Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Friday, March 1, 2013
happy birthday dr. suess!
You're never too old,
too wacky,
too wild,
to pick up a book and read to a child.
-Dr. Seuss
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Thinking Routines
Visible Thinking involves several practices and resources. In our classroom, we use a number of "thinking routines" -- simple protocols for exploring ideas -- around whatever topics are important, say "What is a Scientist?" We used a routine called *Generate*Sort*Connect* to organize our thinking. This is a routine for organizing our understanding of a topic through concept mapping.
What is a Scientist?
*Generate a list of ideas and initial thoughts that come to mind when you think about this particular topic.
*Sort your ideas according to how central or tangential they are. Place central ideas near the center and more tangential ideas toward the outside of the page.
*Connect your ideas by drawing connecting lines between ideas that have something in common. Explain and write in a short sentence how the ideas are connected.
Why Make Thinking Visible?
The central idea of Visible Thinking is very simple:
making thinking visible.
We learn best what we can see and hear
("visible thinking" means generally available to the senses, not just what you can see with your eyes).
We watch, we listen, we imitate,
we adapt what we find to our own styles and interests, we build from there.
Now imagine learning to dance
when the dancers around you are all invisible.
Imagine learning a sport
when the players who already know the game can't be seen.
Strange as it seems,
something close to it happens all the time
in one very important area of learning: learning to think, which includes learning to learn.
Thinking is pretty much invisible.
To be sure, sometimes people explain the thoughts behind a particular conclusion,
but often they do not.
Mostly, thinking happens under the hood,
within the marvelous engine of our mind-brain.
Visible Thinking includes a number of ways of making students' thinking visible
to themselves, to their peers, and to the teacher,
so they get more engaged by it
and come to manage it better for learning and other purposes.
When thinking is visible in classrooms,
students are in a position to be more metacognitive,
to think about their thinking.
When thinking is visible,
it becomes clear that school is not about memorizing content
but exploring ideas.
Teachers benefit when they can see students' thinking
because misconceptions, prior knowledge, reasoning ability,
and degrees of understanding are more likely to be uncovered.
Teachers can then address these challenges
and extend students' thinking
by starting from where they are.
Visible Thinking excerpt from:
VisibleThinkingInAction/01a_VTInAction.html
Labels:
1st grade,
cultures of thinking,
friendship,
kindergarten,
Morning Work,
schema,
thinking routine
Monday, February 25, 2013
Good Morning Work
Each morning, after we put away jackets and backpacks, we work on Good Morning Work.
This practice time includes daily oral language, sight word review, basic reading skills and handwriting practice. First graders, also, use this time to practice recently learned math skills.
Parents, be sure to look for these daily practice worksheets, as they will allow you to see the skills we are currently working on.
This practice time includes daily oral language, sight word review, basic reading skills and handwriting practice. First graders, also, use this time to practice recently learned math skills.
Parents, be sure to look for these daily practice worksheets, as they will allow you to see the skills we are currently working on.
Labels:
daily oral language,
first grade,
kindergarten,
Morning Work
Friday, February 15, 2013
Presidents' Day
Labels:
1st grade,
kindergarten,
presidents' day,
venn diagram
Aliens Love Underpants
Labels:
1st grade,
aliens love underpants,
kindergarten,
literacy
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