Posts Tagged ‘teachers’

How Do We Encourage Charitable Living in Children?

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

The holiday season is here! Many take the opportunity to show charity and we should in order to model for our children what giving is about. I grew up in a very poor neighborhood in Texas. We lived in a house my grandfather built that was next to his house in a neighborhood where you couldn’t leave your sandals on the porch without them getting stolen. We had homeless people knock on our door daily. However, I never felt I was poor. I lived a very rich life filled with love from parents who spent a lot of time with my 4 sisters and I. Plus, my parents are very charitable. Every year we would deliver gifts to children far worst than us. We would give our presents away during our birthdays and Christmas to those who never had a birthday thrown for them. My father even gave away his expensive 10 foot bowling trophies to our friends. We had an open home where several children would stay when their parents were busy working to make ends meet.

Sometimes we would have 20 kids that my dad would take to the beach or to Chucky Cheese and pay for them all. He couldn’t really afford this. Some days we only ate chili con carne as our meal. I used to get angry sometimes but then later I realized in my adolescent years how blessed I was. Great things have happened and all my sisters and I managed to attend college through scholarships and grants. We have never felt true poverty like living from our car or having to figure out how to eat. Many of my friends did experience this, though, as well as many of the children I taught in Texas. Every year I volunteer my time to help others. This charitable spirit comes from parents who have the biggest hearts I know. They still help others daily.

This past Wednesday on the #PTCHAT educators, parents, principals, and other stakeholders gathered to share tips on how to encourage charitable living in our children this holiday Season!

Parentella: As a parent it is so important to me that I am raising empathetic children who grow up giving back & grow into giving adults. How can we encourage giving & charitable living in the classroom?
cybraryman1: “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? And if not now, when?”
Sara24lynn: This year my school is giving to the food bank. I always draw a kid or elder or two 2 buy for each year
jdwilliams: @Parentella my class did this about a month ago: http://mrjwilliams.com/?p=358
stumpteacher: We have done Make a Wish, various cancer groups and we have one that directly aids low income students in our own population
famousmistered: I had change jar that kids/families could donate to. Used for coin recognition & counting, then to buy items for food bank.
penny_222: One of my units was on how charities raise/spend money and what their goals are. My inspiration was Daughtry’s song ‘what about now’

Teaching kids the spirit of giving, not receiving is wonderful and one they will keep for the rest of their lives.

Parentella was created to solve the issue of parent and educator communication at elementary, middle school and high school levels. As part of this mission, we are hosting weekly #PTCHAT discussions to encourage a productive dialogue between parents and educators. We hope you will join us Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST.

You may also want to join Parentella on Facebook to keep updated. We invite you to propose questions for upcoming topics. View the entire transcript here.

If you are new to following hashtag discussions, you may want to check out this video tutorial on using Tweetdeck for hashtag discussions.

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What Are Your Tips to Help Children Study?

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Testing is a part of schooling often associated with stress. One way to help alleviate the stress and ensure success is to help students learn to study. We realize that cramming isn’t the most effective approach to preparing for an assessment. Many of our children, though, have no clue the best they remember information. If they did know, our children would have less stress. Learning is a part of studying and if children commit the knowledge to memory when they learn it then they will need to spend less time trying to cram the information. Often just knowing your learning style can help you. For example, I know that by writing down information and reading the information back to myself helps me commit it to memory right away. I can quickly glance at the information again a week later and I am comfortable I know it!

This past Wednesday on the #PTCHAT educators, parents, principals, and other stakeholders shared their study tips.

Image from Wordle.net

Parentella: Am I the only one freaking out a little about finals coming up? Let’s share some study tips tonight!
cybraryman1:Study skills should be taught by every teacher at every grade level.
eshwaranv: @cybraryman1 Yes. And with them, the students should develop their own. Each individual is unique when it comes to study strategies.
GaryBrannigan: Study begins with advanced organizers. Don’t read a text like a novel. Look at headings, glossary, summary before reading
schooldayze: We have a homework club. We teach kids how to be teachers, so they can help their friends. Learning through teaching.
jodylo: As well as note taking and organization skills RT @cybraryman1: Study skills should be taught by every teacher on every grade level.
Parentella: Teach students to know their key productivity periods and how to best utilize that time.
eshwaranv: Preparation of charts as visual aids and having them pinned on a notice board in the study room helps.
AngEngland: @Parentella I rarely had to study extra for tests if I took good notes.
GaryBrannigan: If done well, note taking is an active learning process, especially if we put things in our own words
Jhotvedt2: @GaryBrannigan And for son 3, for whom there aren’t enough hours in the day, EFFICIENT use of time!
cybraryman1: My Learning Games page (mnemonics are great)http://www.cybraryman.com/learninggames.html/

Parentella was created to solve the issue of parent and educator communication at elementary, middle school and high school levels. As part of this mission, we are hosting weekly #PTCHAT discussions to encourage a productive dialogue between parents and educators. We hope you will join us Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST.

