Thursday, September 2, 2010

Drawing the Colonies

My US History students are drawing the original 13 colonies. They're using books & atlases to freehand or trace. It's probably lazy on my part, but they love it. We're on review right now. I'm giving the old stuff while I work up new lessons for the late 19th century on forward.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Parent Calls

We have to make 5 parent calls a week and log them. I just made mine. Two bright students screw around too much in 4B. I left one message and talked to a mother. One student has 3 tardies (in 2 weeks) to the class after lunch, leading to an unhappy mother. And 2 good student calls, one a message and the other to a happy mother.

Reflect on this? I really don't like calling before there's a real problem. Maybe this will head one off? Maybe I should just start at the top of my 1st period roster and work my way to the bottom of my 5th period roster?

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

I'm back!

It's been almost a year since my last post and 2 school years since I posted regularly. Now thing may change.

I'm halfway through an MA in Secondary Ed. The program is about Reflective Studies. I need to be reflecting on my teaching and classes and learning from that. Journaling is a good idea at this point. I thought, why go out and buy yet another notebook when I have this blog.

I'll keep short entries, but this seems like a good place to reflect.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Equinox

It's the first day of Autumn and the last day of the first six-weeks.

Grading, grading, grading!

Friday, August 22, 2008

Wow!

It's been 2 weeks, now. Things are actually going well. I've seen each class 4 or 5 times. We're in to content now. I've still got new students trickling in, and there are still a lot that I've yet to see, but we're moving ahead.

We've had a much better start than last year, and I'm positive about this year. The new high school made a difference. Even though they only took 9th graders from us, 500 less bodies is 500 less bodies. A smaller population makes a for more relaxed school.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

And We're Off!

It's our third day with students. It's our third day with the A/B Plus schedule, so this is my second day with these students.

I've spent the past two day playing Getting To Know Each Other. Today and tomorrow I'll teach them how I teach. We won't start substantial academics until Monday. Late registration still has the Library packed, so I'm just giving the laggards a chance.

I'll start implementing the new Tardy policy today, which means I'll lock the door on the last bell. I expect that in 2 weeks we will see a whole new level of promptness.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Set up

My wife came by my classroom this afternoon and helped me set it up, to the tune of Sugarland's new CD, "Love on the Inside". I'm not much of a country fan, I've just got a couple of old Lyle Lovett CDs, but I do like this album.

I'd been worrying and / or ignoring the layout for my room this year. I'd spent part of the day giving a new dept. member a tour, introducing her to people and showing her things like the copy room and our dept. supply room. Otherwise, I was just working on notes and grumbling about still not having a network connection. Elena came in about 3 PM, took a look around, and said, "Let's take care of this." We worked about two hours and got everything done. Now it's just lesson plans.

Friday, August 1, 2008

And It's Almost Over

We go back on Wednesday. We get students the following Tuesday. (sigh)

I've been into my classroom a few times, trying to set up. I got new furniture over the summer. I actually got more than I expected in the form of bookcases and storage cabinets. I wanted to arrange the student desks differently from last year, but I've got a half dozen more than I had and there just isn't room. I need those desks, though, since I have sophomores this year. My teacher desk is up on 2X4's because it's so small that that's the only way my knees will fit under it. And I'm only 6'3". Still, it's wonderful to have all these nice, clean, unblemished desks.

On the downside, I have no network connection. They've been doing a major remodel on the wing next to our portables, and we won't be reconnected until the day we start. I've got a whole bunch of stuff on the server and no access to it. I've just been working off of thumb drives. And I have to blog from home. I'm sitting on our front porch right now with my laptop and a cup of coffee, occasionally glancing at the roadrunner hunting lizards in the community area across the street. Man, he's fast!

I'm going to our church's Men's Retreat this weekend. It centered around meditation, so I'll be mellow on Monday.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Summertime, Summertime, Sum-sum-summertime

We're into July now. I've rested, I've had toe surgery, I saw "Wall-E" with my grandson. Now we're focused on getting him and his mother moved to the southern part of the state so she can start graduate school next month. We'll be heading down there next week. I'll be driving with a "boot" on my right foot, because the stitches don't come out for another 11 days.

Right now my wife is outside with members of our community checking the sprinkler system. Apparently plants have been dying. I can see them through our open front door. I was happy to plead fatigue and a need to elevate my foot. I'm sideways on the couch with my foot up.

I went to the AP Summer Institute for US History. I came away a lot of ideas. I'm ready to use AP techniques in regular classes. I'm going to teach topics and posthole through history. If I can't meld Layered Cirriculum into this, I'll abandon it. I'm going back to testing, using objective tests with Scantron answersheets because they're all going to be taking standardized tests. They'll also be doing a lot of writing. It will be work, but they'll learn to think.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Home Stretch

Seniors have 3 weeks of instruction left, as of today. They have a total of 16 days left all together. We're having potlucks in my 3 economics classes during block periods today and tomorrow. So far, the food's been pretty good.

Most teachers save the parties for the end of the year. I know from past experience that my students will be scrambling those last few days to get their final projects done. That's one of the reasons I haven't done this for a couple of years. The other is that they've been more hassle than nutrition. I even brought myself a sandwich today as back-up. However, this year I restricted it to my seniors and so far they've come through. We just spent a crushing week on monetary policy, so they needed the break. We got the food out and distributed, then I gave them the assignment of making posters of the functions of the Federal Reserve.

Down side: I have a student I took on for Independent Study of Gov't because he failed it last semester. He's been avoiding me for over a month. I'd track him down, he'd promise to start coming, then I wouldn't see him until the next time I tracked him down. I'm done. He's not graduating next month.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Break's Over

We got back Monday. The seniors are more attentive than I expected. We're doing the Federal Reserve. I figure monetary policy such a complex subject anyway, they might as well work. So, I'm treating it as an AP level subject and teaching it as such. They'll be happy to move on to something else next week, but this week we're timely.

I wish I had a phone in my classroom.

They told us at our faculty meeting yesterday that on the next inservice day there will be a 90 minute block in which all teachers are expected to make phone contact with at least one parent for each of our students. We have less than a dozen phones available to us. When I, a social studies teacher, pointed out that the math didn't work, we were told, "Do your best." I'll do what I usually do, which is send home printed progress reports for a parent signature. I'll make calls on any senior who's failing, but that's not many.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

The Break is Coming!

It's my prep period on flex day. Two hours that I thought would be total solitude, but two seniors just showed up to work on their project. Unfortunately one needs constant reassurance that what she's about to do is right before she does it. I refuse to do that. I tell her to do what she thinks best and then I'll grade it. Fortunately, her partner seems willing to take the role I refuse. I'm just sitting here typing with the music loud enough that I can't understand what they're saying.

It's the week before Spring Break. Experience tells me this is one of those weeks when they're too squirrely for the usual academics.

My solution for the seniors is a project on moving out of home and into an apartment. This involves a deposit, furniture, utilities, and of course a monthly budget. I assign each student an hourly wage I get from a random number generator, so most of them band together with others in the class as roommates, though I don't require it.

My solution for the juniors is a movie, the only movie I show all year. We're on the Great Depression. I show "Cindrella Man" because it depicts what it was like for families then better than any other movie I've seen. And the boxing keeps them awake.

Two more days, then Vernal Holiday (Good Friday) followed by Spring Break. Next week, I'll be putting in a vegetable garden.