Tuesday, August 25, 2009
First Readers' Workshop
Monday, August 24, 2009
The First Day
The first day in Kindergarten is always a fun and exciting day. I always wonder if the kids have as much trouble sleeping on the night before kindergarten as the teachers! Our newest students came into the school today listening to live string music (remember our theme is "Orchestrating a Symphony of Student Success")and then the kinder kids and families crowded into the Dining Room. At 9:00 the Principal entered and asked the parents to give their last hugs and kisses and then to go to the sides of the Dining Room so the children could see her. She then directed each class as they left the Dining Room throwing kisses and waving good-by. After the children were gone the parents were invited to a "Boo Hoo Breakfast" although one of the teachers said this morning that maybe if it's your second or third child, you might think of it as the "Woo Hoo Breakfast!" By the time we get into the classroom, teach the children the rituals and routines of where to put their backpack, how to find their name and their seat, where the bathroom is and how to get to the carpet for a whole group story, it's time for the WOW of the day, which this year was a live band teaching us about the different genres of music.
Then it's back to the classroom with just enough time to get to the Dining Room for lunch which for our little folks is no small task - all the while teaching the rituals and routines around lining up, finding our room's table, sitting for the entire lunch period, how to ask for help, cleaning up, etc. From the Dining Room it's outside for play time, which continues to be the all-time favorite and today is the perfect Florida day to play outside. After getting water at the fountain, it's a read aloud when we get back inside with a coloring activity, checking to see who can write their first and last name. We end the day with Centers because it gives children choices on their first day. Before you know it, it's time to make sure to go through those rituals and routines again for getting your backpack, packing it with your folder and tee-shirt,lining up, where to sit to wait for someone to pick you up, quick conference with mom or dad in the carport to let them know how the day went and... before you know it, it's all over.
As we enter a debrief of the first day with the entire school, you can hear the kindergarten teachers talking about the child that cried just until his parent was out of sight, how little they are, how over planned they were and how much they love the little people that they are going to grow with this year. This is such a great start to an even greater year!
Then it's back to the classroom with just enough time to get to the Dining Room for lunch which for our little folks is no small task - all the while teaching the rituals and routines around lining up, finding our room's table, sitting for the entire lunch period, how to ask for help, cleaning up, etc. From the Dining Room it's outside for play time, which continues to be the all-time favorite and today is the perfect Florida day to play outside. After getting water at the fountain, it's a read aloud when we get back inside with a coloring activity, checking to see who can write their first and last name. We end the day with Centers because it gives children choices on their first day. Before you know it, it's time to make sure to go through those rituals and routines again for getting your backpack, packing it with your folder and tee-shirt,lining up, where to sit to wait for someone to pick you up, quick conference with mom or dad in the carport to let them know how the day went and... before you know it, it's all over.
As we enter a debrief of the first day with the entire school, you can hear the kindergarten teachers talking about the child that cried just until his parent was out of sight, how little they are, how over planned they were and how much they love the little people that they are going to grow with this year. This is such a great start to an even greater year!
Friday, August 21, 2009
Kindergarten Orientation
Today was the day the parents came to school with their kindergartners for Orientation! What a wonderful day! You could see the excitement in the halls as some children peeked out from behind their moms. Others, of course, came right down to the carpet and were enthralled with their new teacher's every word. Still others went straight for the toys and blocks and never looked back. That's what we love about our youngest students! They come from diverse experiences. Our job is to make sure they become a class family this year! As walked through the kindergarten classrooms, you could see the time and energy that had gone into every single classroom. They had taken our music themes with our kinder country music genre and re-imagined their rooms. They were so excited to meet their new students and their families. Enjoy these slides taken right before the children and families joined us.
Now that we have all met, we have the weekend to get ready because on Monday morning we will begin our first day of Kindergarten! Yee Haw!
Now that we have all met, we have the weekend to get ready because on Monday morning we will begin our first day of Kindergarten! Yee Haw!
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Get Ready... Get Set...
Monday, August 17, 2009
A Back-to-School "Thriller"
Thriller from dayle timmons on Vimeo.
Then each team in turn presented a funny irreverent skit based on their genre of music. Some of the skits were prerecorded using the technology that we have been learning and others were live, but regardless, they all left you laughing. Of course there were gift cards for the best skits!Next on the agenda was the Principal's summary
New teachers were certainly not ignored. They were given 5 minutes to come up with a Soul Train line, so they danced without abandon to everyone's delight. Then of course, they had to take the official Chets Creek pledge!
The day ended with the Principal, a former Kindergarten Teacher
herself, reading us a children's book and finishing with a slide show of some of our most challenging children to the music of Michael Jackson's "Will You Be There?" It helped each of us get in touch with why we do what we do! Oh, and did I mention that there was a drawing on every grade level for an ipod? We finished by lunchtime and were treated to pizza. The afternoon was free for teachers to work in their rooms. Now this was really a back-to-school Thriller!
