102 Review, May 29th, 2017: Going Out with a Bang

Fiona Gil and Valerie Budiman’s art were displayed at the Queens Museum. And Valerie’s TV quote on NY1 is absolutely top-notch: “I chose an owl [as her spirit animal] because I’m a solo worker.”

June is near. Here are some key dates from the NYCDOE calendar.

June 8 Anniversary Day: students do not attend

June 12 Clerical day: elementary & middle school students do not attend

June 26 Eid al-Fitr: schools closed

June 28 Last day of school for all students
But then here’s the 102 Calendar (and it’s not even final).

5/31: Superintendent Visit w/ Meet and Greet with Families in Temporary Housing 

6/1: Kindergarten Orientation

6/1-6/2: Boston trip for both 7th and 8th grade

6/3: Carnival 

6/6: Career Day, Art Expo Opening

6/7: Paint Night

6/9: End Term/ Jeanene-Surprise-Everyone-with-4MoreYears Announcement Party

6/13: STEAM CON

6/14: STEM CON

6/15: 102’s Got Talent

6/16: Pre-K Graduation; 4th Grade Drama Production (5th Period)

6/21: Math Ninja Warrior

6/22: Kindergarten Graduation

6/23: 8th Grade Graduation

I have no doubt every one of these events will be amazing, and I thank all for putting in the extra effort that makes 102 special. One thing we do need to make sure we improve is communication: teachers please help us get the word out to families about these events. We will be backpacking a memo home with brief explanation of all June events, and if you use apps like Remind, Class Dojo, or Google Classroom, etc. to connect with parents, use those channels as well to publicize and inform. (Let’s just assume that backpacked letters rarely reach parents)


THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

Rest up.

102 Review, May 21st, 2017: The Merits of Snapshot Classroom Observations

Observations are wrapping up, and shortly thereafter you will receive your end-of-the-year rating. And it’s only natural to question the validity of a evaluation system that is based on around an hour’s worth of classroom observation, considering the innumerable challenges you overcome each day, never mind the entire school year.

However, the truth is that it almost never takes the entire 15 minutes to know whether students are learning effectively during a lesson. (It probably takes just a little more than the time I need to realize that your room is too hot.)

The reason why evaluating a lesson isn’t all that difficult is not because teaching is easy or straightforward. In fact, it’s the opposite: a teacher must do so much successfully for every little bit of student learning, seeing 15 minutes of it can only mean one thing: the teacher must’ve done hours and hours of work that led up to it. In fact, we almost always see the following in effective lessons:

1.) The lesson makes sense. Clear learning objective –> clear thinking generator(s) —> purposeful activities to surface student intellectual engagement -> robust use of assessment to check for understanding. This is expertise that you can’t fake.

2.) The learning is aligned to not just state standards and curricula but also the STUDENTS. What’s the best way to find out whether a teacher knows the students? It’s not asking them to show you a data binders; it’s seeing whether their lessons are consistently at the right level for all of the students. And that takes time, conversations, meetings, and re-teach and re-teach (and tears.)

3.) Classroom management is tight. It takes so much to create a positive learning climate, and it never just happens by chance. On a similar vein, if a class knows how to line up and walk the halls quietly, I never question whether the teacher would waste instructional time constantly trying to get the students’ attention.

4.) Students are thinking. This is the big one: only masterful teachers can get all students to think day in and day out, and it’s the most obvious one to spot. Most teachers can get students to write, copy, speak, or read; it’s the highly effective ones who can consistently get them to think, to push, and to question.

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

CARNIVAL ORDERS: Please email me ASAP direct links to the product page and desired quantity if you want to order from Oriental Trading. Ms. O’Donnell noticed that Amazon Wishlists do not have a “quantity field”, so please check with Jeanene if you had wanted more than one of any items. P.S. If you are coming to help at the carnival and don’t order a shirt yet, please speak with Ms. Delvecchio to give her your size.

EDMODO MEMO (I fixed the permission setting, in case you still need it)

FACULTY MEETING TOMORROW: 3PM location TBD. Please look out for an announcement tomorrow

JUNE 8th is BUILD THE WONDERWALL DAY: Heads up to everyone that we will be visiting one another’s Wonderwall’s as a learning activity on June 8th. This is the time to update it to reflect the best thinking your students have engaged in.

IMMEDIATE REMOVAL OF STUDENTS: While we are working on streamlining our disciplinary protocols including teacher removals for next year, please be mindful that any students who are physically aggressive in the classroom MUST be removed immediately. YOu should call the main office if your AP is unavailable should this occur during the school day.

