Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Websites for Setting Up Stations in the Classroom




With technology becoming an integral part of most career fields it is imperative that we include it in our classroom. Practice is the most important part of making technology run smoothly in your classroom. The easiest way I've found to incorporate technology in my classroom is to create stations. This allows for students to work at their level and at their own pace. I have also found that it really motivates my students, they want to earn their time on the computer. There are a few things I look for when finding websites for my students is easy of use, tracking student progress/usage, and it has to be free. 

Website #1

I love Front Row for many reasons. It is continually changing and has easy student and teacher interfaces. The first image shows what the student math practice would look like and the second shows what the teacher’s dashboard. Students sign in using the first and last name and a class code given to your when you create an account. Although most of Front Row can be accessed for free you can pay and receive more of the awesome features.  Front Row allows teachers to assign reading, writing, or math practice. However, it is not necessary to assign math work, student can instead complete adaptive work which focuses more on the student’s ability level. The website is continually updated and new features are added. The reading section in much newer than the math. However, you can choose from a variety of articles that are available at multiple grade levels. Students are rewarded with coins that can be used at the websites store. Below are some sample student reports from Front Row.
Website #2
Read Theory is a great reading website. Students in my classroom were motivated by the progress graphs alone. When you create a Read Theory account you are then guided through the process of creating student logins. All students are given the same password. When they log in student must take placement assessments to determine what level or articles will be assigned to them. One of the best features is that multiple teachers can be given permission to see student progress. They also recently added a writing portion to the website that is graded by the teacher. Data is presented in a variety of charts for teachers and students. This was very useful when writing IEPs. 
 
Website #3
This last year my school implemented Engage NY as it’s math curriculum and so say the least it was a bit overwhelming and a lot to teach in a limited amount of time. A little later in the year a colleague told me about Zearn which I quickly pinned and forgot. However, later I rediscover it and began implementing it in my classroom. I used it as my direct instruction and as a choice for stations. During direct instruction student would learn grade level skills and during stations I set it to a lower grade level to work on basic skills.
Although there isn’t a chart that shows student progress/success it does show what lessons are completed. All the materials are given in the lesson from exit tickets, to notes, independent work, and homework. 

You create the student logins and passwords.
Lessons are given with an interactive video. As the lesson is taught I am able to observe my students work and make clarifications. Or students are taught at a lower level when working independently on the computer.















Website #4


I would say that Moby Max is similar to Front Row. It covers a variety of subjects, it provides motivations for students, and charts their progress. It has also grown over the last few years. Although I didn’t use it as much this year I felt as though it deserved mention because it would be easily implemented in any classroom.
Website #5
Common Core Sheets is a great resource for worksheets. I have only used it for math however, it does have some ELA and Social Studies. You can search by topic, grade level, or standard. It now has a feature called “one atta time.” This allows students to work through problems for a certain standard and tracks the number of problems answered correctly and incorrectly with a percentage. I used this primarily to work on student math facts.
Website #6
Pearltrees made setting up stations in my classroom much easier. My first year implementing stations was a struggle primarily because students didn’t know what to log on to or didn’t want to do the website assigned. To help stop this I made Pearltrees the homepage on my student laptops. Pearltrees allows me to save websites and easily change what websites are available to the students by changing it on Pearltrees. I have mine set up by subjects so students know what to click on. 
 Then student have a choice of websites/activities inside of each folder. When setting up your Pearltrees it’s important to save the website from the page you want to the students to use. For example, for front row I have my Pearltree linked to the hyperlink for the student log in page.


Accommodation and Modification

The first thing I would like to address here is the difference between an accommodation and modification. An accommodation is a way to help students reach their grade level standards without changing it. A modification is changes the learning outcome, such as changing multi-digit multiplication problems to single digit multiplication. Both are essential for every classroom and should be part of the intervention process. 

Popular Accommodations:

Read-Aloud or Text-to-Speech:
This is when text is read aloud to the student above their independent reading level so they are better able to comprehend grade level texts.
 

Shortened assignments:
When a student needs more processing time or becomes frustrated with an assignment it may need to be shortened. The student is still completing the same level of work as other students but in a much more manageable way. 

Breaks:
Student who have a lot of energy or get easily frustrated may benefit from taking scheduled breaks in the day to relieve some of the pent up energy. Both scheduled and unscheduled breaks should be timed. This is also beneficial as a whole group activity and Go Noodle is a great tool for this. 

Visuals:
Many times students will need visual clues when completing more than two step directions. This will help reduce the need to repeat directions multiple times and therefore reduce your frustration.

Modified Notes:
Students who have processing deficits of any kind will struggle with note taking. Therefore, modified notes such as fill-in-the-blank notes or just a copy of the teachers notes will help students pay attention to the information presented instead of focusing on completing notes. 

Preferential Seating:
Students who have difficulty staying focused or become easily frustrated may benefit from a special seat in the classroom. This could be a quiet area to work or to just take a break from the class. 

