Monday, October 6, 2014

Activity: February 12 - Celebrate president Lincoln's birthday......

February 12th. 1809

Clean up President Lincoln pennies for his birthday!

This is a fun experiment! You can clean old and dirty Lincoln pennies and explore some of the properties of metals.

Pennies get dull over time because the copper in the pennies slowly reacts with air to form copper oxide. Pure copper metal is bright and shiny, but the oxide is dull and greenish. When you place the pennies in the salt and vinegar solution, the acetic acid from the vinegar dissolves the copper oxide, leaving behind shiny clean pennies.

You need:
·       Dirty Lincoln pennies
  • 1/4 cup white vinegar (dilute acetic acid) and 1 teaspoon salt (NaCl)
  • 1 shallow plastic bowl
  • water and paper towels

This is what you do:
  1. Pour the salt and vinegar into the bowl and stir until the salt dissolves.
  2. Dip a penny halfway into the liquid and hold it there for 10-20 seconds. Remove the penny from the liquid. What do you see?
  3. Place the rest of the pennies into the liquid.
  4. What happens?
  5. Leave the pennies in the liquid for 5 minutes.

(Keep the liquid you used to clean the pennies, so don't dump it down the drain!)

  • After 5 minutes, take half of the pennies out of the liquid and place them on a paper towel to dry.
  • Remove the rest of the pennies and rinse them well under the tap.
  • Place these pennies on a second paper towel to dry.
  • Wait an hour then take a look at the pennies you have placed on the paper towels. (Write labels on your paper towels so you will know which towel has the rinsed pennies.)
v  Rinsing the pennies with water stops the reaction between the salt/vinegar and the pennies.
v   
v  They will slowly turn dull again over time, but not quickly enough for you to watch!
v   
v  The salt/vinegar residue on the unrinsed pennies promotes a reaction between the copper and the oxygen in the air.
v   
v  The resulting blue-green copper oxide is commonly called 'verdigris'.

The BEST science article - ever.

Written by David Hawkins..........long time friend, mentor, colleague.



Going into my wife Jeannine's classroom today and seeing/feeling the positive intensity of 5th grader scientists at work, in small teams, creating the most incredible marble runs I've ever seen, made me think about the BEST article ever written about elementary school science, Messing About in Science (David Hawkins, 1965):

"Nice? It's the only thing," said the Water Rat solemnly, as he leant forward for his stroke. "Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing-absolutely nothing-half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats. Simply messing," he went on dreamily, "messing-about-in-boats-messing-"
Kenneth Grahame
The Wind in the Willows

As a college teacher, I have long suspected that my students' difficulties with the intellectual process come not from the complexity of college work itself, but mainly from their home back- ground and the first years of their formal education. A student who cannot seem to understand the workings of the Ptolemaic astronomy, for example, turns out to have no evident acquaintance with the simple and "obvious" relativity of motion, or the simple geometrical relations of light and shadow. Sometimes for these students a style of laboratory work which might be called "Kindergarten Revisited" has dramatically liberated their intellectual powers. Turn on your heel with your head back until you see the ceiling-turn the other way-and don't fall over!

In the past two years, working in the Elementary Science Study, I have had the experience, marvelous for a naive college teacher, of studying young children's learning in science. I am now convinced that my earlier suspicions were correct. In writing about these convictions, I must acknowledge the strong influence on me by other staff members in the Study. We came together from a variety of backgrounds-college, high school, and elementary school teachers-and with a variety of dispositions toward science and toward teaching. In the course of trial teaching and of inventing new curricular materials, our shop talks brought us toward some consensus but we still had disagreements. The outline of ideas I wish to present here is my own, therefore, and not that of the group which has so much influenced my thinking. 

The formulation I want to make is only a beginning. Even if it is right, it leaves many questions unanswered, and therefore much room for further disagreement. In so complex a matter as education, this is as it should be. What I am going to say applies, I believe, to all aspects of elementary education. 

However, let me stick to science teaching.

My outline is divided into three patterns or phases of school work in science. These phases are different from each other in the relations they induce between children, materials of study, and teachers. Another way of putting it is that they differ in the way they make a classroom look and sound. My claim is that good science teaching moves from one phase to the other in a pattern which, though it will not follow mechanical rules or ever be twice the same, will evolve according to simple principles. There is no necessary order among these phases, and for this reason, I avoid calling them I, II, and III, and use instead some mnemonic signs which have, perhaps, a certain suggestiveness: O, !, and [].

