My building at the school is closed at lunch, but I heard someone on the stair landing today. I called down, “Did you see the sign on the door?”
One of my science students was there with a girl. He looked up at me and said, “No.”
“This building is closed at lunch. You shouldn’t be in here.”
They get up. “You’re weird, Mrs. Pedersen.”
“I’m weird?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s okay. I like weird.”
“You’re one of the nicest teachers I know.”
“Ha ha. Bye, now.”
Comments
(0) |
Permalink
We have three cats and a cat door. Sometimes a cat brinsg in live prey so that he can play with it in a more contained environment. I wish this were not the case. Here is what I came home to this afternoon:
The couch by the front door. Dove feathers.

Behind the couch.

The rug in front of the couch. The cat toy ignored in favor of something livelier.

The number one suspect leading me into the dining room.

The dining room floor near the cat door.

The dining room floor far from the cat door.

On the deck outside the cat door. The poor bird lost its most accessible feathers first.

No dead bird anywhere. I have no idea where it ended up. I hope the cat took it back outside and we don’t find it via smell in a week’s time.
Update 5:50pm My husband found the dead dove, partially eaten, in the backyard. He’s decided to stop feeding birds. I’ll spare you the photos.
Comments
(1) |
Permalink
Filed in
Anecdotes,
Reflections at 4:23 pm.
I started having my design students use a forum I installed on our class web site. Every Monday, students read a posting by me and respond to a prompt. This week, I just wanted to get their feedback on the class. The results just go to show that a mixture of activities is best for all students. What one student hates another loves, and what the first student loves the second one hates.
A couple of examples:
“ive liked the chapter lessons and the work with photoshop, i didnt like the posters, they were boring and irritating”
“my favorite thing and that i learned from was making posters about different thingslike proximity and stuff like that. i dont like doing different lessons”
“My favorite thing i did in this class was when we looked at actual photoshop contests and we looked at all of them. Also i learned how to use photoshop now…kinda ”
“I really enjoy the Photoshop lessons, & i didn’t like the poster redesigning”
“My favorite thing I’ve done so far are the diffrent posters that we made about proximity,repetition etc. I dont really like all the quizes and photoshop.”
And, finally,
“My favorite thing that we have done in this class is freetime when you finish your work.”
Comments
(1) |
Permalink
I’m really worried about the life science classes I’m teaching this year. These are students who have or cannot pass algebra and it seems in most cases they have failed previous science classes. Many of them are very unmotivated, and most of my students are failing so far despite my best attempts.
I am shadowing another life science teacher since I have not taught science before and have no curriculum of my own. In fact, I believe I’m expected to use the same assignments at the same pace so that all the life science classes are virtually interchangeable. This approach is not working out too well. I think I’m teaching it the exact same way as the other teacher, yet her classes have far fewer failing students. I cannot help be feel something’s wrong with what I’m doing. However, the teacher whom I’m shadowing is less than approachable.
My BTSA Support Teacher – I’ll call her Mandy – had two suggestions that together gave me a brainstorm. One, she suggested that I might ease my problem with students repeated talking during exams by randomly giving a candy to those who are behaving correctly. I love this idea. Two, she suggested I can justify changing up the curriculum a bit because “the current path is not working for these students.”
So I bought a bunch of bags of small candies at Wal-Mart. You can get like 200 pieces for seven bucks. Then I got plain and colored tongue depressors at Michaels. They even had some glow-stick bracelets at a good price, and I grabbed those too. Today, I located a few large beakers in the science hallway. I pulled out the markers.
Near the end of each science class today, I introduced “Five Questions”. I had each student write his/her name on a stick of his/her choice, decorate the stick and return it to me. I put all the sticks into a large beaker. Then I asked five questions, one at a time. The questions were right out of today’s notes and should be right there in front of the student. After each question, I pulled a stick out of the beaker and called on that student. If the student knew the answer, his/her stick went into a smaller beaker. A wrong answer landed the student’s stick onto my desk. When we were done, the students who answered corrected came up and picked their favorite goody from the goody jar. They were so excited! Many students were disappointed that they were not called. I told them they might be next.