SHREK CLOSING SHOW is this Wednesday. I’ve heard it is amazing, and at this point I don’t expect anything less from a Zecca production. I mean, her and Pete are having students do light designs using a 108″ promethean board as an input device. This is a level of showboating that even I can’t reach. Bravo, and see you Wednesday!

102 Review, May 14th, 2017: Pizza and Immigration

THINKING GENERATOR BEST PRACTICE

“Would you rather have two 8″ pizzas or one 12″ pizza?”

The pizza question above is an excellent TG for a lesson on finding the area of a circle. It focuses student thinking on the relationship betweeen diameter and area, it engages everyone (because it’s pizza), it spotlights an important concept in exponents in geometry, and it’s applicable.

However, it’s easy to mistake its elegant simplicity as lacking rigor and come up with something like the following:

“Peter sees that two small 8″ pizzas cost 19.99, and one medium 12” pizza cost 24.99. If he wants to get the better deal, which option should he choose? 

He is sharing with 8 friends. How much should the remaining friends each pay if 3 of them can only offer $1, $.87, and $1.12, respectively?”

Although this could be a great performance task, this is not an effective TG to introduce the area of a circle. If students already know how to solve it, then they learned little new by doing it. If students didn’t know how to solve it, they just wasted 45 minutes NOT learning how to do it. Thinking is productive struggle; blindly guessing not knowing even which direction to look is just struggle.

TGs should make students think specifically about an area that can then lead them to an “aha!” moment. That’s it.

(P.S. A 12″ pizza has more than double the area of an 8″ pizza.)

THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW

MONDAY AFTERNOON: All staff report to the auditorium immediately after dismissal to learn about the school’ promotion process.

IMMIGRATION REMINDER: News have reported that last Friday ICE officers visited a school very nearby to pick up a 4th grader.

The law is the law, and we have a legal responsibility to cooperate with authorities once all documents have been verified.

But we also have an ethical responsibility to minimize the trauma and harm such an incident could have on all of our students. While I’m not going to comment on the authorities decision to pick up a student during school hours, I will ask all staff to be prudent in protecting our students’ emotional well-being as politics spill into schools.

WEDNESDAY, May 17th is Family Night. 4-7PM. Please refer to the staff memo for information.

THURSDAY, May 18th: SHREK OPENING NIGHT

NEW STAFF SPOTLIGHT: Vanessa Wyckoff

STEM Summer Opportunity: 

Back in 2015, NYU Tandon School of Engineering made a pledge to the White House to educate 500 teachers and positively impact 50,000 public school students throughout NYC by 2025. This summer they are offering the following programs to teachers:

Please note that all programs offer teachers a stipend for completing requirements.

Applications can be found at http://engineering.nyu.edu/k12stem/educators/ and if you have any questions please email k12.stem@nyu.edu.

102 REVIEW: May 7ths, 2017

HIGHLIGHTS

As a classroom teacher, a certain teacher (we’ll refer to her here as “Mrs. Cho”) likes to imply to her principal husband that non-full time classroom teachers’–a position He once held as her coworker–don’t have as demanding of a job. “You pull out a few students at a time–oh yeah, that’s great classroom management,” she’d say. “That’s sooooooo highly effective for 2D.”

What I’d like to say in support of this embattled principal is that teachers who provide indirect services often do so much behind the scenes that the actual teaching is probably 10% of the job. For example, Ms. Zwillick.

Here are some of the non-direct instructional tasks she completed last week: 1) Came up with an intelligent report for me to quickly see how upcoming IEPs can impact our class organizations next year, with clear explanation along with different projections based on what we can play around with and what we can’t.

2) Review all IEPs to project the amount of speech periods we need to program for 2017-2018

3) Met with a parent to explain the realities of self-contained classes in a 6,7, 8 bridge model, and what is possible with differentiation and what she can expect for her 6th grade child to be in a class with 8 other 7th and 8th graders. Then she quickly researched a range of alternatives along with the hoops sher’d need to jump through for each, ultimately helping the parent come to a new decision and doing so confidently.

Everyone of these tasks are crucial to our operation and planning, and the last example especially so since it can potentially change the educational trajectory of a child. None of them has anything to do with lesson planning, and you’d never know that Ms. Zwillick did any of this, unless you just happen to have a principal who has something to proof. Thank you, Ms. Zwillick!

