Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

September 18, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

My Best Posts On The Basics Of Small Groups In The Classroom

In yesterday’s post, Teens, Their Brains, & Working In Groups, I mentioned that I would be posting a “The Best…” list today sharing a few very practical and simple ideas on how to work effectively with small groups in the classroom.

This “The Best…” list is a bit different from my lengthy The Best Sites For Cooperative Learning Ideas post. That is a much more involved list, while this post is more focused on the everyday basics of just doing a simple small group activity.

Here are my choices for My Best Posts On The Basics Of Small Groups In The Classroom:

Thirteen teachers left responses in the comments of my post, “What Do You To Make Sure Small Groups Work Well In Class?”

The Best Number For A Small Group

NPR Story On Importance Of Social Skills For Small Group Success

And This Is Why We Have To Help Our Students Learn How To Work In Small Groups

Solutions to Social Loafing is a report on forming small groups in classes that has some very interesting, if not unsurprising, findings.

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the 760 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

September 18, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Interview Of The Month — Kevin D. Washburn

As regular readers know, each month I interview people in the education world about whom I want to learn more. You can see read those past interviews here.

Today, I’m publishing October’s “Interview Of The Month” a few days early. Kevin D. Washburn is a researcher, author, and teacher particularly focusing on neuroscience and learning. He is the Director of Clerestory Learning (you can subscribe to their free newsletter here). He’s also a blogger and author.

Can you tell us what Clerestory Learning is and how you got involved in education?

I discovered my love for teaching while in high school. We had the option of serving as aides in elementary classrooms during our free periods. I spent most of these times in a kindergarten classroom, and I knew almost immediately that I loved it. My first day there, a student squeezed his plugged glue bottle so hard that it burst and sent a flood of stickiness all over the table. Where else would you get to get to experience such fun?!?

That enjoyment was honed into a mission while I was in college. I had inspiring professors who pushed us to think, to innovate, and to find a way to share our learning with others. We were also told repeatedly that being a professional meant constantly learning and growing. That message found root in my mind because the professors did not just say it; they lived it. I remember we students tried arguing this with a professor. Our objection was, “What if we end up working in a school system that has no money to send us to conferences or graduate school?” Her reply was classic: “Can you read?” She helped us realize that WE were responsible for our own professional development.

After graduation I searched for a kindergarten position. I got all the way to board interviews at two schools, but the outcome was the same in both. The board members did not feel a man could be “motherly enough” to teach kindergarten. I was disappointed until I started teaching fourth grade. My nine- and ten-year-old students were a constant source of joy. Do people who do not teach get to laugh so much during their workdays? I doubt it.

Forgive me for sharing a story from those early days. The television show America’s Funniest Videos launched about the same time I began teaching. I was reading aloud to my class one day, and the section of the story was especially tense. As I wondered down the aisle, my voice rising and falling with the drama, I worked my way back to a stool I kept at the front of the classroom. I backed onto the stool, wove my legs into its legs, and then plummeted to the floor. I landed, face down, literally nose-in-book. My students were stunned into silence. I stood up, brushed off, looked up, and we simultaneously burst into laughter. A student in the back raised his hand and said, “Do it again, Mr. W., so I can get it on video!” We didn’t, but I frequently replay the event mentally, and it always makes me chuckle.

From there, I taught everything from third grade to graduate school, and I have loved every level. I also served as an administrator just long enough to realize it was not my forte, and then moved into curriculum and instruction-related areas. I’ve had the opportunity to lead development of an instructional reading program and guide schools in its implementation.

Which brings me to Clerestory Learning, an organization my wife and I founded about five years ago. Clerestory Learning is a business dedicated to creating practical classroom applications of neurocognitive research by developing programs and professional development for teachers, our schools’ most valuable asset. We strive for excellence in professional development and training programs by creating effective instructional solutions based on sound applications of multidisciplinary research. In short, we divide our time between researching and developing programs and tools for teachers and schools, leading professional development events, and writing. I love every aspect of this!

Right now, we have three popular programs. “Teaching the Learning Brain” is a one-day event that explores a variety of neurocognitive research findings that have implications for teaching. Then we have two multi-day programs. “The Architecture of Learning” focuses on instructional design tools that help teachers apply findings from neurocognitive research to their teaching. My current favorite is “Writer’s Stylus,” a K-12 instructional writing program that includes a professional development component. I love teaching this because teachers grow both personally and professionally during our time together. It’s one of the most rewarding teaching experiences I’ve ever had. Observing teachers use the methods with students literally moves me to tears. Their work helps students find their voices and craft their messages in ways that deserve attention. It’s moving and inspiring to witness.

