Monday, June 30, 2008

Creating Live Web TV for the classroom

Ustream.tv and Mogulus are live streaming websites where you can make a TV show that can be shown live on the internet and also can be recorded and embedded in a blog, wiki or website later. This is a newer technology that is not being used as much in the classroom. One reason may be because it is blocked in many districts, but it is being used all the time in professional developement sessions. (I have been in two sessions today that we streamed live to the internet for those who are not here.)

You could film special events that can only be seen with a password also. Think of the application...school plays, Open House, classroom news show, class lectures, classroom student presentationsetc.

How does technology extend the learning experience? That is how you should plan. How could this extend the learning in your classroom. This is cutting edge instruction - start dreaming and dream BIG!

The Wonderful World of Wikis

This session was presented by Adam Frey, cofounder of Wikispaces and Vicki Davis (aka coolcatteacher) teacher at Westwood Schools.

Adam Frey started the session by explaining about the back channel link for the session. For those of you who don't know, it is a chat room for the participants of a session to speak during the session and ask each other questions. There is a back channel moderator in the room answering questions and writing some down to guide the session as it goes on.

From Adam: What is a wiki? It is a standard webpage where you can go click a button and change the content. Anyone can change the content. The wiki keeps track of who makes the changes and when. If you are a teacher and your kids are making changes to a wiki you can look and see who made the change and when. You can have the wiki email you when any changes have been made or you can follow the changes through an RSS feed.

Benefits of having a wiki: Kids don't have to have email, it's easy and doesn't take a lot of time, you don't have to have special software. You can have a fully open wiki or you can have one private for your classroom. They are fully capable of embedding html code to post videos from You Tube, Teacher Tube or Voicethread. There is no limit to disk space for the number of pages you want or amount of content.

The biggest advantage to using a wiki for a group project is that it is "trackable to the comma". You can look at the history tab and see the contribution of each person. Vicki keeps all of her class wikis private for the students and students aren't introduced to public wikis until 9th grade, such as Wikipedia.

What does she put on the wiki?
Course outline, student files for them to download, project list and due dates, embedded videos, student artifacts, spreadsheets, blog posts, websites used for projects on student portfolios.

Creating efolios for the students to complete in high school and use as resume or job interviews. Business now want your application and information submitted to them digitally.

The biggest change in her practice is using tags with the kids for their assignments. She teaches the kids how to use tags and has them tag their work in the wiki by naming it assignment or turnitin.

Subscribe to the edits and discussions separately that your students are having.
Problems: Watch your RSS feed closely for edits and let the students know that you take online spaces seriously like you take the behavior in your classroom seriously. You have to be tough and watch everything just like you are when you set up rituals and routines in a classroom. Don't use computers to babysit. They need to have a TASK when they get on the computer.

Vicki Davis was asked why use a blog or a wiki? Do they need both? She says: Blogs are for opinion and first person writing. Wikis are for facts, the assignment.

Check out this video for more about wikis:


Live blogged - so please excuse awkward writing. :)

Get Wet!

I should know better than to turn the computer on before I'm ready to walk out the door in the morning... I logged on to twitter to see what everyone was doing this morning at NECC and noticed an interesting blog post by Wes Fryer at Moving at the Speed of Creativity.

It got me thinking about professional development and how it is changing and NEEDS to change. My own professional development has become 100% web-based. I don't mean signing up for a webinar, although, nothing is wrong with that...but instead, developing my own online presence and connecting with people around the globe who point me in the direction of new tools.

How do you get started today?
1. Read blogs
2. Comment on blogs so people know who you are and what you're interested in
3. Join twitter and follow people who know what you want to know
4. Join a ning like Setting the Standard, Classroom 2.0, or Flat Classroom

As Wes Fryer says: If you're going to swim...you have to get WET!

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Opening Keynote-the Wisdom of Crowds

Tonight has been a true magical experience for me. I have wished to attend the NECC conference for a long time and today that dream came true. I am actually sitting here in a gorgeous landmark hotel (The St. Anthony Wyndam) located in San Antonio, Texas. Even with alot of problems with airplanes, connecting flights, and taxi cab driver that couldn't drive, we made it safe and sound. Did I mention the connecting airplane ride out of Nashville, TN. made me have a flashback of "Mr. Toad's Wild Ride" in Disney?

Well, now back to tonight's magical experience. We arrived at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center to listen to the opening keynote speaker. I was biting at the bit (yep,right here in Texas) to plan my week's workshops, to convene, connect and transform as a learner, and of course look at the books that were on sale. How can I do all of this and not miss one moment? Then there was an answer right in front of me. The keynote speaker was on every closed circuit flat screen in the convention center. Talk about multi-tasking. Mission accomplished.