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

DIRECT FAMILIES TO THE PROPER AUTHORITIES should there be a non-school based issue. As schools continue to assume more and more responsibilities, it is important that staff do not over-step the limits of our roles and capacity. Emergencies, home issues, transposrtation, safety concerns, we need to direct them to the right resources.

We all want to help, but it is unfair to families when we usurp the support trained personnel would’ve provided. Should you have any questions about how you can help our families, speak with your AP and/or myself for clarification.

PARTIAL TEACHING LOAD POSITIONS will be mailboxes Monday. These openings are based on early projections for next years’ program, and more positions may open as we see needs change.

PARENT CONTACT is vital. Struggling students should always be accompanied by a clear log of the year’s parental contact from the teacher, and you should plan for Tuesday parent contact time each week by proactively scheduling calls and meeting.

MAY 17th is FAMILY DAY and one of its objective is to make sure parents of promotion in doubt students are familiar with the promotion portfolio process. We will meet as a staff on May 15th to discuss and prepare.

COUNCILMEMBER DANIEL DROMM will be visiting tomorrow. He serves as the chair for the education committee, and successfully advocated for making sure all NYC classrooms are air conditioned by 2018. And you know I support that. (Now he just need to make sure we give teachers the remotes)

TOMORROW AFTERNOON: (OPTIONAL) ADVANCE PROFESSIONAL LEARNING OPPORTUNITY “CONNECTING WITH EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE THROUGH KINESTHETICS”

2:50-4PM. Wear appropriate gear to kick a ball. 

102 REVIEW: It’s May and There Are Tests, Tests, and More Tests, as well as Activities, Activities, and More Activities

SOAP BOX (MASQUERADING AS HIGHLIGHTS)

Everyone likes to solve problems and offer and implement solutions. It’s natural; we all want to help.

But solutions aren’t really solutions unless they are driven by an acute, accurate, and bias-free assessment of the root cause of the problem in the first place. Far too often we see “solutions” slung into a situation and creating new issues because they don’t actually address the underlying problems. It’s as if a doctor prescribes medicine to treat depression to someone with kidney stones because both carry symptoms of fatigue.

And too often we see this in education.

More PD. More testing. More training. More data-tracking. That’s what we get offered as solutions for all the challenges we see each day. A student acting out violently due to severe mental heath issues? Give the teacher more training on non-verbal re-direction, and offend a once-inspired educator and burn them sooner. Students not doing homework because are apathetic to education? Teach teachers how to transfer a sentence from a loose leaf to a graphic organizer. Students coming to school late due to family issues and potential abuse? More attendance tracking and staff meetings to share and discuss data, and adding to the workload and stress of teachers.

The answer to these issues? Let’s start with  correct placements for students with mental-health issues, firmer disclipine AND targeted guidance for disinterested students, and close-monitoring with family counseling for students who are in difficult family situations.

But they won’t ever be brought to the table unless we get the right assessment of the situation first.

Sure all the tests we’re wrapping up will show how effective student learning has been, but it’ll never be more than a slice our work. Tests will never show how Ms. Ramos had her 2nd grade students build self-powered cars, a project I remember doing myself in 9th grade. Scores will never show Mr. Dewhirst and Mr. Summo buying truck loads of flowers to plant with children, and then Ms. O’Donnell burning under the sun every year to do amazing chalk drawings on Earth Day. And Ms. Budarf’s dance extravaganza? The 4th grade Science test could never capture her success.

These are the things we do to help kids care about life, and in return they will want to care about others, themselves, and doing well in school and beyond. And the test for that? Life.

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

TESTING: We’re wrapping up the state exam–the math exam will be administered this Tuesday through Thursday–and the activities calendar is filled to the brim. The 4th grade Science exam, now with greater significance than ever, will be on May 26th and June 5th. And then there are ongoing NYSESLAT, NYSAA, and Science Regents for some 8th grade students. Please mind these dates and be aware of the activities your students will engage in. The school Shrek play, for example, will be on May 18, 20, and 24th, and 4th grade teachers should definitely go easy on the 25th to help them perform at their best on the 26th.

OPTING OUT: A reminder that there is no official opt-out policy. Students who do not take the test will be scored as a refusal.

SBO: Voting will take place during the lunch periods tomorrow.

PREFERENCE SHEETS: Please complete by tomorrow. All reduced-tracing load positions will be open to applications Friday pending SBO.

NEW NYCDOE DISCIPLINE CODE: 

K-5

6-12

STAFF SPOTLIGHT: Suzie Cook