MSM 228: Power Hungry Internet- Raspberry Pi . . . Ummm, Pie…

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

Two prisoners were making their escape over the jailhouse roof when one of them dislodged a tile. “Who’s there shouted a guard. The first prisoner replied with a convincing imitation of a cat’s meow. Reassured, the guard when back to his rounds
But then the second prisoner dislodged another tile. The guard repeated, “Who’s there?”
“The other cat,” answered the prisoner.

A circus owner walked into a bar to see everyone crowded around a table watching a little show. On the table was an upside down pot and a duck tap dancing on it. The circus owner was so impressed that he offered to buy the duck from its owner. After some wheeling and dealing they settled for $10,000 for the duck and the pot.
Three days later the circus owner runs back to the bar in anger, “Your duck is a rip-off! I put him on the pot before a whole audience and he didn’t dance a single step!” “So?” asked the duck’s former owner, “did you remember to light the candle under the pot?”

Teacher: What are the four main food groups?
Students: Canned, frozen, instant, and lite.

A little girl complained that she didn’t want to go back to school.
“But why, Lisa?” asked her mother.
“Well, I can’t read, I can’t write, and they won’t let me talk.”

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Bethany Beaudrie, Derek McCoy, Vinnie Stocker
  • eMail:  Dr. John Harrison

Advisory:

Unrelated People Who Look Like Each Other

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/12/13/portraits-of-people-who-arent-related-but-look-like-each-other-6-pictures/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Middle School Science Minute — Citizen Science

I was recently reading the November, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association.  In the magazine, Jennifer Fee and Nancy Trautmann, wrote an article entitled “Connecting to Your Community Through Birds and Citizen Science.”  Within the article they explained what is meant by the term “Citizen Science.”  They defined a citizen scientist as a person who collaborates with scientists to gather data on projects and contributes to scientific research.

From the Twitterverse:

* Steve ‏@2learn2
Why Nate Silver Can Save Math Education in America http://goo.gl/ZW1QF
* David Tebo ‏@tebotweets
Pantophobia in Education: http://connectedprincipals.com/archives/6837
* Jerry Blumengarten ‏@cybraryman1
My Project Based Learning page: http://cybraryman.com/projectbasedlearning.html … #rechat
* Bill Ferriter ‏@plugusin
This @samchaltain bit on the pros and cons of longer school days should be required reading for #edpolicy wonks: http://ow.ly/fVT6M
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
10 Steps to a Successful School iPad Program #edtech #plaea #ukstl
* nancyflanagan ‏@nancyflanagan
Common Core headed towards a $500 billion scandal. Imagine the horror as state after state reports drastic “drops”… http://prorevnews.blogspot.com/2012/12/common-core-headed-towards-500-billion.html …
* Steve Cushing ‏@Montberte
The Best Social Studies Sites Of 2012 — Part Two http://goo.gl/YVMIw
* Eric Sheninger ‏@NMHS_Principal
Infographic: How Does Digital Learning Contribute to Deeper Learning? http://buff.ly/Zka48g
* Beth Still ‏@BethStill
Guest post by @kris_still on how to be prepared in the event of a crisis. http://bethstill.edublogs.org/2012/12/14/preparing-for-the-worst-case-scenario/ … #nebedu #cpchat
* CBC Toronto ‏@CBCToronto
Ontario teachers confirm 1-day walkout
Monte Tatom @drmmtatom
8 Useful Video Apps for your #iPad flip.it/AphMQ #fhuedu320 #fhucid ~ for @MSMatters followers
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.

Resources:

Teachers are talent scouts

Spotting talent and helping students see their own gift is one of those things that makes teaching so intoxicating to me. I get to do this? I am a talent scout. Are you?
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/12/teachers-are-talent-scouts.html

Web Spotlight:

Bomb Sight Mapping

The Bomb Sight is using the Bomb Census Maps as the primary data in the tools we are developing. The maps are part of an extensive array of material collected during the Bomb Census Survey 1940 to 1945, organised by the Ministry of Home Security. The records are held in The National Archive (TNA), and we are using the maps with a non-commercial education licence.
http://bombsight.org/#16/51.5034/-0.0987

INFOGRAPHIC: A POWER HUNGRY INTERNET

We know the internet is huge but it’s also growing at a crazy fast pace – doubling in size every 18-24 months! While this is staggering many people fail to think about what it actually takes to keep the Internet up and running every day. As it turns out its actually more than the auto industry and all that energy isn’t being used very efficiently.
http://www.infographicsarchive.com/tech-and-gadgets/infographic-a-power-hungry-internet/

Amazing Anamorphic Illusions!

You’ve got to see it to believe it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBNHPk-Lnkk&sns=em

Anatomy of Preservation

This time-lapse video from LSA’s Museum of Zoology takes the bat species Artibeus jamacanensis from specimen to display. The process might be a little stomach-churning, but then again, good science isn’t always mess-free.

As one of the largest university museums in the world, the Museum of Zoology is a crucial resource for use in research, conservation, and education. Studying animals such as Artibeus jamacanensis allows scientists to craft a tangible record of life on Earth.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=VwT6RLsYe1c#!

Departing Space Station Commander Provides Tour of Orbital Laboratory

In her final days as Commander of the International Space Station, Sunita Williams of NASA recorded an extensive tour of the orbital laboratory and downlinked the video on Nov. 18, just hours before she, cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko and Flight Engineer Aki Hoshide of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency departed in their Soyuz TMA-05M spacecraft for a landing on the steppe of Kazakhstan. The tour includes scenes of each of the station’s modules and research facilities with a running narrative by Williams of the work that has taken place and which is ongoing aboard the orbital outpost.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=doN4t5NKW-k

How long will we live — and how well?

A new analysis looks not only at the number of years we can expect to live, but also at the number of years we can expect to live in good health. In most of the world, life expectancy is longer than it was 20 years ago, but often a smaller percentage of those years will be healthy ones.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/health/healthy-life-expectancy/

Taking Responsibility


This was apparently from a group project.
http://i.imgur.com/mEOv7.jpg

AMLE Annual Conference Sessions:

State Affiliate Meeting
Update on the state of AMLE
Where were we last year?
Top Priorities for his first year
Taking steps

Top Priorities for his first year.
People come first
Emphasize the AMLE mission
Develop a vision for customer service
We are the brand
Taking Steps
1.  Through stakeholder input determine if this draft vision aligns to the Mission Statement and Goals of AMLE and what AMLE wants to become.
2.  Prepare the board of trustees to consider adopting a new strategic plan.
3.  Develop measures of success to chart progress of the mission and goals for striving towards the vision.
4.  Annually identify key strategic priority areas and execution plans for accomplishment of these annual priorities.
Where are we now?
Strategic Plan was approved by Board of Trustees in April.
Strategic Plan goals distributed to stakeholders in August
Strategic Plan strategies distributed of stakeholders in September
Structure of Strategic Plan
•Mission, Vision, Core values
•Six goals
•28 Strategies
Updated Mission and Vision
•Mission:  The Association for Middle Level Education is dedicated to improving the educational experiences of all students ages 10-15 by providing vision, knowledge, and resources to educators and leaders.
•Vision:  The Association for Middle Level Education is the leading national and international organization advancing the education of all students ages 10 to 15, helping them succeed as learners and make positive contributions to their communities and to the world.
(Current membership is around 30,000)
Strategic Plan Goals
Goals are numbered, but not according to priority.
•Goal 1:  Increase AMLE’s visibility with educators and policymakers worldwide.
•Goal 2:  Refine research-based professional development programs and services to ensure they are timely and relevant.
•Goal 3:  Develop partnerships and collaborative relationships with affiliates and other coalitions to influence programs and legislation to improve middle level education.
•Goal 4:  Increase membership.
•Goal 5:  Develop a business model and financial plan that places AMLE on sound financial footing and allows flexibility for strategic initiatives.
Goal 6:  Strengthen the board’s capacity to deliver AMLE’s mission and vision.

Commentary:  The focus of the association is now looking at state affiliates as partners in a coalition, not competitors.

Goal 1:  Increase AMLE’s visibility with educators and policymakers worldwide
•1.1:  Promote the significance of middle level education philosophy and practice.
•1.2:  Create web-based delivery models, including social media, for content and communications.
Lots of folks liked the app for the conference.
•1.3:  Make the website current, visually attractive, and user-friendly.
The number of iPad users visiting the site doubles monthly.
•1.4:  Review the efficacy of the current brand and make necessary changes.
Unify the brand logo through a uniform standard of “look”.
Doing a new brand study and it’s representation.
#4 on this list will come before #3.

Goal 2:  Refine research-based professional development programs and services to ensure they are timely and relevant.
•2.1:  Regularly review This We Believe and revise as needed.
•2.2:  Initiate and publish ongoing middle level education research.
•2.3:  Continue to present a high-quality annual conference that offers relevant and timely content.
•2.4:  Develop theme based conferences based on regional or national topics that are research based, relevant, and needs based.
•2.5:  Revise the content of Leadership Institutes to serve new and continuing participants and provide follow-up activities.
•2.6:  Increase partnerships with state departments of education.
Commentary:
Could we commission a study that the characteristics of This We Believe improve school achievement.
How do we get to the point where the association is driving the research in the field?
Our numbers this year are half of the numbers from the last time in Portland.
How do we make the flagship product meet the attendees where they are?
IDEA:  gear our conference to meet the initiatives in the state to get the State Board of Ed on board.
Theme based mini-conferences.
That’s ironic!  Think of the things we’re doing with drive-in conferences in Michigan.
We need to survey districts to find out what their strategies are.
Conference attendees are not always repeaters and so they don’t get the benefit of having repeating presenters.
Revise the content to serve new attendees vs. repeaters.
Goals:
Increasing affiliate capacity
Increasing partnerships with affiliates and teacher preparation and the superintendents at State Depts. of Education.
How do we get a piece of legislation codified in 50 different locals?

Goal 3:  Develop partnerships and collaborative relationships with affiliates and other coalitions to influence programs and legislation to improve middle level education.
•3.1:  Update the “Success inthe Middle” policy guide as a tool for influencing public policy and education standards.
•3.2:  Provide advocacy tools for AMLE members and partners.
•3.3:  Provide resources relevant to targeted education policy issues.
•3.4:  Engage with the Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors Association to enhance their understanding of the needs of middle grades youth.
•3.5:  Collaborate with affiliate and coalition leaders, including organizations with missions that foster diversity in education.
•3.6:  Reconsider recommendations from the 2010 Affiliate Task Force Report.
•3.7:  Develop a plan to collaborate with international associations.
Commentary:
There is a legislative piece of software that would be more cost effective to provide to affiliates vs. affiliates purchasing for each state.
Getting Ex. Dir.s at the table with State Boards on implementation legislation.  i.e. Common Core
Goal is to have half of the Affiliate Task Force recommendations done by next year.