You may also want to join Parentella on Facebook to keep updated. We invite you to propose questions for upcoming topics. View the entire transcript here.

If you are new to following hashtag discussions, you may want to check out this video tutorial on using Tweetdeck for hashtag discussions.

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How Do We Encourage Communication Between Students and Educators?

Saturday, September 25th, 2010

As our children develop they continue to learn how to deal with the problems life throws at them. However, we must remember they are still children and are still learning. At home, we expect kids to throw a fit or misbehave. We realize the signs and we try to comfort them. However, school is a different environment and many times a teacher has several students in one class. This dynamic often results in the teacher being extremely stressed and perhaps not realizing that a student acting up is due to a deeper issue. Most students do not misbehave, fail a test, or fail to do homework because they just simply are programmed that way. There is a root cause and through communication we can often help the student develop the skills to handle the problems or situations that life throws at them. How do we encourage this communication between students and educators?

That is why this past Wednesday on the #PTCHAT educators, parents, principals, and other stakeholders share ideas to improve communication between students and educators.


Image from Wordle.net

Parentella: Share your thoughts on how to encourage communication between students and educators
cybraryman1: Teachers have to create a rapport with students from day one and have an open door policy.
GaryBrannigan: Effective communication begins with mutual respect and trust!
brettelockyer: @cybraryman1 open door policy: open the door 1/2 hr before class starts, get the children to give parents a guided tour.
CoachB0066: The ability for students to read a situation and understand how to approach an adult can be a key to communication
readtoday: Teachers need to understand they are big and children are small. Even children who act out can be very fragile and easily bruised
CoachB0066: Ultimately, however, it is the responsible of the adult to realize the student is the kid and themselves, well the adult
stevebarkley: Accessible ..is one important way that teachers and schools show parents respect
Mollybmom: We need to build a community of learners in class so that our students feel safe sharing their feelings.
CoCreatr: @brettelockyer yes. Main customers of the institution: 1. Students, 2. Parents, 3. Teachers, 4. Society. More?
schooldayze: schools send mixed messages by wanting to “increase parental involvement” but then failing to notify parents about conferences.
bragTAG: When parents feel pride in their children’s achievements, it instills respect for teachers, and instant rapport!

Parentella was created to solve the issue of parent and educator communication at elementary, middle school and high school levels. As part of this mission, we are hosting weekly #PTCHAT discussions to encourage a productive dialogue between parents and educators. We hope you will join us Wednesdays at 9 p.m. EST.

You may also want to join Parentella on Facebook to keep updated. We invite you to propose questions for upcoming topics. View the entire transcript here.

If you are new to following hashtag discussions, you may want to check out this video tutorial on using Tweetdeck for hashtag discussions.

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What is a Good Teacher? A Parent’s Perspective

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Here in Los Angeles, lately we have been inundated with passionate views on both sides regarding The Los Angeles Times’ recent “value added” analysis system for teachers. There has been a lot of talk about what makes a bad teacher, but not as much on good teachers, or, more aptly put, effective teachers.

There are some teachers that my daughters have had over the years that really stood out. The one thing that they all have in common is that my daughters felt like they believed in her. They’re engaging, positive, and they make her want to do her best. Their confidence in her helps her to believe in herself.  She’s not scared to ask them questions, and she’s motivated to do more for extra credit. Even if she already has an A, she’ll do more for that A+.

The subject matter doesn’t, for lack of a better word, matter. I’ve seen her get As in every subject, and I’ve seen her barely pass some of these same subjects under different teachers.

The effectiveness of each teacher came to a greater light when she was in 5th grade and started having multiple teachers. At the Knowledge Is Power Program charter school she attended for one year, she received straight As and made the Dean’s List. This is the same girl who, the year before, I almost pulled out of standardized testing because she had stomach aches and insomnia worrying about them.

At KIPP, all of the teachers just oozed enthusiasm and my daughter was eager to earn their praise. When she made mistakes, she learned from them. She had more homework than at any other time, but none of it was busy work and she delved into it with no complaints.

