102 REVIEW, ISSUE 2017-3-5

We’ll have our final round of Inquiry Showcase tomorrow afternoon in the auditorium, and to be honest it’s getting a bit hard to take to see all the incredible work that’s being done whichever way we look. It’s awesome overload, and this isn’t just another case of principal hyperbole. See for yourself:

Students are learning how to care and how to say thanks (Operation Thank You website coming soon), they are reading and writing more than they’ve ever done (they’re writing critical reviews in early elementary!), and they engage in math and science lessons that are miles ahead of anything I’ve seen anywhere else. They get to engage in real physical education, they enjoy a full range of the arts, and they even code video games and robots if they are not busy acquiring fundamental skills using the latest technology via blended learning. They’re thinking, non-stop.

So don’t fret come testing time.

It’s natural for educators to self-doubt around this time. It’s why you’re amazing. “Have I not done enough? What did I not do? Have I let my students down?”

The answer is No, No, No. You’re awesome, we’re awesome, it is what it is. If you can’t take in so much amazingness, here’s some more:

WEEKLY HIGHLIGHTS

FOR Ms. Mintiens: I’m always in awe of Ms. Mintiens’ energy to be both productive and nice, and her leadership in getting a Tuesday blended learning program started has been an incredible joy to experience. Like Ms. Pearlman, Ms. LaManna, Ms. O’Connor, and Ms. Bruce’s, she saw a student need and just filled it. Thank you!

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

Parent Teacher Conference is next week. Please plan accordingly and a memo will be distributed tomorrow.

Review Materials: If there are materials you’d like to purchase to use in preparing students for the state exams, send me an email ASAP and we’ll try to make it work.

Tech and Furniture Requests: Our end-of-year budget plan is near finalized, and if you have a need or idea for next year let me know and I’ll try to squeeze it in.

THINGS I NEED FROM YOU

My mother is in town and she may or may not ask you whether you see me drinking soda or eating candy. You should tell the truth and say no. 

102 Review, Issue 2017-2-12: Respect for All (and Making Sure It Happens)

102 Review, Issue 2017-2-12: Respect for All (and Making Sure It Happens)

FEBRUARY 12, 2017 BY PGEBHARDT

“Ultimately, this report concludes that Wisconsin must honor its commitment to make a public education available to all of its students, but must not do so at the expense of the vast majority of pupils who do not engage in disruptive behaviors. Similarly, teachers must be supported and allowed to teach in an environment where their focus can be on student learning, not discipline.”

-Mike Ford, The Impact of Disruptive Students in Wisconsin Public Schools

There was a fantastic study two weeks ago I could no longer find, but the gist of it is simple: children learn how to behave mostly from the way their peers do, and not how the teachers and parents teach them.

When the majority of their classmates respect one another, children reliably learn how to do so. Conversely, when they observe classmates exhibiting disrespectful behaviors, the likelihood of them misbehaving increases.

Unfortunately, children who misbehave draw them most attention, and thus have the most impact. That’s why one hardworking student can never improve the behavior of 29 other students, but one unchecked misbehaving student can absolutely torpedo his/her entire grade.

The solution, obviously, is for educators to check their idealism and pragmatically remove the persistently misbehaving student from the general population. (This is all researched-based, by the way.)  So this Respect for All week (thank you for planning, Ms. Babakitis!), I urge all of us to identify the most-pressing behavior issues still persisting in each grade and let your APs know. The School Climate Team will have a mid-year review of our most critical “cases” this Friday and we’ll escalate our responses accordingly.

HIGHLIGHTS

Ms. Meenan, Ms. Danielski, Ms. Wyckoff, Ms. Monteleone, Ms. Listl, and Ms. Mercado, and Ms. Lee. To watch you expertly attend to explosive misbehaviors as you teach brings back memories of my mother wrangling with her own Hurricane William. Thank you, and your persistence is absolutely vital to the ones who need it most.

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

INQUIRY SHOWCASE

AIS, School Events, and TechFlex: You’re Up. All staff please be ready to learn in the auditorium by 3PM.

OPERATION THANK YOU: I’ve heard that the Chancellor’s office were delighted by our Operation Thank You videos. Please upload them here; I’m creating a web gallery and we would like to share all of our photos and videos.

6TH GRADE TEACHERS: Effectively immediately, please direct all 6th grade students to use only the stairway by Ms. Mulé and Ms. Mintien’s office to and from lunch.

DISCRETIONARY SPENDING SEASON: I’ve been meeting with grade teams to determine how best to spend some of our discretionary budget. Instead of allocating funds to each teacher to make little purchases here and there, we’re aiming to be more intentional this time around with our Spring spending. Whether it’s furniture for the School Climate Team, per-session for planning, Whatever the Cohen’s need, TC books, chromebooks, or the Zecca’s Wish(es) foundation, we will take care of it because we are committed to removing as many obstacles from your work as possible. Help me help you. Go ahead, say, “Show me the_________” and I’ll do my best to oblige.

102 Review, ISSUE 2017-2-5: Maintenance Issue

NEW ISSUE OF 102KNOW IS OUT.

Maintenance Issues

-MOSL: Test scores were going to factor into teacher rating, then they weren’t. Two months before the state exam, we are told MOSL (measures of student learning) will be used to calculate teacher ratings again. Ms. Mulé will be providing everyone with some information regarding MOSL selection, and we will convene a MOSL committee to participate in the process.

-Per-Session: Curriculum planning and development is now open to teachers of 1st year programs such as TC and STE(A)M. Please ask Jeanene for an application form and submit it to me by Friday this week.

Mid-Winter Intensive: Monday will be the last day for you to apply to teach 2 days during February break for MWI. We currently have 10 teachers, and we confirm with them we’ll create the programs and then offer permission slips to PID students. More info will be provided about the process by the end of the week.

TG HIGHLIGHTS by Mr, Borelli

TG: How does a species continue to exist on Earth when individuals of that species die? If every butterfly dies, how will there still be butterflies living 10 years from now?

This 4th Grade TG from Ms. Merino at first glance can be answered simply by answering “they reproduce.”  The thinking, when focusing on a butterfly is this: does a butterfly have the choice to not reproduce?  Is the sole reason of a butterfly’s existence is too make more butterflies?  The Monarch Butterfly, at best, can live up to 6 months and they generally live 2 to 4 weeks in the wild.  How does this insect, with such a brief existence, continue to thrive on Earth?

TG: The three little pigs built three houses out of these three different materials: straw, sticks, and bricks. Explain how these materials affected the outcome of the story.

This 3rd Grade Engineering is Elementary TG from Mrs. O’Connor highlights that materials matter, but maybe not always for the most obvious reasons.  From first glance, who wouldn’t think that a brick house is the best choice?  Most of the apartment buildings we see around the neighborhood have brick facades.  When we move to the stick house, the thinking can veer towards, “Well what types of sticks were used?” “Is there a difference between using dry, broken sticks from an oak tree or when bamboo sticks are used?” Could that 2nd pig have chosen better sticks? What was inherently flawed in the first pig’s and second pig’s respective designs?  Was it strictly the material chosen or was it a combination of the material and how they used it?  This type of thinking is what engineers do when they create any building to see how it fares against wind and the dangers of the environment. It’s the Scientific Method on display.

102 Review, 2017-1-29: Chinese New Year

We will meet in the auditorium Monday at 2:50PM for our mini-midyear Faculty meeting. Inquiry groups will then break out to continue with their work and you should review the updated PL Monday Calendar as some changes have been made and the Inquiry Showcase schedule included.

HIGHLIGHTS

SUMMO: “How would the title alter the play if it were 12 Angry Women instead of 12 Angry Men?”

Ms. Mulé: This TG creates student thinking in several ways, including the shift in perspective between men and women.  Students can look at the way society inherently thinks man and women think and feel and how it changes the outcome of the trial.

Ko: An amazing example TG perfectly designed to provide students a thinking experience that is 1) intentional focus on growing students’ worldview (intro to gender as social construct); 2) impeccably tied to both curriculum and current events; 3) compelling; and 4) surfaces misconceptions students may have about gender equality

(And yes, those are the four elements of an effective TG… )

 

Ms. Chao pulled off her first Chinese New Year event in stunning fashion. (See her new Staff Spotlight Here) She and her students worked overtime all week to provide 102 with an experiential showcase of Chinese culture involving making dumplings, writing calligraphy, and even playing Chinese Chess. The leading Chinese Newspaper paid us a visit and they were most impressed by the prowess of Ms. O’Donell’s cross-cultural brushstrokes. It was a great deal of effort by everyone and thank you for letting all of us head into the weekend in celebration.

Of course, Ms. McClain and Ms. Rafferty leading their Pre-K’ers around the building while chanting chinese phrases brought smiles and joy to all as well.

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

New PL Monday Schedule

PID Meetings: Guidance will be coordinating PID meetings with teachers to meet with PID families. Non-promotion is a school-level decision, and as such it is important that parents recognize through school-level actions the seriousness of their child’s lack of progress. You should prioritize families strategically as you schedule them, and please know that should you and the families have conflicting schedules, you may seek approval from me to be covered for your regular teaching program so you can meet with the parent at an agreed-upon time.

Mid-Winter Intensive: Your PID students need intervention, and the Mid-Winter Intensive is just that. We have a few teachers who have emailed me, and we want as many as possible. Dates are flexible: You may choose any 2 days from Wednesday to Friday, 2/23-2/25, and we will do our best arrange the program according to your availability.

NYC Leadership Academy Professional Learning Opportunity: NYCLA is offering training for our teachers who may want an intro to data analysis workshop. It runs from 4:30-6:30PM on 2/15 in Brooklyn, and teachers who attend will be paid per-session. This is purely for your own development; it is not part of any of 102’s initiatives, and you are not expected to turnkey the information. Email me by Monday should you be interested.

102 Review, 2017-1-22: Effective Thinking Generators

Of all the things we say about Thinking Generators, here are the two most important things you need to think about as you plan them:

1.) You must first know exactly the thinking you are trying to generate as well as how it will lead to new understanding relating to the target learning objective

2.) The TG is written so that there exist no alternative option for students but to think about what you intended 

Why? Because we can’t learn by listening to a teacher talk or explain; we need to think about ideas to learn them. If you disagree, tell me how much you’ve learned about non-commutable variables after a teacher lectures and tells you to copy this idea in your graphic organizer:

“A function of noncommuting variables is a function defined on tuples of matrices of all sizes that satisfies certain compatibility conditions as we vary the size of matrices: it respects direct sums and simultaneous similarities, or equivalently, simultaneous intertwinings.”

Right.

Likewise, for some 6th grade students, the following “knowledge”  can be as confusing as the prior example was to you:

“To clearly defines how a word or complex term is being used in a reading, both denotative and connotative meanings should be considered. Because of subtle differences in both denotative and connotative meaning, a reader’s misinterpretation of the author’s intent may undermine their ability to navigate the nuances of the text.”

So how can we use a Thinking Generator to help students really learn connotation? Let’s use Mr. Goldin’s class as a case study for aTG mini how-to guide.

THINKING GENERATOR HOW-TO: 6th Grade ELA:

(V)TG: To help his students appreciation the purpose of connotation and learn how to use it, first-year teacher uses the following vocabulary Thinking Generator: “How old does an artifact need to be in order to be considered ancient? How old does it need to be to be considered prehistoric?”

By asking students to consider the many degrees of “old”, he allows his students to internalize through a thinking experience that words with similar meanings are not interchangeable because of their implied intensity. This is  an effective thinking generator that does its job to help students think to learn.

Thinking Generators are effective when they are specific: teachers should be able to explain in great clarity exactly what they intend their students should cognitively wrestle with for each and every TG. In this example, Mr. Goldin wanted the students to recognize connotation as a tool for communicating varying degrees of a definition. However, to fully appreciate connotation, he also needs to teach his students that connotation is not just about degrees of intensity: one of the most common mistakes students make as they build their writing vocabulary is using words with inaccurate or unintended positive or negative connotations.

If Mr. Goldin’s target objective for the lesson is for students to consider connotation in their writing, he should pre-emptively address this misconception with the following THINKING GENERATOR:

TG 1: “Mr. Ko is childish” and “Mr.Ko is youthlike”. Which one would make him more angry?”

To differentiate and/or extend the TG:

TG 2: “Find at least 3 more pairs of words that shows the same difference between childish/youthlike”

To differentiate even more by adding a subtext of social studies:

TG 3: “Some people who live abroad are referred to as “expats” or expatriates. Some are called immigrants. How do we determine who to call which? Does it matter?”

With each of these examples, the teacher did none of the thinking for students. However, the teacher knows exactly students should and would think about. TGs cannot possibly be effective without this level of specificity because impactful lessons leave nothing to chance.

HIGHLIGHTS:

From Ms. Mulé:  Without solving, how can you tell that 7x= 3x +4x will have multiple solutions? This question leads students to consider more than simply solving the problem in a traditional way.  Students have to determine what possible solutions are to the problem before they come up with the answer.

From Mr. Borelli: Part of being a skillful reader is adapting to different styles of writing and an article presents a host of challenges: more hyphenated words, charts and graphs placed in the middle of a text that do not always align with the paragraph, and cryptic subheadings. Thinking about the style of writing and what challenges lay ahead can prepare a reader for a stronger understanding of the text. Ms. Buiyan’s TG “Does the layout of an article have an effect on the reader, how?” does exactly that.

From Ms. Mintiens: I had the pleasure of visiting a few Kindergarten classes this week. In Nancy Hafkin’s class the students were learning how to add those tricky vowels to words in their writing, in order to make their writing easier for readers to read. She used a piece of her own writing and made the Exersize interactive asking students to help her. She also brought out her word study vowel chart. These small moves subtly show students how what they’re learning in one part of their day seemlessly helps them in another.  Kindergarten students writing is soaring in part to strong practices such as these.

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

Progress Reports: See this parent-facing memo for more info on Progress reports. With the exception of grades K and 1, all reports should go home by the end of January. NOTE: The purpose of these progress reports is to spark parental involvement: be ready for it.

Mid-Winter Intensive: Teachers who are interested in teaching 2 days, 4 hours each day, should email me to confirm. We are keeping the exact dates flexible, and will confirm once we have a core group of teachers.

Inquiry Groups Check In Tomorrow: Tomorrow we’ll get back to our inquiry work to prepare for our Showcase on 2/6. DO NOT OVER-PLAN for the presentation: Each group will have 10 minutes to describe their work, its implications, as well as take comments and questions. Groups will be able to schedule professional workshops for their colleagues at a later date; this Showcase is simply about sharing what you are working on, and what they can expect from you should there be a follow up workshop.

THINKING GENERATOR WALKTHROUGH: We’ll have our 4th TG walkthrough this week. We are getting better at delivering feedback, and we found that feedback is meaningless unless it is anchored to a shared learning objective. From now on we’ll note the IO in addition to the TG as we walk.