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Author: lagoodson

Let it snow! You’re ready for it!

snow, boots and mittensIt’s official! Winter has arrived and will be sticking around for several more weeks! During those times when we find ourselves teaching remotely, some of the annoyances of winter just don’t matter…scraping off the windshield, slipping across the parking lot, etc. But…if you’re face to face, be prepared for those annoying reminders of winter!

Here are a few suggestions to keep you warm, happy, and teaching through the winter months:

  • It’s cold and flu season, so watch out for those germs! Use disinfectants on door knobs, often-used items around the room, and anti-bacterial lotion for your hands. Keep boxes of facial tissues on hand, as students will go through them quickly. (It might be a good time to request a few boxes from parents.)
  • Messy weather also brings messy items into your classroom. You’ll have snow and slush tracked in, so be ready for spur-of-the-moment clean ups. Throw a few old towels and a roll of paper towels into your storage closet.
  • Cold weather also means more winter coats, hats, mittens, and other gear to keep track of and store through the day, so develop a system that allows easy access for recess or at the end of the day, yet keeps them out of your day during class time. (Need some ideas on that? Check with your hallway neighbor to see what he or she does.)
  • Allow extra time for bundling up younger students! Parents and guardians will appreciate that you spent that extra time making sure their children were protected as they head to a school bus or walk home. (For older students, just remind them to WEAR their coats outside.)
  • For your own well being, be sure to layer your clothing, since schools often can shift from too cold to too warm on a day-to-day basis. Store an extra sweater or jacket in a closet just in case.
  • Allow yourself extra time to get to your school. Sacrificing a few extra minutes of a morning can save you time by helping you avoid a fender-bender…and a visit with the police…and a visit with your insurance agent…well, you get the idea.

Once you get your winter system in place, you can fine-tune it and slush through whatever winter has to offer!

COE faculty, administrators share some Covid-19 suggestions

purple virus particle silhouettesWe know it’s an unusual environment for teachers these days, as classes can shift from face to face to hybrid to remote and back again. We have more College of Education faculty who want to offer you a few ideas to support you through these changing times. We think you’ll find their ideas helpful!

purple virus particle silhouettesTips to be successful in this environment

Dean Debbie Mercer: Take care of yourself! Self-care is not selfish, it is necessary. I frequently say there is a reason we are told to put our own face mask on first when on an airplane. If we don’t have oxygen, we cannot help others. You must be rested, hydrated, and nourished to be your very best for your students. Take time to ensure this happens! Buy a great water bottle, plan healthy lunches, go on walks, take time to do things you enjoy. Each time you do, you replenish your reserves so you can provide what your students need.

Assistant Dean Todd Goodson: Students carry with them all of the stressors in our cultures and our communities. It might be a contentious political climate. It might be a public health emergency, or it might be something we haven’t imagined yet. Students absorb stress from their environments and it follows them into our classrooms. The same could be said for us. Just because we are teachers, we are not immune from toxic influences of the world. We have to attend to ourselves first. We have to have our own heads in a good place so we can assist our students as they deal with the baggage they bring to school.

Dr. Vicki Sherbert: Be flexible! Whether the shift you’re making is something small like shortening or extending a lesson or is a bigger pivot like moving from in-person to remote learning, it can be an opportunity to develop resiliency. Extend grace to yourselves, your students, and your colleagues. This resource is a Padlet compiling 30 conversations on teaching and learning with Kelly Gallagher and Penny Kittle. In each recording, they share honest insights on the struggles (and even a few) unanticipated positives experienced while teaching during the pandemic. https://padlet.com/pennykittle/conversationsWkellygallagher They invited guests to share their experiences and offer resources to teachers at all levels of experience.

