Adventures in Teaching
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Growing as an Educator
  • Into Reading - 4th Grade
  • Parent Resources
  • At Home Activities and Learning
  • Distance Learning Resources for Teachers
  • Social Emotional Learning
  • Archive
    • Language Arts
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Studies
    • Crafty Teacher Resources
    • Art
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Growing as an Educator
  • Into Reading - 4th Grade
  • Parent Resources
  • At Home Activities and Learning
  • Distance Learning Resources for Teachers
  • Social Emotional Learning
  • Archive
    • Language Arts
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Studies
    • Crafty Teacher Resources
    • Art

Edu-Blog

100 Days of Distance Learning

2/12/2021

0 Comments

 

(And 100 things that kept this working momma of a kindergartner and newborn sane!)

Hurray! It's the 100th day of school! Which of course means we made it... someone give us a gold medal... We survived 100 days of distance learning. How? I don't know either but here we go... A list of 100 things that helped get us through.
Picture
(Pictured - My daughter's work space/classroom/left over decorations from her birthday party. What a fun way to celebrate our 100 days of this thing we call Distance Learning!)
  • Embrace the Suck- Look... this sucks. Honor that. At no time do we pretend like pandemic life is the best life. We acknowledge the suck... express our frustrations when needed and then do what we can to make the best of this.
  • Set Firm Limits on Work Time. - When I was pregnant I was so stressed out with work and preparing enough plans for my long term sub to take over my 4th and 5th grade class that I asked my doctor if I should take an early leave. She suggested to first try putting firm limits on my work day. So at 4pm, I shut my computer and didn't go back to it until 8 am the next morning. This might not be news for some of you but for a work-a-holic teacher, promising myself to stop work every day at 4pm to put myself and my family first was life changing. And my work life is still thriving! (Imagine that!)
  • Emphasizing Independent Play.  Pre-pandemic our calendar was jam packed with activities so when the pandemic hit, I felt overwhelmed trying to schedule things to do inside, without friends, for my daughter. I put the bulk of the responsibility for her "not being bored" on me. I'd say about two days into that the pressure and stress of being the sole provider of entertainment to my daughter was overwhelming and completely unsustainable. So I channeled my inner Elsa and... I let it go and fully embraced independent play.
    • For my 5 year old that is usually 30 minutes to an hour but can now be hours of genuinely engaged imaginative play.
    • For my 5 month old? Maybe it means 5-10 minutes of me sitting near by as he rolls around in his playpen.
    • For more on this- I highly recommend checking out Janet Landsbury who is an expert on the 0-3 years and an advocate for incorporating independent play time into your routines. Here are some of her best posts on the topic Stop Entertaining Your Toddler in 3 Steps, Becoming Unglued, Solo Engagement, How To Stop Entertaining Your Baby and 7 Myths That Discourage Independent Play..
  • Outdoor Play Dates - Social interaction is crucial for developing kids (and all of humanity) so we try to keep it safe with short outdoor play dates with families we trust. Cold weather put a damper on this so we've tried other things
  • Zoom Play Dates - My daughter hates (HATES) talking to people on zoom. But she loves her friends and understands we cant see them all in person. Sometimes she'll chat with them for thirty seconds, sometimes she will play elaborate games of hide and seek somehow with them and her ipad running around the house. We let her guide us with this and never pressure her to interact with people on Zoom if she doesn't want to.
  • Our "Bubble" - We paired up with one other like minded family and have been stuck with them since the summer. This one outside family provides great interactions for our daughter where she can get some of all of those great social skills she would be learning in person at school (like compromising,  problem solving, forgiving, and working things out) I was afraid their friendship would be strained by being the one and only other person they see outside of their family but so far so good!
  • Lean on quality screen time. We didn't even have a tv in our house until my daughter was 2. But to stay sane with all of us home all of the time I let go of my rigidity around screen time. You want to watch more than 30 miunutes to 1 hour a day of screen time as a 5 year old? Cool... tune in to
    • Alphablocks,
    • Little Einsteins,
    • or one of the many engaging but maybe a little guilt free shows that incorperate learning on PBS. You are not a bad parent for letting go of rigid screen time limits. Keep it quality, keep your sanity.
  • Get Moving as a Family. In the beginning I had to schedule in purposeful active time and made it a family affair.
    • We love Cosmic Kids Yoga and
    • Peloton's Family Work out with Jess Sims.
    • But we also LOVE just taking a walk.
  • Make the walk an adventure. Sometimes we picked up "the best" pine cones or collected leaves of different colors in the fall to create a rainbow.
