With the arrival of our twins, I asked for guest bloggers and was excited to share this post with all of you by Melanie Samson-Cormier…

Teacher. Author. Creator. Speaker. Mom.

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| image from icanread |
I say it is about those little things, those things that make the biggest impressions, and yet even I forget just how little those little things can be.
Is there a smile on my face?
Do I greet people I see in the hallways?
Did I dress appropriately, take the time to dress with care to show that I care about what I do?
Is my classroom neat and picked up or cluttered and crammed with stuff?
When someone speaks do I turn and listen or give them my back, or half of an ear?
Is there a choice or two or the kids already on orientation day or do I show a path of rigidity and control?
Do parents get a firm handshake if they want and do I remember their names and their faces?
Do I show people they are welcome in our room or do I merely say it?
Am I prepared, can I answer questions or admit when the answer escapes me?
Am I present or is my mind cluttered with things that need to get done?
Those little things make the difference, those little things set the tone. What did I forget?

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| image from icanread |
Why don’t we start a learning revolution this year? It doesn’t have to be grand, it doesn’t have to be huge, but a step toward a revolution, a step toward bigger changes. They say every journey starts about with one step so why not start today?
Perhaps we don’t put away all of our supplies and leave some out for the students?
Or our desk faces the wall rather than the class so we are not tempted to teach from behind it.
How about not making the copies of those work sheets?
How about leaving walls blank in our rooms or not writing the rules out?
How about sharing an idea with a colleague, maybe even someone who is not in the same grade as us?
Perhaps share a success, something that made you really proud without trying to hide the fact that you did that.
Perhaps this will be the year students will be allowed to move freely or not sign out to go to the bathroom?
Perhaps this will be the year where you don’t grade everything but instead talk to students about their goals and their path, giving them ownership of their learning.
How about letting go of our complicated punishment systems?
Throw out the gold stickers.
Throw out our preconceived notions of the students we will teach and how to teach them best.
Throw out those ideas that we so want to work but that perhaps just don’t.
Throw away old hatred, misconceptions, and bitterness toward colleagues.
Throw away the fear of change but stand up for what we believe in.
Don’t be afraid, let’s start today.

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| Image from icanread |
Last week, before the arrival of Ida and Oskar, I was able to sneak in some work time in my new room. As I stood there trying to envision what the room would look like, I realized that it didn’t much matter for two reasons. One; what it looks like empty is vastly different from when it is filled with 20+ 5th graders. Two; more importantly the emphasis should not be on what it looks like but what it FEELS like. So some questions I pondered as I set it up:
What is on your bulletin boards?