Dr. Lori Levin: You know me, always thinking about phonemic awareness and phonics instruction that does not include any worksheets. Here is a fabulous resource to use for remote instruction of phonics and phonology (even math, spelling, science, etc.). It is called Whiteboard.fi and it allows you to instantly create a class and share a code with your students who will get a powerful whiteboard on their screen on any device. They can write, draw, type, do math, and add images, and you can see their screens and interact with them in real time. Imagine saying a word like “bed” and asking them to write the letter for the sound they hear in the middle, or asking them to add a picture of something that starts with the /b/ sound! The possibilities are endless and it is FREE.

purple virus particle silhouettesWords of encouragement

Dean Debbie Mercer: You are an EdCat! You are Powered by Purpose! You are the best of the best. You are ready for your own classroom and you are ready for your students! Stay in touch with your professors and fellow EdCats. They are a network of support for you.

Assistant Dean Todd Goodson: We hope you will teach for many years, but you will only have one first year of teaching. In the years ahead, things that seem very serious today will be routine for you. You are building a foundation to last a career. Be deliberate. Be careful. Have fun.

Dr. Vicki Sherbert: You are doing good and important things for students. Especially now, you are building relationships with students that will make an impact on them throughout their journeys. You can communicate to them that you are the “lead learner” in the classroom and that you are learning alongside them. Your students are learning critical skills that extend far beyond traditional classroom learning.

purple virus particle silhouettesOther thoughts

Dean Debbie Mercer: What an opportunity you have! YOU will change education. You have learned in an environment we could not have imagined a year ago. Yet, you did and you thrived. Take the methods and practices that were a positive impact on you during this time and implement those with your students. You are charting the pedagogy and learning opportunities of the future!

Dr. Vicki Sherbert: Extend grace to yourself and to others. No one has done this before!

Connect with your new BFFs: Custodians and office assistants

In case you haven’t made the connections yet, two of your new best friends should be a custodian and an office assistant. Rumor has it those individuals can save you a mountain of trouble by helping you figure things out in your new school. With bad weather moving in, all sorts of spring activities that will be bubbling up, and other happenings, they can provide advice to help you manage all of these things.

Rumor has it a custodian once saved a new teacher when she found out her room was going to be used for a music festival. The custodian not only gave the teacher a heads up about it, but walked to her room and helped her arrange her room to avoid any issues with equipment, etc. Not naming names here, but I truly appreciated it!

Often they’ve been in the building for some time and know the system, so use…and appreciate…those resources.

Email your COE family!

What’s up?

Why don’t you send us a photo of you at work in your classroom! Or, do you have a question about classroom procedures? A suggestion for a topic we should address in Before the Bell? Want to add your name to our mailing list? Or provide a different email for our list? At the very least, just email and say hi!

And thanks to all of those who have emailed! We love the updates!

Early-career teachers, feel free to jump in and offer suggestions to those who are following your career choice!

We’d love to hear from you, so please email us at lagoodson@k-state.edu.

Go, COE Cats!

Faculty offer resources to inspire you

resourcesHere are some books and other resources some of your former professors offer as ways to inspire you in your new career of teaching:

Dr. Brad Burenheide (Secondary Social Studies) —

  1. First Days of School by Harry Wong and Rosemary Wong
  2. Meet Me in the Middle by Rick Wormeli
  3. Classroom Instruction That Works: Research-based Strategies for Increasing Student Achievement by Ceri B. Dean, Elizabeth Ross Hubbell, Howard Pitler, and BJ Stone.

Dr. Todd Goodson (Secondary English, Speech/Theatre, Journalism) —“Let’s try three great school movies:

  1. Dead Poets Society (1989)
  2. Mr. Holland’s Opus (1996), and
  3. Stand and Deliver (1988)
  4. For extra credit, try Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939).
  5. For comic relief at the end of the school year, try Teachers (1984).

