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.

being me, new year, Passion

The Posts that Spoke the Loudest Part 2

This is it.  Final day of an incredible year and also the birthday of my oldest amazing daughter, Theadora.  So as I stated yesterday, here are the final posts of the years that I wanted to highlight as I move on to a brand new year.   So per tradition, here are the ones that came the straightest from the heart and weren’t always easy to publish.  (In no particular order)

To My Daughter on the Eve Before Kindergarten

…I hope you stay you.  That you continue to find the magic in small things.  That you continue to be proud of what you accomplish and not because someone told you too, but because you believe that what you did was worth pride.  I hope your skin gets tougher, that every perceived slight will not make scars, that you will figure out when something is worth your tears and when it is not.  That you will find your place with friends, not toss your heart so overwhelmingly at every new person you meet, and yet don’t forget to keep putting it out there, giving everybody a chance.

We Teachers, We Make Mistakes Too

…I am here to tell you to not give up on school, not that I think you would anyway.  You see, we teachers, we say a lot of things, and we sometimes don’t know how our words are taken.  I wish we always said the right thing or even did the right thing.  But we are human too, and sometimes words come out of our mouths before we have thought them through.  Maybe that teacher who told you not to read picture books just hasn’t found the right one yet?  Or maybe that teacher doesn’t know you yet.  Doesn’t know how great of a reader you are, how you love to read a variety of books.  How you love handing books to your teachers to have them read them so that you can share your favorite moments.  Maybe that teacher didn’t mean it the way it sounded.

The Downside to Being a Connected Educator

…I have written a lot about all that being a connected educator has done for me.  I have written a lot about how I would not trade it for anything and that I hope others will choose to become connected as well.  I have written about how being a connected educator has enabled me to have connected students, which has radically changed the way I teach.  And yet, I have not talked about the downfall of being connected much.  Not like this, not in this way.

A Letter to My Daughter’s Kindergarten Teacher

…Thea got off the bus today and asked if we could go back to school now.  She had not even taken off her backpack, nor had she told me about her day.  Not hello mom, not how are you, but can we go now?  Please?  When I told her we would have to wait until 5:30, when open house started, she got mad.  “But I want to go now mom, I have to go see my teacher.”

And my eyes got watery and I had to swallow for a second so she couldn’t see how I felt.

Take One and Pass It On

…In the staff bathroom at my school something like this hung on the wall.  I should have taken a picture but I was too caught up in it to think that far ahead.  It kind of looked like this except a couple of strips had already been ripped off.  So I followed the direction, ripped it off, and passed it on.  Perhaps these should be plastered all over our schools

When You Feel Misplaced

…It dawned on me today as I picked my heart up off the floor; I miss my 5th grade.  I miss teaching so many different subjects.  I miss the hugs.  I miss the stories.  I miss the parents randomly stopping by with a forgotten lunch or just because.  I miss my old team, even though my new team is incredible.  I miss knowing the kids in that way you know them when you have them all day. I miss snack time and read aloud.  Our first grade buddies.  The excitement that comes with being a 5th grader and being on the cusp of middle school, not knowing what to expect.  And did I mention, I miss the hugs?

And here are the most viewed posts, some do overlap which is nice.

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, new year, Passion, reflection

The Posts that Spoke the Loudest Part 1

One day left of this year.  This glorious, life changing year that included a new baby released from the NICU, a new house, a new job in a new district, and even 2 books being published.  4 and 14 have always been my lucky numbers but even I could not have foreseen all of the awesome that happened in this year.  So while I can see which posts got the most traffic, those aren’t necessarily the ones that spoke the loudest to me even if they did to others.  So per tradition, here are the ones that came the straightest from the heart and weren’t always easy to publish.  (In no particular order)

What Becomes of the Lonely Teachers?

…I know I forget to, I know I get too busy trying to catch up with the ones I already have established routines with.  I know I forget to include, to ask, to invite, but I try.  And it is in this trying that I find my own hope, that perhaps if I try and everyone else tries, that perhaps those teachers we let slip through the cracks will be caught by someone and for once they wont be the ones shutting their door, for once they wont be the ones that no one noticed that day.

How to Unleash the Uncreative Child

…When I look back on my childhood I see that I was probably not alone.  Many of my friends weren’t explosively creative either and while these days when we have uncreative children we tend to blame our school system, I think it was just the way we were.  We didn’t know how to be creative so we weren’t.

To the Kid Who Walked Through My Door Last Night

…But the truth is you didn’t come to me last night for math help.  You came to tell me about how you are trying your best but the teachers don’t see it.  How it is hard to stay awake some times.  How it is hard to not laugh when your best friend does that funny thing again.  How the teachers don’t get you even though 2 weeks ago you decided to really try your best but now you think your best will never be good enough for those teachers.  They already give you that look, they have already given up.