Goal 4:  Increase membership.
•4.1:  Determine membership benefits.
Is there a benefit to having a “free” membership?  Enticement.
•4.2:  Evaluate current  membership structures and fees.
•4.3:  Target new-entry educators.
•4.4:  Develop a plan to increase Collegiate Middle Level Association chapters and members.
•4.5:  Develop global membership.
•4.6: Cultivate diverse membership.
Commentary:
Reduce the types of membership.  Too many choices.
Building membership (5) usually listed, not all the teachers in the building.

Goal 5:  Develop a business model and financial plan that places AMLE on sound financial footing and allows flexibility for strategic initiatives.
•5.1:  Develop financial reports that align resources to mission, vision, and core values.
•5.2:  Develop an operating plan to launch an opportunity fund to support new iniatives that align to the  mission, vision, and strategic goals of AMLE.
How would we launch something big if we had the opportunity to?

Goal 6:  Strengthen the board’s capacity to deliver AMLE’s mission and vision.
•6.1:  Prepare board members to advance and articulate AMLE’s messages.
•6.2:  Review the board’s structure, composition, and function and make adjustments, as needed, to support AMLE’s mission and vision and reflect the changing demographics of students and educators.
•6.3:  Provide appropriate and ongoing professional learning for the board.
Commentary:
Board structure and governance needs to be revisited.
Do you need an Executive Board?  If so, your board is too big.
Does your board represent geography or expertise?
Finding more professional development for the board.
Training to be better board members.

Can we reach the summit, together?
These strategies will take time to implement.

Additional dialogue
Questions
Comments

MSM 227: We’re Not New & Noteworthy, We’re Hot!

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Eileen Award:

 

  • Facebook:  Joyce Capcara Fisher, Nelly Korman, The Simply Scientific Classroom

 

Jokes You Can Use:

A boy always asks for 50 cents from his mother. So his mother questioned the boy on why he kept asking for 50 cents. The boy replied that his friend told him that if you eat 50 cents worth of peanuts a day you would become smarter. Quickly his mother gave him $5. The boy asks “Why $5”, and the mother replied, “Buy 50 cents of peanut for yourself and buy peanuts for your father with the balance.”

One day the first grade teacher was reading the story of Chicken Little to her class. She came to the part of the story where Chicken Little tried to warn the farmer. She read, “…. and so Chicken Little went up to the farmer and said, “The sky is falling, the sky is falling!”

The teacher paused then asked the class, “And what do you think that farmer said?”

One little girl raised her hand and said,
“I think he said: ‘Holy Mackerel! A talking chicken!'”

The teacher was unable to teach for the next 10 minutes.

A man needing some legal help walks into a law firm. He asks an attorney,
“If I give you $300 per hour to help answer two legal problems I have, will you help me?” The attorney replies “Sure, what’s the other question?”

Advisory:

Perceptions:

Here’s an interesting video. It is an interesting take on perception. Entertaining and instructive. 4:33 long. (via Larry Ferlazzo)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=FUv-Q6EgEFI

A blind person describes color

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=59YN8_lg6-U

What would you do?
Here is a 12-year-old middle school wrestler,Justin Kievit showing a great amount of humility and sportsmanship to his fellow competitor Jared Stevens. I dare you to watch this video and not let out a tear or two.
http://cosbysweaters.com/2012/12/04/middle-school-wrestler-shows-us-all-what-sportsmanship-is-about/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Culturing Microorganisms
I was recently reading the December, 2012 issue of the Science Teacher, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association.  In the magazine, Key Roy, Director of Environmental Health and Safety for Glastonbury Public Schools in Connecticut wrote an article entitled, “Dangers in a Dish.”  In this article he shares the dangers of culturing microorganisms in the K-12 classroom.

From the Twitterverse:

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
5 Great Ways for Teachers to Collaborate on Twitter http://flpbd.it/iUJT2  #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320 ~ for @MSMatters followers
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
How Teachers Are Using Social Media Right Now http://flpbd.it/of7jF  #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320 ~ for @MSMatters followers
* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
Setting Schools Up to Fail http://wp.me/p2odLa-36b
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
New bookmark: 20 Tech Trends for 2013
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
New bookmark: An iPad Workflow for the Classroom Using Google Drive & Pages, Keynote, or Numbers & Notability | …
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
The 50 Most Popular Books For Teachers http://flip.it/hE0io  #fhuedu508 #fhuedu320 #fhupsy306
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Top 10 Bookmarking Websites for Teachers http://flip.it/kg7gV  #fhucid #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320
* International Center ‏@RigorRelevance
Have You Flipped Your Faculty Meeting Yet?by @PeterMDeWitt
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Common Core Big Idea 5: Consider Meaningful Assessment http://flip.it/FXoEz  #fhuedu610 #fhuedu508
* WORLD Magazine ‏@WORLD_mag
Debt and destruction: Insights into America’s rise illuminate the causes of her unraveling http://ow.ly/fVOHF  @MarvinOlasky
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.

Resources:

Gallery of FakeBook Profiles

Some good examples of fake FaceBook profiles.
http://www.classtools.net/main_area/fakebook/gallery/

Sign Up Genius

If you are a group leader and find yourself organizing volunteers, meals, service projects, or events… we want to make your life a lot simpler! Now you can coordinate it all online… FREE!
http://www.signupgenius.com/

Introduction to the Living Wage Calculator

In many American communities, families working in low-wage jobs make insufficient income to live locally given the local cost of living. Recently, in a number of high-cost communities, community organizers and citizens have successfully argued that the prevailing wage offered by the public sector and key businesses should reflect a wage rate required to meet minimum standards of living. Therefore we have developed a living wage calculator to estimate the cost of living in your community or region. The calculator lists typical expenses, the living wage and typical wages for the selected location.
http://livingwage.mit.edu/

Web Spotlight:

Books to Read

‘Tis the time of year that many people pick up additional books to read. Here are some thoughts:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/12/04/best-psychology-philosophy-books-2012/

Whole Novels

I’m writing a chapter of my book on Whole Novels–in which students read an entire novel more or less on their own before having substantive discussions about it–about support and differentiation for diverse learners. The classes at my school could not be more diverse, with reading levels spanning from second or third grade through first year college.  It’s rewarding and mind-blowing!
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/shoulders-giants/11-2012/my-co-teachers-weigh-whole-novels

7 Habits of Effective Teachers who use Technology:
We’ve all heard about Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Some teachers out there may have heard of the 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teachers. Below are our 7 habits of highly effective teachers who use technology:
1) They always start with the why.
2) They are malleable and can easily adapt.
3) They embrace change.
4) They share, share, and then share some more.
5) They think win-win-win-win.
6) They are extremely thorough and think two steps ahead.
7) They actively care.
http://blog.alwaysprepped.com/the-7-habits-of-highly-effective-teachers-who-use-technology/

News:

The Weight of Obesity

Obesity has become an epidemic in our society called developed, according to the OECD. What is the extent of this phenomenon ? Which countries are most affected ?
http://visual.ly/weight-obesity

Top 10 Bad Tech Predictions

Think today’s pundits and scientists can really forecast the future? Not if history is any lesson. Relive the folly of predictions past with 10 particularly ill-fated tech prophecies that did not stand the test of time.
http://www.digitaltrends.com/features/top-10-bad-tech-predictions/

STEM Students Must Be Taught to Fail

As a mechanical engineering professor at Northwestern University, I believe that that’s precisely what we should be teaching our students in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) subjects: how to fail. Right now, we do not explicitly teach our students how to fail so that they can get right back up. That’s in direct conflict with our goal: to prepare students to play competitively upon graduation. If our students are going to stop deadly pandemics, solve the energy crisis, and cure world hunger and poverty, they will have to be prepared to fail, over and over—and more important, they will need to know how to learn from those failures. STEM innovator Albert Einstein recognized that falling is an inevitable part of innovation; he’s quoted as having said, “A person who never made a mistake never tried anything new.” Another STEM innovator, Marie Curie attributed her success the fact that, as she put it, “I was taught that the way of progress was neither swift nor easy.”
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2012/11/23/stem-students-must-be-taught-to-fail

2 Mesa students forced to hold hands as punishment for fighting

Two high schoolers in Mesa, Arizona were given a choice of punishment after getting into a fight at school — Be suspended or sit in the courtyard all day holding hands. You can see what they chose…
The Mesa school district wants everyone to know that they don’t condone this type of corrective strategy and will be discussing it with the principal who sentenced these boys to public humiliation.
http://www.abc15.com/dpp/news/region_southeast_valley/mesa/two-mesa-students-forced-to-hold-hands-as-punishment-for-fighting

MSM 226: Cheesy Penny Lane, I Used to Think…

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Eileen Award:

 

  • Google+: Patti Gray

 

Jokes You Can Use:

When his teenage son asked to borrow twenty dollar, the man said, “Son, don’t you realize that there are more important things in life than money?”
“Yes, sir,” the youth replied, “I do. But you need money to take them to the movies.”

A tourist in Vienna goes through a graveyard and all of a sudden he hears some music. No one is around, so he starts searching for the source.
He finally locates the origin and finds it is coming from a grave with a headstone that reads: “Ludwig van Beethoven, 1770-1827.”
Then he realizes that the music is the Ninth Symphony, and it is being played backward! Puzzled, he leaves the graveyard and persuades a friend to return with him. By the time they arrive back at the grave, the music has changed. This time it is the Seventh Symphony, but like the previous piece, it is being played backward. Curious, the men agree to consult a music scholar.
When they return with the expert, the Fifth Symphony is playing, again backward. The expert notices that the symphonies are being played in the reverse order in which they were composed, the 9th, then the 7th, then the 5th.
By the next day the word has spread and a throng has gathered around the grave. They are all listening to the Second Symphony being played backward.
Just then the graveyard’s caretaker ambles up to the group. Someone in the group asks him if he has an explanation for the music.
“Don’t you get it?” the caretaker says incredulously. “He’s decomposing.”

A man wrote a letter to a small hotel in a midwest town he planned to visit on his vacation. He wrote, “I would very much like to bring my dog with me. He is well groomed and very well behaved. Would you be willing to permit me to keep him in my room with me at night?”
An immediate reply came from the hotel owner, who said, “I’ve been operating this hotel for many years. In all that time, I’ve never had a dog steal towels, bedclothes, silverware or pictures off the walls. I’ve never had to evict a dog in the middle of the night for being drunk and disorderly. and I’ve never had a dog run out on a hotel bill. Yes, indeed, your dog is welcome at my hotel. And, if your dog will vouch for you, you’re welcome to stay here, too.”