Dr. Lori Levin (Literacy) —

  1. “Bookmark the ALA website and keep current on the latest award winners – http://www.ala.org/alsc/2017-alsc-book-media-award-winners
  2. Visit NEA for a list of must reads for new teachers: http://www.nea.org/home/34033.htm
  3. Great Websites for Kids from the American Library Association – http://gws.ala.org/

Ms. Cyndi Kuhn (Technology) —

  1. Teach like a Pirate by David Burgess
  2. Ditch that Textbook by Matt Miller
  3. Good to Great by Jim Collins

Dr. Sherri Martinie (Secondary Math) —

  1. The Courage to Teach by Parker Palmer
  2. Teaching with Love and Logic by Jim Fay and David Funk
  3. Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck

Dr. Tom Vontz (Elementary Social Studies) —

  1. Socrative
  2. Padlet
  3. Core Teaching Skills by Vontz and Goodson

Dr. Vicki Sherbert (Secondary English/Language Arts, Speech/Theatre, Journalism) —

  1. Kittle, P. (2013). Book love: Developing depth, stamina, and passion in adolescent readers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
  2. National Writing Project & Nagin, C. (2006). Because writing matters: Improving student writing in our schools. San Francisco, CA: Josey-Bass.
  3. Graves, D. (2006). A sea of faces: The importance of knowing your students. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
  4. Ripple Maker by Davis Laughlin
  5. In Defense of Read-Aloud: Sustaining Best Practice by Steven Layne

Dr. Phillip Payne (Music Education) —

  1. First Days of School by Harry Wong or Tools for Teaching by Fred Jones
  2. The Journey from Music Student to Teacher by Michael Raiber and David Teachout
  3. Alternative Approaches to Music Education by Ann Clements

Coming up next month

februaryLook at the calendar! You’re shifting into second semester and life is good, right? Well, just in case you need a little cheering on–and maybe a smile or two, we’re going to provide the following stories in our next issue:

  • Assessments—how you AND your students can succeed!
  • Silly first-year teacher mistakes your professors made.
  • Ideas for collaboration with other secondary teachers.

In the Classroom: Kylie Corneliusen

Kylie Corneliusen is ready to greet students in her classroom.

Name: Kylie Corneliusen

Location: Franklin Elementary, USD 475 Junction City, KS

Class/content area taught: Fourth grade

What are you most excited about with your new career? We are currently in person five days a week. I am so grateful to be with my students every day! I have grown so much as an educator these past couple of months due to being a first-year teacher, as well as being the only fourth-grade in-person teacher at my school. I am grateful to have had to persevere to figure out my curriculum and classroom management. It has made me become a better educator!

In addition to being a first-year teacher, I coach high school volleyball at Manhattan High School. I knew it would be a challenge to be coaching and starting my first year as a teacher but I stayed organized and on top of things and was able to balance both!! Anything is possible! I am very passionate about coaching so I knew I could not give it up going into my 1st year teaching!!

Suggestions/encouragement for new teachers: My advice to College of Education students is always ask your colleagues questions, don’t be afraid to try something new with your students because even if it doesn’t work it will teach them to be flexible and to ask teachers in your school what they do for classroom management and always, always follow through with your classroom management!

Check out her fourth-graders cheering on the Cats in the video below:

hand with fingers curled into a powercat sign

Wildcats!

 

 

Here are some teaching suggestions for a pandemic environment

purple virus particle silhouettesWe know it’s an unusual environment for teachers these days, as classes can shift from face to face to hybrid to remote and back again. So your College of Education faculty wants to offer you a few ideas to support you through these changing times. We think you’ll find their ideas helpful!
purple virus particle silhouettesTips to be successful in this environment
Suzanne Porath: NearPod is a great tool for encouraging participation and sustaining attention.

Build relationships through fun activities, theme days, and unstructured conversation time. It is OK to not be academic all the time. Learning happens through the relationships we build with students.

We ALL make mistakes and fumble—goodness knows I have this fall (many Zoom fails). Admit mistakes, reflect on how to be better, and move forward. Dwelling in the past bogs down the present.

