aha moment, being a teacher, being me, MIEExpert15, teachers

If My Mother Had Listened to My Teacher

If my mother had listened to my teacher she would have realized what a horrible child I was.  How I should be kept away from others.  How I should not be with children my own age because I would corrupt them.  How I was doomed to live a life of solitude because no one was safe around me.

She didn’t.

If my mother had listened to my teacher she would have realized how little imagination I had except for the morose.  That my stories lacked depth, that my personality was dull.  That writing was not my strength but something I could maybe get through if I just understood what it meant to follow the rules a bit more.

She didn’t.

If my mother had listened to my teacher she would have realized that I was far too outspoken.  That I never put my hand down and I needed to learn to be silent.  That yes having an opinion was great but listening was better.  That it didn’t always pay off to fight for what you believed in if it meant disrupting the peace.

She didn’t.

If my mother had listened to my teacher she would have realized that there was something wrong with me.  That I was special but not in a good way.  That I may be smart but I didn’t use it for anything good.  That other children couldn’t learn from me.  That I needed to hide what I knew so that others wouldn’t find me odd.

She didn’t.

If my mother had listened to my teacher she would have realized that I had spunk.  That I had nerve.  That I had worth.  She would have realized that I was creative, that I was a hard worker even if I couldn’t get something.  That I was smart.  That I had friends, that I could be a leader.  That although I was not quite the person I wanted to be yet, that some day I would get there.

She did, because she already knew those things.  I was the one that didn’t.

There are so many things that we tell parents every day, what will be the things that they choose not to listen to?  What will be the things that a child carries with them the rest of their life?

I am a passionate teacher in Oregon, Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4th, 5th, and 7th grade.  Proud techy geek, and mass consumer of incredible books. Creator of the Global Read Aloud Project, Co-founder of EdCamp MadWI, and believer in all children. I have no awards or accolades except for the lightbulbs that go off in my students’ heads every day.  First book “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students” can be purchased now.   Second book“Empowered Schools, Empowered Students – Creating Connected and Invested Learners” is out now from Corwin Press.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

being a teacher, MIEExpert15, student choice, student driven

Feb. 5th Show the World What the Life of A Student Looks Like – #Studentlife

As connected educators, we do a lot of sharing what our days look like and in extension the day of our students, yet how much of what we share truly gives an entire picture of what it means to be a student these days?  After reading Grant Wiggins’ blog that detailed what an ed-coach found after she followed two high school students around, I cannot help but wonder if we really know what it feels like for our students?  If we really understand what a full day looks like for them?  And more importantly what we possibly can change to make their days better.  So inspired by the hashtag #principalsday that occurred on Twitter, I think it is time we do the same for the students.

Details

On February 5th, I invite students across the world to share pictures from their regular day using the hashtag #studentlife.  Students (or teachers if students are too young) can use Twitter, Instagram, or whatever social network site they choose to share these slices of their life.  What I hope for is a wide variety of images with or without commentary that will allow us educators to see what happens in our students’ days, not just what we think happens.  If you feel like it, you can also have students do this before February 5th and compile their answers into something that can be shared.  This is what I will do using our blogs.

How can you participate?

Share this challenge with your students and invite them to join, remind them to use the hashtag #studentlife.

Add your information in the form below  or in a comment so that I can share your students’ slices with the rest of the world.

Tune in on February 5th through Twitter or Instagram to hopefully see what our students’ days look like.

Help me spread the word on this please, I think it could be really powerful for all of us to see what students really go through in a day in our schools.

being a teacher, education, ideas, MIEExpert15, Passion, writing

5 + 1 Simple Ideas to Make Writing Fun Again

Over and over their comments come.

“…I hate writing…”

“…Please don’t make me write…”

“…Writing is soooo boring…”

And with each comment, I am grateful for my 7th graders honesty and also very, very challenged.  How do you make writing fun again when all of the joy has disappeared for some?  How do you make writing something students want to do, or at the very least don’t hate, when you have a curriculum to get through?  How do we continue to inspire students to become writers, even when facing so many old writing demons?  Two weeks off have given me some time to think, so here is what I have realized.

