Not only do I love that parents are adding examples of home learning to our private channels in #MSTeams, but I love how one of these examples tonight was looking for (and finding) a toad and a grasshopper. Sharing online doesn't mean that the work has to be done a device. 💕
I also love that these parents saw these moment as learning. Finding value in the exploration, discussion, problem solving, and inquiry that comes from these moments outdoors. #OurParentsAreAmazing
I love how conversations are starting to evolve online. One began today, when C. mentioned that her and her sister go to a creek nearby. "Frogs are there and mosquito larvae. There are also pollywogs." I. unmuted and asked, "What's a pollywog?" 1/?
C. replied, "A pollywog is a baby frog." Then I. said, "Frog on a log. That rhymes." C. then said, "Wait! We have a book called that." She ran off and grabbed the book. When she held it up, I. said, "I have the Frog on the Log book too." 2/?
Then C. held up other rhyming books in the series. I. said, "I have those too," and started showing her rhyming books. Mrs. Crockett wondered, "Do they all rhyme?" She looked at the Fox book. What rhymes with fox? "Box!," C. and I. said. 3/?
This morning, we listened to this fantastic video by @LisaKingHWDSB on the #DishWithOneSpoon Wampum Belt. We stopped throughout the video to discuss her key messages. In this video, C. is sharing how they only “took what we needed” for a nature art project. (A threaded post ...)
Then we spoke about some things we do to keep the earth clean. K. began the discussion by talking about “picking up the garbage.”
This led to C. talking about how we can reuse items instead of throwing them in the trash.
Then there was a child in our class who unmuted & asked another child, "Were you happy that the Leafs lost the other night?" She remembered that he liked the Canadiens more. This led to a discussion on hockey & the last time that the Leafs made it past this playoff. 1/?
She was excited to show the Austin Matthews (apologies if I've spelled this wrong) jersey and mini-stick that her mom got her at @TimHortons today. 2/?
As others chimed in about hockey, I also appreciated when another child joined in and said, "I don't watch hockey, but I'm going to watch Impossible Railroads. The train might not make it." He then told us all about this show that I really need to check out. 3/4
At our playdate this afternoon, W. had a big book of birds (there was a lot of talk on birds in our morning meeting time yesterday). He found his "new favourite bird" a mountain bluebird on "page 354." He told us that it was his favourite "because of the colour blue." 1/?
When he mentioned the page number, Paula wondered what kind of bird was on page 355. He told us, "there is no 355. It goes to 356. There are swampish colour birds on there." Paula had him flip back, but no number was written down for 355. He then flipped the page again. 2/?
W. said, "Hey! Wait a minute. I think it always skips a page." What number would come if he flipped the page again? Both W. and E. realized that 359 was missing. E. said, "I think it will be 350-10." W. flipped the page and said, "It's 360. A lot of numbers are missing." 3/?
I love this for so many reasons. 1) He wanted vehicles so he wrote to ask for them (using writing to communicate). 2) He confidently sounded out vehicles on his own. His sound choices make sense to me. 3) He chose the word vehicles. Not cars or trucks. 1/2
If you want kids to use grown up vocabulary, use it with them. On Friday, a Gr. 7 teacher came up to one of our kids outside, curious what she was doing. “This is my habitat for a grasshopper.” A habitat?! He couldn’t believe she used this word correctly in context. Really 2/3...
Kids of all ages are competent and capable. Six years ago, a speech pathologist taught me to keep exposing kids to new vocabulary, repetitively in different contexts, and they will use these terms. Paula does this all the time. The SLP was right. Okay maybe 3/4 ...
I keep seeing photographs of K classrooms full of tables two metres apart with chairs for kids to sit in spaced out away from each other. I keep wondering, what makes us believe that 3, 4, and 5 yr. olds will spend their whole day sitting at tables? (A threaded tweet.)
When behaviour happens (& it will, based on the environment itself), then what? This is not the child’s fault. @susanhopkins5’s message here really resonated with me: self-reg.ca/a-self-reg-len…. What are the limits, & then what CAN we do within those limits?
Maybe there’s little that we can do. I 100% agree that safety has to come first. But tonight, my heart aches for our learners — some of whom are coming to school for the very first time. I want them to want to come back again. I want a #SafeSeptember that allows this to happen.