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Monday, August 27, 2018

Decrease Grading Time Series: Using Websites to Engage and Assess Students

Are you struggling to keep up with grading? Do you spend hours upon hours grading?  Do you struggle with creating and grading assignments?  Then this post is for you!




Decrease Grading Time Series: Using Websites to Engage and Assess Students

What is it?  This is an in-depth summary of Problem Attic, but basically it's online database of questions that can be turned into warm-ups, exit tickets, review activities, and much more.

How does it help with grading?You can print the PDFs for written activities or use the scoring app to to assess and immediately grade students. You can build, save and edit tests year to year and answer keys are provided.


Moodle

What is it?  This is an in-depth summary of Moodle if you want to read it straight from the source.

How does it help with grading?  You can put your tests and quizzes on Moodle. It takes a little while to get them on there but the computer grades them. You also don’t have to re-enter them after the initial time and can use them the following year.



Edulastic

What is it?  Here's the full explanation of what Edulastic is.

How does it help with grading?  You can use it for your daily formative assessments as well as performance assessment benchmarks to practice for state testing.  What sets Edulastic apart is the fact that it offers a bank of Technology-Enhanced Items (TEIs) that truly prepare students for those type of questions that they will inevitably see on state assessments, all of which are automatically graded.


What is it?  Here's the full explanation of Padlet.  Basically, I consider it to be like an interactive Pinterest board where students can ask/answer questions, collaborate, and share links and pictures.  Padlet calls it a "bulletin board".

How does it help with grading?   The boards can be exported, printed, or shared with a URL.  You can assess for understanding and attach a grade. 



GoFormative

What is it?  It can track progress, allow students to see answers after assessment is finished, and teachers can see live answers and direct message students to check questions.

How does it help with grading?   It gives percentages to correct answers for each class and an entire grade for each assessment. Students can have access to scores all year round to track growth. It has free and paid versions.



Come back next week to see the next part of the Decreasing Grading Time Series: Using Videos to Engage and Assess Students.  See you soon!



Monday, August 20, 2018

What to Do With Students Who Finish First

How do you manage the time when some students are done with an assignment and others need to finish before you move on in a lesson?  This post gives you tips and techniques for managing the time with early finishers.


What to Do With Students Who Finish First




Things to consider before choosing activities for your early finishers: 

  • Are these activities for enrichment, review purposes, or just for fun? 
  • Will the assignments count for extra credit?
  • Will these be assignments to be done individually or in pairs/groups?

First, I’d like to mention that I always have a list of must-do activities to be completed before students are allowed to do any extras:

  • Vocabulary
  • Organizing notes
  • Make up work
  • Correcting tests 

Enrichment Activities 

If students complete the list above, they can request one of the following:

Laminated file folders with simple activities that can be completed with dry-erase markers: 

  • Crosswords 
  • Word searches
  • Storyboards
  • Acrostics 

Comprehension activities:

  • TIME magazine
  • Scholastic
  • Book reviews

Reading

I love to tell students that when they finish early, they may EAT (enjoy a text). 

I have a classroom library with books and magazines about the subjects I cover in the courses I teach.  When someone finishes early, I often tell them to find something to read.  It gives students additional reading practice and it also lets them learn more about topics that I may not have addressed in my lessons that interest them. 


Review Activities 


Use Quizlett for:

  • Vocabulary review
  • Use Classtools.net to put in your content, copy, and then go to Quizlet and paste it in there.  
I also have them “quiz” each other on:
  • vocabulary 
  • turn the headings from their textbook into questions and quiz each other with that
  • Old test questions (I have them keep all their old tests in their binder)

Student Tutors

One option is to pair up the kids that are always finishing first with kids that need more time so that they can hopefully encourage each other - one will reinforce their skills by 'teaching' it and the other will get the support they need.

A word of caution with this technique:  Make sure the personalities mesh before pairing up. Not all early-finishers are kind or helpful tutors. 


Activities just for fun:

  • Challenge capsules: Little plastic bottles with random questions inside
  • Make an enrichment bulletin board with QR codes to make it more interactive. Students watch videos with a tablet/phone

What else would you add to this list?  I always need fresh ideas!






Monday, August 13, 2018

How to Create and Follow a Pacing Guide

Have you been asked to create a pacing guide or felt the need to make one for yourself or your team?  What happens if you make one and can't follow it?  This post will help you navigate through the process of creating a pacing guide and sticking to it!


How to Create and Follow a Pacing Guide


First and Foremost:  Always Plan With the State Standards

It's really best if each person on the team either has a printed or electronic copy of the standards, depending on what appeals to them.  I personally like printed copies so I can mark them up any way I see fit.  You can usually find the standards on your state's department of education website.  I like to save mine as a PDF AND print it out.

Make Sure Everyone in the Group has a Role  

Assigning roles and due dates will keep everyone on track.  Start with the standards you will need to teach at the beginning of the year.  Then, find out what each person enjoys using to teach those standards.  For example, I often liked to find the activities that involved movement or mentor texts to teach the concepts, so I was often in charge of finding those things and sharing with the group so we could include them on the pacing guide. 

Other roles you may want to add:


  • Assessments (multiple-choice, online, vocabulary, etc.).  Make sure they closely match what your state will assess at the end of the year so students have plenty of practice before then.
  • Multi-Media Instruction:  Things like online practice games, videos, YouTube, music, computer lab activities, etc.  You want to try to incorporate as many different forms of instruction as possible so that you reach as many different learning styles as possible.
  • Vocabulary:  Make sure you do some kind of activities that explicitly teach the words that your state standards use.  My post on No-Tech Ways to Teach and Assess Vocabulary in Core Subjects gives several ways to do this, including a vocabulary review packet.


How to Create and Follow a Pacing Guide: Vocabulary Instruction and Assessement


Use Google Drive to Make Sure the Process is Truly Collaborative

To do this, everyone will need to bring their laptop to each meeting.  You can either create a Doc or a Sheet and add all your team members using their emails.  I'd make a Sheet like the one below.

How to Create and Follow a Pacing Guide: Team Planning


Don't Let the Conversation Wander

If you start talking about what you did over the weekend or "that student", you will never get the pacing guide done.   


Meet Weekly, If Possible

You'll want to meet regularly so you can talk about the standards you will need to teach in the future and make sure everyone is at the same place (or close) on the previous standards.




Now, Let's Talk About Everyone's Least Favorite Question: How do I Stick to the Pacing Guide????!!!!


Use a “Window” 

Setting a three-day window for when the team should do things like give the unit exam gives a level of freedom as far as the day-to-day lessons.

Build in Extra Days

Create a pacing guide with built in pause days. Don't forget things like holidays, snow/inclement weather, assemblies, state testing, and all the other things that throw the pacing off.  Make sure you sit down with the school/district calendar so you can include important dates as "pause days" on your pacing guide.

Adjust the Pacing Guide

The pacing guide may need to be adjusted as a grade level if everyone is just too far behind what was originally anticipated.  If only one member is behind, brainstorm how the team can best support that person and their students to help get them caught up. 


What else would you add to this?  I'm sure I'll be making more pacing guides in the future, so I can always use more advice!








Monday, August 6, 2018

How to Avoid Teacher Overwhelm

 Do you ever wonder how other teachers deal with feelings of being endlessly behind and never done?  Whether you’re a first-year or a seasoned teacher, this post has some time-tested advice for you!



How to Avoid Teacher Overwhelm

For the New Teacher:

Most importantly, you need to understand that classroom teaching is different and difficult compared to college, which has set deadlines and a defined“end” with the final project/exam. In classroom teaching, there’s always more you can do or should be doing.

Try to find a seasoned teacher or mentor who is willing to explain what is mandatory and what is “extra”. Always focus on the mandatory first. For example, grading assignments and providing timely feedback, should be top priority since students’ knowledge (or lack thereof) should guide your planning and instruction. 




For All Teachers:

First of all, understand that the to-do list never ends, so you have to make it “end” each day for yourself.  


Make Sure You Differentiate Between Work and Home


If you come home and still work on school things and don't have time to do things with your loved  ones, this sets you up for overwhelm. You have to decide what your "school hours" and "home hours" are. Pick a time for school, say 7:00 am to 4:30 pm. At 4:30, leave school and school work behind so home is home time. Of course, it won't ALWAYS work out that way, but setting personal school hours really helps.

Make Weekly To-Do Lists

Many teachers like to use stick notes to do this so they can either throw the note away when it's done or move the sticky to the next week if they don't get to it. This helps them to prioritize and have a healthy work/life balance.

When setting up your to-do list, think of the daily tasks you need to get done.


Set Up Daily Tasks

For example, Mondays you could have students pass out portfolios and graded papers and then collect portfolios.  Tuesdays, are for grading. Wednesday is for inputting grades. Thursday is for planning your next week’s lessons. Fridays might be for getting your copying done and collecting materials for the following week.


After Your Daily Tasks, Write a Secondary List:

  • You need a clear "do today", "do sometime this week/month", and "do one day whenever the world slows down" list. 
  • Accomplish the “today” list and when you have a slower day or extra time, jump on the “this week/month list”. 
  • Plan out your day each evening/morning and if you have a short today list, add something from your week/month list to "today" 
  • Don't worry about the other two lists. Focus on today. Eventually you will get enough done. And eventually that future list will fix itself on some things and will get shorter.



Assign Class Jobs

If your school allows it, here are some common tasks that students can do to save you time:

  • Take attendance  
  • Pass back papers
  • Help absent students catch up
  • Tutor other students

Just Do Your Best, Always

Don't try to over do it. If you don't get to that one lesson, it will be okay. Some years you will be behind and it's not the end of the world.  If you stick to showing students that you care about them, they will likely learn and retain more anyway.



Spend Some Time Each Day Organizing Your Classroom

I don't like to leave each day until I've at least:

  • Tidied up my desk 
  • Put the to-do list for the next day in a visible area of my desk
  • Put all stacks of papers to be graded in a neat stack in a central location


I have students help me out with the "clean up" portion of organizing the classroom during homeroom.  This includes:

  • Putting back classroom supplies such as scissors, markers, and glue sticks
  • Wiping down counters, tables, and desks
  • Straightening up book shelves


How do you avoid teacher overwhelm?  What would you add to this post?  I'd love to hear your ideas because I still feel overwhelmed sometimes too!