Literacy Events:

Saturday Dec 8 Copper Enameling Craft at Linebaugh Library in Murfreesboro ($4)...Friday December 21st at 10AM Glitter Ornament Making at Linebaugh Library in Murfreesboro...

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Daily Starters


Scholastic has daily starters available - for free - at http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/. Each one has a teachable moment (usually a day in history type thing), a brief writing prompt, and a vocabulary activity. For example, the starter for Sept. 24th reads:


Teachable Moment

Basketball was invented by James Naismith, who taught physical education at the YMCA in Springfield, Massachussetts. During the cold winter of 1891, Naismith had to come up with an exercise his students could perform indoors because it was too cold to go outside. And so he came up with the game of basketball!

My Morning Journal
Can you imagine inventing your own sport? Tell how the game would be played and what equipment would be needed.

Word of the Day
It’s National Punctuation Day!

!?”[*—!

Do you think the lowly comma is irrelevant? Think again. A comma can save a life! For example, read the two sentences below. How does the meaning change in each? Why did it change?

1. Let's eat Grandma!
2. Let's eat, Grandma!

irrelevant  [ih-rel-uh-vuhnt] adjective

•not relevant; not related to the matter at hand

Synonyms: unimportant, beside the point, trivial

Write a sentence for irrelevant. Be sure to punctuate it correctly.

Dr. B's Common Core Websites

Here are the websites Dr. B suggested we use for Common Core: 



State Department of Education
North Carolina  www.dpi.state.nc.us/
New York:
www.nysed.gov/  Using teaching units from www.commoncore.org and will be posting math units
Massachusetts  www.doe.mass.edu/
Missouri  dese.mo.gov/
Nevada  www.doe.nv.gov/

Evidentiary Statements

Click here for the excellent poster Ms. T sent out with starters for evidentiary statements. This is a great tool to get our students ready for TCAP writing!

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Bulletin Board: Genre

Teaching genre? Here is a board Ms. Burtram created for just that topic! This would be a great board to have a few of your kids reproduce during R and E.


Bulletin Board: Bee a Good Reader

Here is a fun bulletin board for keeping track of accomplishments. We use this board to celebrate when a student has completed a Versatile book. Each flower represents a specific book. When a student has successfully completed each exercise in a specific book, his/her bee goes up next to that flower. This would work for any list of accomplishments you had - like, for example, your study island assignments.

Bulletin Board: Thinking Strategies Good Readers Use

This would be a fabulous board to let some of your kids work on during R and E - they are learning reading strategies (and hopefully thinking about them) as they are creating a great reminder for all of your students. If I have visited your class during DEAR, this board was created using the same template as the handouts I gave your students. If you would like your own copies of that handout, and some other great reading posters/bookmarks/etc. click here.




Bulletin Board: French Phrases

French Phrases
How we used this board:
Step One: We took each French phrase from the Tennessee middle school SPI's and created a board with the word, definition, and a visual reminder.
Step Two: Students recreated the board on construction paper, creating original visual reminders.
(You can let some of your kids come in during R and E to create the original board - they will come up with really creative visuals!) 

Bulletin Board: Synonym Rolls

Fresh Baked Synonym Rolls
Here is how we used this board last year:
Step One: We had our students read an informational text about Lewis and Clark.
Step Two: Each student chose from the story a word he/she thought would have multiple synonyms.
Step Three: Each student made a synonym roll, starting the roll with the word he/she had selected from the text and continuing with synonyms from the thesaurus.
Step Four: We chose our favorite synonym rolls and used them to create a bulletin board.


Bulletin Board: Text Features

Text Features Bulletin Board
R and E Activity:
Pull 4-5 high kids into your R and E class. Give them magazines and/or newspapers and show them a picture of this board. Ask them to find and cut out an example of each text feature on the board (a couple of features - like the index - may need to be photocopied from a textbook). Once they are done, they can check with you to make sure that each of their examples in acceptable. Then, let them use their samples to create a bulletin board like the one in the picture. 





Saturday, September 1, 2012

Infographic: Olympic Science


Here is a fantastic article about how the bodies of Olympic athletes have changed over time. It has an incredible infographic along with some other interesting charts. For example, one chart shows how slenderness (height divided by bodywidth) has changed to rasie the center of mass of sprinters.