A tool I have found very helpful in creating interventions, accommodations, and modifications is Intervention Central.



Behavior Resources

Behaviors resources are an integral part of any classroom. Most students need an extrinsic motivation. It doesn't matter how explicit your expectations are, if students aren't motivated to learn you've lost them before you've even started. 

Resource #1
PBIS World

Most schools are moving or have moved to the use of Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. The PBIS World website is a great resource that looks at different types of behaviors, tiered interventions, and data tracking resources. 

















Resource #2
Class Dojo
My students really enjoyed Class Dojo. It can be customized to meet the behavior needs of your students, because of this it can help identify problem areas in your classroom such as shouting out, disrespect, or off task behaviors. This data can be shared with parents and can make communication easier. Class Dojo is a very popular behavior tool in classrooms and therefore there are many reward menus that have already been created and are ready to use.  











Resource #3
Online Stopwatch

As a Special Education Teacher transitions are some of the most difficult times in my classroom. Online Stopwatch really helped with this. It also help to reduce off task behaviors in my classroom when I set the timer for them to complete an assignment. This allowed for students to slowly start to self-manage, toward the end of the year I would hear my students say, "I don't have much more time I need to get back to work!" You can choose from a variety of timers that make watching the time go by a little more fun. 








Monday, June 6, 2016

Secondary Lesson Plans

North Carolina Method
Teacher Name: Nicole VonCannon                                                   Date: 3/4/16
Course: EDUC 307/308                                                                      Unit: Success
Lesson: 1- Introduction

Big Idea:
What ideas are important for students to understand value and apply?
Students will think about different measures of success. They will think about what it means to be successful.  Students will have opportunities to read, write, speak, and listen.
Learning Targets:
What do you want students to know and be able to do?
1. Students will evaluate how goal setting and life experiences shape our ideas of success. 
2. Develop their own definition of success.
3.
State Standards Met in this lesson:
RL6.1 RL 6.2 RL 6.3 RL 6.6 RL 6.9
RI6.1 RI6.3 RI6.4 RI6.5 RI 6.8
W6.2 W6.4
S&L 6.1 S&L 6.2 S&L 6.4 S&L 6.5 S&L 6.6

Essential Question:
What is the learning target within the context of the big idea?
•           How is success defined?
•           In what ways can success be measured?
•           What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Common Instructional Framework:
How will my instructional framework encourage student engagement and powerful teaching/learning?
Collaborative Groups
Writing to Learn
Literacy groups
Questioning
Scaffolding
Classroom Talk
Other____________


Assessment:
How will I know students are mastering learning targets?

The teacher will observe the collaborative groups to assess learning and opinion development. Student will complete a pre-assessment.
Student Groups:
Students will work with a partner to discuss and learn from one another.
Framing the Lesson:
How can I set this up for the class so that students understand the purpose of the lesson and how they can demonstrate mastery of the learning targets?
Students will create three column notes with the focus questions:
·         How is success defined?
·         In what ways can success be measured?
·         What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Lesson Description:
What will the students be doing? How will I facilitate and support student engagement?
Time/Day
Students Will…
Teacher Will…
Engagement
Students will watch this video and complete a quick write about what Ashton Kutcher’s definition of success was and how they know.

Monitor students as they complete their writing and discuss the topic with a partner.
Scaffold
Students will be given a sentence stem to develop their thoughts.
Students will be allowed to highlight in the text as it is being read.
Students will be time to think about what success means to them.
Provide a premade note taking page and sentence stems.
Lesson
Write 3-4 sentences about what it means to be successful and brainstorm ways to become successful. Students will share their ideas and definition with their partner.

Together, read “The Strength of Three.”  Then complete the comprehension questions with a partner
Question students as they read and facilitate discussion:
●What is the theme of this fable?
●What mistakes did the sons make?
●How did the sons’ mistakes contribute to their overall success?
●What did the father mean when he promised his sons a “life of rich rewards?”
●How did the father measure success?
●What role might competition play in becoming successful?
Closure
Add to the success three column notes.
Call on students to share their ideas that could be added to the note taking page.



Lesson Reflection:


North Carolina Method
Teacher Name: Nicole VonCannon                                                   Date: 3/4/16
Course: EDUC 307/308                                                                      Unit: Success
Lesson: 2-
Big Idea:
What ideas are important for students to understand value and apply?
Students will think about different measures of success. They will think about what it means to be successful.  Students will have opportunities to read, write, speak, and listen.
Learning Targets:
What do you want students to know and be able to do?
1. Students will evaluate how goal setting and life experiences shape our ideas of success. 
2. Develop their own definition of success.
3.
State Standards Met in this lesson:
RL6.1 RL 6.2 RL 6.3 RL 6.6 RL 6.9
RI6.1 RI6.3 RI6.4 RI6.5 RI 6.8
W6.2 W6.4
S&L 6.1 S&L 6.2 S&L 6.4 S&L 6.5 S&L 6.6

Essential Question:
What is the learning target within the context of the big idea?
•           How is success defined?
•           In what ways can success be measured?
•           What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Common Instructional Framework:
How will my instructional framework encourage student engagement and powerful teaching/learning?
Collaborative Groups
Writing to Learn
Literacy groups
Questioning
Scaffolding
Classroom Talk
Other____________


Assessment:
How will I know students are mastering learning targets?

