blogging, new year, Student-centered

My Kidblog Settings for Optimal Global Collaboration

When I moved this blog to WordPress some posts did not survive, so in an effort to move some of my favorite posts with me, I will be republishing them here.  

Those who have followed this blog for a while or have found it because you are searching for student blogging resources, know how deeply passionate I am about student blogging and global collaboration.  I am therefore often asked what my settings are for Kidblog and for my students’ use of the site so I thought I would share these.  I have found these settings to offer the safety needed for my students while still allowing them and the world to have a dialogue.

Posts Settings:

 

I find it incredibly important that anyone can read our posts and so far my school district has agreed.  I do, however, give parents a way to opt their students out of blogging if they do not feel comfortable with their child doing it since it is so public.  However, no student has ever been opted out.  Safety is my main concern, as well as how these students represent themselves, so I do moderate all posts before they are published.  I do not get an email but simply check every day.  My students blog too much for me to be notified each time one of them writes a new post.

Comments Settings:

Again, we do  not have password to leave comments on our site nor do you have to be an approved member.  We blog to start conversations with others around the world and as long as I am moderating all comments, I feel we can do it safely.  Every once in a while do I need to delete a comment before a student sees it but mostly because it is a spam one or a duplicate one.  In the four years I have blogged with students, I think we have had 2 insensitive comments left.  I deleted them – no harm done.

 

Finally, Student Settings:

 

 This is where Kidblog keeps proving its brilliance and relevance; this year they added that students could edit their own profiles, thus customizing it to fit their needs.  This has been a huge hit for my students because they feel more in control of their blog and the image they are presenting to the world.  I also like that they can change their password since this is an important computer skill for them to be aware of.  I can still access all of their accounts without knowing their password.

So there you have it, our settings for our classroom student blog, I hope it was helpful, as always if you have any questions please don’t hesitate to ask.  And no, I am not a paid spokesperson for Kidblog; I just love their blogging platform.
I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

Be the change, blogging, new year, Student-centered

6 + 1 Steps to Better Student Blogging

image from icanread

When I moved this blog to WordPress some posts did not survive, so in an effort to move some of my favorite posts with me, I will be republishing them here.  This post appeared in September, 2012.

When I started blogging with my students, I had no idea what I was doing.  I knew I wanted them to write, I knew I wanted them to connect, and I knew I wanted them to reflect openly on many issues and not just blog their writing assignments.  Sometimes their blogs blew me away and other times I wanted to encourage them to hit delete rather than publish.  Over the years as I have seen our blogging reach a wider audience, we have fine-tuned what it means to blog and it is something that I continue to work on with every batch of new students.  So how can you take your blogging from just writing to actual global collaboration and reflection, well, these tips may help.