What do you think are the three most important concepts that educators can learn from neuroscience?

Understanding LEARNING improves your teaching.
Everything you do as a teacher matters. From your intentional instruction to the very words you use, it all fosters (or hinders) learning.
To learn, the brain must THINK! We must plan time for student thinking and engage students in activities that foster the thinking that constructs new learning.

Please share a little about your book — what is it about and why did you decide to write it?

The Architecture of Learning: Designing Instruction for the Learning Brain presents the fundamental processes of learning and offers planning tools to help teachers develop teaching that engages students in those processes. In other words, it takes findings from neurocognitive research, explains how they relate to learning, and suggests ways teachers can apply the findings to teaching. It also explores related areas that are of intense interest to me, such as critical and creative thinking. If there is a bottom-line message to the book, it’s what I offered as one of the three important concepts from neuroscience: To learn, the brain must THINK! The book offers a few ways that thinking can be intentionally included in teaching.

I decided to write the book because there was wide-spread interest in the approach, and many teachers who were interested did not have the opportunity to attend a professional development event dedicated to it. Thankfully, the book has been well-received, even though when I read it I see things I want to revise (again!). I have a second book in the thinking stages right now. After that, I may return to the current book and work on a revised edition. I definitely want to include more examples of technology use, and I have some exciting ideas about applying the model to more self-directed learning emphases.

Thanks to Jason Bedell, who is both genius and blazingly fast learner, the book is available in traditional paperback and in Kindle and Nook formats.

What neuroscience research that is presently going on do you think has the greatest potential for application in the classroom?

Brace yourself. I think the wide-ranging field of wisdom research has significant implications for schools and teachers. I know, I know. Many people think wisdom is beyond the realm of scientific study, but researchers are pursuing this line of inquiry and discovering much that I think we as educators should be exploring.

Wisdom includes supporting capacities, such as self-regulation, that already are influencing classroom practice (or should be!). Many teachers are familiar with Carol Dweck and Angela Duckworth’s research on self-regulation. But researchers are also exploring capacities such as compassion, emotional-regulation (resilience), humility, and altruism. We’re not at a place where these have been studied enough to offer many ideas for education. However, I see this field as potentially altering our ideas of what school should be.

Right now, I am tinkering with a model of four-fold emphasis: self-directed learning, self-directed reasoning, self-directed evaluating, and wisdom. There is far more to this than I can share here, but this emphasis would include elements that many teachers currently would like to emphasize, such as creative thinking. I agree with Robert Sternberg: much of what we do now in schools, including the assessment tools we value, is “orthogonal to wisdom.” I’d sure like to be part of an educational system that sought to produce wise individuals!

Ultimately, this research has to be examined and distilled to the point where we as teachers know what and how we need to change. We’re not there yet. But this are of research is loaded with potential!

Is there anything I haven’t asked you about that you’d like to share?

Yes. We must remember that the brain is an embodied brain. Our schools need to be attentive to the health of our students. Things like true physical fitness and free play support student learning. Students need to be building healthy fitness habits, and this augments the building and maintaining of a brain that is primed for new learning. I know that we cannot (and should not) control every aspect of a student’s life, but we can structure our programs so that influences on learning, such as physical fitness, receive adequate attention. Everyone seems to want more time for teaching. This is the wrong perspective. We need to ask ourselves, “What does a student need to optimize learning?” Part of the answer is physical fitness and free play. We want more time to each; students need more time to maintain healthy brains for learning.

Thanks for this opportunity. Your questions have motivated me to dive back into my work with renewed vigor!

Thanks, Kevin!

September 17, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Nice International Media Literacy Resources

Here are the newest additions to The Best Tools To Help Develop Global Media Literacy:

This is how Worldcrunch describes itself:

Worldcrunch delivers the best global journalism previously shut off from English language readers: selecting, translating and editing content from top foreign-language outlets.

This is how preeeurop describes itself:

Presseurop.eu is a Paris-based news website publishing a daily selection of articles chosen from more than 200 international news titles, then translated into ten languages (English, German, French, Spanish, Romanian, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Polish and Czech).