  1. Writing cannot be for me.  Writing has to be personal and for an audience.  Not a made up one, although they can come in handy, but an actual real live audience that will give feedback on the writing.  Whether it is for a class across the hallway, the local paper, or any connection you can make; establish a purpose and then have that audience give feedback.  My students’ writing grew immensely when they knew they were writing for “real” kindergarten and first grade classrooms.  This also is why we blog, they know people are reading their writing.
  2. It is okay if they don’t write.  I forget that I only write when I am inspired and how hard writing is when it is “on demand.”  Yet, on demand writing is what we ask students to do every single day and we expect it to be great writing!   Sometimes, we just need time to think, to ponder, to reflect, to doodle, to stare into nothing.  Not every day, because yes there are still things to cover, but we seem to have forgotten that a lot of writing happens in our head before anything is even written down.  So allow students to think, help them along if they are stuck, allow them conversations and to look outside of themselves for inspiration.  Yes, this takes time away from covering curriculum but writing needs to be less forced and more organic.
  3. Know when to publish, rather than revise.  We get to so caught up in having students continually revise that sometimes we forget to just let a piece go.  Even if it is not perfect.  Even if it is not finished.  Too often we force students to revise, edit, and revise some more so that we can see their best writing for every single piece, yet writers don’t do that.  They pursue their best piece, abandon others, and sometimes circle back.  We have to offer students an opportunity to decide when something is finished and then let it stand by itself.  Even if that means publishing a blog that is not their best writing, even if it means showing me unfinished work.
  4. Allow for 5 minutes of free write.  I plan on incorporating 5 minutes of free write into my tight 45 minute schedule.  Just as I devote 10 minutes to read independently, I have to devote time for them to just create, think, and possibly write something.  Whether it is a story, a journal, a doodle, a poem, whatever it is, they need the time to get into writing mode.  This will not be graded, nor will it be read by me most days.
  5. Enough with the grades.  I am not a fan of letter grades or even scores when it comes to all writing.  Yes, there is a place for teaching writing through final feedback, but we tend to get so grade heavy that students can’t see any of the progress they have made, nor the feedback they are receiving.  As one of my colleagues told me regarding her writing experience in high school, “…There was so much red pen on my papers when I got them back, I just threw them away without reading any of it.”  That’s what an overabundance of grades and feedback can do.  Instead, have students pick a piece they want graded and have them explain why this represents them as a writer.  Our lens should be on providing specific and short feedback that can boost their writing skills, not continually grading their practice writing.

And yes, as always there is a plus one…

      6.  Use different types of writing tools.  This idea is stolen right form Kindergarten, still has merit with our older                    students.   Why not have them write on post-its, big posters, or anything else that can take some writing?  Why not                bring out the markers?  The sparkly pen?  The paints?  We get so confined in what constitutes writing that we forget to          have fun with it, and while this is a superficial fix that will lose its luster, it can still inject the beginning push for writing to          be viewed as fun again.

On Monday, I plan on having students critique my ideas.  They are, after all, for their educational benefit.  I will share what they say but in the mean time, I would love to hear from you; what has brought back life in your writing with students?

I am a passionate teacher in Oregon, Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4th, 5th, and 7th grade.  Proud techy geek, and mass consumer of incredible books. Creator of the Global Read Aloud Project, Co-founder of EdCamp MadWI, and believer in all children. I have no awards or accolades except for the lightbulbs that go off in my students’ heads every day.  First book “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students” can be purchased now.   Second book“Empowered Schools, Empowered Students – Creating Connected and Invested Learners” is out now from Corwin Press.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

advice, being me, MIEExpert15, new year, Passion, student voice

If You Could Change Just One Thing

“So if you have one piece of advice for anyone looking to change the way they teach, what would it be?”

I cannot count how many times I have been asked this important question or the myriad of ways.  In podcasts, webinars, face to face, workshops, and even in lunch time conversations.  What would you change?  What would you do?  What should we do?

It makes sense really.  There is so much we could change, there is so much we could do. Yet, in the end if you only have energy for one change.  If you only have space for one thing.  Make it this…

Ask the students.

There you have it.  The one thing I say every time I am asked.  The one thing I wish we all did more of.

Ask the students what they want changed.

Ask the students what they love.

Ask the students how they want to learn.

Ask the students about your room set up.

Ask the students what their grade should be.

Ask the students if they have a voice, and if not, give them one.

Ask the students what they want to learn.

Ask the students why they stopped loving something.

Ask the students about their lives.