The teacher will observe the collaborative groups to assess learning and opinion development. Student responses will be monitored for understanding.   
Student Groups:
Students will work with a partner to discuss and learn from one another.
Framing the Lesson:
How can I set this up for the class so that students understand the purpose of the lesson and how they can demonstrate mastery of the learning targets?
Students will create three column notes with the focus questions:
·         How is success defined?
·         In what ways can success be measured?
·         What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Lesson Description:
What will the students be doing? How will I facilitate and support student engagement?
Time/Day
Students Will…
Teacher Will…
Engagement
Watch the video with various definitions of success and discuss with their partner who they agreed with the most and who the disagreed with.
Facilitate discussion and prompt students as necessary.
Scaffold
Discuss what they know about Houdini and if he would be consider successful to them.
Facilitate discussion.
Lesson
Read “Spellbinder: The Life of Harry Houdini” and cite evidence for the text dependent questions.
Prompt students with the text dependent questions:
● What does the author include about the importance of hard work in the first five paragraphs of this story?
● Reread lines 1-16. What is vaudeville? What information does the author provide to inform the reader about Dime Museums? How does this information provide the reader an understanding about Bess and Harry Houdini?
● Who is Harry Houdini? How did he become famous?
● Reread lines 78-79. Lalicki uses the figurative phrase “lightening struck Houdini’s floundering career.” What does this phrase imply?
● Reread the last paragraph. The author chooses to end the story with a quote from Houdini himself. How does this impact the story? What does Houdini reveal about himself in this quote?
● Write a paragraph of how Houdini built a successful career in chronological order. Include appropriate vocabulary for sequencing (first, next, then, etc.).
Closure
Add to the success three column notes.
Call on students to share their ideas that could be added to the note taking page.



Lesson Reflection:



North Carolina Method
Teacher Name: Nicole VonCannon                                                   Date: 3/4/16
Course: EDUC 307/308                                                                      Unit: Success
Lesson: 3- Writing
Big Idea:
What ideas are important for students to understand value and apply?
Students will think about different measures of success. They will think about what it means to be successful.  Students will have opportunities to read, write, speak, and listen.
Learning Targets:
What do you want students to know and be able to do?
1. Students will evaluate how goal setting and life experiences shape our ideas of success. 
2. Develop their own definition of success.
3.
State Standards Met in this lesson:
RL6.1 RL 6.2 RL 6.3 RL 6.6 RL 6.9
RI6.1 RI6.3 RI6.4 RI6.5 RI 6.8
W6.2 W6.4
S&L 6.1 S&L 6.2 S&L 6.4 S&L 6.5 S&L 6.6

Essential Question:
What is the learning target within the context of the big idea?
•           How is success defined?
•           In what ways can success be measured?
•           What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Common Instructional Framework:
How will my instructional framework encourage student engagement and powerful teaching/learning?
Collaborative Groups
Writing to Learn
Literacy groups
Questioning
Scaffolding
Classroom Talk
Other____________


Assessment:
How will I know students are mastering learning targets?

The teacher will observe the collaborative groups to assess learning and opinion development. Student will write and present to the class.
Student Groups:
Students will work with a partner to discuss and learn from one another.
Framing the Lesson:
How can I set this up for the class so that students understand the purpose of the lesson and how they can demonstrate mastery of the learning targets?
Students will create three column notes with the focus questions:
·         How is success defined?
·         In what ways can success be measured?
·         What is the relationship between setting goals and becoming successful?
Lesson Description:
What will the students be doing? How will I facilitate and support student engagement?
Time/Day
Students Will…
Teacher Will…
Engagement
Watch the video on how to become successful.
Facilitate discussion about the video and compare/contract it to past stories/videos.
Scaffold
Work with a partner to create a brainstorm list of what it means to be successful and how to become successful
Observe students as they develop their thoughts.
Lesson
Write an informative essay with three well-developed paragraphs (introduction, body, and conclusion)
explaining how to become successful. Define success in the introduction. Elaborate on how to become successful through the use of cause and effect text structure. Introduce the topic and include their definition of success in the introduction.

Then create a Power Point presentation to show while they present their paper to the class.
Edit writing as necessary. Before students begin creating Power Points, demonstrate how to use the tools and where the basic functions are. Then help students as necessary throughout the project.
Closure
Add to the three column notes as other students present their thoughts.




Lesson Reflection: