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5. April 2010 06:44 by Elisa Waingort - View Profile
Working in Partnerships with Parents


I have been rethinking my relationship with parents as I read, Becoming Teammates, Teachers and Families as Literacy Partners by Charlene Klassen Endrizzi, a National Council of Teachers (NCTE) publication. I am noticing a subtle change in the way I am willing to frame the conversation at the same time that I realize that many of my colleagues are not there, yet.


As I reflect on the ways I involve parents in my classroom I recognize that there are a lot of issues that I need to come to terms with and some perceptions and practices that I need to change. Most of this soul searching comes in the guise of questions for reflection. For example, how can teachers and families share and be responsible for the literacy learning of children? How will this re-visioning change my relationship with parents? How will this change impact children's learning? How can I relinquish control of my classroom in order to better partner with my parents for the sake of their children's learning?


Finally, what kind of parent involvement do I practice: avoidance (parents are seen as adversaries and it's better not to involve them in school at all), dependence (parents are seen as supporting teacher and school programs and as needing to learn from the teacher), mutualism (parents are valued as partners in their child's education so that an attitude of "let's learn together" prevails)? (Source: Becoming Teammates, Teachers and Families as Literacy Partners by Charlene Klassen Endrizzi.)  At the moment, I see myself as falling into a dependency relationship with parents and moving towards practicing mutualism; intellectually I am a mutualist.


More in a subsequent post.  In the meantime, into which paradigm do you fit?

5. April 2010 06:44 by Elisa Waingort | Comments (1) | Permalink |
9. November 2009 04:35 by Elisa Waingort - View Profile
Should we get rid of report cards? By Elisa Waingort

 
      It's report card time again.  I dislike report cards intensely.  It is a passionate hate affair between report cards and me.  It is the only thing I dislike about teaching and the only thing I didn't miss when I was a curriculum coordinator.  Since returning to the classroom three years ago I am constantly reminded of how much I dislike report cards.  Did I say that already?

 


    Reason #1:  I am forced to give a child a number that effectively ranks him or her in at least 50 descriptors ranging from physical education to reading and writing in a second language.  This practice persists despite the fact that studies have shown that children do better, i.e. learn more and actively engage with their learning, when they are provided with timely oral or written feedback about their progress than if they are given a numerical grade.  More...

9. November 2009 04:35 by Elisa Waingort | Comments (0) | Permalink |
8. October 2009 05:07 by John Reilly - View Profile
Did your summer reading projects work? By Richard Peck
 

There are two kinds of summer reading of course: the kind of reading a kid does in the summer and the assigned summer reading from school—a big distinction of course and a new problem. Can a school that really can’t enforce much homework or reading during the year enforce summer reading? Good question. And if so, why? More...

8. October 2009 05:07 by John Reilly | Comments (0) | Permalink |
30. September 2009 04:31 by Richard Peck - View Profile
Reading aloud to bring the family together in the information age. By Richard Peck


The goal of my career is to write the book that brings the whole family together. I like to think I’m writing for people of ages ten until death. I try and put people of all generations in my stories because they are family stories. I think a book unites what the computer divides. More...
30. September 2009 04:31 by Richard Peck | Comments (1) | Permalink |
21. September 2009 04:17 by - View Profile
What do you think about DEAR programs? By S. Roy Stevenson

 


 

I was sitting in the faculty room of one our buildings listening to colleagues discuss their summer reading.  One after another mentioned a “beach book” and spoke with guilty pleasure of having read something totally trivial, a mystery or romance novel, that was “fun,” “superficial,” and thoroughly “entertaining.”  It was as if they were describing some kind of an illicit act, something they would not ordinarily do, and admitting to their friends in the sanctity of the faculty room that what took place in Vegas, stayed in Vegas. More...

21. September 2009 04:17 by | Comments (0) | Permalink |
9. September 2009 04:56 by Elisa Waingort - View Profile
Back To School Assessment

 

I’ve just completed my first full week of school; we’ve been back for exactly seven days.  One of my assessment strategies is to listen in while my students are working and to document my observations as they engage with the choices and materials available to them.  For two days last week I observed my students during math as they explored eight different sets of math manipulatives.  Initially I talked to the children about different ways they could explore each manipulative, adding some ideas when they didn’t seem to have many to suggest, but they were free to experiment with the materials at their table.  As I watched, I learned that some manipulatives were being used in ways that prompted math discoveries while others weren’t perceived as such by the children.  The latter will need to be introduced more intentionally to the children so that their math learning is more effective later on.  Also, I noticed that some manipulatives are intrinsically more motivating than others.   More...

9. September 2009 04:56 by Elisa Waingort | Comments (0) | Permalink |
13. August 2009 04:58 by - View Profile
Building Academic Vocabulary to Prepare Students for Standardized Testing By Linda Howard

 

 Great post by our newest blogger, Linda Howard, PreK-6 ELA Instructional Coach . . .  

 “Being tested is part of being alive.  While we cannot ignore tests, we cannot let them control our lives and the lives of our students. We need to find ways to cope with the demands of the testing environment” according to Fountas and Pinnell ( 2001).  There are ways we can cope with the demands of tests and prepare students in a natural classroom environment. More...

13. August 2009 04:58 by | Comments (0) | Permalink |
12. August 2009 05:28 by Richard Peck - View Profile
How do you teach history through literature?

 

I’m a writer because my seventh and eighth grade students made a writer out of me.  They were the people I new the best and liked the best, and from our first mornings together, I knew things about them their parents dared never know. Never. And after all, all fiction is about secrets anyway.  One of the things I noticed from the young, one of the things they taught me, was they wanted a story. I loved history. I loved non-fiction. I loved biography. That’s what I read, but they wanted a story. More...

12. August 2009 05:28 by Richard Peck | Comments (0) | Permalink |
5. August 2009 05:27 by - View Profile
Why I love teachers and librarians. Greg Neri.

 


 

Once, at a reading festival before I was published, I saw a teacher stand up and, with tears in her eyes, practically beg a panel of middle grade authors to write for her urban hi-lo students. She pleaded that outside of Walter Dean Myers, there was no one who could get her boy students reading. I was moved because that’s exactly the audience I was writing for: urban teen boys who don’t read.More...

5. August 2009 05:27 by | Comments (0) | Permalink |
17. June 2009 02:47 by Richard Peck - View Profile
Does author study enhance student reading and writing skills?

 

I am a writer because I never had a teacher who said, “Write what you know.” If I had been limited to writing what I knew I would have produced in these 38 years one unpublishable haiku. I don’t write what I know. I write what I can find out. Fiction is based on research. If Ernest Hemingway really had fought all those wars and bulls, if he really had climbed all those mountains and caught all those fish, if he really had loved all of those women More...

17. June 2009 02:47 by Richard Peck | Comments (4) | Permalink |

 

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