Friday, 6 December 2019

Thanks Sean Agriss!

Sean Agriss,

Text presentations were great because now I have a list of books that are valuable to teaching and I didn't have to research them myself. The discussions were great and I loved learning from my peers.

This class taught me that "I can". Sometimes college courses are full of criticism, constructive criticism. But it can be hard and a little discouraging.  This class caused me to reflect on my capabilities and it taught me great resources for when I'm clueless. I also learned how to have a classroom that is comfortable for the students.

Thanks for this experience,

Dana

Wednesday, 20 November 2019

Literature/Reading Handout



What? This book covers everything from reading fluency to understanding vocabulary, writing tips, and public speaking. It is divided into four parts: Understanding Struggling Adolescent Readers, Organizing Classroom Contexts that Promote Literacy, Implementing Classroom Instruction for Struggling Adolescent Readers,  and Developing School-wide Contexts to Support Achievement.
       


Why? I chose this text because of the title. I would love to see all my students find joy in reading. I would keep this book handy for when I need help for my struggling learners.


How? Ways to use the Reading Success for Struggling Adolescent Learners
1.     I would start off by recognizing the unique strengths of my students. I could even encourage the students to put out the strengths they see in themselves and others. When People feel good about themselves they rebel less and try harder(44).
2.      Sustained Silent Reading (SSR) time in class is strongly encouraged in this text and it suggests creative acronyms for reading time: DEAR (Drop Everything And Read), FRED (Free Reading Every Day), RIOT (Reading Is Our Thing), or SAFARI (Students And Faculty All Reading Independently).
3.      Indy 500—students are encouraged to read in their free time and record pages read for the quarter and the highest class gets a reward.
Why not? Challenges I can see arising with these ideas in the classroom… not everyone likes to feel good about themselves or receive compliments (it makes them feel “funny”). Sometimes SSR is viewed by students as study hall and it might be used to do homework from other classes. Kids read at different speeds and do some don’t read at all. The Indy 500 would be based on student honesty which might be problematic.

Tuesday, 5 November 2019

Writing/Grammar Handout


What? This book is an easy-to-read-and-follow instruction manual for writing and grammar. It has five chapters: Parts of Speech (nouns, verbs, etc.), Sentenced for Life (sentence structure), Punch Up Your Punctuation (take a guess), Quick and Dirty Tips (my favorite), and Your Right to Write (everything else).


Why? I chose this text because I have heard of Grammar Girl before and have been curious how a book about grammar and writing makes the New York Times Bestseller List. I never thought grammar could be exciting enough to make a bestseller list. Learning grammar can be super annoying as a teenager so I’m seeking advice from this author to hopefully bring grammar and writing to life or just simplify it. Mignon Fogarty also makes you feel normal for feeling like a bad writer and offers great advice and encouragement that makes you believe you can write. I would love a classroom set of this book to use in my classes. If I can’t do that, I will at least keep this book handy for when I fall short and have no clue what I’m doing.

How? Ways to use the Ultimate Writing Guide for Students to inspire…
1.      I would have my class make “zines” or charts similar to Fogarty’s to help them remember the rules… then use these charts to help with writing and editing their own works. (It was said in class that people learn best from reviewing their own work).
2.      The book has “Quick and Dirty Tips” to help with writing. I want to have my classes come up with and share their own anecdotes that they use in writing and spelling. (Like when I write Wednesday I don’t say wends-day in my head I say wed-nes-day. Stupid? But it works.)
3.      The last chapter is motivational and also addresses writing appropriately for the audience. Filters are a must in writing and speech. I would like to have my class write an article or story and rewrite it for different audiences. They could take a newspaper article and turn it into a children’s story then a research article and have them notice the differences in how they write per audience and that we do the same thing when speaking. 
Why not? Challenges I can see arising with these ideas in the classroom… a student could lose their grammar-zine so then I would maybe want to have the students leave them in class or have larger one on the wall as a visual. Not everyone likes to share anecdotes but not everyone would have to because they will learn regardless. I could encourage those students who choose not to share to mention their favorite that someone else shared.

Thursday, 31 October 2019

Uncle Sandy


The local newspaper printed an article when my grandma passed away, the author wrote about my grandma's incredible life and told of her passing to thousands of people. She was an amazing woman and loved by many people. My mom told me stories from her childhood about her three sisters and two brothers. I recently came across a document in a public domain that listed a third brother. I had never heard of my Uncle Sandy. My mom denied the idea of a third brother or a secret family. The obituary that had been written at the time of my grandma’s death had one small mistake; here was a comma in the place of a semicolon. This small error in the obituary has given my mom a third brother: Dave, Walter, and Sandy.  Obituaries often say who the survivors of the deceased are with their hometowns listed. Uncle Dave lives in Sandy, a suburb of Salt Lake City but because of the typo I now have an Uncle Sandy listed as my mom's brother. When I first discovered this I almost believed that maybe there really is an Uncle Sandy that I've never met or was so rotten they never spoke of him. Just imagine the secret I thought I discovered.

Writing is important, we are adding to history when we write or create. We need to be accurate and that includes the little things including punctuation. The NES text makes it seem so simple, if we could only remember all the rules. They really are simple and easy to forget.


As teachers, we will all have at least one student who will ask why they have to learn grammar and punctuation because the student might not want to be a writer, but everyone writes especially with social media being such a big deal. You want to say what you mean or you might end up splitting an inheritance with Uncle Sandy, whoever he is.

Wednesday, 30 October 2019

Visual Literacy Handout




Visual Literacy - Graphic Canon Volume 2 

"A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read."
                                                                                                                                        - Mark Twain

What? This heavy book is filled with snippets of graphic versions of the classics that we have all had the privilege of reading: Edgar Allen Poe, The Scarlet Letter, Oliver Twist, Pride and Prejudice, Frankenstein, Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Dr, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Picture of Dorian Gray, and Huckleberry Finn. The book shows a sample of what is out there in the classics transformed to graphics.

Why? I chose this text because I was looking for interesting ways to teach classic novels and get students excited about seeing them in new ways. More specifically Huckleberry Finn because it is a story that we’ve all read and can remember the torture of reading this. Learning the classics can be super annoying as a teenager, but it is still a very important part of culture and this culture educates you and broadens your mind. As outdated as these novels may seem to our students, they teach timeless lessons that still apply today.
How? Ways to use the Graphic Canon to inspire…
1.      I think it would be fun to have students in a class each take a chapter or two and transform it into a simple graphic novel or scene and create a complete graphic novel unique to each class.
2.      The graphics and simple text of the graphic novel can help simplify the story and help draw emotion that may otherwise get lost in our literary application. Pictures help with textual understanding.
3.      I would love to have my class read both the graphic novel version and the original version and do a comparison of the texts. Different things will stand out in each version. The graphic novel will miss details of the original and the graphic novel can offer understanding that was overlooked by the reader in the original text.
 Why not? Problems that I can see arising with creating a classroom graphic novel: not everyone is artistic and not everyone does their homework. Other problems could be the “Why? Why do we have to read this old book?” There are great articles on the web about the “why”. It’d be worth a google (starting here).

Wednesday, 23 October 2019

Visual Literacy: Applied English


Visual Literacy is a lot more than I thought it was going to be. Initially I was thinking about Graphic Novels but the textbook reading taught me more on this topic and how it applies to our everyday lives. We are continuously exposed to Visual Literacy and we don’t pause to think about it as literature: billboards on the side of the road, advertisements on television, and the menu with beautiful photographs of the food  at your favorite restaurant.

I remember making commercials for student-invented products and campaigns for imaginary candidates in various classes as a child and not knowing that I was creating literature or even visual literature. It was fun and almost felt nonsensical but this is one direction that literature allows us to go.

Visual Literature had limited information on CCSS and that could possibly be due to the fact that visual literature seems like something you might learn in a business class or an art class. This is important for English Classes to be able to offer this form of education because it shows application of the subject. Most students want to know how a school subject applies to the big picture of real life. With visual literacy, the students can see why taking an English class might be important to someone who already speaks the language or doesn’t want to major in English; they can now see that English Class is more than just reading Shakespeare.

I also like the Graphic Novel part of this subject. People learn in different ways and I really like the idea of Graphic Novels to switch up the learning process. I also wonder if it can teach body language for learning social skills. It’s a strange thought but instead of reading how people feel, students would see how people feel with body language expressed in the graphic novel; a skill that everyone can benefit from or improve on.

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Do you hear what I hear? Nope, because you're not listening.

Two summers ago, we went to a hypnotist show and my twelve-year-old daughter went on stage to be hypnotized. This experience revealed an interesting truth about my daughter: she simply doesn’t listen. She was hypnotized, no doubt about it, but she didn’t do everything the hypnotist suggested. If there was too much going on or the instructions were too long, she would get confused and not do anything. She was like a zombie standing on the stage in a daze. The hypnotist would sometimes have to put his hand on her shoulder to get her to listen. Sooo does her inability to listen explain why I have to tell her over and over again to clean her room? Probably not but we’ll just roll with it.

This same daughter also takes forever to answer a simple question. I can ask her what she wants for breakfast and it takes her forever to answer. It used to feel like a long awkward pause until I realized she was seriously considering the question. Now I am learning that brief silences are good so that information gets processed. The textbook teaches us to pause before responding and to comment on the previous speaker first. This keeps us engaged in the conversation instead of focusing on our response.

I am a mean mom. When we go on a road trip, we listen to books instead of watch movies. My kids get excited about the books, including my “super cool” son. I really liked that the textbook mentions that students like to listen to poetry, books, and podcasts. These are important listening opportunities. 

The text also suggests having the students retell the story.
Communication is much more than listening and speaking. According to the textbook, body language is a form of communication. Before we speak to people we automatically assess their body language and what it is telling us and to consciously aware of what we are saying with our own body language.