  • Use your nature walk collections for art. WHY BUY THINGS when you have so much around you? My daughter now has a deep love for gluing leaves onto paper and turning those leaves into fun creatures.
  • Skip the expensive toys. My daughter literally ignored the $100 block set I purchased from Lakeshore Learning and preferred things like empty water bottles and Tupperware. Observer your child and their preferences! Roll with their love of what might have been trash (I'm looking at you water bottles)
  • Get Organized. Am I a fancy pinterest mom with a house that is in perfect conditions at all times. HAHA! NO. My house often looks like it was hit by hurricane toddler and then just to make extra sure that nothing is in order a bunch of frat boys came in to ensure there are an extra large pile of unwashed clothes . But... there is a place for everything. So when I need to work on lesson plans, email parents, or grade assignments my daughter knows exactly where her art supplies, STEM activities or toys are.
    • These shelves (via amazon- not an affiliate link. I am too lazy for that and don't want to spam you with ads) are low to the ground and great for organizing for littles. I organize my playroom in a Montessori based way.
    • These bins (also via amazon. Ditto to the above) keep things visual for 0-5. I rotate out toys maybe every two weeks. Sometimes once a month
  • Minimize Your Workload When Prepping Activities For Ages 3-5 "Academics" should involve little to no prep by you. If it involves printing and laminating and cutting all of the things... skip it! Opt for something easier and more natural to incorporate into YOUR life and routine. Remember, things like cooking provide a much richer learning experience than any workbook ever could.
  • Avoid Workbooks- Toss Em. I spent probably $100 dollars on writing workbooks, math workbooks, reading workbooks etc.... my daughter maybe used them five times. I am a teacher but I am not her teacher. Trust me- your kids will have a life time of worksheets. They do NOT need them outside of what their actual teacher assigns and they definitely do not need them now.
  • Sing Songs- Singing with your child will build all of the wonderful pre-reading skills they need entering kindergarten. Remember Raffi? Ya... all of those lol They will establish a lot of key reading skills (Like Cause and effect- The Itsy Bitsy Spider is a prime example!)
  • Rhyming games and songs- This is HUGE for building phonemic awareness. Check out this post for inspiration.
  • Beginning Sound Activities- You can print a bunch of stuff off I guess but what working parent has time for that? Instead go on a scavenger hunt (or send your kid on one!) "Find something that starts with.... B "bu". Let them search their play room for something  like a ball! This will get your child ready for all things reading and build a love and excitement for it.
  • Chalk Obstacle Course - Check out this instagram post. Look at your calendar and make sure it wont rain for a while lol. Dip your chalk in water to ensure it stays on the ground for a while... just a little work lasts for potentially weeks and kept my daughter engaged and moving on the daily.
  • Kinesthetic Word Work- When my daughter started kindergarten, I had to find ways to get her engaged with learning site words. So... enter more chalk! Check out this instagram post for inspiration.
  • Sensory Bins - This post has some good ideas! Don't go overboard. Start with one that you think your child might like and if they do... move on from there.
  • Real life learning experiences: Cooking incorporates math, language arts, health, science... so. many. things. Cook with your child!! I had to let go of a lot (like my idea of a clean kitchen, and efficient techniques of scooping flour our of the bag or stirring things) Let the kids help! Even if it means some egg shells in your food.
  • Family Reading Time - Confession, I am not a fan of baby books and not so big on most picture books either (sorry not sorry). I am super stoked that my daughter is entering the chapter book phase of life so every night we all snuggle up and read a chapter of her new favorite series Drangon Masters. (Early reader chapter books) and for sweet baby bro? I am putting sister in charge of the baby books now! Gives them bonding time and me time away from reading those... :)
  • Visual Schedules - I still have this up for free. Look- don't go overboard with this. My daughter's visual schedule is currently is Breakfast, Fundations (a school  reading activity) Reading group, play time, math group, play time. lunch, writing group, play time, reading group, Zoom social group, and you guessed it.... play time. When I first implemented this, her day was schedule in almost 30- 45 minute blocks with an activity pictured in from 8am-Bedtime. It was too much! Keep it flexible and incorporate Parent-Guilt-Free Independent play time often. In our schedule those play blocks are either with a parent, a friend from the family we formed a bubble with, or independent play.