September 16, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Learning About Different Cultures

Here are new additions to “The Best Sites For Learning About The World’s Different Cultures”:

Though I wish they had come up with a different title, The world’s strangest festivals – in pictures is from The Guardian.

Where Children Sleep is the book’s website, and it has great photos of bedrooms throughout the world.

Sleepers
is a photo gallery from The Boston Globe and it shows people…sleeping all around the world.

September 15, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Teens, Their Brains, & Working In Groups

I’ll soon be publishing a “The Best…” list on resources to learn about the brain. An article just published in National Geographic, though, is probably the most readable one I’ve seen. It’s titled Teenage Brains and was written by David Dobbs.

I was particularly struck by his analysis of research and experiments about how teens are particularly motivated by social rewards — connecting with their peers (of course, this is no great revelation to those of us who are parents or high school teachers):

The teen brain is similarly attuned to oxytocin, another neural hormone, which (among other things) makes social connections in particular more rewarding. The neural networks and dynamics associated with general reward and social interactions overlap heavily. Engage one, and you often engage the other. Engage them during adolescence, and you light a fire.

He then talks (a little less convincingly — at least to me) about its evolutionary purpose:

Yet teens gravitate toward peers for another, more powerful reason: to invest in the future rather than the past. We enter a world made by our parents. But we will live most of our lives, and prosper (or not) in a world run and remade by our peers. Knowing, understanding, and building relationships with them bears critically on success. Socially savvy rats or monkeys, for instance, generally get the best nesting areas or territories, the most food and water, more allies, and more sex with better and fitter mates. And no species is more intricately and deeply social than humans are.

But, whether you “buy” the second part or not, it’s just another reminder to us teachers about the advantages of having students work in small groups. Earlier in the article, Dobbs quotes a researcher saying that teens give “more weight to the payoff” of social connections than adults do. Given this scientific evidence, and most of what we just see in the classroom, why wouldn’t we teachers try to take advantage of it by incorporating small group work in our lessons as much as possible?

I’ve previously posted The Best Sites For Cooperative Learning Ideas. Tomorrow, I’ll be posting a more specific “The Best…” list sharing posts about the nuts and bolts of using small groups effectively in the classroom.

September 15, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

XtraMath

Here’s the newest addition to The Best MATH Sites That Students Can Use Independently And Let Teachers Check On Progress:

This comes from Tracy Macfarlane: I love xtramath.org. It is a free site that helps kids master their math facts. Initially, the student takes an assessment quiz of what they already have mastered as indicated by a response of 3 seconds or less. Each consecutive session is based on the outcome of the previous assessments. It takes about 5 minutes a day, provides corrective feedback, visuals for goal setting, and can be used for the whole class or set up at home by a parent.

September 14, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

The School Reform Equivalent Of Playing “Mary Had A Little Lamb” With A Stradivarius

I read something truly awful today in The New York Times Magazine article, What if the Secret to Success Is Failure?

But before I share what it was, I’d like to preface it by restating my concerns about a pattern I see of some school reformers taking ideas and practices that have a huge learning and teaching potential and, instead, warping them so their benefits disappear and  can actually become destructive. The title of this blog post comes from one I wrote last year explaining how the Gates Foundation was doing just this with its use of videotaping teachers and using student surveys. In that post, I explained that:

Using videotaped teacher lessons and student surveys for the primary purpose of connecting them to teacher evaluation by test scores is like using a Stradivarius and a Grand Piano to play “Mary Had A Little Lamb” to evaluate the musician. In both instances, the tools have far more value to everyone if used in more expansive ways.

In that post, and in a subsequent column for The Washington Post titled Videotaping teachers the right way (not the Gates way), I discuss at length how my school and I use both tools — completely outside the formal evaluation process — and how that is critical for the enormous success we’ve had with both.

Now, how does this connect to the truly awful thing I read in The Times today?

In that article, Paul Tough examines two efforts at incorporating “character education” in schools, including one done by KIPP Schools. The KIPP program is particularly focused on the ideal of helping students develop “performance character” traits like self control, perseverance, and “grit.” According to the article, they decided to implement it after they saw that many KIPP graduates were not succeeding in college, and concluded that a greater knowledge and understanding of their importance could make a difference.

I am certainly all for helping students develop these kinds of traits, and focus a lot doing just that in my classroom. I write extensively about these lessons in this blog (see My Best Posts About Helping Students Develop Their Capacity For Self-Control and The Best Resources For Learning About The Importance Of “Grit”) and share them in detail in my book Helping Students Motivate Themselves.

