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mhorovitz

Fun Phonics Factory - Phonic Songs that Teach! - 1 views

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36IBDpTRVNE For some reason the URL that is showing is incorrect. Here is an updated URL
mhorovitz

ReadStrong - Word Walls - 1 views

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    Portable Word Wall and other Word Wall ideas to support struggling readers. I have used Word Walls in the past, but I have not used them for individual students. This form of differentiation can be taken with the student to a reading specialist, brought home, or used in the classroom to support instruction.
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    SPR15 strategy phonics K-3 resource
Barbara Lindsey

Musical Chairs Retell | Somewhere to Share - 2 views

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    In this blog post, Carrie Toth describes how she uses a 'musical chairs' strategy to help students collaboratively write a story. This requires them to first read and then build upon previous contributions. Carrie Toth describes how she uses this with her language learning students but it can be used in any content area to help develop student writing and reading skills. An additional benefit is that students get to move around and research shows the importance of physical activity and learning.
Barbara Lindsey

Attributes of High Quality Work | Center for Student Work - 1 views

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    This page provides a set of descriptions that detail the characteristics of quality student work regardless of content area. Teachers could use this in the PLCs as a gauge to evaluate student work. For students in middle school, high school and college, teachers could share these with students to help them achieve high quality work.
Barbara Lindsey

6 Scaffolding Strategies to Use with Your Students | Edutopia - 3 views

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    Author Rebecca Alber shares six scaffolding strategies designed to provide successful learning experiences for our students. Teachers can use these to support our diverse learners.
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    (Week 7: Michele, Ericka and Spencer) This article is accessible through the link --> https://www.edutopia.org/blog/scaffolding-lessons-six-strategies-rebecca-alber. This article focuses on a learning technique called scaffolding. Used as a precursor to differentiated instruction (DI), scaffolding involves chunking the lesson into parts so a higher level of emphasis can be placed on information the teacher desires the students to learn. In the article, the author, Rebecca Alber, provides the reader with 6 strategies to use in their lessons that can incorporate the learning tool scaffolding. To determine the scaffolding strategy, the author emphasizes the use of the zone of proximal development (ZPD). "The ZPD is the distance between what children can do by themselves and the next learning that they can be helped to achieve with competent assistance." Some scaffolding strategies include pre-teaching vocabulary, fishbowl and use of visual aids. Teachers can use scaffolding in class to help encourage higher level thinking which allow students to better understand the information and skills learned in class. Additionally, teachers who do not have the resources to DI (space, time, additional teacher support) can use scaffolding strategies to aid in meeting the educational needs of all their students. Although one strategy does not work, the author emphasizes the importance of trying other. Reference: Alber, R. (2011). 6 scaffolding strategies to use with your students. Retrieved on October 23, 2018 from https://www.edutopia.org/blog/scaffolding-lessons-six-strategies-rebecca-alber EDTC615 Fall2018
Barbara Lindsey

Rick Wormeli: Formative and Summative Assessment - YouTube - 1 views

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    In this video Rick Wormeli describes the difference between formative and summative assessment and how and when they are used for student learning. This could be a great PLC discussion starter prior to work on developing assessments for a data action plan.
Barbara Lindsey

To Remember a Lecture Better, Take Notes by Hand - The Atlantic - 2 views

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    This article describes research that indicates better recall of content when taking notes by hand versus taking notes with an electronic device. This can be shared with students to encourage them to take notes by hand.
Barbara Lindsey

Models, Critique, and Descriptive Feedback Videos | Expeditionary Learning - 2 views

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    These three videos from Expeditionary Learning show how we can model for students how they can critique their own and each other's work and provide descriptive feedback. Teachers can apply these strategies with their own students. Teachers can also work together with their PLC to implement these strategies with their students.
Barbara Lindsey

Response: The 'Secret Sauce' of Formative Assessment - Classroom Q & A With Larry Ferla... - 3 views