The keynote speaker was James Surowiecki. James Surowiecki is a staff writer at The New Yorker, where he writes the popular business column, "The Financial Page." His work has appeared in a wide range of publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Artforum, Wired, and Slate. He spoke about his latest work, "The Wisdom of Crowds".


I walked away with this jewel of wisdom... If you have a diverse group that works together with free flow of information the better the decisions will be. The sum intelligence of a group under the right conditions are often smarter than the smartest person in that group.


Wisdom of a crowd + new tools =POWER. I can't wait to see what the week brings.


My hope is to learn alot to take home to my Chets Creek family, eat good food and have fun.

San Antonio Arrival

This blog post is for all of you who are already wondering what we are doing, where we are going and what we're eating! This may be too much information for some - but it's how we roll on Live from the Creek. We want you to feel like you're really with us. :)

This morning started very early with us heading out the door around 4am! We checked in at Jacksonville International Airport and as our departure time passed we realized something must be wrong. Our plane had mechanical troubles, so they decided to switch. Well, if we weren't awake before.... yikes! We left over an hour later (you'll note in the photos how Susan spent her time waiting :) ) and proceeded to have one of the roughest plane rides I have EVER had. Thank goodness for Dramamine.

We arrived in San Antonio around noon Texas time and checked in to our hotel. On our way to the convention center we explored a little of the Riverwalk in San Antonio. What a gorgeous walkway by the river! We checked in at the convention center to get ready for all of our NECC learning and then prepared for the keynote. I personally can't wait to get started with our first full day tomorrow.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

NECC 2008

The Live from the Creek team is headed out of town for some out of sight learning. We're going to the National Educational Computing Conference in San Antonio, TX.

Get ready, starting on Sunday, for blog posts from myself, Susan Phillips AND....introducing KK Cherney. KK is our beloved media specialist and an integral part of our tech team here at Chets Creek.

If you're interested in being a part of the back channel discussions among participants feel free to lurk on the active ning of participants. http://www.necc2008.org/ KK , Susan and I will also be twittering which you can look for this weekend in the sidebar of the blog.
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Come virtually along with us! We're looking forward to hearing from you!

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Broaden Your Testing, Teaching, Thinking with the DRA 2

I tend to be the type of person who likes to hear it straight from the horse's mouth, so I was thrilled when I was asked to attend the DRA 2 training for my school. Each Duval County elementary school was asked to select one representative to attend a special series of trainings conducted by Pearson, the publisher and distributor of the Developmental Reading Assessment. These lucky teachers were fortunate to be trained by experts who, in addition to years of practical experience with the popular reading assessment and extensive practice with the new version through field testing work, still today work under the immediate supervision of Joetta Beaver, the writer and creator of the test. The only thing better would be training from Ms. Beaver herself!

I left my workshop chomping at the bit! I cannot wait to get my hands on the first kits when they arrive this summer! In my experience with the classic version of the assessment, I, like many of you, have been frustrated by the amount of time the test takes to administer. I, also, have at times been concerned with the reliability of the assessment, especially after conversing with teachers and learning that there are, apparently, a wide range of delivery practices. It has concerned me, at times, that, in the classic version, children are tested so infrequently on nonfiction texts that, at times, the yielded results are not reliable across genres. I've found that the finer points of scoring running records and analyzing errors are often misunderstood, leading to inaccurate error tallies and, therefore, reading levels. I've also witnessed, and been guilty of, over testing students -- testing the next level up in an effort to push students up for more of a challenge.

In short, this training opportunity was incredibly clarifying and educational. I've found that many of the "problems" we've encountered with the DRA have been fixed in the new version of the test, or corrected through thorough, reliable training. For example, one of the most common complaints (especially in the intermediate grades) with the DRA is the enormous amount of time it requires to test every child on an assessment that requires extensive one-on-one conferencing time. Consequently, many teachers have tried to reduce the duration of the assessment by shortening the test passage (number of words in running record), removing important elements (such as the element of student selection of text, reading engagement, or reading habits interview), or both. What I learned, rather, is that with proper preparation (including previous reading conferencing to get to know your readers and build rapport and preparing the students for the assessment), implementation, and training teachers to understand the philosophy behind the assessment, this manageable slice of time can be the most valuable time we spend with our children all year long. This is an amazing and powerful tool that will help us tremendously towards diagnosing students' needs and planning for instruction.

As a part of our new reading adoption, each classroom will receive a new DRA 2 kit. Yes. Each classroom. Additionally, the district recognizes that there is a need for continued training and professional development in the implementation of this assessment to dispel related myths and poor practices. Therefore, they are rolling out a plan for professional development that will span the next two years. Last week's workshop was just the first step in the process. Over the course of the coming years, we will be working closely with district and Pearson personnel to answer questions, resolve issues, and perfect our practices, both within our classroom and between schools in the county.

