I’ve just updated The Best Resources For Learning About Homework Issues.
Additional suggestions, as well as your thoughts on the topic, are welcome….
April 6, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I’ve just updated The Best Resources For Learning About Homework Issues.
Additional suggestions, as well as your thoughts on the topic, are welcome….
April 6, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments
I’ve written before about the independent book discussion groups my students have begun in at our school library (see Two Ways I’m Using Our School Library).
They’ve been going quite well.
These are groups of students who go to our school library once or twice each week during the 20 minute independent reading time we have in class. There, the librarian has graciously agreed to supervise them, but they’re basically on their own.
The group who are potential candidates for the International Baccalaureate program are reading Bless Me Ultima, and have a series of specific questions they need to answer.
However, two other groups — one reading Always Running by Luis Rodriguez and the other Journey To The Center Of The Earth — are following these book discussion group guidelines (you can download them here as a hand-out). I thought readers might find them helpful, and I’m interested in hearing suggestions to make them better:
1) When you arrive at the library, please check-in with the librarian. Make sure she/he has a seating chart with your names.
2) Each person shares the one or two sentence summary they wrote about the chapter or chapters they were to read. Discuss which one you like the best and why.
3) Each person shares the connection (“this makes me remember….”) they wrote about the chapter or chapters they were to read. Please ask at least one question about each connection.
4) Each person shares the question they wrote about the chapter. Discuss what you think the answers might be to each one.
5) Each person shares what their favorite part or parts of the chapter was/were, and why they liked it.
6) Each person makes a prediction. What do you think will happen next in the story and why? Do you agree?
7) Decide as a group what chapters you will read by the next meeting.
8)Thank the librarian and return to class.
Students love being able to do independent work, and I’ve been shocked at seeing how some reluctant readers have become so enthusiastic about being in the groups. A few who never really stuck to any book before are reading at every opportunity now.
I’ll look forward to feedback on the guidelines…
I’ve found a list on the Web titled Bloom’s Taxonomy Book Review Questions. To tell you the truth, the questions aren’t the greatest, but the idea of giving students a list of questions related to Bloom’s and giving them their choice of which ones they discuss is a good one. I’m going to revise this list, but also wanted to know if anybody knew of better ones already out there that are specifically related to books.
April 6, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I’ve just updated The Best Ways To Find Other Classes For Joint Online Projects.
I think it’s pretty complete, but please let me know if I’ve missed any groups.
April 6, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment
I thought I’d write a post sharing links to all “The Best…” lists I’ve created that relate to developing English speaking skills. Because of some technical issues that I’m too lazy to fix, these particular links might not work well if you’re subscribing to this blog via email, or viewing it on Facebook. RSS Readers feeds should be fine. If you go directly to my blog, though, they’ll all work fine.
They include:
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I’ve just updated The Best Sources Of Advice For Teachers (And Others!) On How To Be Better Bloggers.
If you write a blog, or are considering doing so, I think you’ll find a lot of wisdom in those links….
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
As regular readers know, I post a lot about infographics (see The Best Interactive Infographics — 2009). They can make a lot of information accessible to English Language Learners and others.
Now, someone has created an infographic showing why infographics are good resources.
Check-out “Infographics Help Decision-Making Process.”
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
This is a companion list to my others on the different seasons:
The Best Sites For Learning About The Winter Season
The Best Sites For Images Of Fall Foliage (& For Teaching About The Season)
This one is starting out small, but will certainly grow.
Here are my choices for The Best Sites For Learning About The Spring Season (and are accessible to English Language Learners):
EL Civic has a good Spring Lesson.
Here’s a very accessible Science lesson on the seasons, including Spring. It provides audio support for the text.
The British Council has a very simple, and useful, vocabulary game related to Spring.
The Big Picture has two great collections of Spring photos:
Fotopedia also has some nice Spring photos.
Bogglesworld ESL has a number of printable Spring worksheets.
Signs of Spring is a series of photos from The Atlantic.
