Thursday, April 24, 2014

Week of April 24

Thursday Thoughts April 24

 
 
 
I must admit that I too have jumped on the "Happy" song bandwagon by Pharrell Williams.  Maybe it is because I have been a Pharrell Williams fan for well over a decade or maybe it is because he has written a song that crosses all lines and makes everybody feel good.  Not only is the hook "catchy" but the lyrics really speak to me.  "Here come bad news talking this and that, yeah, Well, give me all you got, and don’t hold it back, yeah, Well, I should probably warn you I’ll be just fine, yeah, No offense to you, don’t waste your time.....because I'm happy."
 
For me, the song doesn't really represent a feeling but more of an attitude.  Being happy or having a positive attitude is a choice.  This choice is easy to make when everything is going well.  The challenge is to remain positive when things are falling apart.  If you aren't happy, do something about it...make a change....surround yourself with others who are happy.....laugh more.  You will find that a positive attitude and doing the little things that make you happy will truly make a difference in your daily life.   Here's the link to the video in case you need to laugh right now and want to dance around and be happy.
 
 

Staff Spotlight

This week I would like to shine the spotlight on Sue Bates and Rachel Rafinski.  Early in the year I approached them about participating in the Fulton County STEM Academy.  They accepted the challenge and were among 30 other teachers in the NELC who participated in the yearlong program.  The program highlighted best practices, introduced the STEM framework and gave them an opportunity to collaborate with other teachers to create new lessons. With all of the changes that we endured this school year, I know it was a sacrifice on their part to participate.  Because of the work they have done this year, we will be ready to jump right into a "STEMY" (get it) school year in August.  Sue and Rachel, thank you for not only making your students a priority, but also your willingness to further your professional knowledge and share it with others.  We can't wait to move full "STEM" ahead. 
 


4C's: Collaboration, Communication, Creativity, Critical Thinking Skills

27 Ways to Inspire Students to Innovate

 
Educator Mia MacMeekin made this infographic about ways to inspire students to think more deeply about how innovation applies to them. It’s a helpful way to begin a conversation about what it means to innovate, a word that sometimes seems to belong in the adult domain of business and is estranged from how students think about living their lives.
rethinkinginnovation
Maria L. MacMeekin
 


Technology Tidbits: (If you have websites to share please email me and I will share with all)

Check out the following website:


 
http://www.mathwire.com/problemsolving/probs.html- problem solving resources for grades K-8

News & Notes:

The proposed technology camp, "Lights, Camera, Action" for rising 5th grade MBES students has been approved!  The camp will be held the week of June 23rd from 9am-12pm. Sign up flyers will be sent home soon.  We still need one additional teacher.  If you enjoy teaching students how to create various tech projects, please see me by May 2nd.  The camp will be free of charge and any current 4th grade student will be eligible to attend.  In addition, the Media Center will be open for several dates again this summer.  Leigh will get that information out to students and staff toward the end of the year.



Thursday, April 17, 2014

Week of April 17

Thursday Thoughts April 17
 
 

In the busyness of this week, I forgot to share with you that Nisha was able to bring the baby home from the hospital on Tuesday.  What a tremendous blessing considering that Nisha's original due date was May 1st.    As long as we live, problems, worries and troubles will arise.  But if we focus on the blessings that we have and remain positive during troubled times, we will get through our experiences.  We will then be able to share those experiences with others so that they might be encouraged to hang in there.

Staff Spotlight

This week I would like to shine the spotlight on Sarah Ley.  Sarah is an active participant of the Reading Workshop Cohort and has embraced the Reader's Workshop wholeheartedly.  She has used it to hep her students make great gains in reading.  Throughout this year, Sarah had some challenges with students and continually worked to meet their needs and help them become successful.  When Sarah felt that she needed additional assistance with a couple of students, she reached out for help. She always comes to SST meetings prepared and willing to implement the ideas and suggestions provided.   Whenever you see Sarah, you will be greeted with a kind word and a smile.
  Sarah- thank you for the work that you are doing at Medlock Bridge.
 