But here is where the pattern of some school reformers warping valuable ideas comes in — now, the KIPP middle-schools in New York City actually grade their students on each of these traits and twice a year give out “character report cards”:

Teachers at all four KIPP middle schools in New York City had to grade every one of their students, on a scale of 1 to 5, on every one of the 24 character indicators…

Incredible! They decide that these traits (though, come one, 24?!) are essential for life after school, so they decide to go against what all the research says about the negative learning impacts of incentives (see My Best Posts On “Motivating” Students) and grade them?

It sounds like the schools might be doing a lot of other great learning and teaching activities on these traits. But why mess it up with grading them? Focus on encouragement, self-reflection, helping students see how these traits are in their long-term self interest. If you start grading them, then you’re emphasizing that the grades are the primary reason why these traits are important. You may not say that to the students — you may say that it’s about the long-term. But actions speak louder than words, and the grades are what counts now.

Videotaping teachers, student evaluations of classes and teachers, and now character education — what’s the next great idea that some school reformers can suck the life (and learning) out of?

 

September 14, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Tons Of Free Resources From My Books

As regular readers know, I’ve authored three books that have been published, and two more will come out within the next year or so. There are a lot of free resources from them available without purchase, including excerpts, printable hand-outs, and the ability to “look inside” two of them at Amazon.

Here are the links that will take you to them:

Helping Students Motivate Themselves: Practical Answers To Classroom Challenges

English Language Learners: Teaching Strategies That Work

Building Parent Engagement In Schools

The ESL Teacher’s Survival Guide will be published next summer by Jossey-Bass, and it’s a good — and lengthy — one.  Then a sequel to Helping Students Motivate Themselves will be published by Eye On Education.  I’m sure both will have plenty of free online resources available, too.

I might take a short break from book-writing after that — five books in four years can take its toll :)

I hope you find these materials helpful.

September 14, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

The Best Resources On Our “Becoming What We Read”

Some studies have been released over the past few months finding that — in our minds — we “become” the characters about whom we read. I don’t think this is a big revelation to many of us who love reading, and prior to these studies I’ve written in my books and here in this blog about how I’ve used this tendency to reinforce “life skills” lessons through literacy activities with my students (also see The Best Sites For Finding Folktales To Teach “Life Lessons”).

I thought it might be useful to bring together a few posts I’ve written about the topic, along with articles from other publications.

Here are my choices for The Best Resources On Our “Becoming What We Read”:

Reading fiction ‘improves empathy’, study finds comes from The Guardian.

Why that book changed your life
is from The National Post.

Becoming What We Read

“Dr. King Was A Man Who Never Met A Stranger”

Feedback is welcome.

If you found this post useful, you might want to look at the 760 other “The Best…” lists and consider subscribing to this blog for free.

September 14, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Photo Galleries Of The Week

Obviously, photos can be great educational tools with English Language Learners and with any students (see The Best Ways To Use Photos In Lessons). I post about many photo galleries, also called slideshows. To do it in a little more organized way, though, I recently began this weekly feature called “Photo Galleries Of The Week.” This post is a “round-up” of online slideshows I’m adding to various “The Best…” lists:

Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2011 shortlist – in pictures is from The Guardian. I’m adding it to The Best Images Taken In Space.

Sinkholes around the world is a Guardian slideshow.

Haven and Hell: The World’s Largest Refugee Camp. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About World Refugee Day.

Dadaab: the largest refugee camp in the world — audio slideshow is from The Guardian. I’m adding it to the same “The Best” list.

50 Most Extraordinary Churches of the World

September 14, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

What Are The Most “Engaging” Education Blogs, According To PostRank?

Many people are familiar with PostRank (recently acquired by Google), which ranks blogs by an engagement level.

You can see their complete ranking of education blogs here, but I thought I’d share their top fifteen here:

1. Inside Higher Ed

2. MindShift

3. Free Technology for Teachers

4. NYT > Education

5. voiceofsandiego.org — All articles, full feed

6. Government 2.0 in Action

7. Joanne Jacobs

8. BlogHighEd.org

9. The Thinking Stick

10. Dangerously Irrelevant

11. Stephen’s Web ~ OLDaily

12. Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

13. Teach For Us :: the Teach For America blog network Posts

14. Moving at the Speed of Creativity

15. Big Education Ape