Sunday, December 29, 2013

Build Vocabulary with Prefixes and Suffixes

Build Vocabulary with Prefixes and Suffixes


Learning prefixes and suffixes is a great way to boost vocabulary quickly. But, these letter combos are best learned in the context of the words that they create. Here's a game to get your child thinking about these beginnings and endings, in between a lot of shouting and laughing.

What You Need:

  • Index cards
  • Markers
  • Dictionary
What You Do:
Step 1: Go over these lists of prefixes and suffixes with your child:
Common Prefixes
PrefixMeaningExample
pre-beforepreview
un-notunbelievable
dis-notdisagree
re-againrewrite
mis-notmisunderstood
im-notimpossible
bi-twobicycle
de-notderegulated

Common Suffixes
SuffixMeaningExample
-erdoerteacher
-ableable tounbelievable
-ousfull ofdangerous
-nessstate of beinghappiness
-fulfull ofwonderful
-ly or -ylikegently
-mentstate ofgovernment

Step 2: Ask your child to take the stack of index cards and label each card with a prefix or suffix from the list above.
Step 3: Shuffle all the cards and turn them face down in one pile. As the dealer, it's your job to flip over the top card and lay it face up. The first player who can shout out a word that uses the prefix or suffix correctly, and can provide the definition of the prefix or suffix, gets to keep that card for their pile. You may want to keep a dictionary handy, just in case some funny words come tumbling out. The person with the most cards at the end of the game wins!

Jane Oh has taught third and fourth grades for 8 years. She has worked with many diverse groups of students. Most recently, she has written teacher textbook guides.
http://www.education.com/activity/article/build_vocabulary_prefixes_suffixes_third/

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Guided Reading

Reading Tasks 1 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK A – Give your book marks out of ten and explain why you have given it that mark.

TASK B – Draw a picture of your favorite part of the story. Color it in and explain what you’ve drawn.

TASK C – Write down any new words you have come across in your book and look them up in the dictionary. Record what each word means.

TASK D – Draw a picture of your favorite character in the book. Write down their names and what you have learnt about them from your reading.

TASK E – Write about your favorite part in the story and explain why you liked it.

TASK F – Write down 5 questions you could ask someone about this book to check whether they have read it carefully. 




Reading Tasks 2 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK G – Draw a picture of one of the settings in the story. Where is this place? What happens there?

TASK H – Copy out 3 sentences or phrases you really liked in this book. Why did you like each of them?

TASK I – Draw a poster to advertise the book you have read. Make sure you write on the poster why people should read it.

TASK J – Find 5 – 10 interesting words in this book. Write down what each one means. Then use each word in a sentence of your own.

TASK K – Draw a picture of one of the characters in the book. Find and copy at least 3 things the writer says about this person.






Reading Tasks 3 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK L – Pretend you are one of the characters in the book. Who will you be? Write your diary for one day in the story.

TASK M – Draw a large picture of one of the settings used in the story. Label everything in the picture, using words and phrases from the book if you can.

TASK N – Which chapter or part of the story is the most important? Explain what happens in this section and why you think it’s important.

TASK O – Write a letter to your friend telling him or her a bit about this book. Explain why you think they ought to read it.

TASK P – Do you think the writer uses language (words) in an interesting way? Find 3 – 5 examples, copy them out and explain why you like them.





Reading Tasks 4 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading

TASK Q – Make notes about the story under these headings: *opening *build-up *dilemma *resolution.

TASK R - Make up a wordsearch or crossword based on the book.

TASK S - Write about the main character in the story. Choose 5 – 10 words to describe his or her behavior. Give an example for each one. E.g. Sally is foolish when she goes to the mill by herself.

TASK T – Pick a descriptive word from the text, write it down and use a thesaurus to find 5 words that mean something similar and 5 words that mean the opposite.

TASK U – Re-write a section as a playscript. Remember to include the correct features of a playscript, including setting, props, stage directions and names of characters.




Reading Tasks 5 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK V – Think of 5 questions you would like to ask one of the characters in your book. Then swap these with another person in your group and write the answers as if you were that character.

TASK W – Write an interview between you and the main character of your book. Be sure you write detailed responses for your characters.