  • Ditch the Chore Reward Chart - Yes on visual schedules but no on chore chart? I can't keep up with Reward charts of any kind. If you can't be consistent it wont be effective. Even though I know research points to a HARD PASS on reward systems for kids at home or in school, I tried this with my daughter anyway. And it stressed me out. So I ditched it. Chores should be a normal part of the day incorporated into your schedule. I do not recommend rewarding your child to do chores. Start involving your kids at a young age. Kids love to be involved! Make it a family activity where they can help. Read this blog post for more
  • Check in on Your Child's Distance Learning Engagement - My mom helps monitor my daughter during the day. She was switched into a K/1 online combo class and a week in started to pretend that her computer was broken and told my mom she would fire her if she tried to fix it *still laughing about this* I checked in with the teacher and asked her to put her in a lower reading group. Thats right. A lower reading group. She is reading at a end of year kindergarten level but was in a group with first graders. This made her feel like she couldn't keep up so she started avoiding work. I did NOT want her to begin to establish a hatred for reading knowing this would create a HUGE problem for the rest of her school career so I asked to have her switched into a lower group where she feels more confident and is therefor able to spend more time in her group laughing and smilng with friends while she reads. If your child seems disengaged or is hating online school- talk with your child's teacher to find ways to increase their engagement.
  • Avoid battles- I do not engage in school work battles with my daughter. I want to establish a FIRM love for learning at this age. Monday Asynchronous work does not always do that so... as a teacher I fully support skipping some of the work on such days if it means maintaining a positive relationship with your kids and a positive relationship with their ideas of what school is. (i.e. school is not torture)
  • This List of Resources- If you need more inspiration for quality screen time, screen free, low prep or high prep activities- I've got your back with this list.
  • Snack bins - filled with healthy snacks. Working at home is hard. My 5 year old is now old enough to get snacks on her own and the bin is filled with things I am not worried she will over eat. (i.e. no candy or fruit snacks) She has open access to fruits, veggies as well.
  • Stocking my House with Healthy Things - But accepting that sometimes I need chocolate and aint no one tryin to survive this on healthy food alone.
  • Hello Fresh OR another meal prep service. I would say our biggest martial problem stems from the question "What should we eat tonight?" Hello Fresh solved this! If you want a code, leave a comment and I will send you one but I can almost guarantee you can find a great deal via google.
  • Family/Friend Zoom dates- This got exhuasting in the beginning but I still have once a week zoom dates with extended family and occasion zoom dates with friends!
  • Purge the Clutter - Being home all day every day I got overwhelmed with clutter. So... I joined a local mom "Freebie" facebook page and just give away all the things I no longer need- and in exchange I snag some baby clothes for my 5 month old that is already in 9 month clothes!
  • Prioritize Self Care. My husband and I communicate when we just need to time for self care and we do what we can to help facilitate that.
    • For me its 30 minutes to an hour on my Peloton (follow me on the LB #MoiraRoseJazGal) or maybe sometimes its just sitting on the couch without a kid and my phone in hand while I catch up on Social Media. Either way, when either of us need it, we ask for it and support the other parent in taking out time.
  • Therapy - No one likes to talk about this but Im going to. My therapist is my hero. I went through a year of back to back traumatic losses in 2018.... while I no longer need her for that level of life intensity... I still need her. Some days we just celebrate how great things have been. Others we chat about strategies to remain grounded and sane.
  • My Apple Watch - Oddly this has kept me strongly connected to some friends as we social distance. The competitive ring challenges have kept me motivated to the max. (I'm looking at you friends who I refuse to allow to get more daily points then me even if it means twenty squats at 9:30pm lol)
  • My Peloton - This was a pre-pandemic splurge/mental health purchase. Winter was coming and I knew I wasn't trying to keep up with my morning runs or walks when temps started dipping below 20. Best purchase of my life. If you want to follow me on the LB board MoiraRoseJazGal is my name lol . If you need a referral code for $100 off of accessories, hit me up!
  • The Shipt Account I Got a One Month Free Trial for and then Forgot to Cancel - Am I proud that I accidently spent $100 on a year membership for this? Nope! Is it worth every penny for a working mom of two while we are all stuck at home? Absolutely!
  • Binge Watching Shows That Bring Me Joy - After the kids go to bed I put on something that makes me happy. Sometimes that means putting on Schitt's Creek for the five thousandth time or sometimes it means watching something mindless like Bling Empire.
  • Know Your Limits - When you set a lofty goal (like 100 things that kept me sane over the last days) and you only make it to 50 something.... that is OKAY lol You are surviving a pandemic. You are doing your best. You are doing a great job. Honor that every single day.
0 Comments

