Tuesday, October 28, 2014

A couple of loved lessons

Here's one from assistant principal Ashby Johnson:

Mrs. Thomas’ creative writing class has been working on creating a blog and literary
magazine to share their writing online. The site is called the J.T. Henley Middle
School Daily Buzz. The 7th and 8th grade students have created the site to inform you
about the happenings at Henley. The blog is written by students with a focus on gaining
knowledge about events, fundraisers, and a wide variety of other topics. The literary
magazine, or Lit Mag, is where our Henley students can share their writing in an online
space for people to read and comment on. All the students have signed up for jobs like
publisher, writer, designer, tech support, editor, etc...so it is truly a team effort. The
students write through Writer’s Workshop in class, peer and self edit, then are able to
publish their writing online. It’s exciting to see how hard the students work in class and
how proud they are when their work gets published. Check out the blog posts and the
first posting in the Lit Mag at this address: http://henleybuzz.weebly.com

And one I saw a little while ago:

Last week I had a chance to stop by Adam Kuchta’s room to check out the work he was
doing with his sixth graders. In case you didn’t know, Adam and the rest of the CTE
teachers in the division are working hard to transform their programs so that they have
a stronger focus on things like engineering and programming. He had a great example
of this change taking place with a challenge for his sixth graders. The students have
been learning how to build and program Lego NXT robots. Last week they were given
a task to program their robots (which had been rigged with a magic marker on one of the
robotic arms) to draw a three and a half inch line on a paper, move seven inches forward
without drawing a line, and then repeat the cycle. Students had previously learned the
basics of the NXT programming software and worked first on their computers to build
a program they thought would meet the parameters of their challenge. In pairs, they
would load the program into their robots, give them a command to start and watch to see
if their program created the hoped for results. Most students that I saw did not get their
robots to perform in the way they had hoped on their first attempt, and this was really
a positive for the kids. They had to analyze the results of their program, problem solve
to figure out how to rewrite their program, and then try again to see if they were getting
closer to their goal. These kids were challenged with an authentic task, worked together
to solve it, and realized that failure is a key part of the learning process. A great lesson
all around!

Building Confidence

One of the best decisions I’ve made in recent years is to volunteer to work as an assistant
coach on some of my kids' Peachtree baseball teams. I started out with them in “blastball”
where a bunch of four year olds hit a big rubber ball off of a tee, run to the one base
that is one the field and jump on it to make a horn blow, moved on to t-ball, where you
keep swinging until you get a hit, everyone runs one base, and the final hitter each inning
runs as if he or she hit a homerun, and to our latest league—rookie ball, which has a machine
pitching to kids and all of the regular baseball rules in place, including runs that count
and winners and losers at the end of the game. I’ve quickly found that baseball is a game
of confidence, and that was certainly on display this past weekend. We have a kid on the
team who has struggled all year to get a hit as we came into our second to last
game. With two strikes during his first at bat, he hit the ball—once the look of
complete shock left his face and he realized what had happened, he took off for first. He
was thrown out by a few inches, but something special happened after that. He got a hit
in each of his next three at bats that day. He felt success, and it was contagious and he
was incredibly proud of how hard he had worked to get there.

When I got home from the game and was reflecting on what had happened, I quickly
began drawing some parallels to the work we do with kids. I think school is a confidence
game in many ways as well. We’ve got some kids who have been “striking out”
at school for a long time—by being in intervention classes since first grade, by failing
SOL tests year after year, by trying their best, but being told that sometimes its just not
good enough. I believe that success can be just as contagious in school as it was on
the baseball field the other day. One of our jobs as educators is to figure out how to create
opportunities for challenge and success for all of our kids—from those who struggle with
grade level material, to those who are right in the middle of the road, to those who are our
among our highest achievers. Getting those kids to see that they can do the challenging
work that we put in front of them can start that snowball of success that can lead to a
brighter future. And we can’t do it by letting up on our standards—that baseball wasn’t
moving any slower when things finally started turning around for our player.
Keeping a positive attitude with our kids, letting them know we’ll never give up on them,
and building their perseverance in the face of challenge will help them immeasurably as
they go through middle school and throughout life.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Wrong Design