TASK X – Which character in this book are you most like? Explain your answer. Which character do you like the most? Which character do you least like? Explain your answer.

TASK Y – Construct a timeline to show all the main events in the story in the order they happen.

TASK Z – Write a summary of the story in 50 words only.





Reading Tasks 6 - Fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK 1 – Make a list of as many adjectives and adverbs as you can from the book. Choose 5 and use a thesaurus to write other words that mean something similar.

TASK 2 – What do other characters think or say about the main character? Why do they feel this way?

TASK 3 – Write a poem describing a place or a person in the story you’re reading.

TASK 4 – Write a newspaper report about an important event including a headline, interviews with people involved and pictures.

TASK 5 – Imagine you are one of the characters. Draw a picture diary recording the key events that happened in the story. Add a comment about how you felt.





Reading Tasks 1 – Non-fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK A – Write a list of features of your non-fiction book. Does it have a contents? An index? How many features can you find?

TASK B – Copy a sentence from your book and answer these questions: What tense is it written in? (past/present/future) How do you know? Is it written in 1st or 3rd person or is no-one referred to at all? Does it contain any speech? What is the sentence about?

TASK C – Find 5 – 10 technical words that you don’t know and write your own glossary to explain what they mean. Use a dictionary to help you.

TASK D – Find any 10 words in your book. Now put them into alphabetical order.



Reading Tasks 2 – Non-fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK E – Read through 3 paragraphs in your book and make notes on the most important points.

TASK F - Make a list of as many adjectives and adverbs as you can from the book. Choose 5 and use a thesaurus to write other words that mean something similar.

TASK G - Make up a word search or crossword based on the book.

TASK H – Draw a poster to advertise the book you have read. Make sure you write on the poster why people should read it.

TASK I – Think about 5 questions you would like to find out answers to when reading your book.




Reading Tasks 3 – Non-fiction

Choose an activity to complete about the book you are reading.

TASK J – Write down 5 – 10 interesting facts that you have found out in your reading.

TASK K – Choose your favorite section from your book. Read each sentence and write down the key words and phrases to summarize it.

TASK L – Choose your favorite section from your book and summarize the main points.

TASK M – Thought shower what you have learnt from reading this book.

TASK N – Draw a diagram of something mentioned in your book and label it with relevant information.

 Adapted from a resource contributed to TES Connect by liz_alston




Friday, December 27, 2013

Count 'N Catch: A Skip Counting Game SECOND GRADE VOCABULARY


Count 'N Catch: A Skip Counting Game


Encourage your child to practice skip counting by turning number patterns into an interactive game of catch. It will get your child moving and learning, ball in hand!

What You Need:

  • One soft ball, two players

What You Do:

  1. Begin by telling your child you are going to practice skip counting while playing catch with the ball. Be sure to briefly review counting by 2’s, 5’s, and 10’s.
  2. Sit or stand about six feet away from your child with the ball in your hands. Say the first number in the skip counting pattern aloud, and as you're saying it, toss the ball to your child. Now it's his turn to say the next number in the pattern! For example, when skip counting by 2’s, you say, “two,” and pass the ball to your child who will say, “four" and then pass the ball back to you. Then you say “six,” the next number in the pattern, and toss it back to him. Continue to play the counting game this way, and challenge your child to count as high as he can.
  3. After playing the counting game with multiples of 2, play the same way with multiples of 5 and 10. For an extra challenge, try skip counting by 3’s and 4’s.
Variations:
Turn the counting game into a fun language arts activity by practicing with parts of speech in place of numbers. Play catch back and forth as you take turns listing nouns. See how many nouns your child can list before getting stuck! Next, pass the ball to each other while naming adjectives. Afterwards, play the game while listing verbs. For an extra challenge, try playing the game with adverbs, too. The possibilities are endless with Count 'N Catch. And getting some of those terms and concepts off the page and into the body, really helps kids remember them!