 


4C's: Collaboration, Communication, Creativity, Critical Thinking Skills

Twelve Things You Were Not Taught in School About Creative Thinking

By Michael Michalko


1. You are creative.
The artist is not a special person, each one of us is a special kind of artist. Every one of us is born a creative, spontaneous thinker. The only difference between people who are creative and people who are not is a simple belief. Creative people believe they are creative. People who believe they are not creative, are not. Once you have a particular identity and set of beliefs about yourself, you become interested in seeking out the skills needed to express your identity and beliefs. This is why people who believe they are creative become creative. If you believe you are not creative, then there is no need to learn how to become creative and you don't. The reality is that believing you are not creative excuses you from trying or attempting anything new. When someone tells you that they are not creative, you are talking to someone who has no interest and will make no effort to be a creative thinker.
2. Creative thinking is work.
You must have passion and the determination to immerse yourself in the process of creating new and different ideas. Then you must have patience to persevere against all adversity. All creative geniuses work passionately hard and produce incredible numbers of ideas, most of which are bad. In fact, more bad poems were written by the major poets than by minor poets. Thomas Edison created 3000 different ideas for lighting systems before he evaluated them for practicality and profitability. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart produced more than six hundred pieces of music, including forty-one symphonies and some forty-odd operas and masses, during his short creative life. Rembrandt produced around 650 paintings and 2,000 drawings and Picasso executed more than 20,000 works. Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets. Some were masterpieces, while others were no better than his contemporaries could have written, and some were simply bad.
3. You must go through the motions of being creative.
When you are producing ideas, you are replenishing neurotransmitters linked to genes that are being turned on and off in response to what your brain is doing, which in turn is responding to challenges. When you go through the motions of trying to come up with new ideas, you are energizing your brain by increasing the number of contacts between neurons. The more times you try to get ideas, the more active your brain becomes and the more creative you become. If you want to become an artist and all you did was paint a picture every day, you will become an artist. You may not become another Vincent Van Gogh, but you will become more of an artist than someone who has never tried.
4. Your brain is not a computer.
Your brain is a dynamic system that evolves its patterns of activity rather than computes them like a computer. It thrives on the creative energy of feedback from experiences real or fictional. You can synthesize experience; literally create it in your own imagination. The human brain cannot tell the difference between an "actual" experience and an experience imagined vividly and in detail. This discovery is what enabled Albert Einstein to create his thought experiments with imaginary scenarios that led to his revolutionary ideas about space and time. One day, for example, he imagined falling in love. Then he imagined meeting the woman he fell in love with two weeks after he fell in love. This led to his theory of acausality. The same process of synthesizing experience allowed Walt Disney to bring his fantasies to life.
5. There is no one right answer.
Reality is ambiguous. Aristotle said it is either A or not-A. It cannot be both. The sky is either blue or not blue. This is black and white thinking as the sky is a billion different shades of blue. A beam of light is either a wave or not a wave (A or not-A). Physicists discovered that light can be either a wave or particle depending on the viewpoint of the observer. The only certainty in life is uncertainty. When trying to get ideas, do not censor or evaluate them as they occur. Nothing kills creativity faster than self-censorship of ideas while generating them. Think of all your ideas as possibilities and generate as many as you can before you decide which ones to select. The world is not black or white. It is grey.
6. Never stop with your first good idea.
Always strive to find a better one and continue until you have one that is still better. In 1862, Phillip Reis demonstrated his invention which could transmit music over the wires. He was days away from improving it into a telephone that could transmit speech. Every communication expert in Germany dissuaded him from making improvements, as they said the telegraph is good enough. No one would buy or use a telephone. Ten years later, Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone. Spencer Silver developed a new adhesive for 3M that stuck to objects but could easily be lifted off. It was first marketed as a bulletin board adhesive so the boards could be moved easily from place to place. There was no market for it. Silver didn't discard it. One day Arthur Fry, another 3M employee, was singing in the church's choir when his page marker fell out of his hymnal. Fry coated his page markers with Silver's adhesive and discovered the markers stayed in place, yet lifted off without damaging the page. Hence the Post-it Notes were born. Thomas Edison was always trying to spring board from one idea to another in his work. He spring boarded his work from the telephone (sounds transmitted) to the phonograph (sounds recorded) and, finally, to motion pictures (images recorded).