Here are just a few notes from this first "snippet" of training.

  • The DRA 2 introduces written summaries (scaffolded) as part of the comprehension check beginning in late 2nd grade levels.
  • Kits will contain multiple copies of texts, in addition to more titles per level, to improve efficiency of testing.
  • There are more nonfiction texts in the new version. Beginning in the intermediate range, students should not proceed into the next grade level without first being tested on a fiction and nonfiction text.
  • Higher levels include a written reading engagement survey that can be delivered in a whole group format.
  • Rubrics for all elements of the test have been refined and made more objective.
  • There is an additional word analysis piece to the assessment that is reserved for a specific set of "struggling" readers.
  • The "Bridge Pack" is included in the intermediate kit now.
  • An online management software option is available. (The county will be piloting this with one school from each cluster.)
  • Blackline master books come with each kit. However, each kit also includes a CD with printable forms.
  • Texts have been improved to include a "magic asterisk" to cue students stopping/starting points. (NO MORE WRITING IN THE BOOKS!)
  • Many of the titles are the same, but the text may have been slightly altered.
  • The intermediate kit has a simplified scoring system (which means less levels of text required and less time spent testing students).
  • Each kit comes with a handy-dandy clipboard, with built-in calculator and timer!
There is MUCH MORE to come. Keep an eye on this site and your ear to the ground for details regarding trainings at your school in the 2008-2009 school year. You won't want to miss them!

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Research from the Cutting Edge: The Work of the Florida Center for Reading Research

The presenter of this session was Stephanie Al Otaiba.

Stephanie says that we are moving as a country and a state to a response to intervention and that our field is moving to where we need to be. As educators we must move away from the wait to fail approach.

The main objective was to describe current research being conducted through FCRRTheir response to intervention model is a three tier approach.


Tier 1 Universal Interventions (80-90%)
*All students
*Preventive, proactive
*Evidence-based reading instruction- I heard this over and over by all researchers and presenters at this conference. They are growing tired of counties adopting curriculum that is not evidence- based and that is taught implicitly. Teachers must use a core reading program that covers all 5 areas of reading. She likes Open Court and the newest edition of McMillan McGraw Hill and says they are more explicit.
*Universal Screening


Tier 2 Secondary Intervention (5-10%)

*some students (at-risk)
*high efficiency
*rapid response
*small group interventions
*more frequent monitoring
*some individualizing


Tier 3 Teritory Interventions (1-5%)
*individual students
*assessment-based
*high intensity
*more frequent monitoring
The overall best choices for intensive reading instruction for dyslexic and struggling readers that I heard from presenters, teachers and parents were Wilson and Lindamood-Bell. What was really stressed is that at this level of intensive instruction a multi-sensory approach must be used (The Orton Gillingham Approach). I had a parent get chills and teary eyed while explaining to me how the Wilson reading program changed her son's life.

How fortunate are we at Chets to have both of these programs available for our primary students?! I am on a mission to get trained in Wilson this summer so that our intermediate students can benefit from this program.

Response to Intervention (RTI) is much like what we already have in place at Chets Creek within our classrooms and our primary and intermediate Target Teams.

The first step in the RTI process is
*intial universal screening
*class-wide curriculum based assessment (e.g. DIBELS) informs instruction
-teacher, coach, and principal look at initial performance of whole class (per benchmarks)
Judging how students respond to Tier 1
*second classwide screening to monitor progress
-teacher, coach, and principal look at how well the whole class responds to instruction (Is there a reading gap? or are about 80-90% of children meeting grade level benchmarks?)
*identify students who are not making adequate progress despite your strongest efforts and plan for immediate and intensive intervention and provide more frequent progress monitoring (Tier 2)

Much more information was shared with data on treatment schools. All handouts from the conference are suppose to be made available at http://www.idafla.org/. I keep checking and haven't found them yet.

websites suggested by FCRR
http://www.fcrr.org/
What works Clearinghouse (scientific evidence of what works in education)
http://w-w-c.org/index.html
The National Institute for Literacy (a federal organization)
http://novel.nifl.gov/

Monday, April 7, 2008

The International Dyslexia Association Conference


First and foremost I want to thank my principal, Susan Phillips and literacy coach, dayle timmons for the opportunity of attending this conference. The focus of this two day dyslexia conference in Jacksonville was Reading Rx: What Medicine, Science, and Education Prescribe for Reading Success. As an educator I thrive on hearing cutting edge research and sharpening my tools to better serve the children in my care. If you are a regular education teacher reading this please don't think this doesn't pertain to you. Dyslexia occurs in 1 out of every 5 children and it is important for everyone to notice the early indicators.