Advisory:

Cost of a penny


http://what-if.xkcd.com/22/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Public Laboratory (not lavatory 🙂

Troy Patterson, of the “Middle School Matters” podcast mentioned Raspberry Pi recently, and it got me to wondering if most people knew what it is.  Raspberry Pi is is a credit-card sized computer which can help kids do spreadsheets, play games, watch HD videos and learn programming, all for about $25.

It got me to thinking of other “Do It Yourself” gadgets that middle school students might also enjoy.  This then took me to the Public Laboratory:
http://publiclaboratory.org
a community where you can learn how to investigate environmental concerns using inexpensive “Do It Yourself” techniques.

From the Twitterverse:

* Will Richardson ‏@willrich45
“My Kindergartner had 14 tests this year…” http://wapo.st/QV4dE6  I’m telling you, reformers are going to test themselves out of business.
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
Just a Reminder: American Teachers Do More Work for Less Pay Than Their International Peers #edreform #iaedfuture
* Lucas Gillispie ‏@PCSTech
Full middle-grades language arts curriculum based in WoW and CommonCore aligned is here – http://wowinschool.pbworks.com/  #BYOTchat
* Gary Johnston ‏@GaryJohnston1
My First 3 Days In A 1:1 iPad Classroom http://edudemic.com/2012/11/my-first-3-days-with-a-11-ipad-classroom/ … via @edudemic Great advice from someone who hit the ground running.
James ‏@CrashCourseTech
CommBadge gives you a Star Trek: TNG experience…almost: Tired of plugging a Bluetooth earpiece i… via @phonearena
* Miguel Guhlin ‏@mguhlin
A Must Have App Evaluation Rubric for Teachers http://dlvr.it/2Z0RPX
* BethRitterGuth ‏@BethRitterGuth
RT @bausel: Free Resources for Teachers | Online Student Code of Conduct http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http%3A%2F%2Fwww.collaborizeclassroom.com%2Fresources%2Fgetting-started%2Fonline-student-code-of-conduct …
* Steve ‏@2learn2
TED: Paolo Cardini: Forget multitasking, try monotasking – Paolo Cardini (2012) http://goo.gl/NY7QJ
NASA ‏@NASA
Did you know there’s a great online source with almost 60K NASA images & 30K videos? Visit: http://www.nasaimages.org
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
New bookmark: Legal and ethical issues surrounding use of VAM for teacher evaluation
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
How Teachers Are Using Social Media Right Now http://flpbd.it/of7jF  #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320 ~ for @MSMatters followers

5 Great Ways for Teachers to Collaborate on Twitter http://flpbd.it/iUJT2  #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320 ~ for @MSMatters followers

6 #iPad Apps That Help You Create Interactive Study Guides http://flpbd.it/WYrvX  #mLearning #fhuedu320 ~ for @MSMatters followers

Report: Middle School Students Using Smartphones More Interested in STEM — THE Journal http://flpbd.it/3ZyOU  #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  

Resources:

Transcribe

http://transcribe.wreally.com/

Why Everything Sucks

*Note – some Not Safe For Work Language (NSFW) is present.
http://twentytwowords.com/2012/11/25/craig-fergusons-rant-against-the-deification-of-youth-and-stupidity/

Questioning Autism?

Questioning Autism? is an iOS app designed to help concerned parents understand the signs and symptoms of autism, and to convey their observations to their pediatrician. The app features 12 simple questions, and the ability to share the observations with notes via email. Parents and caregivers can track a child’s progress over time, and save their observations for multiple children. Also included are helpful resources and the ability to share the app socially.
http://asddad.com/2012/11/20/questioning-autism-app-is-available/

15 Cheesy Christmas Music Videos on YouTube

Well, the title pretty much says it all.

http://mashable.com/2012/11/24/cheesy-christmas-music-videos/

Historical Figure Greeting Cards

This morning I used the web version of the Trading Card Creator to create an Abraham Lincoln trading card. To create the card I found a public domain image of Lincoln, uploaded it to the template provided by RWT, and completed the fields that asked for information about Lincoln’s life. When my card was completed I was able to download it to my computer. I could have also emailed it to myself or to a friend.
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/11/create-trading-cards-for-historical-and_27.html

Web Spotlight:

Primary Sources

Docs Teach offers seven free tools that teachers can use to create interactive learning activities based on primary source documents and images. The seven tools are Finding a Sequence, Focusing on Details, Making Connections, Mapping History, Seeing the Big Picture, Weighing the Evidence, and Interpreting Data.
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/11/create-your-own-interactive-primary.html

I used to think…

In a beautifully candid and beautifully written piece for PLP Network’s Voices from the Learning Revolution, Canadian teacher Shelly Wright examines how her thinking and her classroom practice have changed.
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/teachmoore/11-2012/read-i-used-think-teacher-reflections
http://plpnetwork.com/2012/11/08/think/

The Beatings Will Continue Until Morale Improves

Too many kids already hate school. Why do we want to make them do more of it?
http://practicaltheory.org/blog/2012/11/23/the-beatings-will-continue-until-morale-improves-2/

News:

Homework

A study led by an Indiana University School of Education faculty member finds little correlation between time spent on homework and better course grades for math and science students, but a positive relationship between homework time and performance on standardized tests.
Contrary to much of the published research, a regression analysis of time spent on homework and the final class grade found no substantive difference in grades between students who complete homework and those who do not. But the analysis found a positive association between student performance on standardized tests and the time they spent on homework.
The authors suggest in their conclusions that other factors such as class participation and attendance may mitigate the association of homework to stronger grade performance.
“We’re not trying to say that all homework is bad,” Maltese said. “It’s expected that students are going to do homework. This is more of an argument that it should be quality over quantity. So in math, rather than doing the same types of problems over and over again, maybe it should involve having students analyze new types of problems or data. In science, maybe the students should write concept summaries instead of just reading a chapter and answering the questions at the end.”
http://newsinfo.iu.edu/news/page/normal/23471.html?emailID=23471

AMLE Annual Conference Sessions:

Dr. John Medina:  Brain Rules

The field of neuroscience doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with education.
Brain Mythologies
10% usage
Left brain vs. Right brain
Cross brain/physical thingy:  bunk
Interpretation of data is everything!
We don’t know much about the brain, but we do know some things.
Solve problems, related to surviving, outdoors and constantly on the move.
Lecture Part One:  Exercise and the brain
Exercise boosts brain power and counteracts the effects of stress.
“Ode to a Sedentary Carnivore”
1989- Paper called ?

Baby boomers were aging either beautifully or not so beautifully.

Sedentary lifestyle made all the difference.

Executive function vs sedentary.  The scores are hugely different for those that had exercise.

   20-150% difference in scores after introducing exercise.
Aerobics and toning exercise does not improve your memory.
How much exercise to get benefit?
150 minutes of walking, enough that you couldn’t sing while you walk.
Exercise boosts cognition
Sweet spot:  20% increase in learning if the exercise comes right before the classroom experience.
Aerobic trumps strengthening.
Structure:  Exercise, class, class, exercise, class class
Lecture Part Two:
Arousal States
Being digitally exposed during studying is the same as being drunk.

MSM 225: Advisory! Advisory! Advisory!

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Eileen Award:

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter: Paige Johnson
  • Facebook:
  • Google+:
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

 

Jokes You Can Use:

One reason the Military Services have trouble operating jointly is that they don’t speak the same language. For example, if you told Navy personnel to “secure a building,” they would turn off the lights and lock the doors. The Army would occupy the building so no one could enter. Marines would assault the building, capture it, and defend it with suppressive fire and close combat. The Air Force, on the other hand, would take out a three-year lease with an option to buy.

A woman worries about the future until she gets a husband.
A man never worries about the future until he gets a wife.
A successful man is one who makes more money than his wife can spend.
A successful woman is one who can find such a man.

Advisory:

You are Predictable

Make the board ahead of time, or put it on a Promethean Board.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DaWcL3oOd-E

Business Cards

Have the kids design business cards for famous people, fictional characters, historical figures, etc.
http://thisisnthappiness.com/post/35780275184/business-cards

10 Bets that you can win

Use these to create a challenge for students. Encourage them to think together. This can help prime the thinking. These are really just problem solving opportunities.
http://www.tastefullyoffensive.com/2012/11/another-10-bets-you-will-always-win.html

Perceptives

On the cover of American Prospect, Joel Sternfeld’s ode to roadside America, was a ghoulish photo. A fireman shops for a pumpkin as the farmhouse — whose fire presumably brought him to this very acres — burns in the background. Its fiery destruction perfectly complemented the wintry leaves, the spoilt pumpkins, and from the foreground, with his hands tightly clasped upon a prized possession, the orange-clad firefighter: an American Nero.
http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/2012/10/25/joel-sternfeld-mclean-virginia-december-1978/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Reflecting on Data

Recently I gave a talk at a new teacher orientation for the Rouge Education Project, a water quality monitoring project on the Rouge River, in the Michigan counties of Wayne and Oakland.  The purpose of the talk was to share ideas on curriculum.  The two areas I focused in on were:
1.  Inquiry Analysis and Communication
2.  Reflection and Social Implication

To learn more about the Rouge Education Project, please visit:
http://www.therouge.org

From the Twitterverse:

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
#iPad in schools 102 http://zite.to/TPKz8R  via @zite #fhuedu320 #fhuedu642

11 Excellent Ways Teachers Can Use Google Docs http://flpbd.it/tH96v  #fhuedu320 #eLearning #fhuedu642

6 Reasons To Get A Tutor http://flpbd.it/6Jxee  #fhuedu610 #fhuedu508

* YouAndI School ‏@YouAndISchool
#Teachers have such an awesome job. Here is a teachers survival kit for everyday living http://tinyurl.com/chnt56h
* Patrick Larkin ‏@patrickmlarkin
Gamification 101: Why A Badge Is Better Than An A via @terryheick #edchat #bhschat
* Miguel Guhlin ‏@mguhlin
10 evernote uses in classroom http://dlvr.it/2VSPF4
* Lisa Dubernard ‏@onboardlearning
Good blog about the “culture of excellence” #satchat http://blog.eboardsolutions.com/accountability/wait-for-superman-or-build-transformation-teams/ …
* Kyle Calderwood ‏@kcalderw
Infographic: The Anatomy of a Great Teacher http://zite.to/T7jkIn  #njed #edtech #edchat
* Sandy Kendell ‏@EdTechSandyK
18 Snapshots Of iPad Integration | #edtech #mlearning @scoopit via @tperranhttp://sco.lt/7ApQbB

10 Ways To Use Technology To Teach #Writing http://edudemic.com/2012/11/10-high-tech-ways-to-teach-writing/ … via @edudemic #edtech #literacy

* EdTechTeacher ‏@EdTechTeacher21
iPad Resources and More iPad Summit Blog Posts
* Audrey Nay ‏@audrey_nay
Great livebinder – Top 5 Reasons 2 Use Your Library http://www.livebinders.com/play/play/119021 … #advocacy #tlchat #ozteachers #nswdec #austl
* Kristen Stringfellow ‏@SouthKingSuper
“Twitter Cheat Sheet (for any “newbies” out there) pic.twitter.com/ne3u3mZY #NCTE12
* Gerald Aungst ‏@geraldaungst
Why while presenting do so many ed conference speakers avoid the very strategies they promote? #irony #fail
* Lee Ann Spillane ‏@spillarke
Save the date 2/6/13 Digital Learning Day @sjhayes8 #ncte12
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.