7. Expect the experts to be negative.
The more expert and specialized a person becomes, the more their mindset becomes narrowed and the more fixated they become on confirming what they believe to be absolute. Consequently, when confronted with new and different ideas, their focus will be on conformity. Does it conform with what I know is right? If not, experts will spend all their time showing and explaining why it can't be done and why it can't work. They will not look for ways to make it work or get it done because this might demonstrate that what they regarded as absolute is not absolute at all. This is why when Fred Smith created Federal Express, every delivery expert in the U.S. predicted its certain doom. After all, they said, if this delivery concept was doable, the Post Office or UPS would have done it long ago.
8. Trust your instincts.
Don't allow yourself to get discouraged. Albert Einstein was expelled from school because his attitude had a negative effect on serious students; he failed his university entrance exam and had to attend a trade school for one year before finally being admitted; and was the only one in his graduating class who did not get a teaching position because no professor would recommend him. One professor said Einstein was "the laziest dog" the university ever had. Beethoven's parents were told he was too stupid to be a music composer. Charles Darwin's colleagues called him a fool and what he was doing "fool's experiments" when he worked on his theory of biological evolution. Walt Disney was fired from his first job on a newspaper because "he lacked imagination." Thomas Edison had only two years of formal schooling, was totally deaf in one ear and was hard of hearing in the other, was fired from his first job as a newsboy and later fired from his job as a telegrapher; and still he became the most famous inventor in the history of the U.S.
9. There is no such thing as failure.
Whenever you try to do something and do not succeed, you do not fail. You have learned something that does not work. Always ask "What have I learned about what doesn't work?", "Can this explain something that I didn't set out to explain?", and "What have I discovered that I didn't set out to discover?" Whenever someone tells you that they have never made a mistake, you are talking to someone who has never tried anything new.
10. You do not see things as they are; you see them as you are.
Interpret your own experiences. All experiences are neutral. They have no meaning. You give them meaning by the way you choose to interpret them. If you are a priest, you see evidence of God everywhere. If you are an atheist, you see the absence of God everywhere. IBM observed that no one in the world had a personal computer. IBM interpreted this to mean there was no market. College dropouts, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, looked at the same absence of personal computers and saw a massive opportunity. Once Thomas Edison was approached by an assistant while working on the filament for the light bulb. The assistant asked Edison why he didn't give up. "After all," he said, "you have failed 5000 times." Edison looked at him and told him that he didn't understand what the assistant meant by failure, because, Edison said, "I have discovered 5000 things that don't work." You construct your own reality by how you choose to interpret your experiences.
11. Always approach a problem on its own terms.
Do not trust your first perspective of a problem as it will be too biased toward your usual way of thinking. Always look at your problem from multiple perspectives. Always remember that genius is finding a perspective no one else has taken. Look for different ways to look at the problem. Write the problem statement several times using different words. Take another role, for example, how would someone else see it, how would Jay Leno, Pablo Picasso, George Patton see it? Draw a picture of the problem, make a model, or mold a sculpture. Take a walk and look for things that metaphorically represent the problem and force connections between those things and the problem (How is a broken store window like my communications problem with my students?) Ask your friends and strangers how they see the problem. Ask a child. How would a ten year old solve it? Ask a grandparent. Imagine you are the problem. When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.
12. Learn to think unconventionally.
 Creative geniuses do not think analytically and logically. Conventional, logical, analytical thinkers are exclusive thinkers which means they exclude all information that is not related to the problem. They look for ways to eliminate possibilities. Creative geniuses are inclusive thinkers which mean they look for ways to include everything, including things that are dissimilar and totally unrelated. Generating associations and connections between unrelated or dissimilar subjects is how they provoke different thinking patterns in their brain. These new patterns lead to new connections which give them a different way to focus on the information and different ways to interpret what they are focusing on. This is how original and truly novel ideas are created. Albert Einstein once famously remarked "Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand."
 