Students can send spring-related eCards from any of these next three links. Once the cards are sent to themselves or to a teacher, their url addresses can be posted on a teacher/student website or blog:
Feedback and suggestions are welcome!
If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.
You might also want to explore the 400 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
The Baltimore County Public Schools have a very nice collection of educational links for all subjects at their BCPS Curriculum Resources K-12 page.
I’m adding it to The Best Collections Of Educational Links.
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I’ve just updated The Best Resources For Using Puppets In Class.
They can be a lot of fun, and a great learning tool.
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I guess this is sort of “Geography Week” here. Scenes From Indonesia is an excellent collection of images from the Boston Globe’s Big Picture page.
I’ve placed the link on my Geography page.
April 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment
Each month I interview people in the education world about whom I want to learn more. You can see read those past interviews here.
This month’s guest is Carrie Rose, Executive Director of the nationally acclaimed Parent/Teacher Home Visit Project. Our school works closely with Carrie and the Project, I’ve written a chapter about it in my book on parent engagement, and I also wrote an article about it last year for Teacher Magazine.
Can you give a brief description of what the Parent Teacher Home Visit Project is and how it came into being?
The Parent/Teacher Home Visit Project is a unique partnership between a community organizing group (Sacramento Area Congregations Together), a local teachers union (Sacramento City Teachers Association) and a school district (Sacramento City Unified School District). The project developed through an effort to address the cycle of blame that existed between parents and site personnel at several south Sacramento schools where there was a pervasive history of low student achievement, high levels of poverty, and where high percentages of children entered school as English learners. Home visits were identified by teachers as one way to build trust and respect. Community organizers recognized the potential for leadership development through home visits given the similarity to their model of 1:1 interactions. Parents, educators and community organizers came together to develop a training and model for the visits and launched the project in the 1998-1999 school year.
How did you get involved in it, and where do you get the energy to continue being the Executive Director?
My background is in social service and law. In 1999, when my children were very young, I was looking for a more flexible job. The director of Sacramento ACT offered me a part time job as a fund developer and I had to quickly learned to do grant writing and fundraising in the nonprofit world. Luckily, one of my main responsibilities was to raise funds for a new parent engagement project- the parent/teacher home visit effort. As my understanding of community organizing grew, and my participation in the logistics of the home visit project evolved, I experienced a profound shift both personally and professionally.
While I had always been involved in social justice work, community organizing offered new and effective forms of advocacy and leadership development! In 2003, the Parent/Teacher Home Visit Project became a separate 501(c) (3) non-profit organization (jointly governed by representatives from the original three partner groups) and I left ACT to become the Executive Director. Like all non profit directors, there are days when the grind of raising money, adapting to recent policy changes and other stress make me stop and question if I still have what it takes to move forward. To date, I have found a reliable remedy – when I start to have doubts, I either do a home visit or facilitate a home visit training session. As I listen to the “testimony” of parents, teachers or students, I always find the inspiration and guidance I need to move forward.
What are the biggest reservations that School Districts, schools, and teachers typically have about doing these kinds of home visits? How do you respond to them?
There are some common concerns that surface regarding home visits. Funding is always an immediate concern in this day an age of education budget shortfalls. Our partners all believe that staff participation should always be voluntary and compensated because visits take place outside of the scope of the regular work day (nights, weekends, etc). Over the years, participating districts have used various foundation, state and federal grants to fund home visit activity (as most grants have a parent engagement component) but the most sustainable source of funding has been Title I funding (which has a minimum 1% parent engagement mandate).