Ok, so are you wondering why I included a picture of myself and Jacksonville's mayor, John Peyton?!? Well, Mayor Peyton took time to join us for lunch and speak about the importance of early intervention and his Literacy Initiative Plan to get every child in Jacksonville ready to read when they enter kindergarten. Mayor Peyton mentioned that the "Rally Jacksonville" reading initiative has made him as popular with the 4 year olds as Spiderman! He is approached quite frequently around town by 4 year olds telling him how much they love their books. He also shared with us that he knows firsthand how debilitating dyslexia can be as it is in his family.

Dyslexia as defined by IDA is a specific learning disability that is neurological in origin. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the phonological component of language.


Session title: Why Some Smart People have Trouble Reading: The Science of Reading and Dyslexia

Presentors: Sally E Shaywitz and Bennett A Shaywitz
Yale University School of Medicine
Directors of Learning, Reading and Attention

This precious husband and wife team were dynamic! Highlights of their presentation follow.

Simply stated, the definition of dyslexia is an UNexpected difficulty in reading. It is unexpected in relation to intelligence, motivation, education, and for adults professional status. Dyslexia disproves the assumptions that if you read well you are smart and that if you don't read well you are not smart. Dyslexia is multifactorial with multiple influences not explained by a single gene. Multiple genes are involved with each contributing a small amount. Now this is cool.....Through the use of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the brains of impaired and nonimpaired readers Mr. Shaywitz was able to show that three systems in the brain show activity when a non-impaired reader is reading. However, when an impaired reader is reading the only activity was in the frontal lobe. Dyslexic readers try to compensate for this and thus slow down the reading process. Current research is showing that two medications (Stratera and Ritalin) have postive effects on reading with both ADHD and dyslexia. Their plea is that we celebrate and draw positive attention to the "Sea of Strengths" of dyslexic individuals (critical thinking, reasoning, concept formation, comprehension, general knowledge, problem solving, and vocabulary). They support a reading program with scientific evidence.

Early indicators are:
family history of dyslexia
early language delays (speech and syntax production)
and signs of struggling with:
print awareness
letter knowledge
expressive vocabulary
sentence/story recall
phonological and phonemic awareness
rapid automatic naming

Effective reading intervention is early intervention, an evidence based program, knowledgeable teachers, intensive instruction for a sufficient duration (60-90 minutes 4-5 times per week).

My favorite part of their presentation was when Mrs. Shaywitz shared success stories of dyslexic adults. When her book was near completion she had a misguided professor comment that he couldn't imagine "someone like that" (meaning a dyslexic person) being a doctor, lawyer, etc. This gave her the idea to add to the end of her book many "people like that" that are very successful adults. Some names you may know are John Irving and Charles Schwab.

website to visit: http://www.dyslexia.yale.edu/
book to read: Overcoming Dyslexia by Sally E Shaywitz

I have much more to share, so look for more post tomorrow.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Autism

Autism Orlando
Biennial Conference, 2008
“Autism Through the Lifespan”

Although I spent four years working with autistic children in Tampa eighteen years ago and have had a few children with PDD, autism and Asperger’s Syndrome through the subsequent years, I have wanted to look at the most up-to-date research as I am including FOUR children on the autism spectrum in a regular Kindergarten classroom this year. I have been looking for conferences and reading material that might make a difference for these children. This weekend, I was able to attend an Autism Conference in Orlando, FL through EP LiveOnline Webcasting in the comfort of my own home, saving a substantial amount of money and time for this professional development in a new format. This conference is billed as “22 of the leading autism experts in the biochemical, behavioral and developmental world.”

About the content
This conference definitely presented the biomedical interventions that are now available for children on the autism spectrum. They stressed again and again, that they will not all work with every child and that parents must be persistent and discerning about which treatment(s) are appropriate for their child. The conference was peppered with “recovery” videos and recovered speakers (including Raun Kaufman and Elijah Wapner). The videos and personal testimonies certainly offer hope. This is good background for me as parents question and make decisions about their particular child's program.

Below are just a few of the therapy options available to parents today. Some of these are outside of education, but need to be understood as education partners with the family for the best outcome for each individual child.