Lesson Plan: The Drought of 2012

Here is a lesson plan for you using information text and focusing on a current event: the drought of 2012.

Predict: Have students start out by making a web. In the center of the web is the word "drought". Around the center, they should brainstorm different kinds of people who could be hurt physically or economically in a drought (farmer, politician, etc).

Next, show the students the PBS Newshour segment entitled "The Drought of 2012". http://www.pbs.org/newshour/thenews/thevote/story.php?id=19477&package_id=634

Reevaluate and Adjust: After showing the video, have students go back to their web and make adjustments based on the new material they have learned.

Discuss and Describe: Ask the students the following discussion questions:

What is a drought?

How does the 2012 drought differ from other droughts the United States has experienced?

How have farmers/politicians/citizens responded to the drought?

Expand: Have students do a cloze read of the New York Times article "Severe Drought Seen as Driving Up Cost of Food". http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/26/business/food-prices-to-rise-in-wake-of-severe-drought.html?_r=1&hp Students should read the article through once. Then, students should read the article again and highlight the information that indicates how people are being impacted by the drought. Finally, have students discuss with a partner or small group what they have chosen to highlight and why.


Prior Knowledge/Making Connections/ Write: Show students the graphic on products containing corn. http://www.kycorn.org/documents/cornuses.pdf Have the students use what they have learned (that the drought is going to cause a hike in the price of corn) and this list of corn based products to come up with main idea statements and supporting details to explain how specific people will be hurt by the rising price of corn.

Example:

Students may be negatively affected by the drought because of higher corn prices. The drought of 2012 is causing the price of corn to go up. Older students will have to pay higher prices for paper and pens because paper and ink both use corn. Younger students will also be affected because crayons and glue also contain corn. Students will may even have to pay a higher price for those new school clothes! Yes, the fabric that makes our clothes can also contain corn.


For a list of further resources and more lesson plan ideas on the drought, see the resource http://www.pbs.org/newshour/thenews/materials/Drought2012.LALessonPlan.pdf - a lesson plan from the.news.

Lesson Plans: Frogs and Superfish

 Here are three of cross-curricular lessons!
LESSON PLAN ONE: THE THIN GREEN LINE
PBS Nature has some excellent resources that are perfect for cross-curricular activities. They aired a fascinating special on frogs entitled The Thin Green Line that is still available for streaming at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/frogs-the-thin-green-line/video-full-episode/4882/. There are some fabulous resources accompanying the video, include a great infographic. I have included a link to the infographic below. You could display the infographic using your projector. Start by going over the infographic with your students. Then, allow them to work in pairs or groups to answer the questions in the attached document (a sample question is listed below).
Frog Infographic
http://www-tc.pbs.org/wnet/nature/files/2012/08/froginfographic_fnl.png
Features:
A PBS infographic on the anatomy of a frog, comparisons to toads, and the development of the frog
Sample skill question:
According to the infographic, if a frog is 3.5 inches long, can it jump more or less than 62 inches?
Click here to view the full question sheet.

LESSON PLAN TWO: SUPERFISH
PBS Nature also aired a program on billfish that was quite interesting. The entire video is no longer available for streaming, but there are several resources still available along with some video clips. One of the resources is an article on Mercury levels in seafood. It is available here http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/superfish/a-warning-to-seafood-lovers/1008/
This would be an example of an article to use for a cloze reading. First, print the article for your students. Have the students read the article silently. Then, hand out highlighters (or allow your students to get out a pencil) and let the students read through again. During their second reading, the students should highlight information that they think is important or interesting. They can also make notes or comments. After this second reading, you can hold a class discussion on the article or allow students to discuss in groups what they felt was important about the article.
LESSON PLAN THREE: SUPERFISH PART TWO
The Superfish resources also include a great infographic! Use it as you would the frog info-graphic above. (The font seems to be more visible using Explorer rather than Firefox).
Superfish infographic:
Features:
A PBS infographic on billfish including a comparison of various types of billfish and fishing data
Sample skill question:
Using the information on the infographic, explain why the names swordfish and spearfish are accurate for how the fish look but not what they actually do.

Click here to view the full question sheet