Administrators and staff also need to be able to talk about their concerns for the safety of staff while out conducting visits, mandated reporting requirements that may be triggered during a home visit, and possible language and cultural barriers that may prevent good home visit communication. Our non-profit provides participating school sites a three-hour home visit training session – led by parents and teachers- that is designed to provide both a clear step by step guide and a frank discussion of possible barriers and solutions to insure the visits are very effective. In a nutshell, I can tell you that no teacher has ever been harmed in the course of our home visits and the incidence of mandated reporting has been extremely rare because our model is specifically designed to insure the safety and voluntary nature- for everyone- of every single visit. Language barriers have been easier than expected to address given the non confidential nature of these conversations that allow for “unofficial” interpretation by other staff, family or community members. As for cultural barriers, teachers often report that the act of stepping into homes has been one of the most effective capacity building experiences of their careers.
Truthfully, in our experience, the real barrier to home visits working at a school is usually connected to the assumptions we hold. In other words, what does the staff already think is true about the students/families/community? What do the families already think is true about the staff and school? We spend a considerable amount of time in our training session addressing this barrier and offering a practical exercise we can all use to “check our assumption”.
You’ve had some evaluations done on the results of home visits. What do they say?
Nationally, there have been decades of research linking effective parent engagement to increased academic and social success for students. Our evaluations have focused on whether home visits are an effective parent engagement strategy. In order to measure that connection and the outcomes for students, there have been several independent evaluations spanning the course our project.
The first evaluation (1998-2001) focused on whether home visits made a difference in Sacramento schools. Dr. Geni Cowan from the California State University at Sacramento found that “Student performance has improved over the three years of the project’s implementation; parental involvement has increased, and communication between home and school has been enhanced.”
The second evaluation focused on whether the model and training were effective in California schools outside of Sacramento. EMT Associates, Inc. found “Widespread implementation of the program, increase in the number of teachers involved per site, successful dissemination of materials and subsequent trainings following initial training sessions. Participants perceiving benefits including increased parental involvement improved parent/teacher relationships and improved academic achievement.”
The third evaluation focused on the adaptation and effectiveness of home visits as a strategy to help increase high school graduation rates. Beginning in 2007, Paul Tuss of the Center for Student Assessment and Program Accountability with the Sacramento County Office of Education found that: students who received a home visit were considerably more likely to be successful in their exit exam intervention and support classes and more likely to pass the English portion of the exit exam; parents reported home visits improved their understanding of key school issues (graduation requirements, exit exam, college entrance requirements), increased knowledge of school resources and support available for their child, and improved their relationship with teachers/school staff; and, attitudinal shifts among teachers and other school staff concerning the needs of at-risk students and the barriers they face to succeeding in school.
A follow up evaluation for the initial cohort of students at Luther Burbank High School (one of the two pilot schools piloting exit exam home visits) found that visited students passed the exit exam by 12th grade at significantly higher rates and earned sufficient academic credits to graduate at significantly higher rates and graduated at higher rates. Then Paul Tuss began an evaluation on a feeder pattern plan to connect schools and conduct visits with students at key times (in elementary, transitioning to middle school and high school, and before and after the high school exit exam? The evaluation showed that these transitional home visits were associated with increased academic performance for middle and high school students.
Our evaluation focus at this time, thanks to the support of the National Education Association, we are involved in a planning process with some of the best nationally known parent engagement experts and researchers to create a common data collection instrument for any k-12 school conducting home visits with our model so that we can begin to build a consistent and meaningful set of data connecting to home visits to outcomes in the area of parent engagement, staff development and, most importantly, student success. This instrument will then be piloted in several areas throughout the country where home visits are used.
What’s happening locally, state-wide, and nationally now with your project?
Locally: There are two very exciting developments for us in our local work. First, even in the midst of budget challenges, Sacramento City Unified School District’s new superintendent, Jonathan Raymond, has prioritized the expansion parent home visits under the district’s parent engagement funding! Second, representatives from five neighboring districts in the our county are working with the Sacramento County Office of Education on a regional plan to increase graduation rates that includes a strong secondary school home visiting component based on our model.
Statewide: The California Teachers Association (CTA) recently awarded our non-profit grant funding that will allow us to expand training capacity to include more sessions on the connection between home visits and building staff cultural competency and individualized instructional skill sets. Additionally, along with another one of our statewide partners, PICO California, we are working on the release of a publication documenting the steps and outcomes of our secondary school home visiting efforts and the connection between this strategy and increased high school success for our students. We expect that publication to be available within the month.