  1. Be a blogger yourself!  I show this blog to my students and we discuss what I do to keep an ongoing dialogue going.  We discuss what my writing looks like and who I am writing for.  The students notice the care I take with my posts and also that I (usually) comment back.  Because I am dedicated to my own blog, I know how much work it is and also how fulfilling it is.  Why would you ever ask students to bare their souls if you haven’t bared your own?
  2. Make it authentic.  Yes, I have students write about curriculum once in a while, but rarely is just a typed up version of something they already wrote.  So if you want them to blog about an in-class topic such as science, how about making them keep a science inquiry diary where they discuss and reflect on their discoveries and answer questions from others?
  3. Discuss the difference.  We tend to assume that students know the difference between blogging and writing but they usually don’t.  So make a chart, a list, a poster, something and use the students’ own language to discuss the similarities and differences.  Post it and bring it up again, particularly if you see students’ writing not developing the way it should.
  4. Create expectations.  Again, ask the students; what should a great blog post look like?  Then hold them to it.  I have certain requirements the students have to follow and they also add their own to them, after all, this is being published to the world.  While I would not have my students write a rough draft and then type that up, I believe we can hold them to a certain standard when it comes to their blogging.  It should be punctuated correctly, spelled mostly correctly, and it should be a blog post, not just a couple of lines.
  5. Make the time for it.  And keep it!  I have an urge to blog most days and I do wait until inspiration strikes, however, that takes training in a sense.  I love to blog and I love the conversations that follow blog posts, but this is something I have grown accustomed to.  I didn’t start out that way and neither do most of my students.  So dedicate class time to blog, discuss their blogs, and celebrate the comments the students get.  Make it a big deal because it is!  When we grow complacent about our student blogs, they lose their deeper meaning and students can take the global connections aspect for granted.  The blog then becomes just another forced writing assignment.  So make them a big deal and keep them that way.
  6. Prepare, Discuss, and Reflect.  Before you start blogging, do all of the necessary preparation.  Then while you blog discuss how it is going, fine-tune the expectations, and maintain a blogging presence in the classroom.  Reflect once in a while; how is the blogging going?  Should we take a break?  Have students run the discussion, it is there hearts and minds on the line, not yours.
  7. Ask if they want to.  This extra step may sound crazy, after all, we are the teachers.  but some kids don’t want the whole world to see their writing even if their parents are okay with it.  So ask students how they feel about starting this journey and respect if students don’t want their work published.  I sometimes had students wirte a blog post just to me and then told me not to publish it, this always led to great discussions about the post and their feelings.

If you need more help, please visit my blogging resource page.  I even have a letter for parents on blogs that you can make your own.  But in the end, if you do student blogging right, it may just turn into one of the most rewarding experiences for the students and for you.  And even if you don’t do it right, it is never too late to fix it.  Happy blogging!

I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

 

Be the change, being me, new year

How About Intentional Acts of Niceness?

image from icanread

In the past few months, niceness seems to have surrounded my family and I.  Not just the every day, that was nice sort of thing, like someone holding a door.  A student picking up a dropped pencil.  No, instead intentional acts of niceness where people doing it had to actually go out of their way to be nice.  And you know what?  I have noticed.  And I am inspired.

I try to be a nice person to everyone I meet.  (There are some people who I will never be nice to if I meet them again but that list is thankfully short and probably boring.)  I teach my kids their manners in both Danish and English.  I teach them to ask if they can help, hold doors, pick up dropped items, ask interested questions when in conversations and so forth – yes the three young ones think I am just blabbering when I teach, but still…  But I don’t think I go out of my way to be nice.  I don’t think I plan nice things to do for others.  Not like what has happened to me lately.  Take my new teammate Kelly (and in fact all of my new teammates), she has gone out of her way to make me feel welcome, included, and safe.  She has answered all of my stupid questions with grace.  She even took the time to set up an entire scheduled day for me to shadow the team.  She didn’t have to do that, but the fact that she did and still continues to go out of her way, means more than she will ever know.  Or Erin, a friend who I seem to grow closer to every day, who took the time to mail me a surprise gift just because.  It floored me.  When was the last time I mailed someone something?  Or our neighbor who dropped off a homemade cake the other day, just because she felt like it.  Who does that anymore?

So my pledge is to plan intentional acts of niceness.  To go out of my way to do nice things for others.  Not because I need some sort of karmic reward, but because of the profound effect it has had on me.  I have felt thought of by others, what a powerful feeling that is.

So join me.  Plan something.  Take a step out of your normal routine that will make someone else happy.  Spend some of your time creating happiness.  Teach others to do the same.  Think of what we can start?  I know I start tonight, will you join me?

I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

Be the change, being me, new year, rewards

Confessions of a Former Rewards Addict

When I moved this blog to WordPress some posts did not survive, so in an effort to move some of my favorite posts with me, I will be republishing them here.  This one was from 2010, as I first started my in my no rewards classroom.