When Teachers Bully Teachers

…Today I choose to reclaim my past as I leave my old district and school and venture forward, it is time to take back the power that this situation had over me.  It is time to move on and away from the past.  It is time to tell the story of what can happen when teachers bully teachers.

A Letter to Those Who are New, Myself Included…

…Don’t be ashamed of being you.  You may not always have the best advice.  You may not always be an expert.  You may not always know what you are doing, but you still have worth.  Your ideas still matter.  You still matter.  Your excitement can spread.  Your newness may be an advantage at times.  Your energy and curiosity will help you.  So don’t stand in your own way.

And here are the most viewed posts, some do overlap which is nice.

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, classroom expectations, new year, our classroom, Passion

Why Not Treat Them Like They Want to Be In Our Classrooms?

image from icanread

I bartended for many years before and after I became a teacher.  Something about the hours and the people appealed to me and it is even how I met my husband; he was a bouncer and I was behind the bar.  I remember seeing the same people come in weekend after weekend.  Not because they had to.  Not because there was anything special going on.  Not because the drinks were fantastic.  Instead it was because of the people who worked there.  The people who made the place special.  The people who knew you, who knew what you liked, who asked about your family, who made you feel cared about.  They made the experience special.

Why am I bringing this up?  Because in our classrooms we make the difference of whether kids want to show up or not.  We already know they have to be there, but our relationship with them is what can determine whether they want to be a part of our classrooms or not.  It is our attitude, how we greet them, how we treat them, that will make the difference.

So when school starts again, offer them the attention they deserve.  Ask about more than homework or work habits.  About more than what is happening at school.  Look at them when you speak to them.  Seek them out for conversation.  Listen.  Remember. And share yourself.

We know it is about the relationship.  We know a successful education can hinge on personal relationships.  Why not treat the students as if they don’t have to be there but instead want to be there?  Why not treat them like we would our favorite customer?  It’s amazing how much a smile and a few lines of conversation can do, don’t forget that.

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.

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.

ideas, Passion

5 Simple Ways to Reenergize Your Classroom

image from icanread

I carried a crate out of my classroom yesterday.  Filled with a few gifts, 113 projects, and a book, I knew what I needed to bring home.  I am ready for the break and so are my students.  We have worked hard.  And yet, in typical teacher fashion I couldn’t help but think of January 5th, a new year, tired students, and all the great things we get to do.  As I glanced around I knew these next few weeks were my chance to re-energize the classroom, signaling to the students that 2015 would be a year of wonderful learning.  So what can we do to get great energy flowing again in our classrooms?  Well, there are a few simple things…

  1. Clean out all the clutter.  Much like a house a classroom starts to collect things in nooks and crannies.  So I am taking one day to go in and get rid of the clutter.  Start fresh with clean surfaces, wipe everything down, and reorganize the essentials.  The students may not notice it, but the energy changes.
  2. Pay special attention to your own area.  I have a few tables that I use for papers, binders, and other things I need to teach.  They look fine but could really use a good going through.  So every paper will be filed, every drawer will be cleaned.  It is so nice to come back to order.
  3. Switch out all of your (book) displays.  Whatever you have on display in the classroom, change it out.  I always see the students perk up when they notice the new displays.  I treat my classroom like a mini-library and thus have a lot of books displayed throughout,  these are the way my room is “decorated.”  I cannot tell you the excitement kids have when they see new ones displayed.  It doesn’t even have to be new books, I often showcase favorites that students seem to be missing in their browsing.  A physical change in the scenery can inject quite a lot of excitement for a new year.
  4. Find one great new idea.  I love starting the new year with a great new idea.  So pledge to try something different, doesn’t have to be a big thing; find a way to incorporate a technology tool you already use in a new way, change a project, or try something completely new.  Whatever it is, promise to infuse your teaching with at least one new thing to try, and remember; it can be something small.
  5. Be inspired.  Whether you read a great book, listen to an amazing conversation, watch a video, speak to someone who gets you thinking – find a moment for you soul to get re-energized.  I have my stack of books and podcasts lined up ready for me after Christmas and lunch with a few friends.  Break is also about re-finding our purpose, lighting our own fires and being the head bringer of excitement.  If we are not entusiastic to go back to teaching, our students wont be either.
  6.  I know, the title said 5, but here is my bonus idea and probably the most important:  Turn it off.  We are educators 100% of the time but it is okay to turn it off over break.  You don’t have to go in every day.  You don’t have to plan for days.  We see our students need a break but forget that we do too.  Yes, I have things to do to prepare but I also have cookies to make, songs to sing, books to read and relaxing to do.  You cannot get re-energized if you don’t take a step away.  So allow yourself a break, even from your own thoughts, you will come back stronger because of it.

What ideas do you have?

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.