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    In this blog post, contributors Libby Woodfin, Tony Frontier, Laura Cabrera and Alice Mercer provide examples of the power of formative assessment to improve student learning. I was especially intrigued with first grader Austin and how his classmates used concrete, descriptive feedback to help him improve his scientific drawing of a butterfly. Check out the link! This would be a great article to assign for a PLC text-based discussion using any of the protocols described by Venables on pp. 85-87 in his book, Turning Data into Action.
kristine Gregoire-Cope

When We All Teach Text Structures, Everyone Wins | Cult of Pedagogy - 1 views

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    This resource provides a 5 minute video that explains the importance of understanding the structure of writing so that students can recognize it in their readings and they can model it in their own writing. I think that this is imperative to our PLC SMART Goal.
kristine Gregoire-Cope

What Are the Four Tips for Writing a Good Thesis Statement for an Expository Essay? | T... - 1 views

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    In this quick article it identifies a formulaic way to create good thesis statements. I love giving students a map or tool to help them remember how to structure a solid thesis statement that anchors a good essay. These four steps are dead on but we will have to adapt it to the 6th grade level for my PLC practice.
kristine Gregoire-Cope

Literacy, Technology, Policy, Etc....A Blog: How I used Socrative for Writing Instruction - 1 views

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    In this online resource a teacher shares how to have students collaborate on the writing process using the online tool/app of Socrative. It is articulated very well and this is a process I have used in the past with AP writing students!
Alison Burns

5 Fantastic, Fast, Formative Assessment Tools - 2 views

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    I thought I could read my students' body language. I was wrong. As an experiment, I used Socrative when I taught binary numbers. What I learned forever changed my views on being a better teacher. Formative assessment is done as students are learning. Summative assessment is at the end (like a test). The importance of formative assessment. 5 tools for formatively assessing your students.
Katie Tress

Student Center Activities, Grades K-1 (2005) - Student Center Activities, Grades K-1 (2... - 1 views

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    Research based literacy center activities for kids in grades K-2. Has great phonics center suggestions!
tricia1022

BBC - KS3 Physics - Electric current and potential difference - Revision 1 - 0 views

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    This is a perfect resource for students who have trouble writing notes, need to review, or missed class. Teachers could attach a link for a particular lesson to your class website for students to review before class or before a test.
tricia1022

Larry Ferlazzo, Teacher - 1 views

  • One game is calling out a question to answer or a word or sentence to spell, giving the groups twenty or thirty seconds to write the answer (and telling them not to raise their board until I say time is up), and then having them show me the answer.  The groups with the correct answer get a point.   This way everyone has an opportunity to score a point, not just the first one with the answer.  I’ll sometimes end this game, and others, with an opportunity for each team to bet all or part of their points on the last question (like in “Final Jeopardy”).
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    Ferlazzo has a list of games ideas the are a marvel. His basic requirements is that the games require no money, little teacher prep work, and every students has to be involved. I was impressed. I think I know how our students can review for the unit test. Ferlazzo says these are easily modified for other content areas. I thought they be the perfect way to review vocabulary.
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    I like this one.
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    You could laminate the big index cards if you can't find small whiteboards.
Barbara Lindsey

Formative assessment - Google Slides - 4 views

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    This google presentation curated by David Wees provides 56 ways to use formative assessment in the classroom. Teachers can look through these to see which ones might be useful to address their students' learning gaps. For 615 colleagues, be sure to evaluate any strategy using Venables' Planning Protocol Rubric!
Alison Burns

Dipsticks: Efficient Ways to Check for Understanding | Edutopia - 3 views

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    This blog post by Todd Finley describes what formative assessment is, in particular, what alternative formative assessment (AFA) is and how and why it can be used to advance student learning. Teachers can begin to plan the use of AFA by using the downloadable guide of 53 ways to use AFA. For 615 colleagues, be sure to evaluate any strategy using Venables' Planning Protocol Rubric!
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