All of the Free Resources

12/21/2020

0 Comments

 
This year is hard. I am thankful for all of the teachers out there helping other teachers with free resources so will be posting resources I’m using in my distance learning classroom online! Checkout the Distance Learning Resources tab for all of the resources I have been dependent on and some of the resources I have created. Most of these resources are in hyperdoc form!

Enjoy!

If you like my resources, I was going to add a buy me a coffee link but instead, buy one of your teacher friends who needs some extra love some coffee. This year is HARD. Teachers need each other to get through 😭❤️❤️❤️🥰

For in person resources, more of my resources are on Teachers Pay Teachers for cheap, if not free. When I started my career, everything in my classroom was purchased by 23 year old me out of pocket. I strive to price my materials fairly keeping that in mind and post things for free whenever I can!

All of my resources are things I created and use in my own classroom.
0 Comments

To the parent making impossible decisions as the start of school approaches...

7/28/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
To the parent making impossible decisions as the start of school approaches...

I feel you. This is impossible. As a parent, spring distance learning felt like the 7th ring of hell and I am here to tell you every educator in the country felt the same pain.

But we need to all acknowledge some truths.

That was not distance learning.
That was not caused by a lack of training.
That was not caused by a system that failed due to incompetencies.


What we all felt was a sudden, unexpected, unprecedented global trauma caused by a pandemic. The world was turned upside down overnight, without warning, without any way to prepare and that left us all (especially our kids) spinning in disbelief.

Even the best distance learning system would have failed under those conditions and here is why.

