Sunday, March 25, 2018

The Charlie Brown Sound

“Welcome to Science,” I say in a big, booming voice.

This is how I begin each class. It is my call for attention and most of the students respond by ending their conversations and turning towards me. 

Sometimes, I will need to personally welcome students to class; “Welcome to science, Jennifer. Welcome to science, Steven.” This is my polite way of directly asking for their attention. I think it’s a lot more pleasant than “Hey you knuckleheads, stop talking!”

“Our daily learning target is yada, yada, yada,” is my next sentence. At this point my expectation is everyone is listening, but sometimes I’m wrong and I still don’t have everyone’s full attention. 

“Today we will go over the do now, add five vocabulary words,” and this is where I’ve decided I really don’t have the classes attention, so I will add something odd to the agenda. “and then I will ride around the classroom on my pretty, pink, pony” and stop talking.

The students who were listening will smile - they know what I am doing - the ones who were not listening will sense that something is up. It’s not that they’ve actually heard and listened what I was saying, but they sense that something is off in my cadence, and I’ve stopped talking.

What they’ve been hearing is the Charlie Brown teacher sound. “Wah wahh wha wa-wa wahhh, wah waaahh wah.” 

And this explains about 23% of the questions I get on a daily basis. 
I will say something like, “The homework is due Tuesday, if we have school tomorrow,” And a student will ask “We’re having ramen, tomorrow?
All he heard was  “Wah wah wahh wha wa wha, waah ramen tomorrow.”

(Really, this happened a couple of weeks ago)


Or I’ll write down the agenda on the board, review it verbally at the start of class only to have someone ask “What are we doing today?” And sometimes I don’t even answer because all I’ve heard is “Wah wahh wha wa-wa wahhh, wah waaahh?"

Sunday, March 18, 2018

You Know We're Rooting For You, Right?

You do know your teachers are rooting for you, right?

It's true. 

We root for you every day. We are pulling for you in so many ways.

We’re excited when you show us how much you’ve learned.

That’s why your teachers work with you before classes, during lunch/recess, and after school. That’s why we answer emails at 10pm on a Sunday night. It’s why we spend hours of our own time trying to create really interesting lessons that you’ll actually enjoy. 

That’s why we are thinking of you even when we’re not at school. Yeah, we do that a LOT.

Sometimes you need acknowledgment - even something as simple as a smiley face on a piece of homework, or a fun sticker. Sometimes you need encouragement. Sometimes you need to be pushed, so we answer your question with another question to get you to think. Sometimes you can’t sit with your best friend - because neither of you will get your work done. Sometimes you need us to be firm and just say “no.”

One of our goals is to get you ready for what’s next - eighth grade or high school. That’s not on the Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks (The very long set of documents that list of all the things we need to teach you and when to teach it to you), but it’s what we do. We try to help you develop good habits that will make the next years easier, like doing your homework, turning in your work on time, and being well organized.

But, trust me on this, every one of your teachers is one of your biggest fans. We are pulling for you every day. We’re here for you and we’ll help you. 

We all want you all to succeed, every single day.

Saturday, March 10, 2018

If My Students Don’t Like it…

In our science classes we spend a lot of time writing in our science notebooks. We write down vocabulary words and their definitions, we make notes about things like the order of the planets, we write bullet points, “a few sentences,” paragraphs, and multi-paragraph reflections. 

We’re going to fill that science notebook you set up in September - trust me.

But why so much writing?

I have to say, “too much writing” is the number one complaint about my classes. You might ask; If my students don’t like it, why do I make them do so much of it?

There are several reasons.

First off, the simple act of writing something down gives you a better chance of remembering it. If I just handed you lists of vocabulary words and their definitions, you probably wouldn’t learn them very quickly, if at all. The act of putting pencil to paper engraves that information on your brain in a way that has sticking power. 

In science, using proper vocabulary is critical. We learn these words so we can be precise in our speaking and writing. For example; when we talk about a spring tide, we’re saying a lot about the placement of the Sun, Moon and Earth, the resulting phase of the moon and the implication of all this on our tides. You’re saying a lot with just a couple of words. 

Second, I ask you to write complete sentences and paragraphs because that is the way professionals express their thoughts. One-word answers are quick but are rarely complete. If you’re going to be successful in high school, college and your work-life, you will need to present your thoughts and ideas in a clear and understandable way. In other words, you will need to write complete sentences, paragraphs and essays. 

Remember, I did about a million other jobs before becoming a teacher. I know what I’m talking about (technically, I know what I’m writing about - and note, I’m doing it in complete sentences and paragraphs). I wrote sales proposals, advertising copy, memos, reports, letters and emails. I wrote book reviews, newspaper and magazine articles. I produced research findings that made their way into books and TV documentaries. I have spent a lot of time expressing my thoughts and ideas in writing.

The only way to get good at writing is to do it - and do it a lot.

Finally, our science notebooks are organized in a very specific way. We have a table of contents at the front. This lists the major questions we have been looking into and the page number on which that work begins. At the back we are creating an index of all the vocabulary words we have learned. Do you think it is a coincidence that reference books are set up the same way? This is a really good way of organizing your work and, later, finding what you need.  

It is a lot of writing but it is worth it. All that writing is changing your brain. You are embedding that information in there forever - it may not always be a top-of-mind, but you will know that you’ve seen it before and it will be easier to access and remember. 

Sunday, March 4, 2018

What Do You Notice?

Here’s a picture of my bedroom from when I was in high school:

What do you notice?

Obviously, there’s a telescope in the middle of the room - acting as a temporary clothes hanger. Clearly, my interest in science dates back a long, long way. 

This was my second telescope and it was much more powerful than my first. I spent many hours exploring the night sky with this instrument. My atlas of the stars is under the pile of clothes on the chair.

But, what else do you notice?

On thing you would not recognize, but I do (and I do miss it a lot) is my moose sweater. It was a maroon and blue sweater that had several images of moose on the front. I wore that sweater a LOT in high school, college and beyond. I finally wore it out and had to get rid of it. But, I’ve never found a more comfortable sweater in my entire life. You can see it on the chair behind the telescope.

You probably noticed the television. That’s a black and white 12” set that has a bent-up clothes hanger as a replacement antenna. I watched countless Red Sox games on that old TV. I would have been amazed to see what passes for television today. 

Did you notice the tennis racquet between the chair and the dresser? I played a lot of tennis in middle and high school. I’m not a born athlete but I did enjoy playing and, among my other non-athletic friends, I was pretty good.

The thing I want you to notice is all the books. I was not a collector of books. I read them. I devoured them. I can distinctly remember walking home from middle school, reading “Reach for the Sky” (which I mentioned in class the other day) as I walked, trying not to veer into the road, but consuming several pages as I made my way home. 

Sometimes, I think I learned more from independent reading than from my classes in school. It may or may not be true, there’s no way to figure it out. I’m not a fast reader, but I’m relentless. I always have a book with me. If I get a spare couple of minutes - that’s two more pages down. 

Reading is fundament to all aspects of a successful life. It’s how you get exposed to new ideas and perspectives different from your own. It’s how you learn new things and broaden your world view. 

You really can’t get everything you need to know by watching two-minute YouTube videos, you have to read. 

Reading will give you a better opportunity for a successful life - in school, at work, in your relationships and as a parent. There's no excuse not to read - it's fundemental.