O Phase. There is a time, much greater in amount than commonly allowed, which should be devoted to free and unguided exploratory work (call it play if you wish; I call it work). Children are given materials and equipment-things-and are allowed to construct, test, probe, and experiment
without superimposed questions or instructions. I call this O phase "Messing About," honoring the philosophy of the Water Rat, who absentmindedly ran his boat into the bank, picked himself up, and went on without interrupting the joyous train of thought:
"-about in boats-or with boats. . . In or out of 'em, it doesn't matter. Nothing seems really to matter, that's the charm of it. Whether you get away, or whether you don't; whether you arrive at your destination or whether you reach somewhere else, or whether you never get anywhere at all, you're always busy, and you never do anything in particular: and when you've done it there's always something else to do, and you can do it if you like, but you'd much better not."

In some jargon, this kind of situation is called "unstructured," which is misleading; some doubters call it chaotic, which it need never be. "Unstructured" is misleading because there is always a kind of structure to what is presented in a class, as there was to the world of boats and the river, with its rushes and weeds and mud that smelled like plumcake. Structure in this sense is of the utmost importance, depending on the children, the teacher, and the backgrounds of all concerned.

Let me cite an example from my own recent experiences. Simple frames, each designed to support two or three weights on strings, were handed out one morning in a fifth-grade class. There was one such frame for each pair of children. In two earlier trial classes, we had introduced the same equipment with a much more "structured" beginning, demonstrating the striking phenomenon of coupled pendulums and raising questions about it before the laboratory work was allowed to begin. If there was guidance this time, however, it came only from the apparatus-a pendulum is to swing! In starting this way I, for one, naively assumed that a couple of hours of "Messing About" would suffice. After two hours, instead, we allowed two more and, in the end, a stretch of several weeks. In all this time, there was little or no evidence of boredom or confusion. Most of the questions we might have planned for came up unscheduled.
Why did we permit this length of time? First, because in our previous classes we had noticed that things went well when we veered toward "Messing About" and not as well when we held too tight a rein on what we wanted the children to do. It was clear that these children had had insufficient acquaintance with the sheer phenomena of pendulum motion and needed to build an apperceptive background, against which a more analytical sort of knowledge could take form and make sense. Second, we allowed things to develop this way because we decided we were getting a new kind of feedback from the children and were eager to see where and by what paths their interests would evolve and carry them. We were rewarded with a higher level of involvement and a much greater diversity of experiments. Our role was only to move from spot to spot, being helpful but never consciously prompting or directing. In spite of -because of!- this lack of direction, these fifth-graders became very familiar with pendulums. They varied the conditions of motion in many ways, exploring differences in length and amplitude, using different sorts of bobs, bobs in clusters, and strings, etc. And have you tried the underwater pendulum? They did! There were many sorts of discoveries made, but we let them slip by without much adult resonance, beyond our spontaneous and manifest enjoyment of the phenomena. So discoveries were made, noted, lost, and made again. I think this is why the slightly pontifical phrase "discovery method" bothers me. When learning is at the most fundamental level, as it is here, with all the abstractions of Newtonian mechanics just around the corner, don't rush! When the mind is evolving the abstractions which will lead to physical comprehension, all of us must cross the line between ignorance and insight many times before we truly understand. 

Little facts, "discoveries" without the growth of insight, are not what we should seek to harvest.

Such facts are only seedlings and should sometimes be let alone to grow into...

I have illustrated the phase of "Messing About" with a constrained and inherently very elegant topic from physics. In other fields, the pattern will be different in detail, but the essential justification is the same. "Messing About" with what can be found in pond water looks much more like the Water Rat's own chosen field of study. Here, the implicit structure is that of nature in a very different mood from what is manifest in the austerities of things like pendular motion or planet orbits. And here, the need for sheer acquaintance with the variety of things and phenomena is more obvious, before one can embark on any of the roads toward the big generalizations or the big open questions of biology. Regardless of differences, there is a generic justification of "Messing About" that I would like, briefly, to touch upon.