1 - Children cannot learn when they are in a state of trauma.
There is a strong, ever growing body of evidence indicating all of the reasons a child cannot access academic learning when they are in a heightened state of stress. When schools were abruptly shut down with no warning, our kids were processing their own grief over the loss of their normal and were processing their anxieties over global issues that are far to large for children to process all at once. We were all experiencing the same global trauma. As a teacher here is what I saw every single day during our daily zoom call.
  • My kids looked sad. They spent a chunk of time expressing how much they missed each other, how much they missed me, how much they missed school. They desperately wanted their normal back and there was no way any adult in their life could deliver that.
  • They were scared- they never got to say goodbye, I never got to explain to them that while yes, this virus causing school buildings to close is scary, it will be okay. I couldn't sit behind a screen and reassure them that we would get through this in the same effective way that I could in person. They were scared, they were mourning, and discussing literary elements was the last thing they cared to think about.​ 
  • I am going to be blunt- as a teacher, I could not fix them over a screen. I spent 15 years building a trauma-informed skill set to ensure all of my students can access learning. This was the first time in my entire career that I faced a mountain I could not climb. Not virtually. Not through a screen. There was no way I could fix the fact that I never got to say good-bye to my class. There was no way I could assure them that this new and sudden shift in their lives was okay because it wasn't.
  • Engaging kids in academic topics felt impossible when  they were all processing big emotions surrounding the shut down. Of course distance learning failed then.
2. - Children thrive on routine. The sudden shutdown in March ripped this away from them.
All kids thrive on routine. This was ripped away from them suddenly and unexpectedly. Again, we all woke up one morning to the news that school buildings were closed and our reality was now some new uncharted world that felt like chaos. My kids missed their routine. They spent August-March learning and perfecting a routine that worked for them and their style of learning inside of a classroom. They knew  exactly what to expect and when. They had made leaps and bounds of growth... and then BAM- covid threw a brick wall in front of them. They now had to learn a new routine somehow set by one adult who somehow had to coordinate 30 other family schedules during a global pandemic in which every. single. family was struggling to make things work at home, while working, with kids, who were expected to learn through a computer. I offered resources and suggestions to set schedules that resembled some sense of normal but there simply was not a way to meet every family's needs and to make a consistent and coherent plan that worked for every family.  Families were exhausted, they were scared, they were fighting through what we now call Corona-fatigue and the emotional chaos caused by the rug being ripped out from underneath us without warning. We were all thrown into an impossible situation. There was no was schooling was going to survive through it. So as educators, administrators across the country came up with the best on the fly solutions that they could to meet the various needs of families who were now collectively facing the crisis caused by the pandemic shut down.
  • We were told that in order to accommodate every family, we should hold one meeting for 45 minutes to an hour.
  • We were told NOT to introduce any new material. This was fine as state testing was around the corner and most students in most classes had already accomplished grade level expectations. We were shifting from new learning to application of learning to projects. This was a hard sudden shift to make in the absence of in person environment. And as such, it did come off as a lack of rigor to some parents.
  • We were told to hold office hours or drop in hours to ensure we were available for students who needed more assistance.
  • We were told to make things mostly asynchronous so that students could find a schedule that worked best for their families during these times.
  • We spent hours beyond contract time trying to interact with students and families through systems that were not set up for this. We used Google Classroom because that is what our kids were used to, but Google Classroom did not yet have the capacity for online learning.
  • ​ As a teacher, I knew that none of this was on par with the quality of instruction I was able to deliver in person. But I could not fix it. I could not fix the fact that not all of my families could spend an entire school day on school work. I could not fix the fact that technology often failed. I couldn't not fix the fact that I was unable to prep my class in person for what online learning would look like. I could not fix the fact that I never had time to send my kids home with materials so that we could get through this distance learning thing with some sense of normal, real books in hands, paper and pencil... anything that wasn't online.
  • I had an hour one day to frantically gather all of my belongings and any learning materials I thought I might need for an undetermined amount of distance learning time. I had to go during a scheduled scattered block because it was not safe for me to be in the building at the same time as my colleagues.
  • It was the end of the year and teachers were desperately trying to figure out how to still continue on with the fun, end of the year projects and celebrations. None of this played out well on zoom. These lessons demanded group work, interaction, and a sense of togetherness. These are lessons kids knew about and were excited about the entire year.

              How did anyone expect all of that to go WELL in spring.

Of course it failed. But parents, I assure you, this isn't spring learning any more.

I see parent's now fleeing their public school for online schools or homeschooling options with an expectation of coming back to in person learning when things get safe but here are some realities to consider before you do that. The assumption is that spring failed because of teachers. Not because of the collective trauma we all experienced. Before you do that I urge you to consider the following.
  •  Online schools are scrambling to meet demand.
    •  In elementary, some online schools had one teacher for K-5 because that is all they needed before the pandemic. That met their need.
    • Online schools do not have the capacity to meet the demand they are seeing. They are scrambling to hire teachers- these teachers are NOT trained to teach online and will not have the proper training needed to be highly effective by the time school starts.
    • You will still need a heavy amount of support from your child in order to meet the demands of online schools. If that was what bothered you in spring, this option might not be best for you.
    • Most programs are asynchronous meaning not time interacting with teachers or peers. Your child will be expected to complete assignments independently online. A teacher will then check assignments.
    • There absolutely still will be problems caused by the social/emotional impacts of a pandemic.
  • Homeschool is demanding for parents.
    • If this is an option you have been considering for a long time- now seems like a good time to try it. I applaud all homeschooling parents. As a parent/educator... I could not do this option lol... Its just not for me. But if its for you do it!
    • You will be in charge of lesson planning, materials, and curriculum. You will have to pay for all of the above with your own money and time.
    • If you are choosing this option because of what spring looked like, consider why spring was what it was. It was not the failure of our teachers. It was a side effect of trauma.
    • There absolutely still will be problems caused by the social/emotional impacts of a pandemic.
  • Your neighborhood school has been preparing all summer for this.
    • Many districts are offering a variety of options. Online school, online from your neighborhood school, hybrid or in-person. If you choose any of their options, funding will stay with the school. If you want to one day go back to your public school, choose one of their options now.
    • Your school will provide materials, lesson plans, and curriculum to you for free.
    • Online learning through your school will NOT look like what it looked like in spring. We are all mentally and physically prepared for it this time. Kids now understand the routine. It will be more sychrounous (more time interacting with teacher and peers)
    • There absolutely still will be problems caused by the social/emotional impacts of a pandemic.
    • If come October you still hate everything about your districts plans, explore other options... just understand the reality of those options. And commit to whatever you choose for the rest of the year.
Understand the following if you want to someday go back to your neighborhood school. Staffing is being decided NOW based on enrollment. If you leave your public school now, know that teachers will be laid-off. While this is of course sad for teachers, I understand it is happening globally and is a reality every profession is facing. That is not my point. As a parent you need to understand that if you make a choice to leave public schools now, your school will lose funding and teachers so.... if you want to go back mid year, the funding does not reappear mid year nor will more teachers.  If you hate online school or homeschool after a month of trying and want to go back in September or October, just know that your school might no longer have the staffing to accommodate your child in the way they were able to before the pandemic. That is just not how school funding works.