Carrie Ann Cain has been teaching second grade for three years. She is certified in elementary education, special education, Spanish, and ESOL (teaching english to speakers of other languages).
http://www.education.com/activity/article/count_n_catch_second/

Friday, November 1, 2013

Play a Word Recognition Game KINDERGARTEN SIGHT WORDS


Play a Word Recognition Game


Kindergarten is an important step in your child's path towards reading, and you can make it a big step. Once your child can recognize the letters of the alphabet, you may want to start practicing simple word recognition. Here's a fun and easy way to get started:

What You Need:

  • Index cards
  • Pen or marker
  • Old magazines
  • Photographs (optional)
  • Scissors
  • Glue

What You Do:

  1. On one set of index cards, write some simple words, such as cat, dog, or bird.
  2. On another set, draw or cut out magazine pictures that illustrate the words you have chosen.
  3. Lay all the cards on the table, face up, and have your child match each word to the corresponding picture.
  4. Try name recognition by using photographs of your child, siblings, friends, relatives, and so on. Write each person's name on an index card and have your child match the photos to the appropriate name cards.
Soon, your child will be matching words and images in a flash, and his confidence and ability to recognize basic words will skyrocket!



http://www.education.com/activity/article/Word_Recognition/

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Review of Common Core Demanded by Georgia Gov. Deal

Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has asked the state Board of Education to review the Common Core State Standardsthe Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Aug. 22. He is particularly concerned about certain "text exemplars" included with the English/language arts portion of the standards, which serve as a suggested reading list to help teachers as they design their lessons.
In his letter, dated Aug. 15, Deal says he wants a "formal evaluation" of the standards and a comparison between the common core and Georgia's previous content standards, and that he wants the board to consider input from "all stakeholders." And he wants the board to reconsider the "text exemplars" that accompany the standards and for the state board to adopt its own model reading list.
Let's break down what that last part means, exactly. The text exemplars are meant to be used as "guideposts" for teachers that are "suggestive of the breadth of texts that students should encounter in the text types required by the standards," as an appendix to the ELA standards in the common core states. They're not required reading under the common core, but teachers uncertain about which texts to use might be expected to draw upon the "exemplars" as a resource in their classrooms. These are broken down by grade levels and include well-known books such as "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" by Mark Twain, as well as poems and informational texts.
So to be clear, these exemplars are not the actual ELA standards that are part of the common core. But, it's easy to imagine that reading lists for the common core, whether they're mandatory or suggested, could provoke anger or distaste on the basis of a few titles.
Now, Deal doesn't single out any specific exemplar that he wants examined or finds particularly troubling. But Georgia Rep. William Ligon, a Republican who introduced common-core-repeal legislation earlier this year (it didn't get political traction), expressed concern specifically in the Journal-Constitution about In the Time of Butterflies and its portrayal of Fidel Castro's ouster of Fulgencio Batista. The book is a "text exemplar" for grades 9-10.
This complaint isn't entirely new—in a May 7 story for Frontpage Mag, a conservative website, Mary Grabar describes the book's "explicit descriptions of masturbation and intercourse," in addition to its portrayal of Castro and his brothers, which she deems inappropriately hagiographic: "No indication in the novel that Fidel and Raul turned out to be tyrants, or Che a mass murderer." Other text exemplars in those grade levels are Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart, Homer's Odyssey, and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451.
Grabar, by the way, teaches in Atlanta and has a Ph.D from the University of Georgia.
Deal, along with state superintendent John Barge, have previously been supportive of the standards, which the state school board adopted them back in 2010. But there's been a relatively significant amount of agitation from conservative groups in the state against the standards, in addition to Ligon's legislative efforts. And in July, the state dropped out of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, one of two state consortia developing tests aligned to the common core, with officials citing the additional costs the tests would bring to the state.
State board member Scott Johnson told the Journal-Constitution that "we'll do what the governor has asked us to do."
As the Journal-Constitution points out, Barge could be a GOP primary opponent for Deal in 2014, so there's political tension that might divide two state officials who, strictly on policy, have been on the same side when it comes to common core. Note that Barge said he thought that prior to his letter, Deal agreed with Barge about the importance of the standards.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Calculator Use on Exams to Shift With Common Core