Resources:

Circuits

Circuits.io was founded in 2012 by Karel Bruneel and Benjamin Schrauwen. After struggling for years to design and teach to design electronics using existing EDA tool, they felt that electronics design needed an urgent jolt. Learning from how software is designed, they came up with the following magic recipe which is at the heart of circuits.io: (i) allow to easily build on pre-designed electronics modules, (ii) use intuitive tools that hide much of the complexity in software, and (iii) embrace the open hardware movement. Furthermore, we will soon allow easy PCB ordering right from circuits.io, no more messing with Gerber files. We promise that circuits.io will always be free for open hardware designs and that you can export all your designs, we will never lock in what actually is yours.
http://www.circuits.io/

8 GREAT GRADING APPS FOR IPAD

After posting about some of the best gradebook tools for teachers we got an email from one of our readers asking about some grading apps for iPad. We looked into our archive and found a post that we have published almost a year ago containing some great grading apps for iOS users but because thousands of apps have been created since the posting of that list we deemed it important that we do a general scan to review the new emerging grading apps. We found quite many but we only handpicked the ones mentioned below.
http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2012/11/8-great-grading-apps-for-ipad.html

Web Spotlight:

A Cure for the Mania of Multiple Drafts, Multiple Formats, X 100

By Ariel Sacks
In my last post, I described my utter failure to effectively organize and manage my students’ drafting process for writing projects.  This job has become much more complicated over the years with the availability of various technological tools for writing.  New, clear parameters are definitely necessary.
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/shoulders-giants/11-2012/cure-mania-multiple-drafts-multiple-formats-x-100

Everything That Will Go Extinct In The Next 40 Years

Futurist website nowandnext.com put together this awesome infographic predicting all of the technologies, behaviors, and ideas that will probably be distant memories by 2050.
Among their predictions: no more retirement four years from now, no more secretaries six years from now, and no more free parking or sit-down breakfasts by 2019.
The European Union is seen as surviving the current crisis before extinct in 2039.
http://www.businessinsider.com/everything-that-will-go-extinct-in-the-next-40-years-2012-8#ixzz29zsNrc6U

News:

The [editor of Phi Delta Kappan] concludes by asserting that “every classroom should have excellent teaching every hour of every day.” I would add that every child should also have an excellent parent who serves them excellent food and provides them with an excellent home in an excellent neighborhood. Let’s also add excellent healthcare and excellent supervision every hour of every day as well. If we could accomplish all of that, we would have the highest achieving students on earth.
http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2012/11/while-we-wait-for-wise-lawmakers-to-emerge.html

AMLE Annual Conference Sessions:

Dr. Debbie Silver, paid session.

Standard Introduction:
Teach through stories.
The self-reference depends on when the story happened in her life.
Middle school song by Monte Selby:  “Get Back Up Again.”

“He has a relentless commitment to his dream
so he’ll watch and ask
Then walk for books to read
Builds his talent with desire,’
Loads of time and endless fire
Always redefining persevere”

“So he tries and he tries, with a smile, then he cries
Countless falls, break the skin, get back up
Start again and again
Then he stays up late when he knows he shouldn’t
Tells his parents that he couldn’t – quit.”

Middle school is the last best hope for some of these kids.

“What lies behind us and what lies in front of us are but tiny matters as compared to lies within us.”  – Ralph Waldo Emerson
We have kids that have already given up before they got there.
Research is clear, you cannot motivate anybody.  They have to motivate themselves.  (That’s interesting!)
Mindset-The new Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck
Elizabeth’s Story:
Which of the five choices are the right response:
1.  You tell her you thought she was the best.
2.  Tell her she was robbed of a ribbon that was rightfully hers.
3.  Reassure her that gymnastics is not that important.
4.  Tell her she has the ability and will surely win the next one.
5.  Tell her she didn’t deserve to win.
Video:  Charlotte & Johnathan
How do we help students become self-motivated?
Failure has become an entity instead of a state of being.
We need to get kids to understand that falling is part of the process, not the end state of things.
Advertisement video:  CapriSun commercial where the Mom goes and protects the kids to the point of being stupid.
Replace the term Self-Esteem with Self-Efficacy (Bandura)
Self-Efficacy:
What does it do?  It influences:
•The choices we make
•The effort we put forth
•How long we persist when we confront obstacles
•How quickly we “bounce back” from setbacks or failures.
Learned helplessness
When kids have power over their environment, they will blossom.
“Anything easily attained is cheaply held.”
Zone of Proximal Development:  Lev Vygotsky
The greatest way to get people self motivated is to raise the bar just beyond their reach.
Letting students do what they can already, it is demotivating.
Lifting the leg example.
What kids are starved for is adult attention.
The Zip Line Adventure
Cartoon:  Scaffolding
Scaffolding
Describe a scenario in which you were asked to perform a task far beyond your current ability level and no scaffolding was provided.  How did you respond to the challenge?  What happened?
Handout item:  Scaffolding Instruction Guidelines
Deci & Ryan
Helping Kids Be Successful:
•  Autonomy:  Go do it.
•  Competency:  They have to feel they have the knowledge to do it.
•  Relatedness:  Connecting it to other things and people.
The story of Andy:
Cartesian Diver:  You can do it with condiment packages evidently.
Be careful of over effusive praise.
Andy and the drums.
Doug Moreland Band
Seventh Sun
One of Andy’s character traits is his very strong self-discipline.
The ability to delay self-gratification.
Many lack the ability to defer gratification
Video:  The Marshmallow Test
65% of the kids waited.
65% were:
•more socially competent
•more personally effective
•more self-assertive
•Better able to cope with life’s frustrations.
• . . . see handout
210 more points on SATs.
(Mischel, Schoda, and Peake, 1988)
These skills can be taught!
Tips for helping Children with Impulse control
In class do not allow students to raise hands or blurt answers.  When asking for a response require students to wait 10-15 seconds before calling on someone randomly (I pick up from a cup of craft sticks with the name of a different student on each one).
•  Model “think alouds” for the students.
1.  The adult performs a task while “thinking out loud.”  For example, “Before I start to do this activity.  I need to read all the directions.  After I read all of the directions, I will check and make sure all of the materials are here.  Then I will begin with step #1.

3.  The student performs the task while instruction them self out loud.
Teach students the “Stop and Think” 5 step problem solving strategy:
1.  “What am I supposed to do?”  (Figure out what exactly what the problem is.)
2.  “Look at all the possibilities
•  Role play with the students the problem and possible solutions that occur in recurring social events.
•  Use a timer to indicate periods of independent work and reinforce appropriate behavior with positive feedback.
•  Use the words “For now . . . ”
“I don’t want to do this.”  “That’s ok, you’ll do this ‘for now’.”
Steps in Deliberate Practice.
•  Remember that deliberate practice has one objective:  to improve performance. ” People who play tennis once a week for years don’t get any better if they do the same thing each time.”  Ericson has said, “Deliberate practice is about changing your performance, setting new goals and straining yourself to reach a bit higher each time.”
•  Repeat, repeat, repeat.  Repetition matters.  Basketball greats don’t shoot ten free throws at the end of team practice, they shoot five hundred.
•  Seek constant, critical feedback.  If you don’t know how you’re doing, you won’t know what to improve.
•  Focus ruthlessly on where you need help.  while many of us work on what we’re already good at, says Ericsson, “those who get better work on their weakness.”
•  Prepare for the process to be mentally and physically exhausting.  that’s why so many people . . see handout.
Motivation:
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
Psychological reactance relates to a classic distinction made by motivational psychologists:  the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic motives.  An activity intrinsically motivating if a person does it voluntarily, without receiving payment or other type of reward.  An activity is extrinsically motivated if it is performed primarily for external reinforcement such as food or money.
The Chit Example:
How to turn play into work:  Lepper and Green (1974)
What are classroom rewards?
•  Extrinsic rewards can be denied as rewards that come from an aoutside source such as the teacher.  Rewards include the obvious bonuses such as prizes, certificates, special privileges, gold stars, stickers, candy gum, redeemable tokens, grades, or even money.  Teacher praise is also considered to be an extrinsic reward as are more subtle signs of approval such as thumbs up signs, smiles, nods, hugs, or pats on the back.
•  Intrinsic rewards can be defined as rewards that are inherent or the natural consequence of behavior.
Activity:  Describe how praise can sometimes do more harm than good.  Give examples from your experience.
Using Classroom Rewards
•  Task-contingent rewards are available to students for merely participating in an activity without regard to any standard of performance (i.e. anyone who turns in a homework paper gets an A.)
-Detrimental to motivation
•  Performance-contingent rewards are available only when the student achieves a certain standard (i.e. anyone who has at least 93% correct responses on the homework paper gets a sticker.)
*  Success-contingent rewards are given for good performance and might reflect either success or progress towards a goal (i.e. anyone who has at least 93% correct responses on the homework paper or improves from their previous score.)
Guidelines for using Classroom Rewards
•Use the weakest reward required to strengthen a behavior.
•When possible, avoid using rewards as incentives.
•Reward at a high rate in the early stages of learning and reduce the frequency of rewards as learning . . .
“It is the nature of man to rise to greatness, if greatness is expected of him.”
-John Steinbeck
Song:  “Fly on the Wall” by Monte Selby
The Key Principles of SFP are these:
A.  We form certain expectations of people or events.
B.  We communicate those expectations with varous cues.
C.  People tend to respond to these cues by adjusting their behavior to match them.
D.  The result is that the original expectation becomes true.
“Hamstrung by unrealized potential.”  Don’t praise anything a child cannot control.
Jordan’s Nike commercial:  “Over and over again I’ve failed in life, and that’s why I succeed.”
Realize that inappropriate praise can do more harm than good.
Attribution theory:  Why do individuals say they fail?
• Task Difficulty
•  Luck
•  Innate Ability or Talent
•  Effort
External (controlled by other than self)
•  Task Difficulty
•  Luck
•  Innate ability or talent
Internal (controlled by self)
•  Effort
Mindset:  The new psychology of success.  Dr. Carol Dweck (2006)
Fixed Mindset (Entity Theory)
Growth Mindset
Dr. Dweck’s Interview Video
Being praised for the easy problems caused students to go back to the easy stuff because they were successful at it.
Students praised for effort, generally were more willing to take on harder tasks.
Implicit Personality Theory.