  • Detoxification/ Chelation therapy
  • Hyperbaric Oxygen therapy
  • Antiviral and Nasal Methyl B12 Spray therapies
  • Behavioral therapy
  • Dietary interventions
  • Digestive/ gastrointestinal interventions
  • Melatonin replacement

Possible autism causes:

  • Genetic and Metabolic (that you can’t really do anything about)
  • Fungus/ Bacterial
  • Viruses
  • Metal toxins

Resources to check:
http://www.autism.com/ (with 22,000 parents reporting)

Interesting information:

  • Calling stimming “deep interests” that should be developed (Valarie Paradiz)
  • There may be a connection between some autistic children and lower abdominal discomfort that explains their behavior such as peculiar posturing, difficulties with bowel movements, recurring abdominal pain, general discomfort (Arthur Krigsman)
  • Regressive autism is used to refer to children who were developing normally and all of a sudden, regress or quit making progress and then are diagnosed with autism (Arthur Krigsman)
  • Raun Kaufman, who is the recovered child of Son-Rise is the CEO of the Autism Treatment Center of American. He advocates "joining" stimming behaviors which he calls "isms" as a way to enter into the child's life. He also advocates using a child's interest to teach him new skills. The idea is to pair the skill with the child's interest in a game-like situation so that the child learns to do it with joy and independently out of the training session. Everything is taught through play. In their program you will not see total structure because you want the child to be more flexible. His program advocates a more flexible environment to teach flexibility. Teach socialization goals before academic goals. Prioritize the interactions over the goals. In other words, put priority on meaningful, caring relationship with others instead of compliance. A non-judgemental and optomistic attitude are the keys. Celebrate what is before you try to change it. When you get proper biomedical intervention and dietary changes, it makes a difference in the son-rise playroom, because stress drops and the child can go into recovery mode.

About the on-line experience
This experience is different than blogging because you get first-hand experience with the sessions at a conference while they are happening. You see the presenter, their videos and slide shows as the participants are also seeing them. However, this is not High Definition! The picture is a little grainy and the sound sometimes includes echoes, but given that you do not have to travel to the conference or spend the extra money on room and food, it is a deal. In this case the on-line version was $175 as compared to the conference registration of $310 (add on travel, room, food). Of course what you have in traveling to a conference is the networking that happens after hours and the time away from your normal activities that gives you a chance to synthesize the information. I think an on-line option will definitely be on the radar for the future.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

At Long Last....A Virtual Tour of CCE

Ever since the week we left to attend the conference in Hollywood, CA I have been trying to upload our Virtual Model School Tour video that we showed in our session. The problem was...the length of the video. At long last, and with the help of my twitter network and Liz B. Davis, I was able to upload to blip.tv. The quality is not as good as the real thing...but we hope you will enjoy this visit to our school and learning about the relationships, risks and results that make us who we are. Without further ado....

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Mathematics Navigator: A Safety Net Program for Struggling Students


Mathematics Navigator: A Safety Net Program for Struggling Students
Angela Phillips and Rick Pinchot
Chets Creek Elementary, Jacksonville, FL

Rick Pinchot and I presented a session on our school's success in using Mathematics Navigator, a mathematics safety net program developed by America's Choice for helping students who have fallen approximately two years behind that of their peers in core math content areas (such as fractions, place value, and conceptual understanding of operations).

We began our presentation by sharing the Chets Creek Data Story. We shared the Vision of our school and our history of "high-stakes" results on FCAT Mathematics (grades 3-5), our state's "high stakes" accountability test. Our data shows a steady increase from year to year from where we began with 21% of our students scoring at proficiency levels (10 years ago when our school first opened) to where we are now- with over 90% of our students meeting proficiency in recent years. In considering N.C.L.B., the effort to leave NO child behind, our emphasis two years ago became searching out a meaningful and aligned safety net program (to compliment our everyday regular classroom "constructivist and conceptual-based teaching", which occurs in all classrooms Kindergarten through Fifth Grade in our school.

We shared our excitement in finding Math Navigator, and remarked on the six "philosophies" of Navigator to help tell our success story. From there, we introduced our participants to the components of Navigator- the "Skill Cards" and a "Lesson". After our participants had the opportunity to work through several skill cards and a Navigator lesson, we regrouped to discuss anticipated student misconceptions that would arise and be addressed (corrected) through the lesson. We then shared actual samples of student work from the lesson and discussed the student misconceptions that were evidenced in the work. We then shared what each of the four students learned from their mistakes when they corrected their work after receiving teacher feedback and further development.

The next emphasis of our presentation was to share the various Implementation Models that we have found successful for use in our school (through our Extended Day after school program, through our Exceptional Student Education department, and through committed teachers and coaches pulling small groups of students before and after school).

