, we need to know he or she has been removed.
The specific central office department does not want us to make changes to the TCS Sub List online.  They are the only ones able to make any adjustments now.  Mrs. Phillips forwarded the request to highlight changes to the Payroll Dept. at the BOE, but the list is closed to new additions, so the only changes now would be removals.  As you secure a sub just remember to periodically check the list for changes. 

4. Can the Literacy and Math Coaches present vocabulary mini lessons on WPIN beginning on A day and two more mini lessons for each cycle? The teacher would piggyback off the lessons and give support in the classroom.
I will talk with the Math Coach and Reading Coach to see what suggestions that they might have based on research and previous experiences. 
As of now, we will follow the present routine that was introduced regarding Academic Vocabulary two months ago. I am seeing great success in classrooms with the vocabulary lessons, students are excited about it and they absolutely love sharing their academic vocabulary notebooks with me (and having meaningful conversations about the words and meaning), teachers are finding time to present it during morning meeting and other suggested times as outlined in the initial training. I will provide you all with a more in-depth explanation to this answer, but as of now, we will continue with the Academic Vocabulary plan as it presently is. 
5.  Can Magpi move to a table in the lunchroom?      
This has been taken care of.      

6.  To get a true measure of test results from classroom to classroom, classes need to be equally balanced in number, gender, ability, etc. May we work on this in each grade level for the year 20152016?
Ms. Stacks works on this for several weeks during the summer to balance the class by gender, race, discipline, GaTE, special ed.  Zoning for the upcoming new schools is now a factor as well as we move forward. We will reopen the conversation regarding class design in the spring.

7.  Can we limit the length and number of e-mails we receive? Long and multiple e-mails keep us from being productive. 
We will all begin to monitor the amount of times we “reply all.”  I will revise the blog posts for staff to 2-3 times weekly (if possible).  More specific information would be helpful so that we know what exactly is being emailed too often. 
It is not my desire to discourage colleagues from providing affirmations to one another and emails of support, because I know and completely agree that from time-to-time words of encouragement, or just knowing that others appreciate you and your work, is VERY helpful. It provides for a boost in school morale, the overall school culture, and it is simply a nice gesture to make to others on occasion. 
If you are frustrated with these types of emails (i.e. emails of support or thanks from one another), there is a way to delete several emails at a time. I will get with our technology team and/or department to find out exactly how.
8.  Can we make sure the RtI, Data, and other meetings do not coincide with the end of the grading period?
Yes, we definitely will do this.  This year was a different situation due to the data coming in much later than usual and the change in Administration around October.

9a. May our unused copies carry over each month since some months require more or less at different times of the year? 
Our copiers do not allow a carry over.  Either everyone’s copy number is reset or no one is reset.
 9b. We need more copies each month since we are not purchasing textbooks.  We have to make copies of everything that we use.  Math textbooks would be more economical and environmentally friendly.  Also parents need tools to have so that they can better understand today’s math and how it is taught.  
This is a funds availability matter.  We buy 30 cases of paper every month and a half for $1051 and copier expenses of over $1000 a month.
We have started our Math at Paine Intermediate School math blog and have set dates for our Parent Math Academies. More information will be provided to you all during our November 24th faculty meeting. 

9c. Parents have been requesting math textbooks.  Students would benefit from having research based textbooks.  Can we get math textbooks?
Please direct parents to the administration for further conversation regarding textbooks if you are presented with the question. As far as the committee knows, funds are not available for textbooks or e-books at this time.

10.    Can we have a new large paper cutter for our workroom?  Ours is dull and flimsy.
Yes, that has been taken care of.  Please send equipment requests to Mrs. Phillips to order; those requests can be handled faster without waiting for a TAC meeting.

11.    Instead of having a Valentine Party, can we have an end-of-the-year celebration?
1.      Parties will only be at Christmas time and Valentine’s Day. (Room mother(s) to assist if you’d like). *This is covered in the Teacher Handbook.
2.      Small treats can be given at Halloween, end-of-the-year, and other times such as this.
3.      No Other Class Parties should take place throughout the year (unless permission is given for a special situation).


12a. Kona Ice becoming a school-wide and the only reward for the students meeting their end-of trimester AR goals was not discussed with teachers.  Instead of being told, can teachers have their own choice in how they decide to celebrate at the end of each trimester?  However, if this is to be the only reward, should the children have to pay for their hard work with AR?
 The school-wide Kona Ice program was established last school year and it was my desire to maintain it this school year. If Kona Ice seems to be too much, we can consider canceling it (but it seems to be favored by our children). Kona Ice is an easy fundraiser for our school; it is not money that comes from the teacher’s pocket or instructional fund. The main office staff manages the money and additional faculty members monitor the children while they are enjoying the treat. It’s a great social experience for our students and provides additional time for the teacher in the classroom while students are away.
12b. Would we be able to offer rewards to students for reaching their AR goals that are similar to last year’s rewards?  Last year we had to Kona Ice treat for a school-wide AR point goal, so it wasn’t known until recently that this would be students’ only reward for reaching their AR goal.  It also wasn’t known that rewards could not be given like they have been in year’s past.

 Accelerated Reader Plan for the 2014-2015 School Year  

The plan below will be PI’s AR Reward plan for the remainder of the school year. First, I would like for everyone to talk with your CAD (starting today) to decide on a consistent AR reward incentive for your students for the remainder of this school year. We am asking everyone to refrain from activities that interfere with the instructional program and instructional time. Examples of possible rewards are: 

*Teacher assistant for the day.
*Free books, pencils, treasure box, etc.
*Bring a special snack or drink from home.
*Popsicle Treat
*Pajama Day/Hat Day/Crazy Socks Day
*Another other minor incentive to encourage your students 

AR classroom rewards should not be movies, class parties, large food celebrations, or anything of that nature that takes away from the instructional program. If you engage in a celebration after school hours, you are welcome to continue those as it does not interfere with instructional time. 

All rewards for AR for the 1st trimester should be over. Kona Ice served as our 1st trimester reward (unless you were cleared otherwise, and those have been complete.
You are welcome to engage in other incentive and reward type of celebrations for students’ success, but the goal is to stay away from those things that take time away from our instructional program. I am a strong proponent for, and I believe in celebrating success, recognizing students (and teachers) for growth, leadership and other factors throughout the school year, and creating a school culture where everyone enjoys coming to work and students enjoy coming to school; but with that, we must maintain our primary focus which is instruction. I am also a believer in the education of the “whole child,” and I honestly believe we do a great job and have many different factors set in place at PI in order for us to truly educate the “whole child”.