Although calculators have not figured prominently in discussions of the common-core math standards, it's likely the complementary tests will result in far greater uniformity in their use on state exams across the nation.
Policies emerging from the two state consortia developing common-core assessments would prohibit most students from using calculators on the grades 3-5 tests, for example. At grades 6 and above, they call for calculator "on" and "off" sections and set restrictions on what functionality is allowed. (Both consortia will provide online calculators for the computer-based tests.)
Those rules, especially in today's high-stakes-testing environment, are sure to influence regular classroom use of calculators, from the elementary ban to the ways increasingly sophisticated calculator use is assumed at the secondary level, many experts say.
State policies are all over the map for using calculators on large-scale assessments. At least a few states—including Arizona, California, and Nevada—prohibit most students from using calculators at all, even on high school exams. But that approach appears to be the exception. Meanwhile, some states, such as New York and Ohio, prohibit calculators only for elementary students.
There are other variations across states, too, including whether the exams have calculator-free sections (many do, including tests in Kentucky, Maryland, and Rhode Island), and the limits imposed on the type of device students may use at different grade levels, such as a basic four-function, scientific, or graphing calculator.
Last summer, the 20-state Partnership for Assessment of College and Career Readiness, or PARCC, issued a policyRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader for its forthcoming assessments. The 25-state Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium has drafted a tentative policy that's similar in many respects to the PARCC approach. Final adoption of the Smarter Balanced policy, which has not been made widely available, is expected later this year.
Reaction from math experts and educators to the PARCC policy since it was issued in July 2012 has been mixed. Although making the exams at grades 3-5 calculator-free has been welcomed in some quarters, others criticize the move.
"The old saw is, teach to the test, and that's the reality," said W. Gary Martin, a professor of math education at Auburn University in Auburn, Ala. "If [students] can't use a calculator on the test, it's effectively banished from the classroom."
On the other hand, Mr. Martin and others praised the PARCC guidelines for high school, which call for the use of an online graphing calculator with comparable functionality to a Texas Instruments TI-84, a popular calculator in high schools.
"It will be a step in the right direction," said Brad Findell, the associate director of math-teacher-education programs at Ohio State University. "It will encourage graphing-calculator use in high school, particularly among lower-achieving students for whom this may have been withheld."
Exactly how many states will ultimately use the PARCC and Smarter Balanced assessments is unknown. Recently, Georgia and Oklahoma have bowed out of the PARCC exams, for instance, though most states are planning to use one or the other testing system.