The final and most important component of our presentation was to share our incredible results. Our "Data Story" shows that over 98% of the students in our school (these modules serve grades 2-5) who have gone through a complete Navigator safety net module have shown improvement, and in many cases, the improvement has been significant. Almost all of the students who are assessed on FCAT (grades 3-5), scored at proficiency levels on the assessment after participating in a Navigator module of study. Our previous predictions of these students indicated that they would not have scored at proficiency levels had they not experienced Math Navigator. Our sources in making these earlier predictions, which helped to identify these students as needing to be targeted for participating in this program, came from a very reliable diagnostic resource- a comprehensive math diagnostic assessment used in our school and developed by teachers in our school to document growth (August to December to May) and predict performance on FCAT based on our alignment of historical data (December midyear scores) to what students actually received on FCAT (taken in March) in years past. The results we have received from implementing Math Navigator with our struggling math students far outweighs any mathematics safety net attempts we had explored prior to using this product.

For these reasons, we highly recommend this safety net program to any elementary school searching for a conceptually based safety net mathematics program. Math Navigator identifies and surfaces student misconceptions in the context of the embedded assessments (pre-, checkpoint, and post-); addresses concept, skill and problem solving development; teaches students to be held accountable and responsible for their own learning; and best of all, improves teacher pedagogy, which then transfers into the regular classroom and affects all learners in the teachers' care.

Click below to watch the video of our presentation:

Going Big Screen

Envision five large screen projection televisions attached to the ceiling displaying your image with an audience of approximately 1,500 educators hanging on your every word. This image was a reality last week at the America’s Choice Conference for two of our own, dayle timmons & Melanie Holtsman, and they handled the attention beautifully! Although, I cannot tell a lie... Melanie may have been mumbling something under her breath about her hair!

Melanie’s large screen debut occurred during the Opening Keynote when Judy Codding unveiled Literacy Navigator. A promotional video taped by Learning in Motion was broadcast to the audience, and included footage from Melanie’s Literacy Navigator group. Also, showcased were our friends from Twin Lakes Academy Elementary. What an excellent way to start this action packed conference!

Coming full circle, dayle’s debut concluded the conference in her Closing Keynote address that brought some in the audience to tears and left the Chets Creek observers beaming with pride—This is an extraordinary teacher we get to work collegially with every day! How lucky are we? She shared her journey as an ESE teacher and literacy coach who had the opportunity to learn and grow in an America’s Choice Cohort 2 school and how that training changed everything!

She even shared a small secret—she was so eager to obtain literacy training that she signed in as a friend, snuck into a training session and stole her very first standards book! You should know that this is sooooo out of character for dayle--she is the most genuine trustworthy responsible teacher I know. Although, I will say, she is also the most passionate, too, and has an insatiable hunger for knowledge! Hence, the “borrowing” of a book that would become her life line to improving classroom instruction. I’m sure she hasn’t ever looked back!

dayle talked about the exhilarating ride of her life as she joined the learning community of pioneers at Chets Creek Elementary. The staff is passionate, fast-paced, and full of energy, and dayle fit right in. In fact, her leadership qualities and early literacy knowledge landed her the role of primary literacy coach. She is among the most revered teachers at our school, and has earned the distinguished award as the 2004 Florida Teacher of the Year. She gives accolades to the America’s Choice School Design for bringing her the platform for this honor, and specifically thanked General John Fryer for bravely bringing this design to Duval County Public Schools in 1999.

As a Chets Creek risk taker, dayle, along with many other learning leaders at CCE, have stepped it up a notch this year. She has learned how to blog in order to communicate with our stakeholders and as a way to have a discussion that encompasses a larger, world-wide audience. She is in the process of archiving a year in the life of kindergarten, including how a high performing America’s Choice Model School impacts our youngest learners.

She concluded as she addressed trainers and coaches, administrators, and teachers, and urged each of us to never underestimate the work we are doing. To build our legacy. To shape our children's destiny-- our future.

A well deserved standing ovation ensued. After all, she's the queen...

The Real Heroes of Chets Creek

Being in Hollywood was so much fun but while we were there, the work of Chets Creek continued. 4th grade teachers worked furiously to prepared students for the Florida Writes. Scribes worked with our neediest students, taking the incredible amount of time necessary to make sure that each student is prepared. Kindergarten teachers began their annual conferences with parents which means a entire day of conferring and then meeting mornings and afternoons for two weeks during their planning time to make sure to meet with the parents that couldn’t come on a single day. Target Team (our Intervention Team) met two mornings while we were gone during their planning time, just like they do every week of the year, to discuss, brainstorm and develop strategies for our most challenging students. The teachers committed to the Target Team process do the work simply because they believe that every single child deserves the best we have to offer. Intermediate teachers continued to tutor mornings and afternoons on their own time to make sure every child is ready for our state test. A teacher in Hollywood asked me how we get our teachers to commit so much of their time and talent – what about the union contract? I didn’t really have an answer for her except to tell her that our teachers are passionate about the children they teach. They really believe that they can make a difference and they see that difference every day.

