Wednesday, May 15, 2013

A Treat for Staff Members and Pre-K Graduates

I recommend all teachers to give a treat to their staff members to say Thank You! Every member of a school is there to make your life  and your student's life easier and better. Teachers have an appreciation week. Custodians, maintenance workers, and cafeteria workers only get a verbal thank you. Its great to do something special for your staff. I am blessed to work with some amazing teachers who have become great friends. I wanted to show some appreciation to the men and women who have trusted me to teach in their school.  I gave each staff member a Great Value Fudge Marshmallow Cookie from Walmart. These cookies are really delicious and cheap. I purchased twelve cookies for $1.88. I created a label from Print Artist Platinum 24. I put each cookie in a treat bag and stapled the label to the bag.
 
 
I am so proud of the Pre-Kindergarten students! Those babies are so cute and funny. They brighten my day. I adore how they are extremely quiet when I read them a story. It shows how powerful reading can be with a great story and silly storyteller. I am excited to see them in their little caps and gowns. I went to the Dollar Store to make their graduation treat bags. There are thirty eight students in Pre-K since they have two classes. I tried to be economical. I purchased a huge bag of animal crackers, oreos, and vanilla oreos. I attached a cute graduation label I created with Print Artist Platinum 24. I can not wait to give the little ones these cute and cheap treat bags. Go Class of 2013!
 


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Same As, More Of, and Less Of Student Behavior Contract inspired by Love Works


As a new teacher, my leadership skills are ever changing. I am still figuring out what works and what does not work when dealing with classroom management. My goal is for students to learn and want to learn. However, I am aware that incentives motivate some students. I am for using classroom incentives in my classroom because every adult gains a pay check for his or her work. I believe school is a student's work place. I think teachers and CEOs should have a discussion to provide suggestions on how to lead people. Teachers and CEO's main job is to motivate workers to ensure the students or employees complete a task successfully. I have become interested in business leadership books to gain knowledge of how to motivate people whether they are five or fifty. I found a book called Love Works: Seven Timeless Principles for Effective Leaders by Joel Manby. The book emphasizes seven characteristic traits such as patience, kindness, trustworthiness, unselfishness, truthfulness, forgiveness, and dedication. I want all of these characteristics to be in my classroom. Joel Manby gives positive and negative examples while showing how leading with love is more beneficial and productive for both the employer and employee. My favorite part of the book is chapter seven when he discusses Same as, More of, and Less of. I was inspired to create a student behavior contract using his model of Same as, More of, and Less of. Same as is qualities or actions that you love about the student and want the student to continue such as always having a sense of humor. More of is qualities or actions that you want the student to work on such as turning in homework to become a better student and learner. Less of is the action or qualities that you want the student to discontinue such as yelling during disagreements. I love this model because it’s both postive and negative. It shows the student they have strengths and weaknesses. I have attached a Same as, More of and Less of student behavior contract below. If you use in your class, please provide me with any feedback with your experience whether it was successful or unsuccessful.



Saturday, April 27, 2013

Vista Print: An Attendance Chart, Teacher's Stamp, and Incentive Cards for Students

 


I have a great friend who teaches Pre-K. She creates an attendance chart for every theme she teaches throughout the year. The students stick their name of the attendance chart to see who is present and absent. An attendance chart will teach name recognition. Plus, a substitute teacher can easily complete attendance using an attendance chart since students are required to perform the task. I plan to write the names of students on mailing labels and stick the labels on the attendance charts using velcro.

 
 
Every teacher needs a stamp saying please sign and return. This stamp will be great for report cards, progress reports, behavior notes, or field trip permission forms. I am sure I will think of others ways to use this stamp in my classroom.
 
