What’s new?

This may be a long blog post since it’s been a few months since I’ve added to our class blog.  We are now on Thanksgiving Break – this year is flying by, at least to me.  When we return, we need to finish our parts of speech review- conjunctions and interjections, and read Scrooge and Marley, a dramatized version of Charles Dicken’s A Christmas Carol.  We will also be reviewing for our mid-term exam, which will count twice (two test grades). Then, you will finally be able to clean out those binders in preparation for spring semester.

Last Friday, we had our Thanksgiving luncheon – it is so refreshing to see children, parents, siblings, and grandparents gathered for a meal at school.  Prior to the luncheon, we had a pep rally to recognize the tennis and basketball teams.  Nice work cheerleaders, dance team, Mrs. Holloway, Coach Bunn, and all others who contributed to this fun event.

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7th grade boys at Pep Rally

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Some of new baskeball players

 

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At the park after the show

Earlier in November, the seventh grade attended a field trip in Albany, Georgia.  I plan to write more on my performing arts blog, curtainupcolumbus.net. It was my first time driving one of the St. Luke buses – there was one moment of anxiety, but we made it safely.  After viewing the Encore production of Chamber Repertory Theatre at the Albany Municpal Auditorium.  We watched live presentations of several short stories we read in class including “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras Count,” “The Tell Tale Heart,” and “The Raven.” After the show, we enjoyed a picnic lunch at a local park.

I am looking forward to the next few weeks as we wind down our first semester.  My plans include a Victorian party with foods from Dickens’s era, think plum pudding, wassail and more.  We’ll be researching some of these topics and the life and times of Charles Dickens.

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Albany Municipal Auditorium

Love my students

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Ashley Murphy in Fancy Nancy joined by a group of her friends from St. Luke School

Recently, my daughter and I attended a performance of Fancy Nancy, the Musical at Family Theatre in Columbus.  We went to see some of the students in the show, including Ashley Murphy who is in my Language Red class.  I was pleasantly surprised to see a large group of her friends from St. Luke there to support her.  What a wonderful surprise for Ashley!  I am blessed to teach this great group of young women.

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Go Lions!

Friday before last, St. Luke had its first peprally.  It was spirited, and incredibly loud!  Even though eighth grade went home with the spirit stick, I thought seventh grade represented well.

This week in Language Arts, we will continue reading Moon Over Manifest.  We will have a test on vocabulary and reading on Wednesday, Sept. 30th.  This week I will also post something on the class blog about your reading, and students will need to respond in the comment section.

Reminder that AR grades are going in the computer Monday, but you still have until Oct. 8th to read and test.  Friday is Grandparents and Special Friends Day.  I can’t wait to see the videos of the grade levels, especially ours!  1/2 Day on Friday – and the following Friday for Report Cards.  Fall Break coming very soon too!

Have a great week.

Test and Stuff

Tomorrow we have a test on nouns and pronouns.  I have uploaded the powerpoint on pronouns to the website. Also, I uploaded the questions to the Noun/pronoun Scoot Review activity we did today.  We will be in the computer labs tomorrow to take the test on Juno.  You should also review your pronoun foldable and be familiar with the different types of pronouns and how to identify them.

Here are some other interactive sites you can use to practice the grammar.

https://www.ixl.com/ela/grade-8/identify-pronouns-and-their-antecedents

https://www.ixl.com/ela/grade-8/form-and-use-plurals-of-compound-nouns

https://www.ixl.com/ela/grade-8 At this site, you can choose the exercises you want to practice with.

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Students in 4th period play Scoot to review nouns/pronouns.

Student Poetry

It’s the end of week three, and we are busy with grammar, writing, and literature.  We finished pronoun notes today, and if you didn’t complete the practice in class, you should do so for homework (page. 309, Exercises 18-21 odd numbers).