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Greater Than Yourslef
This year's Leadership book study is Greater Than Yourself by Steve Farber. In usual Farber-style the book is a parable that tells the story of a philosophy called GTY, Greater Than Yourself. It's a quick read. It reminded me a lot of Jim Collin
s' Level 5 Leader - the self actualized leader with self confidence so intact that he didn't have to claim credit for himself - the leader who easily gives up the limelight to build up others. GYT includes three tenets: Expand Yourself, Give Yourself and Replicate Yourself.
Expand Yourself reminded me of advice I used to give my daughter. You will attract the opposite sex when you stop thinking about who you will attract and concentrate instead on being a better you. It's being good in your own skin that's attractive. Farber insists that you need to continue to learn. In this step he suggests that you take inventory of what you do well and then choose someone to share your talents.
Give Yourself means to give to that project without expecting anything in return. Of course, he goes on to explain that you really do get lots in return. This step to me is all about relationships and being able to share with abandon - without worrying if it will make the other person look better. It's the total philosophy at Chets that we are transparent and that we have a moral and ethical obligation to share what we are fortunate enough to learn. It's the difference in being at a school with teachers that collaborate to make the whole better instead of being with a group of teachers that complete because they have to be top dog. In that type of school, teachers don't share because they want to be better. In a school like Chets, everyone shares because they want everyone to be better.
Finally, Replicate Yourself. Find and train your replacement. It's sort of the way you feel about your children. You so want them to out-achieve you.
There's really nothing about this philosophy that I don't believe and try to live. I guess it's just the idea of intentionally identifying a project that puts me off a little. It seems a little arrogant to decide that you are so good at something and then choose somebody that's not to "fix." I figure I've been Melanie Holtsman's GTY project for quite a while now. She knows so much more about technology than I do and she gives time to teaching me almost every single day and she certainly expects nothing in return! Who else could have gotten me to try Twitter and have me thinking about Facebook?!! I guess it's just the part about ever being better than she is at technology that has me rolling in the floor! Nevertheless, this is an interesting book and something to think about...
s' Level 5 Leader - the self actualized leader with self confidence so intact that he didn't have to claim credit for himself - the leader who easily gives up the limelight to build up others. GYT includes three tenets: Expand Yourself, Give Yourself and Replicate Yourself. Expand Yourself reminded me of advice I used to give my daughter. You will attract the opposite sex when you stop thinking about who you will attract and concentrate instead on being a better you. It's being good in your own skin that's attractive. Farber insists that you need to continue to learn. In this step he suggests that you take inventory of what you do well and then choose someone to share your talents.
Give Yourself means to give to that project without expecting anything in return. Of course, he goes on to explain that you really do get lots in return. This step to me is all about relationships and being able to share with abandon - without worrying if it will make the other person look better. It's the total philosophy at Chets that we are transparent and that we have a moral and ethical obligation to share what we are fortunate enough to learn. It's the difference in being at a school with teachers that collaborate to make the whole better instead of being with a group of teachers that complete because they have to be top dog. In that type of school, teachers don't share because they want to be better. In a school like Chets, everyone shares because they want everyone to be better.
Finally, Replicate Yourself. Find and train your replacement. It's sort of the way you feel about your children. You so want them to out-achieve you.
There's really nothing about this philosophy that I don't believe and try to live. I guess it's just the idea of intentionally identifying a project that puts me off a little. It seems a little arrogant to decide that you are so good at something and then choose somebody that's not to "fix." I figure I've been Melanie Holtsman's GTY project for quite a while now. She knows so much more about technology than I do and she gives time to teaching me almost every single day and she certainly expects nothing in return! Who else could have gotten me to try Twitter and have me thinking about Facebook?!! I guess it's just the part about ever being better than she is at technology that has me rolling in the floor! Nevertheless, this is an interesting book and something to think about...
Friday, August 14, 2009
New Concept for Leadership Team
It's the Friday before the first day that teachers come back and I spent most of the day at school noodling around with our new concept for leadership. I was joined by 20 other teachers who took time from their last day off to come and meet!
Jim Collins says that in order to go from good to great that you have to brutally honest. It is only by admitting and realizing where you are, that you can really make changes. I think as a Leadership group we did that hard work and imagined something different for ourselves. So... this year we have added layers of professional learning/leadership groups that will inform and lead different parts of our work. We will divide and conquer. There is an Administrative Council that includes the Principal, Standards Coach, Technologist, Media Specialist, Literacy Coach, Behavior Specialist, and Guidance Counselor. This group will be our Management Team which will be assisted by our long standing Shared Decision Making Team made up of Team Leaders selected by each grade level but the real work of moving student achievement ahead will be done by three Curriculum Councils - Literacy, Math and Science. Each of the three groups will have a grade level representative. Each group will meet once a month and then the entire Council will meet on the fourth week. This is vertical articulation by subject that has been missing in the past. The hope is that we can use our time wisely in addressing the specific needs and dreams of each curriculum group.