Sherri Martinie: Students want to feel connected with others. We often want to jump right into content and that’s not the primary interest or concern for students. They want be noticed and heard. I often have first year teachers email or call me and tell me their students won’t talk. When they are teaching and ask a question or try to start a discussion, no one will answer. I tell them to ask a question about something unrelated to math that is of interest to the students – last night’s football game, a TickTock video, a movie, weekend plans, etc., and get them talking. Then shift to the content. There are some good recourses that can support this. One teacher I talked to recommended “2000 Would You Rather Questions” and “2000 Questions about Me.” This teacher makes a routine out of starting class with one of these questions. I have had success with “Would You Rather” questions working with people of all ages. I also recommend trying to put students in small groups during a whole-class meeting or, alternatively, meet with them in small groups some of the time. If you have 60 minutes for a remote class, you could meet with half the first 25 minutes and then second half the second 25 minutes. If you don’t have time to hear from each individual student during the time you meet with them, teach them how to record and send a video or audio message to you. You may not have time to respond to all of them, but select a small number each time and rotate through until you’ve responded to everyone. The more connected they feel, the harder they will work for you!

Angie Messer: Engage/interact with your students as best you can! Create topics that are appropriate for them to discuss in breakout groups, be sure to have someone report out for the group and then you need to have a short dialogue with that person. Bounce between breakout groups while they are having discussions so they know you are listening and interested and value what they are discussing.

James Alberto: First and foremost, don’t be afraid to slow down and embrace the idea of consciously spending extra time for you to connect with your students, and vice versa. New research points out what we pretty much already knew—our students are socially and emotionally struggling right now, and so are teachers. This aspect of their health and development (and ours) is MUCH more pressing right now than any content we can deliver. Create time for them to connect with you, you with them, and them with each other. The content can wait a bit! Best of all, this is so easy to do because they WANT to do it…they need to do it!

The best literature I’ve read lately on this is a great study called Are the Kids Alright, conducted by a group called the California Partners Project. It’s worth taking a few minutes to peruse. The pdf of the study’s findings can be found here: https://www.calpartnersproject.org (click on “Read the Report”).

Spencer Clark: You’re the expert; be a problem solver.

Tonnie Martinez: Students love to be consulted. If you begin a remote lesson with a poll or question of the day, students are engaged from the minute they click on. Say the students’ names. Get creative with reasons for students to join the fun. Some ideas are: Hide an object in view each day and see who can find it first, crazy hats, dress up, everyone with a mustache, pets (real or pretend), meet the family member, and ask the students for their fun ideas. Google “national days” and celebrate something each day. Keep in mind that students’ attention span correlates with their age. The younger the student, the more transitions/breaks in the action are needed—think “bursts” of micro-learning instead of long, drawn out lessons.

purple virus particle silhouettesWords of encouragement

Suzanne Porath: Care for yourself, so you can care for your students. It is not selfish to turn off the computer and enjoy time away from school. Don’t feel guilty and savor it mindfully so you can be refreshed when you choose to return to grading, emailing, and planning.  Make sure to plan to refresh yourself.

Sherri Martinie: As teachers, it is easy to get bogged down by the challenges we face each day. We often take for granted the things that are going well. So I say to you, you are making a difference in ways that you may not realize for some time. One day you will tell your children, your grandchildren and new teachers that you mentor about the first year you were a teacher. You will try to explain what it was like to teach and learn during a pandemic and they will be amazed by your strength and your courage. You are a pioneer. You are pioneering innovative techniques for teaching and exploring a new world of learning. We will forever be changed from this experience and your commitment to your students during this time will be something they will never forget.

Angie Messer: You are getting an amazing opportunity! You get to experience this hybrid style teaching in its infancy.  All teachers are like first-year teachers. There will be so much sharing and support!  Take advantage of companies offering free support for teachers during this time to explore avenues that support the content you are teaching. Look for the positives – what does hybrid teaching allow you to do that teaching in-person did not!

James Alberto: Right now, they need connection. You can do this! You were built for this…you need connection, too! Keep in mind, the content we learn is all a blur in the end. What endures is the way a teacher made us feel—the connection they made with us. Focus on that. They’ll remember you for that long after they have forgotten who taught them which content. The relationships are what matters in the end.

Spencer Clark: You/we are making history, embrace it and think about how you and your colleagues can shape the future of education.