We finished our “Where I’m From” poems yesterday.  I’m excited to post some examples on the Student Work page (click on the link above).  Also, I had a few digital presentations to share.  I will try to post them on the website as this type of file is not allowed here.

We will have a grammar test next Wednesday on nouns and pronouns.  We will also continue to read in the Literature book, and have another writing assignment soon.

Dig In!

The first two weeks are over, and we are digging into the curriculum in room 703 at St. Luke School.  Our first writing assignment is the the bag so to speak, or in the book (the gradebook), and we have our first vocabulary test on Monday.  Yesterday, I rafted with the 8th graders, but Mrs. Walker led you in your vocabulary crossword review.  Also, you were working on your “Where I’m From” poems.  See this link if you are still struggling – also I”ll be working on one of my own to share for more inspiration.

In grammar we are reviewing nouns, and will likely have a quiz in the next few days on identifying nouns and classifying them. From what I have observed in class, this is simply a review.  Up next is our pronoun review.  Independently you should be reading and working toward your AR goals for the first nine weeks.  The STAR reading reports were distributed to students last week with the point goals, including the 15% that should be non-fiction.  With no more reading logs, you will need to self-monitor, and I plan to check in two weeks on your progress as well.

In Bible class we are discussing the concept of a person’s identity and how Jesus connects to that identity.  Our theme in literature is also connected to that identity as we have read stories and poetry about forming our identity, and not relying on other people to form it for us.  We are also discussing family as part of identity, and we are creating poetry, and reading an essay by Alex Haley, “My Furthest Back Person.”

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Members of my homeroom class singing the SLS alma mater

Have a great weekend, and get ready for more digging!

First Week of School

We’ve had a great week so far.  Yesterday’s Opening Convocation was inspiring.  I love our shirts with the GLOW theme – Give Light to Our World.  The memory verse for the week is Matthew 5:16

Let your light shine before others that they may see your good works and glorify your father in heaven.

Quiz on theme and verse tomorrow in Bible. Also we have a handbook test on Monday.  glow promo logo BKpadgett and me

Summer Lovin’

While I am loving the freedom of summer break, I am also working on preparing for the coming school year.  Have I mentioned how excited I am to be working at St. Luke School?  I have moved most of my things into the room and have started decorating.  I’m working on lesson planning and ideas for the coming year.  I can’t wait to meet my new students. Homeroom students will be receiving a welcome letter from me soon.  Enjoy your summer, but don’t forget about your summer packet assignments!

I thought it would never come…

Maybe teaching is like a marriage, and this was my 7-year itch.  Or maybe, I’m just too old and frustrated to continue working in a system that seems to be failing our students.  Whatever the reason, I must express an enormous amount of relief that I am not returning to my current teaching position.

It’s not the administration or my colleagues who are all dedicated to their mission of educating all students at our schools.  In fact, I really feel that educators have our hearts in the right place across the board.  No one becomes a teacher thinking, “I can’t wait to order people around,” or “That’s where the real money is,” or “I get a high from failing kids.”  We all want to make a difference or to emulate an inspiring teacher from our past.

Unfortunately, school of today is not at all what I remember.  Now I’m not one of those that says these kids today are much worse than they were in my day.  I’m not that old!!  However, times have changed, and so has our culture.  Education is not a respected profession; in fact, we have become a scapegoat in our field.  There is so much wrong with how we are educating our children, and there is blame to share.  With few exceptions, though, teachers are really part of the solution, not part of the problem.  Or, we would be, if anyone bothered to ask us, or visit our classroom for longer than a walk-through.

As I contemplate my own career change (I’m not leaving the profession, though I am changing to an independent school), I am thinking about the focus on teacher responsibility. Like I said, with a few exceptions, every colleague I have had in education, has been focused on what is best for the student.  In fact, we are the ones worrying, staying up late, waking up in a panic wondering how, when, and to what extent we can reach our students and teach our objectives at the same time. We are so overwhelmed by what we need to do: lesson plans, documented EL forms and IEPs, written daily objectives and activities, grading, providing feedback – a hundred things that don’t involve our primary objective – that there is limited time for what we should do, which is classroom instruction.