Nationally: Thanks to a vibrant partnership with the National Education Association, most of our growth this past year has been on the national front! Currently, schools and districts in five different states have fully adopted and adapted our model- Ohio, Colorado, Montana, Nevada, and Massachusetts. We are also in the process of working with local leaders to plan and launch efforts in schools in Virginia, Louisiana, Washington DC, Maryland and Alaska.
Thanks, Carrie!
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment
There are two interesting videos on YouTube that trace the history of teachers over the past four hundred years:
The Evolution of Educators – Part 1 (1600-1900)
The Evolution of Educators – Part 2 (1900-Present)
I’m not embedding them here because I think it’s worth watching them at the YouTube site and seeing the surprising number of other videos related to the history of schools you’ll see on the side of the page.
Thanks to Big Education Ape for the tip.
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment
WebKlipper lets you easily, without requiring registration, annotate any webpage with virtual post-it notes or a highlighter. You’re then given the url address of the annotated webpage.
It’s quite easy to use. However, as far as I can tell, it appears that anyone can then remove your annotations. I may be missing something, and have emailed the site to find out if I’m correct. If that’s the case, it makes a problematic for student assignments that would be posted on a student/teacher website/blog.
Nevertheless, it’s a nice app that I’m adding it to Best Applications For Annotating Websites.
Thanks to the Make Use Of blog for the tip.
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
I’ve just updated The Best Resources For Finding And Creating Virtual Field Trips.
Please feel free to suggest additional resources.
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
Scientists find how relaxed minds remember better is the headline of a recent article from Reuters News Service.
The article reinforces previous research that has shown people will learn more when they are less stressed. Here’s a quote from the article:
Stronger and more lasting memories are likely to be formed when a person is relaxed and the memory-related neurons in the brain fire in sync with certain brain waves.
In my book that will be published this month, English Language Learners: Teaching Strategies That Work, I talk about some of this research and the importance of positive relationships — student/student and student/teacher — in developing a classroom atmosphere supportive of learning.
Thanks to Judy Willis for the link. By the way, Judy will be a guest in a future Interview Of The Month.
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
Here are some more additions to The Best Sites For Learning About Easter And Passover:
Good Friday Around The World is a New York Times slideshow.
Holy Week is a slideshow from The Washington Post.
An annual Good Friday parade in the D.C. area is another Washington Post slideshow.
CNN has a video of the annual Easter Egg Roll at the White House.
Easter Baskets For Needy Kids is another video from CNN.
How’s the bunny connected to Easter? is a short article from MSNBC.
An Easter Egg Hunt for the Blind is a video from ABC.
April 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
The Boston Globe’s Big Picture published a series of great photographs of London.
These are particularly neat because they were taken at night and from the air in a helicopter.
I’ve placed the link on my Geography page.
April 3, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments
LocPDF is a visual search engine for PDF’s on the Web. In other words, you see thumbnail sketches of the PDF’s that are in your search results.
I really don’t know how big of a deal it is, or how different the search results are than from typical search engines, but I know when I typed in “parent engagement” I found some resources I hadn’t seen before. It was neat being able to see the images first.
I don’t think it’s particularly useful for English Language Learners, but I think it’ll be useful for teacher research.
April 3, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments
It’s approaching the time in many states when our students will have to take annual standardized tests.
I’ve written quite a few posts about how I prepare my students to take them, as well as posts writing about how bad the tests are. I thought I’d bring them all together in one “The Best…” list.
I’ve made it quite clear that our school we intentionally do little explicit “test-prep” work with our students. Instead, we believe the work we do during the entire year prepares them to be lifelong learners and that this will show-up in test results. We also do a number of things to help students feel positive on test days.
Please feel free to offer suggestions for other good resources on how to prepare students for the tests, or pieces that show why the tests are bad.