Ask the students what they hate.

Ask the students how they feel about you.

Ask the students and then listen to their answers.

Ask them and change your teaching.

If you do one thing in the new year, let this be it.  One question is all it takes.  One moment is all you need.

I am a passionate teacher in Oregon, Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4th, 5th, and 7th grade.  Proud techy geek, and mass consumer of incredible books. Creator of the Global Read Aloud Project, Co-founder of EdCamp MadWI, and believer in all children. I have no awards or accolades except for the lightbulbs that go off in my students’ heads every day.  First book “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students” can be purchased now from Powerful Learning Press.   Second book“Empowered Schools, Empowered Students – Creating Connected and Invested Learners” is out now from Corwin Press.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

being me, blogging, MIEExpert15, technology

A Few Nontraditional Tips For Starting Your Own Blogging Journey

image from icanread

4 1/2 years.  That’s how long I have been spreading my random thoughts on the internet.  What started out as a way for me to simply get things out of my mind, has grown to be an integral part of me.  I never knew I would be a blogger.  With that title comes many things; access to a vast network of people who know so much more than me, heartfelt discussions, emotional reflection, and even the occasional kick in the stomach when someone goes to the dark side on one of my posts.  Yet I didn’t set out to blog, I merely started out wanting to write.  So if you have been looking to start a blog, a few maybe not so traditional tips from me to you.

  • Start your blogging journey for yourself.  Don’t think of the end game or where you would like your blog to go, think of what you would like it to do for you right now.  I wanted a place to reflect out loud, I didn’t think anyone would read it, and that has made the biggest difference.
  • Don’t write for an audience, yet.  I notice that when I start thinking of who may read a post my writing gets jilted and jagged.  I start to change my voice to appease the imaginary eyes.  So write for yourself, keep readability in mind, and don’t get hung up on whether people or not will read it.
  • Don’t share just the good.  The internet is filled with amazing, and yet our classrooms are filled with attempts.  So share the attempts, share the magnificent, share the catastrophes.  Be as real online as you are in person, so if anyone who reads your blog comes to your class they wont wonder what happened.
  • Get to the point.  I can get long winded too, but I try to edit myself.  Blogs are meant to be quick doses of reflection, not papers of thought.  Get to the point, stick to the point, and then find an image that underlines the point.  Be brief and powerful.
  • Don’t map it out.  I never knew what I was going to blog about in the future, I still don’t.  And while some bloggers are incredibly good at sticking to an area, don’t make it too narrow.  Your blog should allow you to grow as a person and if you box its focus in too much, you will hinder your own growth.
  • Change the world with kindness.  I wish I had thought of this when I first started, I was much more determined in my message and much more one-sided.  Now I try to push change with kindness.  No one wants to hear how wrong they are or how awful what they are doing is, so be nice.
  • Keep your purpose in check.  I think when we start to blog to get something, whether it be followers, comments, or even more work, it shows.  And it shows it an icky, not so good kind of way. I have been guilty of this myself and I have later cringed at my posts.  Don’t put yourself in cringe worthy positions, write from the heart, write it out, don’t write for terrible purposes.
  • Be thankful.  I don’t expect anyone to read this blog, still.  So for every person who reaches out to me, I try to give my thanks, sometimes more successfully than others.  Blogging is something I do for me but the fact that others find it helpful as well never ceases to amaze me.  Stay humble, stay thankful, don’t ever take others times for granted.
  • Create your own path.  Whether you only blog when you are inspired (yup) or blog on a set schedule, know that there is not a right way to blog.  Make it your own, make it work for you, and just figure it out.

However you start or continue your blogging journey make it meaningful to you. Make it something you are thankful for.  Don’t wait for the world to acknowledge your genius, even if no one reads your blog, be proud.  And if you think I should discover your blog, please leave me a link to it in the comments.  I would love to add more inspiration to my life.

I am a passionate teacher in Oregon, Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4th, 5th, and 7th grade.  Proud techy geek, and mass consumer of incredible books. Creator of the Global Read Aloud Project, Co-founder of EdCamp MadWI, and believer in all children. I have no awards or accolades except for the lightbulbs that go off in my students’ heads every day.  First book “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students” can be purchased now from Powerful Learning Press.   Second book“Empowered Schools, Empowered Students – Creating Connected and Invested Learners” is out now from Corwin Press.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

being a teacher, MIEExpert15, Passion, projects, student choice

Our Epic Nonfiction Project

I don’t share specific lessons on here often but this time I have to because this one has just made the last 6 weeks, yes 6 weeks, fly by.  Not just for me either, most of my students that reported on their survey that they hate writing but love this project.  So without further ado, let me tell you all about our rather epic nonfiction picture book project.