I admit it.  Gold stars, super duper stickers, sticks, names on the board; I have done it all.  And when one reward system failed, another one took over.  Never one to sit and reflect that perhaps it was the system that was faulty and not just that the students grew tired of it.  After all, that carrot at the end of the stck was essential to my teaching success.  Those stickers meant I cared.  That Awesome board where A+ work was proudly displayed gave students something to strive for.  That certificate if you got an A on your math test meant that you were smart and that other students should look up to you.  Right?  Wrong again.

Oh, I thought I was clever.  I thought I knew how to motivate students and after all, what could a little reward do that would possibly hurt the child?  Well, after reading Alfie Kohn’s book “Punished by Rewards,” I realize just how wrong I have been.  Those papers on the awesome board did nothing to improve unity in my room.  Instead they acted as the great divide, highlighting the students that could from those that could not.  Those stickers I doled out for anything above 90%; not a cheerful way to celebrate achievement, but rather a glaring marker showing which students did the best in the room.  Those great “You did it” award certificates stapled to their math tests, not great posters of pride but instantaneous feedback on where a students falls within the grade hierarchy.  And yes, the students knew exactly where they fell within the classroom.

So this year I am throwing it all out.  Well, most of it anyway, I do like those stickers and will use them for good rather than evil.  And I am petrified.  After all, this is how I was taught to teach.  If a student does something good they should be rewarded and nothing says “Great job! I can tell you worked so hard” better than a smiley face sticker.  Except when it doesn’t.   A smiley face sticker says; “If you work hard, you will get a smiley face sticker.”  And when in life does that ever happen?  This year, I plan on talking to my students even more.  Telling them what was great, asking them what they thought was great and then peeling apart things that didn’t quite get there and figure out what went wrong.  We shall learn from our supposed mistakes, those will be our rewards.

So while I am excited for this new no-reward agenda, I do shudder a little bit at the implication it has.  No longer will I be the cool teacher with the Awesome board, the one you get to have pizza with if your stick doesn’t get moved, the one that doles out classroom parties as if they were clean socks.  Instead, I will be the one that shouts the praise the loudest to every kid.  The one that talks to all my students and highlights all the things they did right.  The one that creates more work for herself because talking rather than just placing a sticker takes more time, more effort, more thought.  And I can’t wait.  Will you join me?

H/T to this post from George Couros “The Impact of Awards

I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

being a teacher, being me, new year, reflection

I Am Afraid

image from etsy

I have been to my new classroom twice this summer.  Twice.  This coming from the queen of being in the classroom over the summer.  So while I could chalk up my lack of visits up to the fact that I have been super sick for the past 8 days, or that I have moved to a new house, that I am further away, or that I having too much fun with my kids (which I kind of am), none of those reasons would be true.  The real reason is that I don’t know what to do there.  I am not sure where to start.  I can’t get the vibe of my room and I don’t know where to start.

So imagine how my incoming 7th grade students will feel?

Yet, the fact that I am recognizing this leaves me hope.  That means that those unfamiliar cabinets, filled with books I am not sure what to do with, has my attention.  That the desks (urgh desks) will need to be rearranged somehow.  That my own 3 teacher desks can be downsized.  That I can unpack my 100’s of books onto my new bookshelves.  That I can go garage saleing for more shelves because 3 bookshelves will not contain my collection of books.

And yet, that’s not really it either.  It is not the things that are stopping me.  It is the newness.  It is the unknown.  It is the feeling of being in over my head not sure where I can rest my feet, and yes, I am afraid.  I knew how to do elementary.  I knew how to do elementary well.  I knew what to do with 9 and 10 year olds.  But 12 and 13 year olds?  Yup, they terrify me .  And even though I am okay with that, there is just so much new that I don’t quite know where to begin.  As a 6th year teacher you would think I would remember what it feels like to be a new teacher, apparently I don’t.