I read a really interesting article in Wired magazine last week about the concept of “wrong design.” It began with a story about the artist Edward Degas and his work Jockeys Before the Race. The painting has three beautifully rendered horses with riders preparing for a race. What apparently made the painting radical for the time, however, was something seemingly very simple--the addition of a pole running vertically through the foreground of the painting and right through one of the horses. Degas did this to purposefully create something that wasn’t pleasing to the eye, and because of this, Degas was basically a laughing stock in the art world for a period of time. But it turns out that Degas knew what he was doing--his work soon caught the eye of other artists that wanted to do something unconventional. The author of the article explains this concept of “wrong design” much better than I can, so here it is:

“Degas was engaged in a strategy that has shown up periodically for centuries across every artistic and creative field. Think of it as one step in a cycle: In the early stages, practitioners dedicate themselves to inventing and improving the rules—how to craft the most pleasing chord progression, the perfectly proportioned building, the most precisely rendered amalgamation of rhyme and meter. Over time, those rules become laws, and artists and designers dedicate themselves to excelling within these agreed-upon parameters, creating work of unparalleled refinement and sophistication—the Pantheon, the Sistine Chapel, the Goldberg Variations. But once a certain maturity has been reached, someone comes along who decides to take a different route. Instead of trying to create an ever more polished and perfect artifact, this rebel actively seeks out imperfection—sticking a pole in the middle of his painting, intentionally adding grungy feedback to a guitar solo, deliberately photographing unpleasant subjects. Eventually some of these creative breakthroughs end up becoming the foundation of a new set of aesthetic rules, and the cycle begins again.”

So how can this idea apply to the work that we do with students every day? I think the message is that when we think we’ve got something down--something we’ve done for a long time with our students, something that people say is the “right” way to do things, something that we think is perfect just the way it is--maybe that’s the time to mess it up a little bit. Maybe it’s time to make things a little bit imperfect and see what happens--you never know when you’re going to find the next great trend.

Lessons we loved

This year I'm going to try to continue to highlight some of the great work that is taking place in our classrooms thorough our blog.  Here are a couple of examples of some outstanding lessons from HMS:

From Ms. Johnson--I’ve seen a couple of different classrooms use a Gallery Walk strategy for various reasons over the past couple of weeks. As you may know, a Gallery Walk allows students to explore multiple texts or images that are placed around the room. Teachers often use this strategy as a way to have students share their work with peers, examine text, or respond to a collection of quotations or images. This strategy requires students to physically move around the room, so it is often appealing to many of our kinesthetic learners. Erin James, 7th grade language arts, had students respond to each others Word Snap projects through leaving sticky notes next to each others journals. On the sticky note, the student wrote a question and/or comment for their classmate to consider or think about in terms of their project. Peer feedback is a big part of the Writing Workshop model, that Erin uses in her classes. This activity allowed students to start to practice providing feedback to their peers, while walking around the room, looking at each others project. I saw another version of a Gallery Walk in Monique Faruque’s 6th grade history class. Monique has many images placed around her room. During this Gallery Walk, she had students look at a section of images quietly, while taking notes, and writing comments and questions about various themes and characteristics they noticed. Again, students were up around the room, thinking and responding to what they saw and later they were able to discuss their thoughts within a group.
For more information and ideas about a Gallery Walk, paste this link into your web browser: http://bit.ly/1uG1tcD

From me--I stopped by the spark space last week and ran into a great lesson being taught by Todd Rooks and Pam Koury. Todd and Pam were co-teaching an activity on global citizenship. Students were working together in small groups at different stations to learn more about our world and its diverse people and cultures. At one station they were exploring this through music videos, at another they were researching another culture on-line and creating a Venn diagram comparing it and contrasting it to life in the United States, a third station had them taking a global awareness “ignorance test” and learning about world conflicts, and a final station had them researching world geography. All of this was set up through their blackboard sites and it created a highly engaging lesson for kids who likely don’t realize just how different things are throughout the world. Pam and Todd are going to be building on this lesson this year with the start of their “Global Nomads” club in which students will partner with school kids in either Afghanistan or Pakistan to develop relationships and learn about each others cultures and customs. This was a great learning experience for the kids and one that can help us build some strong relationships in the future. Great job, Todd and Pam!