Here are my choices for The Best Posts On How To Prepare For Standardized Tests (And Why They’re Bad):
PREPARING FOR TESTS
Getting Into A “Smart” Frame Of Mind on Test-Days
What Snacks Do You Give Students On Test-Taking Days?
Display The Letter “A” On Test Days & Your Students Will Do Better?
More On Test-Day Brain-”Priming”
Talking With Students About Standardized Tests
“To Improve Girls’ Science Scores, Show Them Women Scientists”
Brief Social Conversations Improves Performance On Cognitive Tasks
Thinking About Our Ancestors Helps Us Do Better In Tests
“Brief Diversions Vastly Improve Focus, Researchers Find”
The Most Effective Thing I’ve Done To Prepare Students For Standardized Tests
“Write About A Success That One Of Your Ancestors Had”
The Cognitive Benefits of Chewing Gum is by Jonah Lehrer at Wired. He reports on a study that showed test-takers chewing gum scored higher than those who did it — it kept the chewers more alert. I thought this was particularly interesting because the only other similar research I had read was financed by the Wrigley Company, which didn’t inspire a great deal of confidence in its integrity.
Chewing Gum May Improve Test Scores reports on a new study that says chewing gum can improve test performance, but only for fifteen or twenty minutes after chewing stops. It says the gum should only be chewed prior to the test and will actually ultimately hurt test performance if it continues. This contradicts the previous study.
WHY THESE TESTS ARE BAD:
Meeting Testing Goals By Lowering Standards
“Why Rising Test Scores May Not Mean Increased Learning”
So This Is What Obama Was Talking About…
“Test scores poor tool for teacher evaluation”
Refusing To Give A Standardized Test
“Why you should be skeptical about standardized test scores”
Race to Self Destruction: A History Lesson for Education Reformers is by Yong Zhao.
Michelle Rhee’s Cheating Scandal is by Dana Goldstein.
Transcript (& Selected Highlights) From President Obama’s Town Hall Meeting On Education Today
The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Test Scorer by Dan DiMaggio
“As The Stakes Go Up, The Validity Goes Down”
The Test Generation is an article by Dana Goldstein that was just published in The American Prospect magazine.
Do Standardized Tests Reflect Student Learning in Schools? is by Patrick Ledesma.
Resistance to test-based school reform is growing is by Valerie Strauss at The Washington Post.
‘I am a bad teacher’ appeared in Valerie Strauss’ blog in The Washington Post.
High-stakes tests and cheating: An inevitable combination? is from The Hechinger Report.
Testing Insanity: Amount of Time on Testing is a fascinating chart by John T. Spencer.
Is the use of standardized tests improving education in America? is a good summary of research from Pro/Con.
If Gifted And Talented Programs Don’t Boost Scores, Should We Eliminate Them? comes from The Shanker Blog.
Why Test-Driven Accountability Is Grasping at Straws is by John Thompson
Standardized tests for everyone? In the Internet age, that’s the wrong answer. is from The Washington Post.
“Teach With, Not ‘To” The Test”
When an adult took standardized tests forced on kids is from Valerie Strauss’ blog at The Washington Post.
This music video comes via Tom Whitby and The Educator’s PLN:
Standardized Testing & Creative Thinking
SURVIVING THE POST-TEST BLUES
WHAT STUDENTS THINK OF THEM
My Students Reflect On Standardized Tests
Building Social Capital In The Classroom Helps With Test-Taking
Additional suggestions are welcome. Though many of these posts point to articles written by others, I’m sure I’ve missed some great ones that are out there. I’d love to revise this list and add them.
If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.
You might also want to explore the 400 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.
April 3, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments
“Timelines: Sources From History” is a nifty interactive from the British Library that lets you explore items from its collection using text, video and images.
It’s very engaging. The only negative I see is that you can save favorites, but only to a PDF that you can then print-out. There doesn’t appear to be anyway to save it online. That seems a little strange, but maybe I’m missing something.