Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Classroom Screen

There are just some tech tools that just HAD to be created by a classroom teacher.  A tool that seems to be the brain child of an educator who thought to him or herself, "you know what would be awesome?  A web tool I can open in its own tab that does everything I could possibly need it to do!"

Classroom Screen is such a tool.

Accessible on the web at http://www.classroomscreen.com, this site opens in its own tab with a plethora of tools located in the bottom middle of your screen you can use in your classroom tomorrow.

You need a visible clock?  Click on the bad boy.

What you want a timer?  Of course you do - and this one even will do seconds in ten-second intervals.

Hold up - did you say you needed a text box, a drawing box, and a QR code generator?  IT HAS THEM ALL!

And if you have an inordinate amount of Finnish-speaking students, you can even change the language settings, right there on the screen.

Happy classroom screening, peeps.

~Mr. D

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Unit Three Goals

Hey peeps - Unit III is about to come at you fresher than the latest J. Diz track!

This unit of study focuses on a variety of reading and writing skills as they relate to the study of the Holocaust.  Here are the three goals for the first part of the unit:

  • to engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions
  • to analyze the development of a theme or central idea of a text
  • to research an issue of national or global significance
Let's roll!

~Mr. D

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Pre-CP: Reading Plus Reward Book List (Spring 2018)

For all of my Pre-CP ELA folks in 6th and 7th periods, the following list refers to books that are possible for you to read to complete your reading goal for the mid-point and year-end goals set forth by our librarian, Mrs. Sarah Stapp:

"The Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkien (L1000)
"1984" by George Orwell (L1090)
"The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald (L1010)
"The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime" by Mark Haddon (L1090)
"A Dog's Purpose" by W. Bruce Cameron (L970)
"The Pearl" by John Steinbeck (L1010)
"Ready Player One" by Ernest Cline (L990)
"The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon" by Stephen King (L970)
"Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad (L970)
"Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" by Seth Grahame-Smith (L1070)
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe (L1050)
"Abe Lincoln: Vampire Hunter"by Seth Grahame-Smith (L960)
"The Beekeeper's Apprentice"by Laurie R. King (L1030)

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Using GOOGLE DOCS as Teacher/Student Collaboration Tool

Most students are familiar with the WRITING PROCESS by the time they enter middle school.  Most of their experience may follow an outline similar to the one below:


By the time they reach they reach the DRAFTING phase of the process, they have hand-written a version of what their final product will look like (i.e. a speech, an essay, a narrative).  It is usually at this point the piece is turned into the teacher for review, or quite possibly even over to their peers for them to leave comments, suggestions, etc.

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

The Giver LEGO Sets

This past summer, I was accepted into a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) teacher workshop regarding Manifest Destiny and the Mormon Experience at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.  Part of that workshop involved taking the information learned and examining it through a pedagogical lens. To help facilitate that process, the U of U brought in local teacher expert, Quinn Rollins, to help think through ways to help students engage the content in a more meaningful way than other traditional methods (i.e. worksheets, passive note-taking, lecturing).

Quinn is also the author of the book, "Play Like a Pirate," in which he outlines practical ideas for making learning fun again.  One of the methods he shared with us at the workshop (and in the book) is for students to create LEGO sets based on information that they have read/studied.



Recently, our class read Lois Lowry's dystopian classic, "The Giver."  As a way to end the unit of study, I gave students copies of Quinn's templates and had them create a LEGO set on a key component of the story, complete with the mini-figures that would accompany their scene.  Here is a sample of what they created:



For a copy of the LEGO templates to use in your own classroom, visit here.