'Appropriate' Use

The use of calculators in schools has long been a divisive issue, with some critics seeing little place for them at the K-12 level, especially for younger students. But analysts suggest the debate has quieted down in recent years.
Today, with calculators widely used in schools, particularly at the secondary level, the real dilemma is when and how to use them, argues Kathryn B. Chval, an associate professor of math education at the University of Missouri in Columbia who has studied calculator policies.
"The debate should be: When do we use calculators? When do we not use calculators? What is the calculator going to help you teach?" she said.
"I personally see them as useful tools, but like all tools, they need to be used appropriately," said Patrick Honner, who teaches math at Brooklyn Technical High School in New York City. That, he said, includes explicit training for students.
The word "appropriate" is key to how calculators are discussed in the common core. The document explicitly references using technology, including calculators and other tools such as spreadsheets and even geometry software. The main guidepost, analysts say, comes in the Standards for Mathematical Practice. The fifth practice standard, Use Appropriate Tools Strategically, says that mathematically proficient students "are able to use technological tools to explore and deepen their understanding of concepts."
What's On, What's Off
The PARCC and Smarter Balanced testing consortia have written policies for the online calculators to be used on their common-core exams. The Smarter Balanced policy is in draft form, subject to approval by member states.
Mr. Findell from Ohio State appreciates that emphasis.
"Under current practice, the words 'appropriate' and 'strategically' are too often absent from discussions of the use of calculators and other tools," he said, arguing that students often rely too heavily on them.
To that end, Mr. Findell praised plans for the common-core assessments to have calculator "on" and "off" sections at grades 6 and above, which would be a change for Illinois and some other states.
"The common core represents a reasonable middle ground that potentially, if we take it seriously enough, and assessment helps us enough, can bring us to a better place where students end up being thoughtful," he added.
In developing calculator-use policies, officials from both PARCC and Smarter Balanced said they considered several factors, including what the common standards say, current state policies, and how the issue is handled on other prominent assessments, such as national and international exams.
"We really spent time researching the standards and researching what the standards call for as technology," said Carrie Piper, a senior adviser for mathematics at Achieve, a Washington-based organization working on the PARCC assessments. "PARCC feels as though the calculator should be used as a tool for the student."
Ms. Piper also said PARCC consulted with Jason Zimba, one of the lead writers of the math standards.
The rules for national and international assessments vary. The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study bans calculators for the grade 4 exam, but allows them at grade 8. But the National Assessment of Educational Progress permits calculators for some questions at grades 4, 8, and 12. On the SAT, scientific and graphing calculators are permitted.
Shelbi Cole, the math director for Smarter Balanced, said that for pilot testing conducted earlier this year, the consortium's policy was similar in many respects to PARCC's planned approach. But for the draft policy now awaiting action by the Smarter Balanced governing states, one notable change is to permit a scientific calculator at grade 7. PARCC restricts students in both grades 6 and 7 to a four-function calculator with square root.
Ms. Cole said the change came in response to feedback from educators in the field and a closer examination of the content to be tested in grade 7.
Standards Practice
One of the eight Standards for Mathematical Practice in the common core, Use Appropriate Tools Strategically, explicitly discusses the use of calculators and other technology.
"Mathematically proficient students consider the available tools when solving a mathematical problem. These tools might include pencil and paper, concrete models, a ruler, a protractor, a calculator, a spreadsheet, a computer algebra system, a statistical package, or dynamic geometry software. Proficient students are sufficiently familiar with tools appropriate for their grade or course to make sound decisions about when each of these tools might be helpful. … For example, mathematically proficient high school students analyze graphs of functions and solutions generated using a graphing calculator."
Smarter Balanced also plans some adjustments to the high school calculator functions based on feedback from educators, she said.
At high school, the draft policy says the online calculator will have scientific, regression, and graphing capabilities. In fact, it's already available online for anyone to use, though Ms. Cole said updates are being made prior to field testing—planned for early next year—to further refine it.
Smarter Balanced is still exploring how to handle calculator use for students with disabilities. PARCC's recently issued accommodations policy makes some allowances for students with disabilities on noncalculator sections.
In the draft policy, Smarter Balanced says it will not allow hand-held calculators for students who use the online test (unless explicitly allowed under the accommodations policy). PARCC will allow hand-held calculators for the first year of testing, but no decision has been made beyond that.
Ms. Cole said a key advantage of using online calculators is it levels the playing field to ensure all students, regardless of background or income level, use the same calculator on the test.
"The biggest benefit to me is the equity issue," she said.
But several educators said that while they like the idea of an online calculator for the exams, they still see reasons for concern, especially in high school.
"While everybody will have access to the same technology, not everybody will have the same background with that technology," said Cliff Bara, who teaches math and science at Troy Junior and Senior High School in Troy, Mont.
Mr. Bara also expressed concerns about the middle school restrictions in both consortia's policies.
"If the common core ... is moving a lot of the algebra down to grade 7 and especially 8th grade, for them not to allow a graphing calculator, at least at the 8th grade, seems to be a serious oversight," he said. Seventh and 8th graders at his school use them "all the time."

Chilling Effect?

The "no calculator" plan for grades 3-5 has generated considerable criticism. Some educators and experts who believe calculators have a valuable role at that level fear the policies will have a chilling effect on their use, and say it has implications for test questions.
"It's absolutely true that kids need to be able to compute without calculators, ... but that's only part of what they need," said Cathy Seeley, a senior fellow emeritus at the Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin. "To prohibit them [on the exams] in grades 3-5 even when there are very useful ways students would use them to get to higher-level thinking" is a mistake. "It constrains the depth of the [test] problems you provide."
In 2011, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, long an advocate for using calculators across grade levels, issued a policy statement explicitly touting the benefits of "selective and strategic use" of calculators to support elementary math learning.
But a 2012 teacher surveyRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader suggests calculators are not regularly used at that level. Four-function calculators are available in 58 percent of elementary classrooms, it reported, but they are used at least once a week in only 13 percent.
Linda Gojak, the president of the NCTM, said she's "not too troubled" by the grades 3-5 prohibition on tests, though she said "it's really hard to make a judgment without seeing more test items."
But Jennifer Barrett, a math-curriculum consultant for the 14,500-student Kenton County district in Kentucky, welcomes the restriction. (In Kentucky, calculators are now allowed for some elementary test items.)
"This gives teachers permission to spend time on the grade-level fluencies explicitly stated in the [common core], which in recent years have been de-emphasized," she said. "If calculators are used, how is [computational] fluency and number sense being supported?"
Ms. Piper said there was little debate in PARCC on the grades 3-5 policy. "Deciding not to include a calculator was a pretty easy [call]," she said, "because of students being able to build their number-sense skills, number sense, and fluency."
Linda Kaniecki, a math specialist at the Maryland education department who worked with PARCC on its policy, said that while the rules will be a shift for her state, there's no intention to send a no-calculator message to teachers.

