Life In 1st Grade My class!
#1
Posted 22 July 2006 - 11:31 AM
#2
Posted 01 August 2006 - 01:06 AM
Have fun with your first graders. I would teach little kids but I can't stand the administrations,
which I think you have more contact with than if you teach high school.
Keep us posted. Kids say the darnednest things. ;-)
--des
#3
Posted 08 August 2006 - 07:46 PM
des, on Aug 1 2006, 01:06 AM, said:
Have fun with your first graders. I would teach little kids but I can't stand the administrations,
which I think you have more contact with than if you teach high school.
Keep us posted. Kids say the darnednest things. ;-)
--des
I will. We are year round. I have October, February, & June off! I work a total of 187 days (on my salary). I'll probably work an extra 4-10 days with extra pay doing trainings! THis year I'm focusing on Language trainings, next year -- Math!
#4
Posted 09 August 2006 - 10:11 PM
We have what appears to be a sharp new assistant principal, who might go crazy there.
--des
#5
Posted 10 August 2006 - 08:53 PM
#6
Posted 17 August 2006 - 09:52 PM
This week I started with the HS kids. I team teach and we have small groups as we are teachign them to read. I am appalled at the no. of nonreaders. We have 3-4 kids this year who read at a pre-primer level!!
I am just stunnned. We have a high no. of immigrant kids from Mexico, so I am hoping they just weren't taught or are very new to the US. (I had one boy last year, wasn't quite that low, who was totally literate in Spanish.) We really need quite homogeneous groups, and don't have them in some cases. Last year, for instance, we had retarded kids in one class which made life easier all around. Now we have them in all different classes. The more homogeneous the groups the better this works, so it has us concerned.
On a sort of funnier note, some of the girls want to be with my partner. He has lost weigt so I'm sure that won't hurt his popularity. :-)
(BTW, I was right not to expect too much from the hotel speaker. The lunch was terrific anyway. :-))
--des
#7
Posted 19 August 2006 - 09:54 PM
des, on Aug 17 2006, 09:52 PM, said:
This week I started with the HS kids. I team teach and we have small groups as we are teachign them to read. I am appalled at the no. of nonreaders. We have 3-4 kids this year who read at a pre-primer level!!
I am just stunnned. We have a high no. of immigrant kids from Mexico, so I am hoping they just weren't taught or are very new to the US. (I had one boy last year, wasn't quite that low, who was totally literate in Spanish.) We really need quite homogeneous groups, and don't have them in some cases. Last year, for instance, we had retarded kids in one class which made life easier all around. Now we have them in all different classes. The more homogeneous the groups the better this works, so it has us concerned.
On a sort of funnier note, some of the girls want to be with my partner. He has lost weigt so I'm sure that won't hurt his popularity. :-)
(BTW, I was right not to expect too much from the hotel speaker. The lunch was terrific anyway. :-))
--des
Teaching some kids to read is *so* hard. I have a few right now who I suspect are terrified of it. It seems that some of us are programmed to learn to read with almost no effort and for others it seems like a horrible struggle! *sigh*
#8
Posted 20 August 2006 - 07:19 PM
It is absolutely true. From a neurological pov there is no place in the brain for reading. The brain pulls in from various areas to make it possible. Some kids, perhaps, a 1/5th will learn regularless of how or whether they are taught. About 1/5th are dyslexics of some level or another (from very severe who need the most intensive of approaches to mild). And the rest are somewhere in between.
--des
#9
Posted 23 August 2006 - 06:51 PM
des, on Aug 20 2006, 07:19 PM, said:
It is absolutely true. From a neurological pov there is no place in the brain for reading. The brain pulls in from various areas to make it possible. Some kids, perhaps, a 1/5th will learn regularless of how or whether they are taught. About 1/5th are dyslexics of some level or another (from very severe who need the most intensive of approaches to mild). And the rest are somewhere in between.
--des
Now that is something I never learned! It makes sense. I was one of those kids who would learn regardless of how I was taught, just needed to be taught. Because I was so young I don't really remember actually learning to read. I couldn't read and then I could read just about anything. I do recall learning how to spell although it came easy. At the time it was nice but it can make it harder to teach.
#10
Posted 23 August 2006 - 08:37 PM
it is not made available to teachers in training. There is an excellent article "Reading IS Rocket Science".
www.aft.org/pubs-reports/ downloads/teachers/rocketsci.pdf
Tells how and why teaching reading is a much harder task than we usually think.
--des
#11
Posted 24 August 2006 - 07:44 PM
des, on Aug 23 2006, 08:37 PM, said:
it is not made available to teachers in training. There is an excellent article "Reading IS Rocket Science".
www.aft.org/pubs-reports/ downloads/teachers/rocketsci.pdf
Tells how and why teaching reading is a much harder task than we usually think.
--des
ACK! I got a 404 on it!
This post has been edited by October's Autumn: 24 August 2006 - 07:44 PM
#12
Posted 24 August 2006 - 10:27 PM
BTW, a good friend of mine teaches 5th grade in a pretty rough school. A kid came in the other day complete with hooded sweatshirt (hood up) (note: It's 90 degrees) and an attitude. She told him, "You're
not a hommy, you're not "bad", and your in 5th grade and a little kid. Please come and act like one." Today he came in "normally)".
There is no way I can tell my kids they aren't hommies, etc. But most of htem that think they are are wannabes.
--des
#13
Posted 25 August 2006 - 12:19 AM
des, on Aug 24 2006, 10:27 PM, said:
BTW, a good friend of mine teaches 5th grade in a pretty rough school. A kid came in the other day complete with hooded sweatshirt (hood up) (note: It's 90 degrees) and an attitude. She told him, "You're
not a hommy, you're not "bad", and your in 5th grade and a little kid. Please come and act like one." Today he came in "normally)".
There is no way I can tell my kids they aren't hommies, etc. But most of htem that think they are are wannabes.
--des
404, the page doesn't exist
#14
Posted 25 August 2006 - 10:22 PM
--des
#16
Posted 28 August 2006 - 07:15 AM
just thought I'd drop in on your chat and say Hi as well as "keep going" !!
I worked in a couple of high schools and saw the huge impact that literacy levels had on young people. The ability to read (even just a little bit!) can reframe someone's life and future, bring hope and give confidence, encourage independence, often when they thought there was no real chance for them to go very far. Keep doing what you're doing, it sounds great.
#17
Posted 29 August 2006 - 10:07 PM
reading level would end up reading at a sixth grade level in 3 years. That might not sound like much but it is what most newspapers are.
We had about four girls who just did an amazing job, jumping 4-5 grade levels or so. They start reading for pleasure and that sort of thing.
I really wish we'd get these kids in grade school though!! That's where October comes in. :-)
--des
#18
Posted 30 August 2006 - 08:53 AM
des, on Aug 29 2006, 10:07 PM, said:
--des
I skimmed that article. It is what they are doing in my Teacher Credentialing program.
I try to get as many as possible. I have one little guy who insists he can't do anything! I plan to convince him otherwise. I did have some success with him using word wheels and word families. Decoding is step one, comprehension after decoding is step two! (Verus comprehension from listening to someone else).
#19 Guest_Michaeljc4_*
Posted 30 August 2006 - 06:42 PM
#20
Posted 13 April 2007 - 10:16 PM
I have multiple teachers telling me they don't know how I do it because I have such a crazy group of students. I now have 17 boys and 3 girls. UGGHHH! Of course 5 of my best behaved students are boys and 2 of my worst behaved students are girls.
Some days I'm not sure why I became a teacher. This too shall past. It takes looking at the big picture and not the day to day stuff. *sigh*

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