So what made me leave prior to my ten years that were necessary to be vested in our retirement system?  There is no one answer, rather numerous combined frustrations, that were changing me into a different teacher, really a different person than I wanted to be.  First, there are the students.  Either I am getting older and crankier, or they really are getting more disrespectful and inappropriate.  Maybe it’s both, but this year was more than I could take, more than I should have to take as a teacher.  I don’t allow my children to speak to me in a disrespectful way, nor do they speak to other adults that way; yet, these kids think they are grown and that they don’t have to do as requested.  There are so many special needs within one classroom, and one person is challenged to meet them all while teaching certain standards that all students should achieve.  Whoever said class size shouldn’t matter if you are a good teacher obviously is more concerned with the bottom line, or hasn’t been in a classroom in the last 20 years.  More and more parents have handed responsibility for their children over to someone else, until it comes to disciplining that child, and then we are picking on him/her.  I don’t want to get bogged down in this issue, but student behavior is a key source of stress each day.

Another reason is limited time and resources.  I’m going to focus on the time issue, because teachers are notorious for being able to stretch a dollar, craft a needed item, or reuse and re-purpose when we are not begging or borrowing needed resources.  This year, I had 30 minutes of planning per day.  That time had to cover making copies, planning lessons, calling or meeting with parents, documenting behavior issues, completing forms, meeting with administrators, and let’s not forget grading papers.  Actually, I won’t include grading papers since I never had time to do that during planning anyway.  Also, that was my only time during the day to use the restroom without getting someone to watch my class.  So more and  more responsibility is expected, all while providing teachers with less time to accomplish it, and less money too.  I’m gotten great at hoarding copy paper, that’s for sure.

My third reason is less of a local than a national issue.  Testing, testing, and more testing!  We have to focus on these kids in the middle- the almost ready kids- since the ones at the top are already at the ready level, and the ones at the bottom are not likely to move up.  As a parent myself, I was becoming increasingly upset that my children who were already at grade level, were not being challenged, and were being forced to sit through all the same lessons, and were being pretty much ignored, at least when it came to moving them beyond “ready.”   Let’s add to this issue making teachers accountable for their students’ test scores.  I am here to say I am not a proponent of tenure, and I am not a member of any teacher’s association lobbying group because of some issues I don’t agree with.  So I am not a supporter of the status quo in terms of those issues, but there is no way anyone with half a brain (maybe that’s the problem) would say as a teacher I am responsible for my student’s standardized test score.  Have you ever administered one of these tests?  Every year I have to wake kids up multiple times during one test.  I have had students complete a reading comprehension test with several excerpts in 10 minutes.  I have seen students making pictures on their bubble forms because they don’t want to be bothered to read and follow the directions.  I don’t believe I need to go on – ridiculous!

I am excited about my new job for another reason – I get to talk about God and Christ during class.  After all, Jesus was the ultimate role model for teachers.  It is difficult to speak about building character without speaking about the teachings of Christ.  I won’t even limit it to Christianity, though, let’s bring some type of faith, family, and meaning back into the lives of our students.

Additionally, I want to work in a truly collaborative environment where my input is valuable or at least considered for issues affecting my students.  I’m tired of being told, “That’s just the life of a teacher.  A good teacher spends her own money.  If you don’t like the way things are run here, you know where the door is.”  You expect to hear that last one in many places of employment, but good leaders don’t treat their employees that way.  When will our schools get tired of the turnover and training new teachers?  I guess when the pool of employees is no longer as deep, maybe someone will listen to what we have to say.