The Book:  The little girl on the front is a character of a little girl named Stephanie.
We must view young people not as empty bottles to be filled, but as candles to be lit.  (The burning of the ditto transfer paper)

Website:  debbiesilver.com   Password:  iamateacher
I’m number 24.  Randomizer says
EY-88 Code for CEUs.

MSM 224: Spewing Forth: Alternate Show Weeks

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Eileen Award:

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:
  • Facebook:  Steve Ralston
  • Google+:
  • iTunes:  Steve Ralston
  • eMail:

Jokes You Can Use:

One Halloween a man was walking down the street and heard a thumping noise behind him. Looking behind him he saw a coffin following him, upright. He was a bit nervous and began walking a little bit faster. The coffin continued, “thumpety thump, thumpety thump”. He began running and the coffin kept up and began opening and closing, “”thumpety thump, thumpety thump clap, “thumpety thump, thumpety thump clap”. Terrified he ran to his front door, and went inside, slamming the door and locking it. The coffin continued, “thumpety thump, thumpety thump – CRASH” it came right through the door, He ran up the stairs, and right behind him, “thumpety thump, thumpety thump clap, “thumpety thump, thumpety thump clap”. He rushed into the bathroom and slammed the door, but the coffin broke through the door – “thumpety thump, thumpety thump crash”. Terrified the man grabbed the first thing he could, a bottle of Robutusin and threw it – and the coffin stopped!

One psychologist greets another on the street: “You’re fine, how am I?”

Socrates came upon an acquaintance that ran up to him excitedly and said, “Do you know what I just heard about one of your students?” “Just a minute,” Socrates replied. “Before you tell me I’d like you to pass a little test. It’s called the Test of Three. “The first test is Truth. Are you sure that what you will say is true? “Oh no,” the man said, “Actually I just heard about it.” “So you don’t really know if it’s true, Socrates said. Now let’s try the second test, the test of Goodness. Is what you are about to tell me about my student something good?” “No, on the contrary..” “So,” Socrates interrupted, “you want to tell me something bad about him even though you’re not certain it’s true?” The man shrugged, rather embarrassed. Socrates continued. “You may still pass though, because there is a third test, the filter of Usefulness. Is what you want to tell me about my student going to be useful to me at all?” “Well it ..no, not really..” “Well, concluded Socates, “If what you want to tell me is neither True nor good nor ever Useful, why tell it to me at all?” The man was defeated and ashamed. This is the reason Socrates was held in such high esteem. It also explains why he never found out what Plato was up to.

Advisory:

Antipodes

http://www.jasondavies.com/maps/antipodes/

Last Wish

Lifelong football fan Danny Webber had one last wish – to meet QB Andrew Luck and the Indianapolis Colts. With help from the Colts organization and wonderful workers at the Heritage House, his wish was granted. Watch as Inside the NFL cameras were there to capture this truly heart-warming story.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uU1sK9HLpFo&feature=youtu.be

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Volcano Safety
This podcast is based on the Question of the Month from the Scope on Safety section of the October, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  The question of the month is written by Ken Roy, director of environmental health and safety for Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, Connecticut.

The question of the month deals with the use of ammonium dichromate in the classroom.

We won’t blow our tops on this one.

From the Twitterverse:

* Orion School View ‏@OrionSchoolView
ALL teachers should read this! Ten Commandments For Educators Who Teach Kids on the Autism Spectrum http://enabledkids.ca/?p=2076  via @EnabledKids
* Valerie Lees ‏@ValerieLeessd36
This is what interdisciplinary learning can give us:students offer overnight solution to gas station crises #Sandy http://huff.to/Ydl312  #fb
* Kevin J. Galbraith ‏@KevG
How Are Districts Covering the Tech. Costs of Common Core? http://zite.to/RzLc6h
* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
Do you have your armband? “Just let me teach.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/11/01/just-let-me-teach-arm-bands-taking-off/ …
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
China as number two — or even number three
* Catherine Flippen ‏@CatFlippen
Instead of teachers evaluating other teachers, use method called “Idea Bandit”–visit a classroom, “steal” a great idea. #edadmin
* Eye On Education ‏@eyeoneducation
How to Design Open-Ended Assignments to Meet the #CommonCore http://ow.ly/eZncK  #edchat #ccss #engedu #literacy #ccchat
* Emily Wyble ‏@wyblee
#edcampGR presenters switching back and forth on the Apple TV between the iPad mini and the “regular.” Co-teaching possibilities?
* Kevin Creutz ‏@kevcreutz
Three Video Explanations of Why We Change Our Clocks This Weekend via @rmbyrne #edtech
* Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
Ideas for English Language Learners | ‘Gangnam Style,’ ‘Emotion Words’ and More http://nyti.ms/Sfnew1
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
New bookmark: Library Of Congress Unveils Massive Common Core Resource Center | @edudemic
* Sandra Wozniak ‏@sanwoz
Are you using elections to teach critical thinking? Great resources #satchat
* Sandy Kendell ‏@EdTechSandyK
How to clean Apple products including iPad | #mlearning #edtech #ipaded @scoopit http://sco.lt/98tt4L
* Rick Wormeli ‏@RickWormeli
School superintendent to Thomas Friedman: Why you are wrong about Race to the Top http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/10/31/school-superintendent-to-thomas-friedman-why-you-are-wrong-about-race-to-the-top/ …
* Sandra Wozniak ‏@sanwoz
HOTS & Bloom’s by @JillBromen on @scoopitGreat critical thinking resources. #gtchat #edchat

Resources:

Higher Order Thinking Strategies and Tools

“The following Online Interactive Thinking Strategies and Tools are designed to provide a scaffold which enables students to think with more depth and structure. When using them, ask students to continually reflect on and justify which Habits of Mind best suit how they are thinking.”

There are some terrific organizers here that would be easy to replicate.
http://learningcurveplanner.com.au/thinking-tools.html

The Victorians Learn to work like a historian

This website introduces primary pupils to historical sources. It helps children to think and work like historians by using objects, images and documents from the collections of the V&A and The National Archives to learn about the Victorian period. Begin with this tutorial to get the best out of the six themed units that follow.
This short starter activity introduces the learning model that guides and supports pupils’ work throughout the resource.
The approach for dealing with sources has been broken down into four steps. A simple mnemonic, L-A-C-E, helps pupils to remember them.
Two online presenters guide pupils through each unit. They introduce a range of different historical sources and ask various prompt questions at each step of the LACE process. There is some variation between these questions, to accommodate the different types of sources used in this resource, but they retain the same focus throughout:
LOOK: Describe what you can see.
ASK: What questions do you need to ask, and answer, to make sense of what you have seen?
CONCLUDE: What have you learned about the issue that you are investigating from this source?
EXPAND: What more would you like to know about? How can you find out?
The steps in the LACE process are not always mutually exclusive. In fact, evaluating evidence is often an iterative process. Pupils may sometimes engage with the different steps in a non-linear way. When this happens it is not a problem. The main purpose of this approach is to encourage pupils to develop different types of questions to progress their understanding of the evidence.

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/victorians/resources.htm
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/victorians/Default.aspx

A visual A-Z of the hidden treasures of language.

As a lover of language and words, especially obscure and endangered words, I was instantly besotted with Project Twins’ visual interpretations of unusual words, originally exhibited at the MadArt Gallery Dublin during DesignWeek 2011.
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/07/02/project-twins-unusual-words/

Public Domain Comics

We are the best site for downloading FREE public domain Golden Age Comics. All files here have been researched by our staff and users to make sure they are copyright free and in the public domain. To start downloading just register an account and enjoy these great comic books. We do not charge per download and the goal of the project is to archive these comic books online and make them widely available.
http://digitalcomicmuseum.com/

Web Spotlight:

Can Your Kid Read Graphs and Charts?

As these visual displays become more and more ubiquitous, it is all the more important that students know how to read, interpret, and summarize the information presented. It’s become an essential element of overall literacy.
As students get older, it’s important for them to learn not only how to be intelligent viewers of graphic representations, but wary and cautious viewers. While charts and graphs obviously are a boon to our ability to communicate information about large numbers or complicated relationships, there are also hidden pitfalls.
http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/10/can-your-kid-read-graphs-and-charts/263689/


http://tedmccagg.typepad.com/drawings/2012/10/back-in-my-day.html

News:

 

Ethiopian kids hack OLPCs in 5 months with zero instruction

“We left the boxes in the village. Closed. Taped shut. No instruction, no human being. I thought, the kids will play with the boxes! Within four minutes, one kid not only opened the box, but found the on/off switch. He’d never seen an on/off switch. He powered it up. Within five days, they were using 47 apps per child per day. Within two weeks, they were singing ABC songs [in English] in the village. And within five months, they had hacked Android. Some idiot in our organization or in the Media Lab had disabled the camera! And they figured out it had a camera, and they hacked Android.”

http://dvice.com/archives/2012/10/ethiopian-kids.php

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.

MSM 223: RoundTable of TwitterVerse and Student Responses.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Call for Action:

iTunes

Jokes You Can Use:

A Sunday school teacher asked her little children, as they were on the way to church service, “And why is it necessary to be quiet in church?” One bright little girl replied, “Because people are sleeping.”

Only in America……

1.- …..can a pizza get to your house faster than an
ambulance.
2.- ……are there handicap parking places in front of a skating rink.
3.-……do drugstores make the sick walk all the way to
the back of the store to get their prescriptions while healthy people
can buy cigarettes at the front.
4. -……do people order double cheeseburgers, large fries, and a diet coke.
5. -……do banks leave both doors open and then chain the pens to the counters.
6. -……do we leave cars worth thousands of dollars in
the driveway and put our useless junk in the garage.
7. -……do we use answering machines to screen calls and
then have call waiting so we won’t miss a call from someone we didn’t
want to talk to in the first place.
8. -……do we buy hot dogs in packages of ten and buns in
packages of eight.
9. -……do we use the word ‘politics’ to describe the process so well: ‘Poli’ in Latin meaning ‘many’ and ‘tics’ meaning ‘bloodsucking creatures’.
10. -……do they have drive-up ATM machines with Braille lettering.