"We're hoping that it's still used in instruction," she said.
Bushra Makiya, an 8th grade math teacher at a New York City public school, is upbeat about the PARCC rules, which she says are quite similar to how New York, a PARCC governing member, now approaches testing, except for the planned use of online calculators.
"Calculators are a really important tool for students, and if they're going to be used effectively in the classroom, it's important that they are also used on state tests," said Ms. Makiya, who teaches at the Leadership and Community Service Academy. "I don't see how good problems that really delve into the eight mathematical practices [in the common core] can be developed if calculators aren't allowed for at least some portion of the test."
One of her chief concerns, however, echoed by other teachers, is getting students used to the online calculator that will be embedded with the computer-based tests.
"While this may seem like a small detail, I could see it really throwing some students off if there's not adequate practice time," she said.
Vol. 33, Issue 01, Pages 1,12-13

Monday, September 2, 2013

A Kinder, Slower, More Receptive Approach to the Start of School

No teacher begins a teaching career with ill intentions. Yet most of us make our biggest mistake on our very first day. I was no different, five years ago. I chose to do everything the way I had been taught in college—the way the popular new-teacher advice books said I should.
Sure, I laughed with the students and made noises about our "class community." But as the all-important first week of school progressed, I went about dictating rules, establishing who was in control, and setting tight boundaries for the year.
As a result, I lost the opportunity to create the kind of relationship with my students that leads not only to motivation and engagement but to real ownership of learning and ultimately greater achievement. At the time I didn't recognize the loss—it took several years, in fact. If you're a new teacher about to begin your journey, maybe my lessons learned can help you avoid the pitfalls of a pretend partnership with your students.

Rule-Maker in Chief

On my first actual day of teaching (the one after orientation), I stood smiling at my door, shaking the hand of each 4th grader entering my room. I was eager to start our very first conversation: “How We Enter the Classroom.” As the students took their pre-assigned seats, I asked them for their attention and then proceeded to model for them exactly how I wanted them to come into the room. I told them what they needed to bring and what the consequences would be for entering unprepared.
Then we moved on to the next important conversation: My rules and the consequences for breaking them. Here I relied on a novice-teacher staple, The First Six Weeks of School by Paula Denton and Roxann Kriete. The authors pose the enticing idea of making it appear that your students themselves are coming up with the classroom rules and procedures, thus facilitating buy-in as you steer them to the inevitable conclusion. In fact, I already had the rules typed up: “Respect each other, take care of yourself, and take care of our property.”
My intentions were noble. I wanted my students to feel like they were part of the management of the classroom. But I was creating a false notion. I had no intention of letting them set the rules. I knew from all my training and reading that my number one job was to be the leader of this learning space. And leaders make the rules.

Missed Opportunities

The rest of that first week of school was an actual blur. Most teachers (veteran and new) are dazed by the end of the first week, caught up in the anxiousness to get started with curriculum, but also busy figuring out who their students are and how they will manage them throughout the year.
I was in awe of the kindness my kids had shown to me, but also very tightly gripping the reins of control for all of our learning. Now was not the time to appear too weak or too friendly. I'd staged numerous ice-breaking activities, and I thought we had gotten to know each other well. In fact, I knew very little about each student, definitely not anything that could guide me in my teaching. I figured those things would come later (and sometimes they did), but in reality I had completely missed the biggest opportunity I would have to truly get to know my students.
In essence, I was fearful that if I did not firmly assert my authority from the very first day of school, the rest of the year would be out of control. So assert I did—that year and for several years after. We did OK. I taught. My students learned. But I could sense so much wasted potential beneath my iron grip.