Regardless of what you choose, know that you are making the best decision for your family. It is a hard, impossible decision to make. We are all doing our best and when this is all over... our kids will be okay.
0 Comments

Last Week of Distance Learning Activities

5/17/2020

1 Comment

 
Phew! We made it. This certainly was not ideal, I would be lying if I said it was. But I truly feel we made the best out of it all, and now it comes to an end!

Typically the last week of school involves fun and bonding so, I have been wracking my brain to make that happen for my kiddos online.

Digital Memory Book
We will be finishing up a digital memory book together, reflecting on all of the good times (even online!) that we had together. I do not have access to a printer, but the file can be printed for kids or parents who prefer. Currently, I edited this one from Teaching with a Mountain View.

Fun and Games
Every year, we end with some fun and games. I tried my hardest to convert some of that into an online experience and made this Google Slides Minute to Win It Activity using materials kids could find at home. Click the link to automatically make yourself a copy!
Picture
1 Comment

Distance Learning - The Quest to Bring Joy

4/5/2020

0 Comments

 
First I want to acknowledge that this is hard. We are living through collective trauma and all the emotions, good and bad, are valid. I want to make sure that my students have a safe place to discuss all of the hard bits of this while also having a space to experience and relate joy.

I've been working hard to take away the hardship from my kids and replace it with moments of joy. Whether it's something ridiculous like my insistence on coordinating my outfits to my Zoom background or my giddiness making a video with changing green screen backgrounds, I want this to be as fun as possible for my class.

So as we get comfortable idea with this distance learning being permanent for the rest of the year, I am creating activities to keep our beautiful classroom community as strong and connected as it was. I'll be updating throughout the day but here is one small simple and silly thing we are doing, daily themes! (Not new, I didn't invent it, but if you need a free, editable calendar, here you go!)
​
Picture
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Distance-Learning-Theme-Days-5414450
0 Comments

Distance Learning... Here We Go!

3/20/2020

0 Comments

 

Passion Projects

I am building this resource for my class and putting it out there for all of you to use, free of charge, because these times are crazy. Fair warning, I plan to put video instructions on it as well featuring yours truly. All of the directions reference Google Classroom and any materials needed are linked on the site.