So I will allow myself to be terrified a few days more.  I will allow my mind to procrastinate planning for a new year a few more days.  I will pretend that my heart doesn’t itch to unleash all of my books and dreams onto my new room.  I will pretend that my thoughts aren’t starting to think of the new adventures ahead.  I will pretend I did not just order new books specifically with our first unit in mind.  I will confront my fear and then chip away at it.  I will take my own advice and plant a seed of change.  I will allow myself baby-steps into the room, into the change, into the new me that doesn’t seem to have an identity anymore.  No longer a 5th grade teacher, no longer me.  I will continue to be afraid but I will start to reach for hope.  I will reach for the new me that really is just me but changed.  That really is me but just with a new title.

I will allow myself to be afraid but I will not let it stop me anymore.  The clock is ticking, the days are slipping, and my new students are waiting.

I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.

 

 

being a teacher, being me, classroom management, new year, punishment, Uncategorized

So How Do You Manage Your Classroom When You Don’t Punish?

image from etsy

 

Following the debate over public behavior charts, many people wondered what they could do in its place to still keep students engaged and on track?  I referred to a few posts but then realized that I did not have just one post that laid out exactly what I do in my own room, tips and ideas are in many different places.  And then I realized, I don’t really have one system because my approach changes every year depending on the needs of the students and the type of community we strive to make.  And yet, there are threads that run through every year with my students of what we do.

  • I don’t set the rules.  The students know how to do school, in fact, by 5th grade they are experts at it.  So instead of me telling them what the rules of the room is, I ask them to make them.  They discuss expectations in their table groups and then share with the class.  Nothing is written down on paper but instead we get a feel for what type of classroom we want.
  • We create a vision.  Every year, I ask the students to create a vision of the room.  Sometimes a theme emerges and other times it is just our hopes and dreams.  This is one of the first steps in our community building.
  • We do community building all year.  Even on the last day of school we are trying to create family, and so we do challenges throughout the year, we have “huddles” (meetings led by me or students), we discuss how our room is doing, we change our rules, we set up new expectations, we sometimes even call people out.  Building community is not a beginning of the year thing, it is an all the time thing.
  • We do challenges together.  The very first day we do a bloxes challenge simply so I can get the students working together, this has to do with seeing them grow together and how they function without my guidance.  I love what this simple challenge shows me about the students.
  • When a problem arises, I consider my option before speaking.  Rather than call out a student for misbehaving I often pull them aside, ask them to leave the room to think about it, or do a quick check in.  Humor also gets me far in many situations.
  • When a larger problem arises, I stop if I can.  Often when a students is very, very angry, it needs my intervention or if more than one student is involved.  There is a root to the anger and something needs to be done to uncover it.  While it is very hard to stop what you are doing if you are the one passing out the information, often my students are engaged in a self-driven project r investigation.  This therefore frees me up to discuss/deescalate situations.  Not always, but often.
  • Engagement matters.  If my students are engaged, they misbehave less.  So if behaviors seem to be out of control it is often because of what we are doing.  If we need to stop, reevaluate, and re-think whatever we are doing then we do just that.  Yes, there is curriculum we need to do, but there are many ways to get through it.
  • I ask the students point blank what is going on.  I used to assume I knew why a child was misbehaving, now I ask them instead.  If its because they are bored, I dig deeper.  If it because of some other reason, we find the time to figure it out, even if it means for now they sit and take a breather for a bit.
  • I ask the students how they think their day is going.  If a child seems off, I can guarantee I am not the only one that notices.  That child, more often than not, is acutely aware of it as well.  So why not take this opportunity to build a deeper relationship?  If a child is acting out, there is a reason, we have to try to find the time to work with them and uncover it.
  • I look for the good.  I used to get so fixated on all of the things that were going wrong in the room, all of the “naughty” things a child kept doing that I forgot to see all of the good.  I now remind myself to look at the moments of kindness, the hard work, the laughter and learning that happens within a room on a daily basis.  I hold that up higher in my mind than the bad.  Sometimes it is all about mindset.
  • Every day is a new day.  Rather than label my students, I try to wipe the slate clean every day (of course, this is easier said than done).  Just like I want a new chance every day, I afford that to my students as well.
  • There are consequences, but they make more sense.  When I tell people I don’t punish they assume kids get away with whatever they want in our room, but that is not it at all.  There are consequences yes, but they are not meant to publicly shame a child, but rather to have them reflect and work on their behavior.  This can certainly still be viewed as punishment in the eyes of the child, but I do try to have a growth opportunity for them instead of just a  one action fits all solution.