Of course, many students still did not know the answers because these students did not bother to write the notes today. I am hoping that Five Questions is incentive enough to start writing notes. Subsequently I hope test scores will go up too, and perhaps even the general level of work completion and turn-in.
I’ll report back in a few weeks or months.
UPDATE 10/2/08
This has turned out to be very popular with my life science students. They are better at getting their materials put away and back into their assigned seats quickly so that we can do “5 questions” at the end of class. So far, the winners have mainly been those students who were already doing okay. I’m interested whether the less engaged students will start answering correctly, which means having paid closer attention in class that day. It may be slow going, but I’m hoping that this will have a positive effect. At the very least, it is a nice closure activity.
Having graded tests today for my graphic design class, I’m think I need to try “5 questions” there too. They do not appear to be taking the reading seriously and are just jumping ahead to do all the tutorials. This is detrimental to their understanding of the software and design concepts in general.
UPDATE 10/13/08
After viewing recent quiz scores in my design classes, I decided to try this game there as well. The kids in the design classes love it as much as the science students.
There’s a life science test coming up on Friday, and various design quizzes tomorrow and Friday. I’ll be calculating the average scores for these and see if there’s been any improvement in lesson retention so far.
UPDATE 10/17/08
My life science classes have shown some improvement. In 6th period, for example, last month’s Unit 3 test generated a 60% average grade. Today’s Unit 4 test generated a 66% average. These numbers include only students who took the test. This difference may have to do with the nature of the individual test questions and not my methods, but this result encourages me to keep trying 5 Questions.
Here are some stats:
| PERIOD 5 |
Unit 3 Test |
Unit 4 Test |
| Class average |
50 |
62½ |
| |
% students |
% students |
| As |
4 |
0 |
| Bs |
11 |
10 |
| Cs |
11 |
38 |
| Total As, Bs and Cs |
26 |
48 |
| Ds |
15 |
19 |
| Fs |
59 |
33 |
| Total Ds and Fs |
74 |
52 |
| PERIOD 6 |
Unit 3 Test |
Unit 4 Test |
| Class average |
60 |
66 |
| |
% students |
% students |
| As |
13 |
0 |
| Bs |
4 |
24 |
| Cs |
22 |
28 |
| Total As, Bs and Cs |
39 |
52 |
| Ds |
13 |
8 |
| Fs |
48 |
40 |
| Total Ds and Fs |
61 |
48 |
UPDATE 11/18/08
5th Period did much better this unit test, while 6th period dipped but still did better in terms of % of As, Bs & Cs compared to Unit 3.
| PERIOD 5 |
Unit 3 Test |
Unit 4 Test |
Unit 5 Test |
| Class average |
50 |
62½ |
69 |
| |
% students |
% students |
% students |
| As |
4 |
0 |
18 |
| Bs |
11 |
10 |
18 |
| Cs |
11 |
38 |
18 |
| Total As, Bs and Cs |
26 |
48 |
54 |
| Ds |
15 |
19 |
23 |
| Fs |
59 |
33 |
23 |
| Total Ds and Fs |
74 |
52 |
46 |
| PERIOD 6 |
Unit 3 Test |
Unit 4 Test |
Unit 5 Test |
| Class average |
60 |
66 |
60 |
| |
% students |
% students |
% students |
| As |
13 |
0 |
5 |
| Bs |
4 |
24 |
10 |
| Cs |
22 |
28 |
33 |
| Total As, Bs and Cs |
39 |
52 |
48 |
| Ds |
13 |
8 |
19 |
| Fs |
48 |
40 |
33 |
| Total Ds and Fs |
61 |
48 |
52 |
Comments
(3) |
Permalink
In my design classes we’ve been working on making posters for our classroom walls. Each poster gives a visual representation of the 4 main design principles as outlined on “The Non-Designer’s Design Book” by Robin Williams.
Proximity Poster
Alignment Poster
Repetition Poster
Contrast Poster
Back-to-School night is next Tuesday, so I recruited my students to select the best posters to display on the wall. I cut up star-sticker sheets into groups of three stickers. I have a medium rectangle table I can set up for special projects like this vote we did today. I let the students spread the posters out on the table to sift through.
We voted on the first three posters today (we’re still wrapping up the fourth.) Each student got three stickers for each round of voting, totaling nine votes per student. I had each period vote only on the posters for the other two design periods, not their own. I did this to discourage favoritism (and let kids avoid hurting each other’s feelings by not voting for someone standing right next to them.)
Here are the voting guidelines I put on the board:
Do:
- Select your fave 3 posters by affixing a star to the backs.
- Vote according to the quality of the design.
Do Not:
- Affix more than 1 of your stickers to the same poster.
- Vote according to the name of the designer.
- Keep the stickers for yourself.
- Let the posters fall to the floor or get crumpled.
The vote went exceedingly well. The students chose want they want in the room without my input. I love their choices, too, now that I’ve counted the star-votes. A few of students are really “stellar”, having received more than 30 votes across all three posters. One young lady got 65 in total. Just amazing.
Update 9/7/08
The top ten posters for each principle are now viewable in the gallery.
Comments
(0) |
Permalink