Last year we continued a tradition at Chets Creek that has served us well with a Leadership Team that met once a week. The Team was led by the Principal and made up of the Standards Coach, Technologist, Media Specialist, Guidance Counselor and a handful of lead teachers. In previous years the Leadership Team had really been the engine that soared student achievement ahead. They were the brains - the guiding force - the group that dreamed the impossible dreams and then made them a reality. We debated issues and brainstormed possibilities. Nothing seemed impossible. While we continued that same workable formula last year, with many of the same dynamic people that had so inspired us in previous years, last year the formula just didn't work. Maybe we simply got stuck in a rut. People came to the table as usual, but without that sparkle that had been so characteristic in the past. Maybe we lost focus on our common mission or maybe the vision began to cloud. I'm not really sure but the electricity in the room dwindled to a smooth, but lackluster current. We slowly evolved into a management team without the zest, depth and joy that had once characterized our meetings. The diversified leadership at Chets is not characterized by a single charismatic leader but about the synergy of the group and, in my opinion, the group simply lost its deep connection. Give us credit for realizing that we needed to make a change. Don't get me wrong. We had a great year. We are still an "A" school with our 4th graders leading the charge and making substantial gains on our state's test. We are only one of a small a handful of schools within our county that made AYP, but I think we realized that something just wasn't as good as it could be. We have always wanted more and expected more of ourselves than others may have believed was possible.
Jim Collins says that in order to go from good to great that you have to brutally honest. It is only by admitting and realizing where you are, that you can really make changes. I think as a Leadership group we did that hard work and imagined something different for ourselves. So... this year we have added layers of professional learning/leadership groups that will inform and lead different parts of our work. We will divide and conquer. There is an Administrative Council that includes the Principal, Standards Coach, Technologist, Media Specialist, Literacy Coach, Behavior Specialist, and Guidance Counselor. This group will be our Management Team which will be assisted by our long standing Shared Decision Making Team made up of Team Leaders selected by each grade level but the real work of moving student achievement ahead will be done by three Curriculum Councils - Literacy, Math and Science. Each of the three groups will have a grade level representative. Each group will meet once a month and then the entire Council will meet on the fourth week. This is vertical articulation by subject that has been missing in the past. The hope is that we can use our time wisely in addressing the specific needs and dreams of each curriculum group.Will this new alignment work? Will it help us reach that last 5% of kids so that we can truly reach 100%? I don't know. We organized at the end of last year and then met for the first time today. These groups include many people who have served on th Leadership Team for years but also many new people who will have to find their confidence and their voice to make a difference but it builds layers of leadership opportunities for many of the teachers who are ready for that responsibilty at our very large school.
That's what I love about the beginning of school - new plans, new ideas, new alignments. Stay tuned. I'll let you know how it goes....
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
I've got the music in me!
It's that last week before school starts - you know the one - you have those last doctors' appointments, get a new hair cut and a pedicure, go to the beach that one last time and generally think about how you want to change the way your room looks this year. For me, it's time to start tossing and turning at bedtime as I think about the new year. Although I hate giving up those last lazy days of summer, I begin to get excited thinking about a new year and a new group of kiddos. When I lay down to sleep my mind runs wild with all the possibilities and I have to get up and write lists of things I don't want to forget. Our theme at Chets Creek this
year is "Orchestrating a Symphony of Student Success," so it will be singing and dancing each day! Each grade level has been given a different genre of music and kindergarten will be all country, so I guess I'll be boot scootin' boogyin' through the year. On the first day, each grade level and team presents a "skit" which can be just about anything so the Office Team has been practicing all week - which is certainly taking me to places I've never been before! I can't tell you what we will be doing because it is "TOP SECRET," so you'll have to tune in next Monday for the big reveal!But... today, I received my "Welcome Back" letter from the Principal - you know the one - where the principal welcomes you back to the new school year, tells you what time to report for the first official back-to-school day, tells you they hope you had a good summer and gives you the new roster so you can speculate about all the changes! Well this year, instead of a letter, we received an e-mail with a new wiki that will house all of our resources for the year. How COOL is that! It's a private wiki only open to the faculty and staff because it has faculty phone numbers and addresses, but also has the Resource schedule, lunch schedule, Calendars, faculty and staff birthdays, the Handbook, Climate and FAME Surveys, Emergency Plans, maps of the school and even all those back-to-school forms! How convenient will it be to just pull up the wiki and copy a new form when you need it for the child that's lost it for the fourth time instead of sending to Office to get one! And of course, mistakes can be corrected right then before the form goes out again. This wiki includes the entire first day back to school information! This use of technology will allow us to spend the day playing and enjoying the time back together, getting really excited about the new year... instead of listening dryly to the packet being read to us for the first day! We'll have time to sing and dance, think and brainstorm and... dream!
This video that opens our new wiki is just a little hint of why I am so excited.
Welcome Back from Susan from Melanie Holtsman on Vimeo.
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