Tonnie Martinez: Think of building a learning community instead of a being leader with followers. We’re all pioneers right now and students will support what they help create. Check-in’s that ask, “How are we doing? What do we need more of? How could we tackle learning this?” can make your learners feel a part of something great.

purple virus particle silhouettesOther thoughts

Suzanne Porath: Focus on one thing at a time – too often we try to multi-task. That is a great way to do a lot of things poorly!

Angie Messer: Take time to have some fun with your students! Incorporate “get to know you” activities and interactions that allow you to laugh and have fun.  You can play 20 questions, charades, etc. One fun question we had our students discuss and report out on is “If you were ruler of education, what FUN rule would you implement in your school?”  (Example:  Walk Backward Wednesdays, Field Day in High School, Trade a Grade for a Day) Our students had a great time with this! It helped them remember what they thought fondly of from their school days.

James Alberto: Google the term “how to get students to know each other online.” I’ve done this same search a handful of times this school year already, and I get new results each time. Here’s an example of what I found recently: https://symondsresearch.com/icebreakers-for-online-teaching/ (a list and instructions for 21 different online icebreakers).

Tonnie Martinez: If you are teaching remotely, please consider asking your students to private message you each week (at least). For example, “Today I need PM’s from students 5, 15, 19, 22. and 25.” For the most part, you’ll see “I’m good” or “I’ll be glad when _____ is over.” But you may read, “My Dad tested positive for Covid-19,” or “We have to move to a different place,” and you don’t know students’ needs unless you ask.

Hmm…so what’s in YOUR desk drawer?

desk-drawerWe asked some of your Curriculum and Instruction professors what five items new teachers need the most in their desk drawer. Here is their growing list of responses. (Feel free to email us your own go-to items in your desk drawer!)

Cyndi Kuhn (Technology) –

  1. Flash drive
  2. Power cords for technology (go buy a second set and keep a set at home)
  3. Advil
  4. Kleenex
  5. Your favorite motivational quote, so every time you open that drawer, you are inspired.

Dr. Brad Burenheide (Secondary Social Studies)

  1. Gum
  2. Notecards
  3. A great pen
  4. Flash drive
  5. A picture of your spouse or significant other to look at when times are rough

Dr. Todd Goodson (Secondary English, Speech/Theatre, Journalism)

“Forget about the drawers. They will be full of clutter and useless in a week. The most important thing you can have on top of your desk is a book (appropriate for the age group you are teaching) that you are currently reading. If every teacher in the building demonstrated a lifelong love of reading for students, that would do more than any instructional program to improve students’ literacy skills.”

Dr. Sherri Martinie (Secondary Math)

  1. Crackers for hungry kids.

Dr. Lori Levin (Literacy) –

  1. Breath mints
  2. Band aids
  3. Granola bars (both for you and for the child who never seems to have had breakfast or bring a snack),
  4. Chinese take-out menu,
  5. Lots of post-it notes (invaluable for jotting notes, collecting data, and last-minute exit tickets).

Kaylee Myers (Elementary Education)

  1. Safety pins
  2. Colorful writing pens
  3. Chapstick (talking lots=dry lips)

Dr. Tom Vontz (Elementary Social Studies)

  1. Coffee cup
  2. Kleenex
  3. Laptop
  4. Grading folder
  5. Parent contact info

Dr. Tonnie Martinez (Secondary Language Arts) –

  1. Mints for the face-to-face conferences (for you and the students)!
  2. Hand-sanitizing lotion that smells good
  3. Vending machine change
  4. Granola Bars
  5. Tylenol

Dr. Vicki Sherbert (Secondary English/Language Arts, Speech/Theatre, Journalism)

  1. Band-aids
  2. An extra flash drive
  3. Colorful pens
  4. Encouraging notes you’ve received from students and parents
  5. Tic Tacs

Dr. Phillip Payne (Music Education) –

  1. White-out
  2. Calculator
  3. Pencils
  4. Pens
  5. Audio recorder