 
I created incentive cards for students. The students will receive a punch on their card for good work or good behavior. The students will receive a treasure from the treasure box when they obtain ten punches on their card. This card template was apart of the 250 free business cards to pick from Vista Print.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Greensboro Sit In Lesson Plan on Google Docs


The Greensboro Sit In lesson plan is my most popular post. I concluded it was not fair to share lesson plans on Teachers Pay Teachers or Teacher's Notebook since everybody does not have an account for those websites. I want to enrich the lives of teachers and students. I have uploaded my free lesson plan on Google Docs. Its thirty eight pages and in a PDF format. If anybody has any problems downloading the lesson plan, please contact me at creative.teacher.pirate@gmail.com
I will gladly attach the PDF file and send you the lesson plan through email. I hope everybody has a wonderful day.


Greensboro Sit In Lesson Plan for Fourth Grade

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Drop Everything and See Bon Jovi!


This post is not academic. As a teacher, there are so many things to accomplish. I love participating in tedious task such as creating games and displays for my students. Being a teacher is consuming even though its the best job in the world. My time is split between teaching and learning to receive my masters degree. I love to read. My master classes require a lot of reading so my weekends are consumed with reading. Actually, I would pick staying in my pjs to read over visiting an island any day. I am such a homebody. I have my music and books. Is there anything else I need?

Sometimes, you have to enjoy life. I went to see Bon Jovi on a school night. Only teachers can find humor in seeing an attractive man on a Tuesday night. I had a huge crush on Jon Bon Jovi since I was in sixth grade. I seriously felt like a giddy teenager again. I saw Jon Bon Jovi when I was fifthteen. I remembered thinking; whoa this is the best looking man I have ever seen. Ten years later, he still does not disappoint. For the last few weeks, I have felt energized. Three hours of watching Jon Bon Jovi shake his booty is the equivalent of a paradise cruise to me. I took great pictures of Jon Bon Jovi. I could be a great concert photographer. I uploaded some photos of Jon Bon Jovi to create a teacher's travel mug. The mug will remind me to drop everything and see Bon Jovi. I am not going to let another ten years go by without seeing him again. I plan to see him again on his next tour. A happy teacher is a most effective teacher.


 
 
 

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Class Rules

 

I will admit picking classroom rules are challenging. I knew it would be a challenge to pick the "right" rules for my classroom. I always read the rules of any classroom I visit to see if I forgot an important rule. I remember "Keep your hands, feet, and objects to yourself" was extremely important rule when I was in school. My past teachers always told students not to bother anybody making the rule mandatory for my clas. School's hand books also presented a challenge for me. Handbooks are very detail. I believe if the information is in the handbook then it should not be on my rules since I plan to discuss the handbook with students. Classroom rules are designed to make your life easier. Anything that makes your life easier is tough to keep at a minimum of seven rules. I am sure any teacher could create two hundred rules and still be surprised about student's actions and behavior. I also wanted to combine "little kid" rules and "big kid" rules. Sharing and using kind words are stressed in Pre-K, Kindergarten and First Grade. Sharing and using kind words are important if you are five years old or sixty years old. Rules design to create responsibility for students such as being present and prepared are stressed in Second Grade and higher. Being present and prepared is listed in many college university class syllabuses. Somebody told me a classroom with rules set up and initiated during the start of the school year creates a better learning environment for students and less stress for the teacher.

I created my rules poster at Vista Print. I love the size of the poster. It’s the perfect size - not too big and not too small. I was excited to see polka dots used as a background. Polka dots are great. They are unisex due to the various color schemes. I found polka dot wrapping paper that I used for a bulletin board background. Polka dots can be adaptable for anything in the classroom.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Using Technology in the Classroom: Woolworth Lunch Counter



Students find history much more interesting when technology is possible. I aspire for students to see the people and hear their voices while allowing students to see the locations that changed the course of history. I look to find Internet videos discussing the events or speeches made by the people who changed history. Technology allows historical figures to become real! Students will not find history interesting if you give them a text book to show a portrait of someone while you list or read their accomplishments. I challenge teachers to find videos that make students time travel to the historical event. Let the students see what their ancestors saw then discuss it. The reactions of students will create powerful discussions.

Teachers living in North Carolina can have a field trip to Greensboro, North Carolina to visit the International Civil Rights Center and Museum