While it is fun to share what we are doing, and it is certainly fun to do it in LA, it is the teachers in the trenches that stayed at school to work that deserve our highest praise. Their hard work is the heartbeat of our work. We may have gotten the glory, but they are the real heroes!

Dr. Elaine Weber's Stack the Deck Game

Imagine a session designed to show the multiple ways to bridge the use of technology with the teaching of reading. Sounds interesting doesn't it? Last week at the conference Michelle, Debby and I attended a great session in which Dr. Elaine Weber shared a few of the many sites and tools available to assist in the teaching of reading. Below is a great game that can be used by readers to practice the 7 habits of highly proficient readers. Imagine the possibilities...


Monday, February 4, 2008

Home Sweet Home

In an effort to save a few dollars, we decided to fly back on the red eye... which means that we flew all night! Susan asked more than once, "NOW WHOSE IDEA WAS THIS?" Our flight from Hollywood to Atlanta, which was the long leg of the flight, was on a plane that must have been made for children under three feet tall! The plane was full and it was impossible to even cross your legs, much less sleep. We had a short layover in Atlanta (where the sun was coming up) and then it was finally home to Jacksonville. We lost three hours on the way back because of the time change and the entire weekend with our families.

We do a lot to save money at Chets Creek in order to send as many people as we can to conferences. We stay 3-4, even 6 to a room, unless, of course, you are Rick! There are some advantages to being a man in an elementary school.

We also encourage teachers to send proposals to present at major conferences, and then do everything we can to find the money to support their travel. In fact, the 10 Chets Creek faculty that went on this trip all went because they had sent in a proposal last year that was accepted for the Hollywood conference. The acceptance pays for a teacher's registration and without that financial support, it would impossible for our school to send anyone at all. I think we all feel that these sacrifices are minimal because we so want to be able to hear first-hand what is going on across the country. We are so fortunate to have a principal that believes that this type of knowledge and travel makes the difference. Thank you, Susan, for sending us and for learning with us!

Get ready, Chets Creek teachers, proposals for the 2009 America's Choice Conference in Orlando will be due in March!

What They Do Know Can Hurt Them:

What They Do Know Can Hurt Them: Identifying and Addressing Math Misconceptions
Presented by: Phil Daro and Cindy Fielder- America’s Choice


Early in the presentation, Daro shared some compelling results of International Comparisons that have been done in an extensive N.A.E.P. study (1991-2007). He shared that in Reading, we are at the head of the pack. In Science, we are in the middle of the pack. In Math- we are at the back of the pack. The point was made that these results are based on the same kids with the same teachers- same parenting, same culture, etc. This suggests the idea that there is something wrong with the way math is being taught in our country. While reviewing the data collected in this study, the comment was made that the data shows that we are making progress in our country, which is very encouraging…but the data also shows improvements on an international level. The charge was made to move more aggressively toward closing this gap.
On another note: Daro also commented that when doing data comparisons, it is best to compare data against other states to assess your own state’s progress.

Three Areas of Needed Focus
Suggestions were made on where we need to focus in order to facilitate this needed change. 1) Time- Kids are running out of time to seize the opportunity to go to college, etc. Problems must be faced before change can occur. Students with a history of learning more slowly are not going to catch up without spending more time on their learning. The strategy must be to accelerate their learning with their time…shift more of their time to learning mathematics (which means giving up something else). 2) Attention: “Who Teaches Whom” – One problem that we face is that first year teachers in inner city schools spend much of their time on behavior management, some leave after Christmas…etc. The professional development they receive during that first year of teaching will begin to help the following year, but many of these students will have moved on to another grade level or teacher (who may likely be another inexperienced teacher). Middle school math departments must then take ownership of this problem.
3) Algebra in 8th grade? If we want kids to enter college without remediation, they have to complete Algebra 2 by 12th grade. This leads many districts to accelerate their course work, and many times, students struggle to pass other courses to get to that point. There is time if we spend it wisely. If kids are not ready for Algebra, Daro suggests giving them algebra readiness courses instead – this can happen even at 9th grade. There will still be time to complete Algebra 2 by the end of 12th grade.

Offering Students Feedback on their Work
Daro emphasized that you must ask children questions about their work. Simply saying “good job” does not offer enough. Questions drive learning and help to clarify misconceptions.
He emphasized that in a classroom of 30 kids and 1 teacher, each kid gets 1/30 of the teacher’s time. That is where partner work can benefit in offering feedback to students, when half the class talking and half the class listening (as long as the conversations are “on topic” conversations).
Offering homework help is also a vital part of offering feedback. Sometimes, if you help a student with just one of the problems on a homework assignment, they are able to complete the rest of the assignment without incurring problems…this can help them not become one year behind. (closing the gap).

