What are the patterns of teaching and learning that make a classroom holistic? How do children invent oral and written language? How do they create the culture and curriculum of a classroom? How does the spirit of community and collaboration develop among children and teachers? What are the relationships between literacy, schooling, and socialization as they form among the children? These are a few of the broad questions that Kathy Whitmore and Caryl Crowell answer in this absorbing portrait of Caryl's third-grade classroom, "the Sunshine Room." Over the span of a school year, we watch the students in this bicultural classroom within a bilingual, working-class neighborhood work and develop together as a community of learners. It is the story of how the Sunshine Room, like many whole language classrooms, invents itself; and how in this process the children themselves are continually inventing oral and written language, culture, and curriculum. In two separate collaborative voices, the authors carry readers through several critical events in the life of the classroom: the process through which the children and the teachers negotiate the curriculum, the creation of a theme study about the Middle Ages, and a vicarious experience of the Middle East war through children's literature and discussions. On an individual level, the deep friendship between Seaaira, an English-speaking child from the volunteer community, and Lolita, a bilingual Latina from the barrio, is symbolic of the bicultural experience fostered in the Sunshine Room.
In this practical guide, Sylvia Martinez and Gary Stager provide K-12 educators with the how, why, and cool stuff that supports making in the classroom, library, makerspace, or anywhere learners learn.
From philosophy and rationale to sample lesson plans and evaluation forms, this complete design for the mixed-age primary classroom provides practical answers to teachers', administrators', and parents' questions about planning, ...
A practical guide for primary school educators who want to inspire their students to embrace a tinkering mindset so they can invent fantastic contraptions.
The students were at first very reluctant to have a stick insect walk on them, but soon were clamoring to have the experience! I “grossed out” many of my colleagues by carrying one around on my arm, but now they all want one!
Discusses how educators can use action research to raise student achievement and strengthen instructional leadership, offering suggestions on how to formulate specific research questions, collect and analyze data, and communicate findings.
This young coach had just shown that she could lead a team, and would not let them erode their own confidence. Once, several girls criticized another girl. They said, “Susan is holding us back. We would be better if she were any good.
All of his published books were dedicated to a person in power, including the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems: Ptolemaic and Copernican, and a Pope, Urban VIII, The Assayer.
Saving this class is going to take a genius. Discover the true story of how Naismith invented basketball in 1891 at a school in Springfield, Massachusetts.
In the elementary classroom, Morning Meeting should occur just about every morning for 15 to 30 minutes. Teachers should be careful to limit Morning Meeting, because students may lose focus and attentiveness.
This book provides teachers with strategies and resources to enable whole classes to work together through the medium of talk. Creating a Speaking and Listening Classroom provides timely professional development for teachers.