http://project-genius.weebly.com/

​
Hope it helps!
0 Comments

Screen Free Activities for Family Fun

3/16/2020

0 Comments

 
What to do when stuck inside?
  1. Dance Party
  2. Build Away! Build the tallest tower you can using whatever is around. Use legos, cards, or whatever else is handy,.
  3. Boredom Buster: Design your own board games. Create the rules, the game board, and any cards you might need. Make it fun! Play as a family.
  4. Get moving! Design a simple (or complex) obstacle course. Have a blast moving through it!
  5. And... Action! Write a script for a play you can perform.
  6. Reuse It Art! Make a sculpture using items that may otherwise have been thrown away.
  7. Secret Code: Create your own secret code! Start by listing the letters of the alphabet. Under the letters, draw a symbol or picture. You can also find 27 different objects and use those as your code. In your new code, write letters to friends or family members! 
  8. Postcards to Send: Create a post card for you teacher (he or she misses you a ton!) On the front, draw a picture and on the back, send a sweet message.
  9. Build a Fort - Use it as a reading den, a secret hide out, or a place to relax!
  10. Bowling Time! Use empty bottles as the pins and any type of ball to bowl with. Aim for that strike!
  11. Rock Art: Find some great rocks outside and use them as a canvas! You can use these to decorate your back yard or leave them around the neighborhood for others to find and enjoy,
  12. Put on a Puppet Show! Recreate your favorite story with puppets. Make the puppets out of socks or any other materials you have laying around.
  13. Puzzle Time: Complete a puzzle or- for more fun- make your own puzzle! (If you have a Cricut or Silhouette at home, there are puzzle patterns you can cut after drawing your picture)
  14. Paper Airplane Challenge - Design the best paper airplane you can! Compete with each other to see whose will go farthest!
  15. Treasure Hunt - Hide some treasure and then make a treasure map to guide others to where you hid your treasure!
  16. Adventure Time - Set up a tent indoors or in your back yard and have your own fun adventure!
  17. The Gift of Giving - Create homemade gifts for the people you love!
  18. Memory Lane - Find some of photographs or memorable items and create a scrapbook!
  19. Family Book Club - Start a family book club!
  20. Mini Golf - create a mini golf course of your own. If you are indoors, use a ping pong ball :)
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

Unapologetic Self-Care

1/10/2020

0 Comments

 
For the first time in my fifteen year career I took a day off in January.
Not just a day off in January but a day off in January, on a Thursday after coming back from a two week winter break. I’m not sick, but I needed a day. And while new teacher me would have been horrified at the thought of taking a day off (in fact- new teacher me went to school with an actual kidney infection - true story) current me feels zero guilt over this one day off for seemingly no reason. Current me is proud that I honored myself and my needs with an entire day to my self. And I’m not sorry that I did it.

My life is hard- hard as in I am an ovarian cancer survivor who has an appointment with an oncologist on Wednesday because for the last six months I have been neglecting ovarian cancer symptoms because instead I have been grieving the the death of my son- hard. So, I took a legitimate mental health day because after the hell that is getting through the first Christmas after the death of a child I needed a day for self care and the holiday season doesn’t allow for such a thing.

So I took a day off.

If you’re reading this you’re probably thinking- well my God- of course you should take some time off. Why just a day?! Take the year.

But I don’t need to take a year. Because I know I work in a place that supports a teachers need to take a day, with no questions, with no judgement, whenever needed, because self care should come first.

So I took a day, instead of a year. Because amazing things happen when a teacher knows she is loved and supported.

My second year of teaching, I went to school with a slight fever and severe back pain. I didn’t want to call in sick because I knew I would get hell for it, so I sucked it up, took some DayQuil and went on to work.

By the end of the day I was shaking, laying at the back table in my room with a fever that had now peeked to 104.5. I called my boyfriend to pick me up and he immediately drove me to the Emergancy room. I was horrified, knowing I couldn’t write comprehensive sub plans, but pushed through the fever, chills, and shaking to email something that resembled plans to my office manager and then spent the night in the hospital.

The next day, I got a call from my principal.

“Your kids are misbehaving for your sub,” she scolded over the phone. Without pausing to hear why I was out she continued on, describing what the kids were doing, how not okay any of this was, but never once stopping to ask why I was out.

When I told her I was in the hospital with a kidney infection she simply replied, “Oh.” And then hung up the phone.

I spent the rest of that year looking for other jobs. Filling out applications to colleges for a second masters degree in anything but teaching. I spent hours researching and contemplating how I could get our. I dreaded going back and consistently questioned why I became a teacher. And then, a blessing in disguise of sorts, I was layed-off and rehires by a different district.

This new district respected teachers. They honored all of my years. Payed 10k more than the past district and, miraculously, supported me.

When I was first diagnosed with cancer, I was terrified to tell my new principal. For an entire week, I would attempt to walk to her office to tell her I would be out for a few weeks because of cancer surgery. And for weeks, I would get to the hallway leading to her door and then turn and run. I was absolutely terrified to tell her. Would she yell at me for needing time off? Would she fire me because I had cancer and the only thing worse than a person dying of cancer was apparently a class that had to have a sub?

Luckily, this principal knew better. She believed in self care. She believed in caring for her teachers. And she believed that a class with a substitute would survive. She supported every second of my journey, encouraged me to take as much time as I needed and assured me that it would be okay.