Reasons Students Struggle in Mathematics
1-Misconceptions- Students need to develop their meta-cognitive development of analyzing their own thinking and work.
2-Bugs in procedural knowledge
3-Mathematics language learning – There is a lot of math vocabulary that kids need to understand, which needs to be developed meaningfully and in context.
4-Meta-cognitive lapses
5-Lack of knowledge (gaps) – You should not look at data and look at not what they are getting wrong, but why they are getting it wrong; Extra feedback for kids is the key- they need to receive feedback early in their schooling and often.
6-Disposition, belief, and motivation- If students believe if they can change for the better, their behavior can change. Research shows that teachers can build student confidence with practice, feedback, and encouragement- and make a difference. He also stated that sitting a kid alone in front of a computer is poison…. They need to have conversations with someone asking them the right questions.

Ïmportance of Number Lines
If a number line is not in your classroom, there is a problem.
Number lines are the most important key in moving from the concrete to abstract.
Rulers are also important number lines in showing fractional parts of wholes.

~As teachers we need to think~
“What is the math that my kids need to learn by doing these problems?”……not……
“How can I show the kids how to get the right answer?” (using math they already know- this means I am not teaching you the math you need to know…I am just helping you get the point to do well on the next test)……this is where misconceptions come from. It was emphasized that answers are important, they are part of the process, but they are not the product. Even incorrect answers are important. (Why didn’t that strategy work?)

One of the most compelling statements Daro made was the following;
**If kids forget how to do something, it means they did not learn it in the first place. The brain forgets very little of what is learned.

Walking the Talk

When I got back to school, Maria Mallon dropped by to bring me a piece of writing that had been done by Ryan during our live lesson to the America's Choice conference in Hollywood. During the conference we dropped into Maria's class for a Writers' Workshop. Ryan was working on the following piece:
Today at school we got video taped. We had a TV in our class. We have a fun teacher. Then we ate lunch. Then we played outside. The TV went back to California. I was delighted!

I wonder if Ryan thought his piece was a 1, 2, or 3 on his classroom rubric? Bet he could rate each element of the rubric and decide what the paper needed to move to the next level!
Debbie Harbour, another of our kindergarten teachers presented a session at the conference on the vocabulary that we wrote as a professional learning community, based on the work of Beck and McKeown, and are currently teaching to our youngest learners. She will be very pleased to know that Ryan used the word "delighted" in his writing in Maria's class which was one of the vocabulary words that he learned from Red Riding Hood. Just goes to show how we really do walk the talk!

Response to Intervention

Why Response to Intervention (RTI)? Enhancing Outcomes for All Students
Jack Fletcher
University of Houston

Dr. Jack M. Fletcher of the University of Houston presented an outstanding presentation on one of the hottest topics in Special Education today, Response to Intervention (RTI).

Some interesting points for me...

Although Joe Torgensen was able to improved accuaracy and comprehension in an 8-week intensive (2 hours per day) phonologically-based summer program, he was not able to increase fluency. Why? Because fluency increases because of practice and children who are struggling to decode every few words don't enjoy reading, so they don't read. They don't get the practice they need to improve their fluency.

Early intervention works. We can cut our at-risk to 2-10% in K-2, but we need small group (3-4 kids) in a Tier 2 supplemental pull-out intervention. (We should be proud at Chets Creek because this is exactly what we have done with universal screening through DIBELS and then K-1 Reading Mastery intervention. Unfortunately we have NOT figured out how to do this in addition to our core instruction!)

Tier 3 intensive intervention should be with 1-3 kids at a time for 45-50 minutes a day. (How can our Special Education teachers at Chets continue to provide this when the county is suggesting that we cut from 8 to 5 Special Education teachers next year?)

Because IQ does not matter in the type of intervention that you plan for LD students, then there is no need for the type of IQ testing we have been doing. With RIT we would switch instead to academic evaluations (Again, Chets should be proud of its Target Team because this is exactly what they are stessing. We are so far ahead in this new RTI model!)

Everything you ever wanted to know about Progress Monitoring can be found at http://www.studentprogress.org/.

Dr. Fletcher's website

With the author's permission, Dr. Fletcher's PowerPoint is shared below.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Hollywood Work and Fun

There weren't enough hours in the day... We woke up early to attend or present sessions and by the time we ate and returned home to blog, it was only a few hours before we started the pattern all over again. We worked hard and played hard...now it's time to look to next year.

Who gets to go on these conference trips? People who submit presentations. Everyone who went wrote a presentation and worked at the conference. 2009 presentations are due this spring. Get with your coach and start thinking now, about what you could share. We would LOVE to see an even bigger group go next year!