There is more, and this entry is getting long.  I’ll try to condense some information.  Budgeting and resources are another problem facing our students.  I am a supporter of science and technology – I think this is integral to our future.  However, creative thinkers come in all shapes, sizes, colors, and fields of interest.  We must stop cutting funding for the arts.  Music, dance, art, drama – these are all important for teaching students how to think, how to collaborate, how to plan and find creative solutions.  That’s another reason I am leaving, and have moved my children as well.  The opportunities available in their old schools for creative expression are being eliminated within the classroom.  Students aren’t even exposed to a foreign language until 10th grade.  Art and drama is no longer offered until high school.  To me, this is another thing that will widen the achievement gap.  Families who can provide their children with these experiences though camps and summer programs will have children who develop more of these creative skills that are needed for any job, including problem-solving and collaboration.  This will make the gap between the haves and the have not’s even wider.

Well, I guess I have said enough for now.  I am truly excited about my new position at St. Luke School in Columbus.  I know that this will not be a “perfect” job; there’s no such thing.  But I know from my son’s experience this year, that I will be able to do more instructing and less “babysitting.” I will spend more time doing activities and having discussions and less time handing out pencils and papers and attempting to keep kids from throwing them across the room at each other. I will spend less time yelling and correcting behavior in an attempt to maintain some type of learning environment in the classroom.  I will have more time to plan meaningful learning activities, the kinds of things that I haven’t had time to do in recent years, the kind I envisioned when I chose to return to school to become a teacher.

Let me be clear that I am blessed by the experiences I have had because I know I have touched the lives of some students who have come through my classes, just as they have touched mine. The last seven years have given me a unique perspective, and I am thankful for each year (especially thankful to have survived this one).  I know that God is leading me in the direction that I am headed.  I pray for all those working each day to make the lives of our students better. I pray that the rest of the country will recognize the value of the teacher and of education in general, instead of our current culture of hailing celebrities and athletes.

I hope to achieve MLK’s idea that “The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and critically. Intelligence plus character-that is the goal of true education.” Another favorite, though this hasn’t been substantiated as having come directly from the great leader Winston Churchill himself, though I like to think so: It was once suggested that he cut funding to the arts to pay for Britain’s war, to which Churchill responded “Then what would we be fighting for?”  Public education is essential for our society.  I have always supported taxes and funding for education, but when the system isn’t working, and I am not able to be part of the solution, I must make decisions for the best of myself and my family.

Which brings me to this, the main reason I am leaving my current job.  I like the idea that independent schools are more able to be mission-driven instead of politics, funding, or data-driven.  I am hopeful that some day soon those who make decisions about education and funding may actually have been teachers themselves in this century. Finally, one of my favorite high school teachers who inspired me on this pathway, taught me on my first day of Latin class, Ipsa scientia potestas est, which means Knowledge itself is power.  I truly believe this, and send my prayers to all those in education throughout the world.  Never stop believing in the power of knowledge.

12 Days and how long they seem…

Students are giving up, and we are all feeling the summer creeping in on us.  We need to push through and maintain our focus for two more weeks.  Rough Drafts for argumentative essays are due today.  You will work on revisions over the next few days with final drafts due a week from today.  Last spelling test is tomorrow!  Grammar test is Friday.  What may you ask are we doing after that?

Next week, we are working on a cumulative assignment called ABC books.  For each letter of the alphabet, you will write about something you have learned this year that begins with that letter: grammar, vocabulary, figurative language, writing skill, spelling words, etc.  No two books should be alike! Students will also take a writing assessment and grammar test for Unit 6. Argumentative final copy is due next week.

Following those assignments, you will complete a few additional end of year activities, like a brochure for incoming students.  So, as you can see, it is not time to give up!

19 More Days –

It doesn’t seem like much, but class is still going on.  We aren’t shutting it down until the last day of school.  Check the website for updates. The Unit 6 Week 4 newsletter is posted already, and will be distributed in class on Monday or Tuesday.  We are working on the Unit 6 writing assignment, argumentative essays.  Please turn in your graphic organizer on Wednesday of this week.  Grammar and Spelling test tomorrow!