Title: Building An Engaging Learning Community in Your Classroom
1Building An Engaging Learning Community in Your
Classroom
- Cathy Costello
- Curriculum Coordinator Retired
- York Region District School Board
2Presenter Profile
- Cathy Costello is a recently retired educator
with 31 years of experience. Her roles have
included teacher, department head, curriculum
consultant, and curriculum coordinator for
literacy for York Region District School Board. - Her expertise is in the areas of literacy and
special education. Cathy is currently an author
and reviewer for Pearson Education Canada where
she is involved in Literacy in Action, Grades 7
8, and Stepping Out reading and writing
professional training programs. - She has been part of author teams for four books
in the Boldprint series (Grades 4 to 12) and
Reading and Writing for Success. - Cathy was on the provincial writing teams for
Think Literacy Cross-Curricular Approaches and
the Reaching Higher resource package. - She has been a member of Oxford University
Publishings author team contributing literacy
strategies for subject textbooks Active Citizen
(civics) and Encounter Canada (geography). - Cathy was also a contributor to the 2nd Edition
of The Literacy Principal. - Her e-mail address is cathy.costello_at_sympatico.ca.
3History With the person to your right
- If you could meet and do lunch with one
personality from history, who would it be? Why?
4Music With two people behind you
- If you were shipwrecked on a desert island, what
two songs would you want to have on your Ipod?
Why?
5Outcomes of This Session
- Participants will
- learn about practices supported by research that
engage students in learning - understand that how you teach is as important as
what you teach - support each other with experiences and
strategies.
6How do we teach?
Assumptions about Learners
Practices Protocols
Understandings Beliefs
Reality of your classroom
Map backwards How do the practices and protocols
in your classroom reflect your assumptions? How
do your assumptions build from your beliefs and
understandings?
7You had me at hello
- Meet students as they come in the door.
- Stand at the door or close to it. Greet them
with a compliment or a genuine query about how
they feel, why they look happy, worried, tired,
etc. Students learn that you consider them a
person first. - Nobody cares how much you know until they know
how much you care. William Purkey
8Give Them a Stake in the Room
- Invite each student to colour the room with a
photograph, a poster, a piece of artwork, a
newspaper clipping or magazine cover of a
favourite activity - Quote of the day teacher posts for first 2 to 4
weeks, then students choose and contribute. - Graffiti Board where they leave messages for
each other appropriate for public viewing.
9Establish Order and Structure Cooperatively!
- Students need fences to bump up against. John
Leeds, Principal - No more than 3-5 basic ground ruleseven 2
- Respect People
- Respect Property
- Routines
- Agenda of days activities
- Startup and cleanup routine
10Build Self-Esteem Bragging Exercise
- Find a partner
- Interview each other about what you do best or
what you are good at. Take 1 to 2 minutes each. - You will introduce each other to the rest of the
class, so use effective listening skills. - Jack Canfield, Mark Hansen, 100 Ways to Enhance
Self-Concept in the Classroom
11Build Relationships and Teams
- Birthday line working in teams of 10-12, get in
a line according to your birthday with January at
the front. NO TALKING AT ALL. - Lifesaver Relay popsicle sticks, large gummy
lifesaver shape - Lead to
- Effective Collaborative Group Work
- http//wilderdom.com/games/Icebreakers.html
- - Choose carefully.
12Building the Learning Community
- Working with two other students
- Name the 10 provinces and three territories of
Canada. Bonus prize for adding the capital of
each one. - List as many major events of World War Two as you
can. - Working in a group of four, do a group homework
check. You have 10 minutes to ensure that
everyone understands how to do the first five
problems. One person from your group will be
asked to demonstrate one of these five questions. - Take Five in Think Literacy Oral Communication.
13Grab their attention!
- Challenge of the day
- Issues and Answers
14Geography Rapid Writing/Brief Reflection
- If you had to make one thing in the world or
in this country smaller, what would it be? - IfQuestions for Teens by Evelyn McFarlane
John Saywell
15Mathematics Group Think
- What information would you need to estimate how
many cell phones are in this hotel right now?
16English Think-Pair-Share
- Think of 30 words that include the oa letter
combination. You may not use the dictionary until
you have 20 words. - What was your strategy?
17Find Out About Them What do they read? What do
they write? What are their interests?
Historical novels
Biography
Sports
Thrillers
True crime
Romance
News articles
Mystery
Poetry or Drama
Nature
Science
Science fiction
Magazine articles
History
18Find Out About ThemI Am Unique Sentence
Completion
- My favourite song/music
- My hobbies
- Pet(s) I own
- Sports/games I like
- TV show(s) I enjoy watching
- Movies Ive seen
- Places Ive been
19Set Students Up for Success
- Assessment for learning know their strengths
and needs so you can build skills - Assessment as learning checklists, checkbrics,
rubrics, exemplars, goal setting opportunity for
each assignment - Assessment of learning provide engaging
assignments which require high-level thinking and
for which there is no wrong answer, e.g.,
responsibility pie graph, visual verbal essay,
mind map
20Assessment For Learning with Issues and Answers
- Use think, pair, share, or inside/outside
circles - What is an important environmental issue in
todays world? - Use a values line and fold the line
- World War One could have been prevented.
Agree strongly Disagree strongly
21Responsibility Pie Graph
- Who was most responsible for? What was the most
important cause or effect of? What is the most
important factor in? - Name each piece of the pie and assign a
percentage of responsibility. - Add evidence to support the ge.
- Example Who was most responsible for the tragic
end of Louis
Riel?
22Verbal/Visual Essay
- Students draw or find five symbolic elements
related to what they have read and explain the
meaning of each one. - Students choose five key quotations from the text
and explain why those are significant indicators
of what is explained in the text. - Technique originally shared by Jim Barry,
author for Thomson Nelson Publishing.
23Mind Maps
- Key idea in the centre
- Creative integration of visuals, colours, codes,
words, ideas, and connectors a natural
function of the human brain - Demonstrates various aspects of the key idea.
- A more personal response.
Viewing
Writing
Oral Comm
Processes
Literacy
Reading
Venn
Strategies
Vocab in Context
Timeline
24Mind Map about Creating a Mind Map
25Celebrate Success as Moving Forward
- Be a guide on the side. Support the right moves
and directions. - Conference with students. Ask questions to lead
them forward. - Be an encourager. Tally the positives, not the
negatives. - Celebrate their strengths.
26The Lessons of Martin Haberman
- Success in school is a matter of life and
death, especially for the poor. - He published The Pedagogy of Poverty Versus Good
Teaching in the December 1991 issue of Phi Delta
Kappan. - He exposed the paradigm many educators in inner
city schools adopted in teaching the poor
routinized activity, strict discipline,
compliance, teachers teach/students learn.
27Haberman Good teaching is happening when
students are
- involved in issues they regard as vital concerns
- being helped to see major concepts, big ideas,
and general principles, not simply isolated
facts. - involved in planning what they are doing.
- involved in applying ideals such as fairness,
equity, and justice to their world
28Good teaching happens when students are
- actively involved
- directly involved in real-life experiences
- participating in heterogeneous groups
- provided with access to information technology
- given opportunities to reflect on their own lives
29Buzz Moment Final Thought
- Engaged learning doesnt just happen. It is the
result of a cluster of practices that
systematically over time build a learning
community in the classroom, bolster student
confidence and self-esteem, and lead towards
greater student achievement because students
believe they can accomplish the tasks of learning.