Teachers deserve support. This profession is wildly toxic in ways that I cannot comprehend. When life gets hard, teachers shouldn't have to even think about sub plans. And to all of the admin out there ensuring their staff knows they come first, thank you. The profession needs more of you.



0 Comments

Mindfulness in the Classroom

1/2/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
This is my current passion. I am a firm believer in putting all things social emotional well being in the classroom first. Academic success can't come without it. In my classroom, part of this means incorporating Mindfulness into our day.

What do I do?
  • I carve out a short 3-5 minute chunk out of my day. (For this class, it is always the first thing we do after lunch.)
  • Sometimes I will guide the breathing, but more often I use GoNoodle, Breathe Think Kids or Smiling Minds to guide the practice.
  • Thursdays our practice is a gratitude practice we call Thankful Thursdays. We do a short gratitude mindfulness breathing exercise and then reflect on one kind act someone at school did this week. We right it down on a leaf and add it to our Kindness Tree. (More on that here.)
  • Last year, my kids loved our mindfulness exercises immediately. This year it took some time 😂 But I kept with it and it was so worth it.
  • I do not make this mandatory. Kids have a choice to join in, or take a three minute quiet break in their desk. Inevitably, the entire class joins in but I always give the choice.

Why Mindfulness? Mindfulness is the practice of focusing on the here and now. It integrates breathing techniques to help calm the body and mind while increasing self awareness, self regulation and self calming skills. Mindfullness practices have been proven to increase a student's ability to thrive both academically and socially.

I have always incorporated some piece of mindfulness into my day. Early in my career that meant adding stretching and breathing techniques into my P.E. block. However, it wasn't until I experienced my own personal life trauma that I really began to look into mindfulness activities and then saw the immeasurable value of using mindfulness to strengthen my classroom community.  To be honest, part of the consistent implementation of mindfulness was giving myself the few minutes a day to stop, breathe and live in the present moment. But the impact it has had on my class is beyond words. As we continued with the practice as a class, I noticed some significant changes. I saw that this small practice was truly fostering student confidence and independence while also helping my class build empathy and the ability to work together as a team.


Going into 2020, I am excited to deepen this practice. Understanding that kids cannot attend to learning when they are feeling stressed or overwhelmed, I wanted to put more into this social emotional wellness journey. In addition to my current mindfullness activities, I wrote a DonorsChoose grant. The grant was fully funded in December (Hurray!) And I cannot wait to get back and get started with the materials.

The materials in this grant include mindfulness games as well as other social emotional support tools. I hope to create a peace corner in my room where students can go when they need a quiet place to destress and calm down. Many of the sensory items included in this project will give students the tools and the space to take short breaks when needed to refocus their attention and energy.

**If you are looking to incorporate more mindfullness in your classroom, check out the recourses on GoNoodle, Breathe Think Kids and Smiling Minds. Also, feel free to check out my DonorsChoose grant for inspiration!

​
0 Comments

Reflections and Intentions for 2020

1/2/2020

0 Comments

 
I want to start the year off on a positive note, helping my kids reflect on the accomplishments they have made so far this year while also setting new intentions and goals for the rest of the year to come. I am so proud of everything my students have done so far, and am pumped to get back into the swing of things on Monday. This is what I will be doing with my class first thing Monday morning. Enjoy, Happy New Year, and enjoy those first crazy days back at school! Click the image below to download.
Picture
0 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>
    View my profile on LinkedIn

    Categories

    All
    Art
    Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    Back To School
    Beginning Of The Year
    California History
    Classroom Economy
    Classroom Managment
    Colorado History
    Crafts
    Earth Day
    Earth Science
    End Of The Year
    Holiday
    Language Arts
    Life Science
    Long Term Planner
    Maternity Leave
    Math
    Notes To Students
    Novels
    Posters
    Reading
    Robotics
    Science
    Science Of Reading
    Science Sundays
    State Testing
    Teachers As Professionals
    Travel

    Archives

    July 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    October 2023
    February 2021
    December 2020
    July 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    July 2019
    March 2019
    December 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    August 2017
    March 2017
    January 2016
    August 2015
    January 2014
    November 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    January 2013

    RSS Feed

     

    "The best teachers are those who show you where to look, but don't tell you what to see." - Alexandra K. Trenfor

Company

About
The Company
Menu

Support

Contact
FAQ
Terms of Use
© COPYRIGHT 2012. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.