There were two buddies, one with a Doberman Pinscher and the other with a Chihuahua. The guy with the Doberman Pinscher says to his friend, “Let’s go over to that restaurant and get something to eat.”
The guy with the Chihuahua says, “We can’t go in there. We’ve got dogs with us.”
The buddy with the Doberman Pinscher says, “Just follow my lead.”
They walk over to the restaurant, the guy with the Doberman Pinscher puts on a pair of dark glasses and he starts to walk in. The bouncer at the door says, “Sorry, mac, no pets allowed.”
The man with the Doberman Pinscher says, “You don’t understand. This is my seeing-eye-dog.”
The bouncer says, “A Doberman Pinscher?”
He answers, “Yes, they’re using them now; they’re very good and protect me from robbers, too.”
The man at the door says, “Come on in.”
The buddy with the Chihuahua figures, “What the heck,” so he puts on a pair of dark glasses and starts to walk in.
Once again the bouncer says, “Sorry, pal, no pets allowed.”
The guy with the Chihuahua says, “You don’t understand. This is my seeing-eye dog.”
The bouncer at the door says, “A Chihuahua?”
The man with the Chihuahua says, “A Chihuahua?????? They gave me a Chihuahua?!”
Steve Cushing ‏@Montberte
I had amnesia once – maybe twice.

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:  Dr. Catherine Hart
  • Facebook:   Josh Flory
  • Google+:
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

 

Advisory:

A $20 Bike Made Of Cardboard Is Headed To Market

http://www.businessinsider.com/20-cardboard-bike-headed-to-market-2012-10

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

This podcast is based on the Editor’s Roundtable from the October, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  The roundtable was written by Inez Liftig.

The purpose of the roundtable was to emphasize the importance of genetics education in middle school.  It is important not only because it plays a prominent role in the new Next Generation Science Standards but also because genetic testing and gene-based medicine will play a large part in their lives.

From the Twitterverse:

*Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
Irony in Ohio http://wp.me/p2odLa-2Dp  via @wordpressdotcom
*TeachHUB ‏@TeachHub
5 Things I Wish I Had Known Before I Became a Special Education TeacherPED #spedchat #edchat
* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
Why Foist an Unproven Method on the Entire Nation All at Once? http://wp.me/p2odLa-2CE  via @wordpressdotcom
* Kevin Creutz ‏@kevcreutz
Six Multimedia Timeline Creation Tools for Students via @rmbyrne #edtech
* Tween Publishing ‏@TweenPublishing
The Middle School Student’s Guide to College http://tweenpublishing.uberflip.com/i/65514  via @uberflip #edchat #schools #collegereadiness #tween
* Sandy Kendell ‏@EdTechSandyK
Would love your feedback here if you’ve deployed iPads in any number in a school setting: http://goo.gl/fb/zZVXP  #edtech #edchat #ipaded
* Justin ‏@justinstallings
New tab in Evernote for Educator’s Livebinder: Teacher Pages.  +LiveBinders +Evernote #edtech #edchat  http://www.livebinders.com/play/play_or_edit/245623?tabid=a73e3b38-ac0f-4533-99d2-098683df4c10 …
* Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
RT @ChrisWejr: The “Khanification” of Education
* Laura Gilchrist ‏@LauraGilchrist4
Why Learning Should Be Messy | http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2012/10/why-learning-should-be-messy/ …. Via @MindShiftKQED #nkcsedu #midleved #elemed #scichat #sschat #edreform
* Parentella ‏@Parentella
Drugstore Food Deals – Week of October 21 #family
* Jerry Blumengarten ‏@cybraryman1
Sites to teach with Twitter http://cybraryman.com/twitter.html  #satchat
* Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574
@JohnWink90 Here is the link to the Storify archive for tonight’s #mschat http://sfy.co/bACM  Have a great Friday and weekend.

Resources:

Fun Student Responses:

http://hypervocal.com/culture/2012/18-best-students-on-the-internet/

Next YouTube EDU Gurus:

Introducing the YouTube Next EDU Gurus. Want to learn something new? Check out these channels today!
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?annotation_id=annotation_312811&feature=iv&list=PLEoqe4x_0u5PEmoFoQNecNRJMqw2DXYHn&src_vid=KvZcVVV7CrU

Restorative Discipline

When the student-government president here at City Springs Elementary/Middle School turned into the class clown last school year and began treating teachers disrespectfully, administrators had many options for how to deal with him, including sending him home for a few days to cool his heels.
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/10/17/08restorative_ep.h32.html?tkn=SUTF2jciDTH8F91y7avjwzZdnR%2B%2BCKn%2Fxmuw&cmp=ENL-EU-NEWS1

Web Spotlight:

 

Thinking About Cursive in a Digital World

By David Polochanin
“What does a cursive Q look like?” I asked my wife after dinner one recent night. We were helping our 5-year-old daughter form uppercase letters in manuscript when it occurred to me that I did not remember how to form a cursive capital Q.
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/10/17/08polochanin.h32.html?tkn=VYMFhjYXlmJFh7XjeraeH5hTUhnjnAgattpv&cmp=ENL-EU-VIEWS1

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.

MSM 222: Flipped Off!

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

 

Call for Action:

iTunes Reviews

Jokes You Can Use:

Three leaders of the big beer companies meet for a drink. The president of Budweiser orders a Bud. Miller’s president orders a Millers and the president of Coors orders a Coors. When it is Guinness turn to order he orders a soda. Why didn’t you order a Guinness everyone asks? Nah Guinness replies. If you guys aren’t having a beer neither will I.

Life is very short. It’s only a 4-letter word.

A guy took his girl friend to her first Longhorn football game. They had great seats right behind their team’s bench. After the game, he asked her how she liked the experience. “Oh, I really liked it,” she replied,
“Especially the tight pants and all the big muscles, but I just couldn’t understand why they were killing each other over 25 cents.”
Dumbfounded, her date asked, “What do you mean?”
“Well, I saw them flip a coin and one team got it and then for the rest of the game, all they kept screaming was: get the quarterback. Get the quarterback! It’s only 25 cents!

Officer to driver going the wrong way up a one way street. “And where do you think you are going?”
Driver: – “I’m not sure, but I must be late as everyone else is coming back.”

Advisory:

How do you get to school?

http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/12/14390958-risky-river-crossing-filipino-kids-tube-to-get-to-school

Everything I Need to Know I’m Learning From My Sixth Graders

http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/10-2012/everything-i-need-know-i-m-learning-my-sixth-graders

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

This podcast is based on an article from the Fall, 2012 issue of Green Teacher.  The article was entitled “Children’s Rights and Climate Change.”  The article was written by Paula Gallo and Barbara Strang.

The purpose of the article was to help teachers help young people realize their right to a healthy planet.  Teachers, have an invaluable role to play in generating the power of students, and they can do so by exploring with students the world of climate change and other environmental issues, as seen through the lens of children’s rights.

From the Twitterverse:

* Moxie Molly ‏@MoxieMollyM
“Nothing will stop you from being creative so effectively as the fear of making a mistake.” ~ John Cleese
* Paulo Simões ‏@pgsimoes
Teachers Guide on The Use of ePortfolios in Education http://dlvr.it/2Jlxw9  (@medkh9) #elearning #edtech
* Miguel Guhlin ‏@mguhlin
Flipped PD | Reading By Example http://dlvr.it/2JsMs3
* Tami Brass ‏@brasst
20% class time in two minutes | @scoopit via @ajmccarthynz http://sco.lt/9MNyGv
* TeachHUB ‏@TeachHub
12 Ways to Use the Presidential Election in Your Classroom #sschat #2012Elections #edchat
* Miguel Guhlin ‏@mguhlin
Why I Gave Up Flipped Instruction http://dlvr.it/2JsWVc
* Jennifer McFarlane ‏@WWMSPrincipal
MT”@Jigsaw_Learning: 10 Observables of a Collaborative Culture – http://jigsawlearningca.wordpress.com/2012/08/28/10-observables-of-a-collaborative-culture … #mschat
* Naomi Harm ‏@nharm
@danking56 “What would U like 2 learn 2day” A question posed each week 2your students. How will they react? Try http://www.instagrok.com/  #MSchat
* eInstruction ‏@eInstruction
Here’s how you can keep students focused on a single iPad app.
* John Robinson ‏@21stprincipal
When teachers are forced to practice in a carefully prescribed way, don’t expect innovation. #satchat

Resources:

The Flip: End of a Love Affair

…my brief love affair with the flip has ended. It simply didn’t produce the tranformative learning experience I knew I wanted for my students .
My students loved the idea of trying something that very few other students were doing. Some of my students even benefited from watching and re-watching videos. Even so, we used it sparingly.
As I shifted my classroom from teacher-centred to student-centred, my students began to do lots of their their own research. Sometimes this resulted in them teaching each other. Sometimes they created a project with the knowledge they were acquiring. But the bottom line was that their learning had a purpose that was apparent to them, beyond simply passing the unit exam.
As this new way of learning played out over time, my students found they didn’t need me to locate or create videos for them. Instead, they learned how to learn, and they were able to find their own resources.
It took almost a year for me to notice it was gone. Instead, our classroom had become a place where students discovered and shared their own resources, while engaging in projects with each other. There was no need for me to assign video homework or create portable lectures. It all happened during class.
Lest anyone think we were able to do this because we learn in a high-tech school, that’s not the case. We weren’t a 1:1 classroom. We used whatever devices my students had, which often was a couple of iPads, a few computers, and student cell phones. There were students who didn’t have a device, so other students shared. We made it work and everyone learned.

1) I dislike the idea of giving my students homework.

2) A lecture by video is still a lecture.

3) I want my students to own their learning.

4) My students need to be able to find and critically evaluate their own resources.

I told my students we had 10 concepts to learn in 8 weeks. They could work at their own pace, with whatever resources they chose, but in the end, we all needed to be done in 8 weeks when the semester ended.
http://plpnetwork.com/2012/10/08/flip-love-affair/

The Google Cultural Institutue

Awesome materials presented in a very visual manner. The concept is to promote and preserve culture on line.

We have created this site to provide a visually rich and interactive online experience for telling cultural stories in new ways. Discover exhibits by expert curators, find artifacts, view photographs, read original manuscripts, watch videos, and more.

http://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/#!home

Make InfoGraphics

http://piktochart.com/

Web Spotlight:

 

What happens if there is a tie in the President Election?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=sHEDXzOfENI#!