The goal of the project is rather simple; create a 30 to 50 page nonfiction picture book meant for a K or 1st grade audience on anything you wish.  Throughout this project we have been able to successfully marry tech tools with writing, as well as using Skype, Twitter and other interactive tools.

Why this project?  Because within it we have been able to work on:

  • How to take organized notes in a way that works for them.
  • How to write a paragraph and all of the myriads of lessons that are attached to that.
  • Grammar!  Spelling!  Punctuation!
  • How to find legal images.
  • How to cite sources, including images, books, and websites.
  • How to uncover reliable sources (yes, there is a place for Wikipedia in our research).
  • How to search the internet better.
  • How to conduct market research using Skype to ask K or 1st grade classrooms what they want to read and how they want to read it.
  • How to rewrite information in our words.
  • How to do design and layout on a page to make it inviting.
  • How to create good questions.
  • Exploring our own interests.
  • How to write assessment rubrics.

I had a hunch that it would be a success, but I didn’t know how much.  Yet the conversations that have happened within our room have been incredible.  The hush that falls over the room when 26 students are all intently researching, writing, and quietly conferring with me or friends have been amazing to witness.  They get it.  They know what their purpose is.  They are writing an authentic piece for an authentic audience who not only is guiding them forward but will also be providing feedback once it is complete.

So a few details about the project:

  • This is a 6 week long project, anchored by a 10 or so minute mini-lessons every day and then work time the rest of class.
  • Mini-lessons have centered around how to take notes ( I showed them 3 different ways), how to research well, how to write paragraphs, how to rewrite information, and anything else we have had to address.
  • Students were able to ask questions to K and 1st grade classrooms via Skype to do market research, they are also asked to do a live interview with a child ages 5, 6, or 7 and incorporate that feedback into their project.
  • I reached out through Twitter and Edmodo to find classrooms that will assess the final product, they are asked to fill out this Google form with their feedback.
  • Students created their books in Google Presentations for easy access for all (we checked out Chromebooks), as well as easy design and layout.
  • To see all of my handouts and resources, go to my classroom’s English Resource Page where all the nuts and bolts can be found.

Why have we loved it so much?

  • Using Skype in a meaningful way to interview the audience we are writing for got the students on-board and excited right away.
  • Audience became an ongoing conversation and what we kept in the back of our mind throughout the process.
  • It allowed me to really dig in with each student through mini-conferences.
  • I was able to cover basic grammar over and over without the students finding it repetitive.
  • Students were in charge of their project starting with the choice of their topic to what they would write about.
  • It is an authentic project, not just being written for me.
  • Plagiarism is easily circumvented because students have to simplify the language of their research.
  • We were able to meaningfully collaborate between English and their Tech Tools class.
  • Students have been able to finish the project within English class if they spent their time wisely.
  • We were able to delve into nonfiction in an exciting way, students sometimes hate nonfiction because they find it boring, they forget how much of our life is surrounded by nonfiction and how much fun it can be.
  • And yes, it covers 4 of the 10 standards I have to cover which should never be the only reason we do something but is still a reality of my day-to-day.

Tomorrow they hand in their projects.  They will present by having them run on Chromebooks and students doing a gallery walk, that way we can show off all of them within our 45 minutes.  Then students will self-reflect as always and I will spend a lot of winter break poring over their hard work and assessing them.  I can’t wait.

Thank you Corinne for allowing me to share your finished project

 

 

I am a passionate teacher in Oregon, Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4th, 5th, and 7th grade.  Proud techy geek, and mass consumer of incredible books. Creator of the Global Read Aloud Project, Co-founder of EdCamp MadWI, and believer in all children. I have no awards or accolades except for the lightbulbs that go off in my students’ heads every day.  First book “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students” can be purchased now from Powerful Learning Press.   Second book“Empowered Schools, Empowered Students – Creating Connected and Invested Learners” is out now from Corwin Press.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.