Technology Tidbits: (If you have websites to share please email me and I will share with all)

Check out the following website:


http://www.lakeshore.wnyric.org/Page/3492
The Lake Shore Central School District in Angola, NY has a page of Common Core Math word problems for grades 1st-5th.
 
http://www.wcschools.com/education/components/scrapbook/default.php?sectiondetailid=62235
A first grade teacher's webpage that is full of Common Core math resources.

 
News & Notes:
Congratulations to Kristen Bates who has been specially selected by the National Council of Teachers in Mathematics (NCTM) and the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) to attend the 2014 Mickelson ExxonMobil Teachers Academy at the Hyatt Regency on the Hudson, Jersey City N.J.

Kristen will join 150 third-through fifth-grade teachers from across the nation in Jersey City, NJ on July 20 for this one week-intensive, all-expense paid professional development opportunity.

By applying at www.sendmyteacher.com, teachers from all 50 states have the opportunity to attend the Academy and hone their math and science teaching skills. More than 1,100 teachers applied for the 2014 Academy, and Kristen's commitment to teaching stood out among the rest.
 

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Week of April 3

Thursday Thoughts  April 3







If you are reading this on Thursday night, then you have approximately 18 hours until Spring Break.  If it is Friday then you have less than 8 hours and you are almost there! I hope that no matter your destination, you take the time to rest.  Turn off your brain.  Do something that is worth sharing with others when you return.  We have worked hard and deserve a few days off.  For those of you who will be on the road (or on the sea) I wish you safe travels.  For those that will enjoy the benefits of staying home, I urge you to dive into some great books or movies and make a lasting imprint on the couch. Thank you for taking caring of our students....now take care of yourself!


This week I would like to shine the spotlight on Jennifer Briskin.  This is Jennifer's first year at Medlock but you would never know it.  Jennifer works closely with the special education team as well as the SST Team to provide strategies, help identify students' needs and administer testing.  Her ability to complete testing well ahead of designated timelines is uncanny.  I have had the opportunity to participate in numerous meetings with Jennifer and she is knowledgeable, compassionate and willing to go the extra mile for students. Although Jennifer is not here on a daily basis, she calls Medlock home and has become a valued member of the team.  Thank you Jennifer for all that you do for our students!

4C's: Collaboration, Communication, Creativity, Critical Thinking Skills

A List Of 50+ Teaching Strategies To Jumpstart Your Teacher Brain   

Teachthought Blog


Teaching strategies are among the most important ingredients for highly-effective learning environments.
In addition to literacy strategies, approaches to assessment, and grouping strategies (among many others), knowing the right teaching strategy for the right academic situation may not be a matter of expertise or training, but memory: out of sight, out of mind, yes?
Which makes the following infographic from fortheteachers.org useful.
While it doesn’t offer definitions and explanations for each strategy (it’s an infographic, not a book), and many great strategies are missing (e.g., 3-2-1, exit slip, project-based learning, accountable talk, ask a question, etc.) it does work well as a kind of reminder for what’s possible, even offering categories for each strategy, from progress monitoring (think-pair-share, KWL charts), to Note-Taking (graphic organizers).
There are 87 instructional strategies listed below, but several are repeated across categories, so let’s call it “50+” strategies.
Enjoy!
instructional-strategies-graphic

Technology Tidbits: (If you have websites to share please email me and I will share with all)

Check out the following website:


www.fortheteachers.org This site is a great resource that gives more detail about each of the strategies in the chart above.

News & Notes:

The security buzzer system will be operable within the 3rd week of April.  At that time, I will send a school messenger letter and a hard copy letter home to all parents with the details.