Common Core Resource

Smarter Balanced sample items illustrate the rigor and complexity of the English language arts/literacy and mathematics items and performance tasks students will encounter on the Consortium’s next-generation assessments.
http://www.smarterbalanced.org/sample-items-and-performance-tasks/

News:

While taking amphetamine-like drugs to improve academic performance is typically seen as a vice in richer children, Anderson considers it a virtue for poor kids, helping level the playing field. And there is little disagreement among child psychiatrists that lack of funding and resources means that giving drugs is often seen as the only option to help many children, even in cases where the evidence shows that talk therapies are not only safer but more effective.
http://healthland.time.com/2012/10/10/drugging-poor-kids-to-boost-grades-in-failing-schools-one-doc-says-yes/

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

 

MSM 221: It’s What You Need To Hear . . .

Jokes You Can Use:

A vertically challenged psychic was arrested one day. He escaped from jail and the newspaper headline read, “SMALL MEDIUM AT-LARGE.”

Hoss rode into town to buy a bull. Unfortunately, when he bought it, he was left with one dollar. Hoss needed to tell his wife to come with the truck and get the bull, but telegrams cost one dollar per word. Hoss said to the telegram man,”OK. I have my one word-‘comfortable’.” Why do you want to tell her that?” asked the telegram man. “Oh, she’s not the best reader,” Hoss said. “She’ll read it really slowly”.

Did you hear about the accountant with insomnia? He decided to try counting sheep, but he made a mistake and was up all night trying to find it!

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:   Jennifer Larson
  • Facebook:
  • Google+:  Alec Couros, Wes Fryer
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

Advisory:

Rationalization & Dishonesty

Dan Ariely does an RSA animate speech. Warning there are swear words (hell is used twice). There is also a discussion about confession.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=XBmJay_qdNc#!

Belgian Coal Miners

* Note there are lots of images at the base site. They have a warning about needing to be over 14. Interesting, I was given a warning about several pictures for which absolutely no warning was needed.
http://vintagephoto.livejournal.com/5767874.html

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

This podcast is based on an article from the September, 2012 issue of Science Scope.  A magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  The article was entitled “Successful Co-Teaching in the Science Classroom.”  The article was written by Leslie Forbes and Stacy Billet

Co-teaching has become a popular concept in the field of education, especially as related to special education.  There are five main types of co-teaching:  lead and support; station teaching; parallel teaching; alternative teaching; and team teaching.  Although the research on co-teaching is limited, it is growing and what is available is generally positive.

From the Twitterverse:

* John Robinson ‏@21stprincipal
When teachers are forced to practice in a carefully prescribed way, don’t expect innovation. #satchat
* Jerry Blumengarten ‏@cybraryman1
FAIL= First Attempt in Learning http://cybraryman.com/learningfrommistakes.html … #satchat
* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
The Big Tradeoff: Common Core and the Budget http://wp.me/s2odLa-8846  via @wordpressdotcom
* Danita Russell ‏@DanitaR
Freebie! Math menus for differentiating in MS math #slms @myen http://www.teachersnotebook.com/product/Lessons%20From%20The%20Middle/math-menus-differentiating-math-for-grades-6-9 …
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
RT @TeacherCast: Make a Mini Documentary with WeVideo by @mseideman http://goo.gl/Gj8UX  #edtech #blog #edstuff #tcdn
* Joyce Seitzinger ‏@catspyjamasnz
How Twitter is Reinventing Collaboration Among Educators http://zite.to/QvlGjZ  via @zite <- we should have #yam chats @colwar
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
How To Properly Integrate Classroom Technology #fhuedu320 #eLearning #fhuedu642 ~ for @MSMatters followers http://tinyurl.com/cv8ywvz
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Think You Can Pass Harvard’s 1869 Entrance Exam? #fhuedu508 #fhuedu320 #fhuedu642 http://tinyurl.com/dykynbx
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
11 Reasons Teachers Should Make Their Own Videos #fhuedu320 #eLearning #edtech #fhucid ~ for @MSMatters followers http://tinyurl.com/9owswqe
* Shelly S Terrell ‏@ShellTerrell
Over 50,000 Middle School Activities, Lesson Plans, & Handouts via @coolcatteacher @rickylynne76 #edchat #midleved
* Steve Kwikkel ‏@SKwikkel
My next MiddleMan2012 post is out. It appears I’ve struck a nerve. Interesting DM’a http://middleman2012.wordpress.com/ #edchat #midleved #iowa1to1
Don’t forget #mschat on Thursdays at 8:00 pm EST on Twitter!

Resources:

Eight Things Skilled Teachers Think, Say, and Do

Larry Ferlazzo

http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/oct12/vol70/num02/Eight-Things-Skilled-Teachers-Think,-Say,-and-Do.aspx

Mysteries of Vernacular

Clew?
http://www.mysteriesofvernacular.com/

Historical Thinking Matters

Welcome to Historical Thinking Matters, a website focused on key topics in U.S. history, that is designed to teach students how to critically read primary sources and how to critique and construct historical narratives. Read how to use this site.
http://historicalthinkingmatters.org/

How to tell students they are wrong

As a teacher, I have a few ways to say “that’s wrong” without actually saying it. The point isn’t to sanitize the class or soften the critique. For students, they often see the word “wrong” as a gateway to devaluing their own potential, as if their wrong answer determines their competency in the subject. We have to find ways for students to own and play on their mistakes without feeling like they’ll never get it.
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/future-teaching/09-2012/other-ways-tell-student-they-re-wrong-without-using-word-wrong

 

Web Spotlight:

How Americans Spend Their Money

After two years of falling incomes and penny-pinching, Americans opened their wallets in 2011, ramping up spending on everything from restaurants and clothing to health care. The average level of spending in 2011—$49,705—was the highest since 2008. Below, a breakdown of spending by category and how spending in each category has changed since 2000.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444358804578018823313863636.html

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.

MSM 220: Picture This, Space, Books and more.

Jokes You Can Use:

The teacher said; “Take a pencil and paper, and write an essay with the title ‘If I Were a Millionaire.’” Everyone but Joe, who leaned back with arms folded, began to write feverishly.
“What’s the matter,” the teacher asked. “Why don’t you begin?”
“I’m waiting for my secretary,” Joe replied.

Why were all the ink spots crying?
Their father was in the pen.

A fellow bought a new Mercedes and was out on the interstate for a nice evening drive. The top was down, the breeze was blowing through what was left of his hair and he decided to open her up. As the needle jumped up to 80 mph, he suddenly saw flashing red and blue lights behind him. “There’s no way they can catch a Mercedes,” he thought to himself and opened her up further. The needle hit 90, 100…. Then the reality of the situation hit him. “What am I doing?” he thought and pulled over. The cop came up to him, took his license without a word and examined it and the car. “It’s been a long day, this is the end of my shift and it’s Friday the 13th. I don’t feel like more paperwork, so if you can give me an excuse for your driving that I haven’t heard before, you can go.”
The guy thinks for a second and says, “Last week my wife ran off with a cop. I was afraid you were trying to give her back!”
“Have a nice weekend,” said the officer.

Eileen Award:


  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:   Rovy Branon , Allison Petersen
  • Facebook:  Ella Sherman
  • Google+:
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

Advisory:

Picture books

Have your students make picture books for elementary students. (This can be done the “old fashioned” way or electronically.
http://www.culturestreet.org.uk/activities/picturebookmaker/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

“A Special Assignment from NASA”

This podcast is based on an article from the September, 2012 issue of Science Scope.  A magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  The article was entitled “A Special Assignment from NASA” – Understanding Earth’s Atmosphere Through the Integration of Science and Mathematics.  The article was written by Justine E. Fox and Nicole J. Glen.

The purpose of the special assignment was to help students understand the role of NASA scientists, while asking real world questions about the atmosphere.  The unit begins with the reading of “Here’s the Crusher” from the book “Even More Everyday Science Mysteries.”  The mystery is about a boy, Eric, who washes a water bottle under hot water and then observes what happens to the bottle.  This leads students in the classroom to re-enact the mystery and then apply the knowledge to a better understanding of why certain technological items like satellites, airplanes, etc. are found in certain atmospheric levels and not others.  They study the height and the temperatures of the atmospheric levels.

From the Twitterverse:

* Lance Mosier ‏@lmosierhistgkk
RT @B_Berns: Middle School teachers: Consider joining IA, MI, and NE’s Mystery Skype project. #mschat https://docs.google.com/document/d/19bNaKCOgsFnwrpXo_O311uSlju-n5g9DgRayswxrxXM/edit … #nebedu
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
Vocabulary Strategies http://goo.gl/nfzgC  #edchat #midleved #elemchat

Inquiry Chart for developing questions and doing research http://goo.gl/86iMd  #edchat #midleved #elemchat  

* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
Why Kids Need Schools to Change via @mindshiftkqed #edreform #iaedfuture  

How to Plan a Memorable Parent Night: Classroom Videos | Expat Educator

* Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne
7 Good Sources of Creative Writing Prompts http://ow.ly/dTGV4
* russeltarr ‏@russeltarr
Video: If institutional education refuses to adapt to the information age, it WILL die and SHOULD die: http://tinyurl.com/6zd67ov
* Angela Maiers ‏@AngelaMaiers
Twenty Tips for Success for New Teachers http://goo.gl/ak66l  via @teachingwthsoul
* Beth Lisowski ‏@MrsLTech
RT @twhitford: Do Middle Schools Make Sense? | Harvard Graduate School of Education http://shar.es/uOYu2  #cpchat #mschat
* AMLE ‏@AMLEnews
AMLE Best Sellers Now on Kindle and iPadOnly $9.99 (save up to 40% over print editions) #edchat #midleved

When it comes to the common core, librarians can be a school’s secret weapon http://ow.ly/dPSDE  via @educationweek #mschat #edchat  

How will students perform? Depends on teachers’ expectations http://ow.ly/dNuiA  via MindShift KQED #edchat #ntchat #mschat

* Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574
Here is a link for 36 ways to know your class. https://docs.google.com/present/view?id=dhn2vcv5_650dvtj3dgk … #mschat
* Kara Walk ‏@karawalk
Grading blog motivate vs. engagement #cpchat #edchat #mschat http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/coach_gs_teaching_tips/2012/09/grades.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter …
Don’t forget #mschat on Thursdays at 8:00 pm EST on Twitter!