In the end, I believe student motivation is a huge part of why students behave in a certain way in our rooms.  In fact, so much so, that I wrote about it in my book, “Passionate Learners – Giving Our Classrooms Back to Our Students.”  I therefore leave you with an excerpt from the book to help you peek into my brain some more.

Not punishing students does not mean letting things slide or letting them walk all over you. It simply means handling situations calmly and figuring out the “why” behind the behavior and then working on that rather than enforcing a set of rules. How you react changes from situation to situation — something that’s much more difficult to do when you have cut rules into stone the first week of school.

Much of misbehavior comes from students’ perception of control within the classroom. That perception also affects their intrinsic motivation for wanting to be successful participants. A problem with punishment and reward is that it often only motivates in the short term. And yet many teachers do not know how else to get students to behave. I certainly was not consistently successful until I realized that the problem wasn’t the students, it was more often the curriculum and how I taught it. Meaning, it was really me. While I may not be the one who decides what to teach, I am most certainly the one who decides HOW to teach it. If I thought that mostly lecturing (which even put me to sleep in

college) was going to capture the imaginations of 9-year olds, then I was in the wrong job. So I began to think and learn a lot more about motivating learners.

My lessons in motivation

Here is what I know about motivation from shifting my own teaching practice:

  • Choice matters. When students choose not just what they will do for a project but also what they would like to learn about (within some boundaries), you get buy-in. This continues to be one of the most simple and exciting realizations I have experienced.
  • Motivation is contagious. When one student gets excited and has an opportunity to share that enthusiasm, the contagion spreads. My students get to blog about projects, we have huddles where we share, and we are a bit louder than we used to be. But guess what? Those loud noises are usually indicators that my students are super excited about something inside those boundaries I mentioned.
  • Punishment/reward systems stifle learning. This short-term approach to motivation proved to be more harmful than helpful. It created a toxic learning atmosphere. Now we have class parties when we feel we want one. I have lunch with all my students several times a month because they ask me to. No one is excluded from anything. When homework doesn’t get done (I have limited homework when kids don’t get enough time to do it in class or they don’t use their time well), I ask them how they plan to fix it, and most students choose to do it at recess. This is fine by me; they are free to go out and play if they choose.
  • Be excited yourself. The fastest way for kids to lose interest is if you are bored. I faced up to the fact that I hated some of the things I taught and how I taught them (goodbye grammar packets). Something had to change. Now my students joke about how I almost always introduce something new with “I am so excited to do this…”
  • Consider outside factors. Some students have a lot more on their plates than we could ever fully imagine. We need to ask questions, get to know our students, and be a listening ear. When my husband lost his job, it was hard for me to be excited about everyday life. I was too busy worrying. I understand how outside worry can influence the way we function within our school. I’m sure you do, too.
  • Manage and guide what’s in front of you. We will never be able to control what our students go home to, but we sure can guide what happens in the room. Good teachers choose to create a caring environment where all students feel safe. Students let their guards down and feel it is okay to work hard and have fun. It’s the first essential step toward building a learning community.

And finally, read more about old and new ways to deal with common forms of misbehavior in this chart I’ve put together.

I am a passionate  teacher in Wisconsin, USA,  who has taught 4, 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” can be pre-ordered from Corwin Press now.  Follow me on Twitter @PernilleRipp.