I surprisingly had a hard time finding useful information on Pumping at work. I went in half optimistic, half terrified. Some how, some way I made it an entire year- as a full time working mother- breast feeding. There were absolutely some bumps along the way; I definitely wished that I would "dry up" more than a handful of times- but I never did. And my sweet little girl is still gaining all of the benefits of being breastfed. (**Around 9 months I had to start supplementing- I'll discuss later.)
The Commute I live in LA- before getting back to work I lived a whopping 0.8 miles away from work. My commute was usually a 3 minute bike ride. If I left my house after 7:45 the parking situation got hairy and I usually didn't make it into my classroom until around 7:55 *gasp* an entire 10 minutes from the time I left home. That charmed life came to a screeching halt when we realized a dog, a baby, 2 adults and 900 square feet didn't mesh well. So we moved about 35 miles away next door to my parents. We had a lot more space for our growing family and free babysitting! ...And my 3 minute commute became a beast of a drive. LA traffic increased my commute from what should have been a nice traffic free 30 minutes to about an hour and a half. What's a nursing mom to do in such a situation? Pump. Of course. Maximize your time by pumping in the car. Yup. I fully endorse pumping and driving. I got an entire pumping session out of the way while sitting in the hellish traffic of the 405 freeway. Find a comfortable place to pump. For me that happened to be my classroom. I set up a nice corner in a place that I could easily hide in the event of an unannounced intruder. My next door neighbor teacher and every adult in the school knew this is where I pumped. In the event of a rainy day schedule, I invaded my principals office because the only other available space was the nurses bathroom and- no thanks. If you don't have a boss that is supportive, demand it. In most states its the law.
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Let my start with this: I was first introduced to Interactive Notebooks by an amazing Teachers Pay Teachers author and her absolutely fantastic Language Arts Interactive Notebooks. Her resources added what I felt was missing in my Language Arts Curriculum.
I am a STEM teacher at heart. Kids leave my classroom loving all things Science, Tech, Engineering and Math. A colleague of mine suggested we introduce some Interactive Notebooks into our Science curriculum so I happily jumped aboard. Until I saw the resources... and cringed. Interactive Notebooks are great. They are also incredibly time consuming. For grammar instruction, the time in is arguably worth it. The cut and paste activities add a little spice into a subject that is by nature boring. (I am sorry grammar lovers, but it's true!) STEM lessons scream hands on. To spend an entire lesson cutting and pasting vocabulary words into a journal is a missed opportunity to spark love for learning. While there is absolutely a time and place for the Interactive Notebook resource, please don't let that time and place be Science! Instead do this: 1. Spend time doing hands on activities Science is all about systems and process. A student won't truly understand any of this unless they get hands on with the material. The web is exploding with great STEM resources both free and paid. The activities don't have to be elaborate. They can be a quick and simple 20 minute thing or can spam over a week. Either way, the time spent is much more valuable than cutting and pasting words into a notebook. 2. Draw it out Students should be taking time to diagram things on their own. Instead of cutting and pasting that diagram of flower parts, have your students draw it and label it themselves. This is something a real scientist would do in their real journal anyway. Get your kids used to this. 3. Journaling Talk about a perfect time for a two-fer. Squeeze in some Language Arts time into your science curriculum by having your students journal about their experience. Have them record their observations and thoughts on the lesson you completed. When doing an experiment, follow the Scientific Process. Start by having the class make observations about the topic you are studying. Guide them to form a question to answer. Come up with a good hypothesis to the question. Figure out a process that will guide your experiment. Record any observations and data during the experiment. Analyze the results. And finally have your students write about the outcome. Interactive Journals are great. But in science, are they really interactive if all you are doing is cutting, pasting and coloring? |
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July 2024
"The best teachers are those who show you where to look, but don't tell you what to see." - Alexandra K. Trenfor |