Resources:

Run for President:
http://adomatic.us/

DIY

“We designed it for ages 7 and up, but parents are encouraged to sign their kids up earlier and help them along until they’re ready to use it themselves. Some reading is required.
DIY is designed for kids as young as 6 years of age, and to comply with the United States Federal Trade Commission’s Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), which was put in effect as of April 21, 2000:
Your kid can create an account and use DIY for free. Many parts of the service will always be free to play. However, DIY will eventually offer paid memberships. Membership will give DIY kids access to extra features.”
https://diy.org/

ISTE:

Interactive, Customizable, Free:
Using Open Source FlexBooks

CK-12 is non-profit organization.

Have free and low cost options. See the about page.

All content is in the STEM. Middle School and High School. Most of it is Math and Science.

Standards correlations is on the About page. Done by Common Core and State.

All material is written by content experts.

Books can be customized. The system is being upgraded.
beta.ck12.org

Create an account. This allows you to save changes.

When editing, you can combine from different books. Click on scrubber icons to add to the Flexbook.

FlexBooks go to My Library when saved.

When editing, you can add images, videos, links to other sites, etc. This can be localized. Videos are streamed. If YouTube is blocked, it won’t show.

When editing, if you are pasting from Word, use Edit | Paste From Word.

License:
Creative Commons – by Attribution, Non-Profit, Share a like.

Anything embedded must match the license.

In order to have multiple people edit a book, you would need to share an account.

How to Share:
Print your book using the Print icon. This will generate
PDF – Video will have a link. You can use a local printer or Amazon or USB sticks.
HTML 5 – Can provide students with a link. Students do NOT need to have an account.
Online
(Beta will add Mobi and ePub)

Beta:
Different paths for Students and Teachers. Will allow to associate students with specific teachers.

Concepts are meant to be 10-15 minute.

Weekly webinars are available. They are on Tuesday or Wednesday. Can be scheduled.

David Wylie (Wiley) put together a cost study.

News:

“Using VAM to evaluate teachers is akin to using Lysol as a mouth wash because it does a good job killing germs on your kitchen counter.  – Principal Carol Burris, in The Answer Sheet “
http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2012/09/quotes-no-such-thing-as-good-use-of-vam-data-for-evaluation.html

No Soft Retirement

Last season, he made $3 million as the Cowboys’ backup quarterback. Now, he makes roughly one percent of that to teach at Lincoln High School and coach the Abes.
http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49057206/ns/sports-nfl/#__utma=14933801.30557598.1342395962.1348024023.1348079521.86&__utmb=14933801.1.10.1348079521&__utmc=14933801&__utmx=-&__utmz=14933801.1347886274.81.3.utmcsr=photoblog.nbcnews.com

Quote

Lawrence Baines’s Education Week Commentary, “What If We Brought Education Reform to the Military?,” suggested satirically that, “An infantryman in Afghanistan, outnumbered by well-armed terrorists, who fails to accomplish the mission should receive a deduction in pay. An accountant stationed in Honolulu, who balances the payroll, thereby accomplishing his mission, should get a raise. … There are no excuses.”

Web Spotlight:

The day I quit teaching

Posted by Brad Flickinger on Sep 20, 2012

As it turned out, technology wasn’t the problem, I was.
http://www.schooltechnology.org/2012/09/20/the-day-i-quit-teaching/

iCivics (www.icivics.org)

WebQuests and other online tools to teach the U.S. Constitution and other democratic principles to middle schoolers.

“iCivics prepares young Americans to become knowledgeable, engaged 21st century citizens by creating free and innovative educational materials.
In 2009, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor founded iCivics to reverse Americans’ declining civic knowledge and participation. Securing our democracy, she realized, requires teaching the next generation to understand and respect our system of governance. Today iCivics comprises not just our board and staff, but also a national leadership team of state supreme court justices, secretaries of state, and educational leaders and a network of committed volunteers. Together, we are committed to passing along our legacy of democracy to the next generation.”

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:




AMLE Affiliate Conferences:




Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.


Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.  

MSM 219: Rat holes about electronics.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

A biology teacher wished to demonstrate to his students the harmful effects of alcohol on living organisms. For his experiment, he showed them a beaker with pond water in which there was a thriving civilization of worms. When he added some alcohol into the beaker the worms doubled-up and died.
“Now,” he said,” what do you learn from this?”
An eager student gave his answer.
“Well the answer is obvious,” he said ” if you drink alcohol, you’ll never have worms.”

The following 15 Police Comments were taken from actual police car videos around the country.

#15 “Relax, the handcuffs are tight because they’re new. They’ll stretch after you wear them a while.”

# 14 “If you take your hands off the car, I’ll make your birth certificate a worthless document.”

#13 “If you run, you’ll only go to jail tired.”

#12 “Can you run faster than 1200 feet per second? Because that’s the
speed of the bullet that’ll be chasing you.”

#11 “You don’t know how fast you were going? I guess that means I can
write anything I want to on the ticket, huh?”

#10 “Yes, sir, you can talk to the shift supervisor, but I don’t think
it will help. Oh, did I mention that I’m the shift supervisor?”

#9 “Warning! You want a warning? O. K., I’m warning you not to do that
again or I’ll give you another ticket.”

#8 “The answer to this last question will determine whether you are
drunk or not. Was Mickey Mouse a cat or a dog?”

#7 “Fair? You want me to be fair? Listen, fair is a place where you go
to ride on rides, eat cotton candy, and corn dogs and step in monkey poo. ”

#6 “Yeah, we have a quota. Two more tickets and my wife gets a toaster oven.”

#5 “In God we trust, all others we run through NCIC.”

#4 “How big were those ‘Just two beers’ you say you had?”

#3 “No sir, we don’t have quotas anymore. We used to, but now we’re allowed to write as many tickets as we can.”

#2 “I’m glad to hear that chief (of Police) Hawker is a personal friend
of yours. So you know someone who can post your bail.”

#1 “You didn’t think we give pretty women tickets? You’re right, we don’t. Sign here.”

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:   Aaron Morris, Chris Billings
  • Facebook:
  • Google+:  Lori Anderson,
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

Advisory:

Old Man Toilet Paper Roll Faces

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/09/10/17-bizarre-ugly-and-awesome-old-man-faces-made-out-of-toilet-paper-rolls/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

RABBITS IN THE CLASSROOM

This podcast is based on the Question of the Month Column, from the Scope on Safety Section of the September 2012 issue of Science Scope magazine, a magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  It was written by Ken Roy.

This month’s question deals with letting rabbits run free in the middle school classroom.  Ken shares advice from the Humane Society of the United States and the American Association for Laboratory Animal Sciences.

From the Twitterverse:

* Jason Eifling ‏@jeifling
Clifford has it? RT@Ron_Peck: 65 Ways to Say “Good for You” http://su.pr/1MOXas #edchat #elemchat #mschat #midleved
 Teachers.Net ‏@TeachersNet
When Students ask, “Why Do We Need to Know This??” http://teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/editor/why-do-we-need-to-know-this/ @edchat #mschat
* Beth Lisowski ‏@MrsLTech
Cutting class begins in middle school, survey finds http://sbne.ws/r/boTN #mschat #edchat
* Maria Angala ‏@TeacherSol
New smartphone app tackles bullying http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/story?section=news/education&id=8804202 #bullying #mschat #edchat
* Eye On Education ‏@eyeoneducation
16 Websites Every Teacher Should Know About @medkh9 #edchat #teaching #ntchat #edstuff
* Dr. Joan McGettigan ‏@drmcgettigan
How to Build Happy Brains http://zite.to/PjC04R  #midleved #isedchat #cpchat
* Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne
MapFab is a Fabulous Map Creation Tool http://ow.ly/dFuF8
 Distance Education ‏@onlinecourse
How to Transition Your Traditional Classroom to the Web – http://dedu.org/bAiORu
* TeacherVision ‏@TeacherVision
Sixth Grade Open House Ideas for Teachers: http://su.pr/5ahTOB  #midleved
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
Formative Assessment Strategies http://goo.gl/Dx2mJ  #edchat #midleved #elemchat
Image will appear as a link Engaging Educators ‏@engaginged
RT @principaldiff: CCSS in the Middle Grades Classroom http://sco.lt/8NClBR  #ccchat #commoncore #mschat
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
5 Effective Reading Instruction Strategies For Any Grade http://zite.to/NPjxQY  via @zite #fhuedu508
* Erin Klein ‏@KleinErin
Student Introduction to ClassDojo (classroom management tool): http://goo.gl/Wemh1  via @youtube cc@ClassDojo

Teacher review of ClassDogo:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qh2nv6UXmec&feature=related

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
4 Ways We Can Connect With Parents #fhuedu610 #fhuedu642 http://tinyurl.com/9ms3p5t
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Getting to Know Your Students Through Poetry | Edutopia #fhuedu508 http://tinyurl.com/8v4fh77

Resources:

Free Electoral Maps

http://www.c-spanclassroom.org/Special-Offers.aspx

2012 Electoral Voting Map:  Frequent updates.
http://electoral-vote.com/

YouTube Launches “Star Search” for Teachers

Starting today and running through October 1st, YouTube is  looking to identify tenYouTube EDU Gurus.
YouTube has partnered with Khan Academy to run this contest. The ten chosen finalists will receive $1,000 toward for video production equipment, attend a three day workshop with Khan academy staff, and have work featured on YouTube EDU. To enter you have to submit video samples and answer two short essay questions (responses limited to 200 words).
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/09/youtube-launches-star-search-for.html

MemStash

Stop forgetting. Start Remembering.

  • Simply highlight any text you want to remember, and click the bookmark “Stash It”.
  • We’ll email or SMS you 10 minutes, 24 hours, and 7 days later to make sure you memorize it.
  • Optional: Push your notes automatically to your Evernote account.

Save everything. Remember everything.

http://memstash.co/

Vintage Book Posters

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/11/vintage-ads-for-libraries-and-reading/

Web Spotlight:

David Byrne on How Music and Creativity Work

Among the book’s most fascinating insights is a counterintuitive model for howcreativity works, from a chapter titled “Creation in Reverse” — a kind of reformulation of McLuhan’s famous aphorism “the medium is the message”into a somewhat less pedantic but no less purposeful “the medium shapes the message”:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/13/david-byrne-how-music-works/

Banned from school:

1. Pogs

2. Dictionaries

3. A Hat With Toy Soldiers on It

4. Silly Bandz, Slap Bracelets, and Cancer Awareness Bands

5. Air Jordans

6. “Mom” and “Dad”

7. Peanuts

8. Jamie Oliver

9. Vegetables

10. Skinny Jeans

http://www.worldsstrangest.com/mental-floss/10-things-public-schools-have-banned/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.