Because of a lot of changes, both in our lives and at the school, the next year she transferred to a regular public middle school. There, her grades went back to fluctuating.

When she was in elementary school, I thought I knew her strengths and weaknesses, based on her progress in each subject area. Now that she’s had three years of answering to at least 5 different teachers, I see how much difference a teacher can make.

Even just a few weeks into this school year, I know what subjects she will do great in. There are two teachers, her Social Sciences and Algebra teachers, that she talks about almost every day (without prompting from me). She is not afraid to ask them questions, and she always does the “extra credit” homework assigned. When I checked her progress online, it was no surprise to me to see that, so far, she has an A+ in Social Sciences.

Last year, it was her Science teacher that she raved about all year long. Again, she received an A+ in that class. The year before, it was her Social Sciences teacher, and again, an A+.

In classes where I don’t hear about the teacher (except maybe in negative terms), she’ll do just enough to get by. Unless it is a class she loves or is easy for her, like Music or Physical Education, she’ll get a B or a C.

Teachers matter. The methods of teaching can vary greatly, but what I’ve seen in my children is that when their teachers are passionate, enthusiastic, and show great expectations for my children, they are eager to meet those expectations, excited to go to class, and remember the lessons long after the test.

An effective teacher is one that believes in our students.

April McCaffery is a single mom to two daughters, in 5th and 8th grade.

Essentials of Communicating With Parents

Friday, September 10th, 2010
Tyneham - old telephone

The biggest change I’m making in my planning for the start of the new school year is in how often I will communicate with parents. Communicating with parents requires effort, openness, clarity, and regularity. Let’s examine each of these.

Effort

Communicating with parents is not in the curriculum and not something taught in education classes. Too often, the only times teachers communicate with parents is when something is wrong; a child misbehaves or is injured somehow.  It is important to work at spreading good news, too.

But teachers already have so much to do. Where are we going to find the time to communicate with parents? Build it in to what you already do. Are you on Facebook or Twitter? Start a Facebook list of parents and limit what they can see. One post a week is all it take. Or start a Twitter account and only let parents see those tweets.

And, of course, there is Parentella. Parentella is a private parent-teacher social network. Teachers can create their private online classroom and invite parents to the class. Teachers can post homework, class news, events, and reminders to keep parents engaged in their kids’ educational lives.

Openness

Communication is a two-way street. When information flows in one direction only it is a lecture or an advertisement, but it is not communication. Good communication is about receiving information or other feedback as much as delivering information.

Listening with attention is a skill we ask our students to master and we have to do it also. As we teach our students, listening is more than keeping one’s mouth shut while someone else is talking and it is not planning what you will say. Listening is hearing, processing and considering what someone else has to say. We need to model it in our interactions with others.

Clarity

Like any other area of human endeavor, education has jargon. I wrote a paper as an undergrad in which I speculated that education in a particular field is merely the process of coming to understand what the jargon means. Parents don’t understand education jargon.

Practice clarity. Write and speak in clear, jargon-free English (or other language you share). Don’t sound like an education jargon generator.

One more thing, proofread! My wife is a copy editor and she catches every error in the notes and notices that come from our son’s school; there are far too many and some of the most aggravating ones would have been caught had the writer just read the item out loud. Trust your ears, if it sounds wrong, it probably is wrong.

Regularity

I have a colleague who teaches some children with very challenging emotional and behavioral issues. She is one of the few teachers I know who talks to parents with regularity; she calls the parents of all nine of her students every day. It needn’t be that often, but it is important to contact parents on a regular basis.

When my wife or I would pick up our son at the end of the school day and ask him what happened he’d respond, “stuff.” He’s going to be a junior in high school this year and all that’s ever happened at school is ‘stuff.’  Parents want to know what’s going on in class, what the class is studying, what’s coming up next, and more.

In the past I’ve given the parents of my students my email address and my cell-phone number, and I’ve left it up to them to contact me. This year I’m going to be more proactive. I’m going to email or call all parents at least once a week with general information about school and class events, also with information about all the great work their child is doing. Parents need to hear good news even more than they need to hear all the trouble their son or daughter causes.

Students are Crossing - Buckman Elementary-3.jpg

When I was student teaching in a 2nd grade class, the teacher guided the students in the collaborative writing of a weekly newsletter. Every Friday after lunch, the boys and girls would draw illustrations for the missive. I wonder if that would work in 7th and 8th grade. Hmmmm.

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