Giving Back the Classroom

Since I had been taught how to set up the first week of school to assert my authority and control, dismissing those notions was hard. It's a journey I write about in a book that will be published later this year, The Passionate Learner: Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students Starting Today.
Let me just say here that I know now that what we do in the first week of school to listen, communicate, and share our genuine interests with one another sets the tone for the rest of the year more deliberately than any list of rules or expectations ever will.
Were you to come into my classroom now on the very first day of school, you'd see a much different approach—one that is kinder, slower, and more in tune with what I now understand my students really need: respect and a place to call their own.
Now, at the beginning of each school year, I remind myself to hold back—to not give in to the pressure of pacing guides and classroom-procedure gurus. I now know from experience that if I take my time with my students, that investment will pay off all year long.
On the first day, every year, I remind myself of the following:
• We are all brand new to each other.
• We are cementing our routines.
• We are discovering our rules.
• The curriculum will mean nothing if we do not get excited about it.
• We relish our freedom.
• We have to build trust.

Out With the Old

So what does it look like in practice when a teacher tries to honor these intuitive precepts? Well, first let me tell you what it doesn’t look like. Here are some common start-of-school practices that I now advise against:
Don't pre-post your rules. Nothing says "This is my classroom" like a beautifully laminated poster of your rules that have been hanging there for years.
Don't spend days writing a class constitution. As a social studies lesson, I think this might make be a marvelous project. But it's not a way to build classroom community. Think of it through the eyes of a child—days spent discussing the rules for the rest of the year and then pledging to uphold all 20 or so of them. What a dull way to start a year together.
Don't "set clear boundaries" and label them. I was a label master, making sure students knew exactly when they had crossed into my territory, whether it be my desk, my cabinets, or my pencils. With labels come restrictions, and classrooms have enough restrictions put on them already; we do not need to add more.
Don't invest much time in icebreakers. I have never made a connection through an ice-breaking activity, sorry. Instead, invest in something meaningful as a community, such as a connection map, or a student-designed tour of the classroom, or anything that the students can work on as a team challenge. If they can focus on a task rather than the act of connecting, the community building will naturally start to evolve.
Don't announce that "we will now build community." I love setting goals, and we set many throughout the year, but this goal is better left unsaid. It's like telling people that you are trying to become their friend; the hyper-focus tends to make things weird and uncomfortable. Instead, tell the students you are happy to be their teacher and then do something together that you know actually builds community.
Don't have a million things planned. Sometimes the best beginnings of a community come from just spending low-key time together. When you plan too much or have too much to do, there isn’t time for just getting to know each other, so be choosy what you invest your time in.

A New Start

So, if you’re not doing those things, what should you do the first week of school? Here’s might advice on fostering a creative and engaged classroom community:
Be yourself. Students can see through any phoniness and an act is hard to keep up for more than a few days. So if you happen to have the personality of a comedian or a perfectionist or a massive dork, like I do, let it shine through.
Share your life. I often start my year with a video or two of my children or a funny story about one of them. Nothing planned or long, just a quick story. The students get to know me and my family, and they share their own stories as well.
Laugh a lot. I love to laugh, and I think kids are hilarious. Give them a chance to speak in humorous ways.
Start decorating the classroom. I stress over and over that this is “OUR classroom,” so the students get to make decorating choices as well as furniture setup decisions.
Start learning. I know I said to go easy on curriculum the first week, but do get started with something right away. The students are ready to learn because they cannot wait to see what it will be like in this new grade.
Decide on expectations together. Spend some time having the students discuss what they expect out of the year and then have them discuss what that means for their learning environment.
Give it time. Great community does not spring up on the first day of school, but you do need to plant the first seeds that day. So tend to it and nurture it, and give it the time it deserves to grow tall and strong.
In the end, that first week, that first day, that first moment of school carries more weight than we realize. We know first impressions tend to stick. They are not impossible to rectify, but why not start out right? Signal to the kids that this is their room, that this year is about them, and the learning path they want to take. Let them know that they matter, that their voice matters, and that this year will matter.
They'll figure out that this year, in your class, things may be a little different than they're used to. And maybe lots better.
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