This phase is important, above all, because it carries over into school that which is the source of most of what children have already learned, the roots of their moral, intellectual, and esthetic development. If education were defined, for the moment, to include everything that children have learned since birth, everything that has
come to them from living in the natural and the human world, then by any sensible measure what has come before age five or six would outweigh all the rest. When we narrow the scope of education to what goes on in schools, we throw out the method of that early and spectacular progress at our peril. We know that five-year-olds are very unequal in their mastery of this or that. We also know that their histories are responsible for most of this inequality, utterly masking the congenital differences except in special cases. This is the immediate fact confronting us as educators in a society committed, morally and now by sheer economic necessity, to universal education.
To continue the cultivation of earlier ways of learning, therefore; to find in school the good beginnings, the liberating involvements that will make the kindergarten seem a garden to the child and not a dry and frightening desert, this is a need that requires much emphasis on the style of work I have called O, or "Messing About." Nor does the garden in this sense end with a child's first school year, or his tenth, as though one could then put away childish things. As time goes on, through a good mixture of this with other phases of work, "Messing About" evolves with the child and thus changes its quality. It becomes a way of working that is no longer childish though it remains always childlike, the kind of self-disciplined probing and exploring that is the essence of creativity.

The variety of the learning-and of inhibition against learning-that children bring from home when school begins is great, even within the limited range of a common culture with common economic background (or, for that matter, within a single family). Admitting this, then if you cast your mind over the whole range of abilities and backgrounds that children bring to kindergarten, you see the folly of standardized and formalized beginnings. We are profoundly ignorant about the subtleties of learning but one principle ought to be asserted dogmatically: That there must be provided some continuity in the content, direction, and style of learning. 

Good schools begin with what children have in fact mastered, probe next to see what in fact they are learning, continue with what in fact sustains their involvement.

! Phase. When children are led along a common path, there are always the advanced ones and always the stragglers. Generalized over the years of school routine, this lends apparent support to the still widespread belief in some fixed, inherent levels of "ability," and to the curious notions of "under-" and "over-achievement." 

Now, if you introduce a topic with a good deal of "Messing About," the variance does not decrease, it increases. From a conventional point of view, this means
the situation gets worse, not better. But I say it gets better, not worse. If after such a beginning you pull in the reins and "get down to business," some children have happened to go your way already, and you will believe that you are leading these successfully. Others will have begun, however, to travel along quite different paths, and you have to tug hard to get them back on to yours. Through the eyes of these children you will see yourself as a dragger, not a leader. We saw this clearly in the pendulum class I referred to; the pendulum being a thing which seems deceptively simple but which raises many questions in no particular order. So the path which each child chooses is his best path.

The result is obvious, but it took me time to see it. If you once let children evolve their own learning along paths of their choosing, you then must see it through and maintain the individuality of their work. You cannot begin that way and then say, in effect, "That was only a teaser," thus using your adult authority to devalue what the children themselves, in the meantime, have found most valuable. So if "Messing About" is to be followed by, or evolve into, a stage where work is more externally guided and disciplined, there must be at hand what I call "Multiply Programmed" material; material that contains written and pictorial guidance of some sort for the student, but which is designed for the greatest possible variety of topics, ordering of topics, etc., so that for almost any given way into a subject that a child may evolve on his own, there is material available which he will recognize as helping him farther along that very way. Heroic teachers have sometimes done this on their own, but it is obviously one of the places where designers of curriculum materials can be of enormous help, designing those materials with a rich variety of choices for teacher and child, and freeing the teacher from the role of "leader-dragger" along a single preconceived path, giving the teacher encouragement and real logistical help in diversifying the activities of a group. Such material includes good equipment, but above all, it suggests many beginnings, paths from the familiar into the unknown. We did not have this kind of material ready for the pendulum class I spoke about earlier and still do not have it. 

I intend to work at it and hope others will.

It was a special day in the history of that pendulum class that brought home to me what was needed. My teaching partner was away (I had been the observer, she the teacher). To shift gears for what I saw as a more organized phase of our work, I announced that for a change we were all going to do the same experiment. I said it firmly and the children were, of course, obliging. Yet, I saw the immediate loss of interest in part of the class as soon as my experiment was proposed. It was designed to raise questions about the length of a pendulum, when the bob is multiple or odd-shaped. Some had come upon the germ of that question; others had had no reason to. As a college teacher I have tricks, and they worked here as well, so the class went well, in spite of the unequal readiness to look at "length." We hit common ground with rough blackboard pictures, many pendulums shown hanging from a common support, differing in length and the shape and size of bobs. Which ones will "swing together"? Because their eyes were full of real pendulums, I think, they could see those blackboard pictures swinging! A colloquium evolved which harvested the crop of insights that had been sowed and cultivated in previous weeks. I was left with a hollow feeling, nevertheless. It went well where, and only where, the class found common ground. Whereas in "Messing About" all things had gone uniformly well. In staff discussion afterward, it became clear that we had skipped an essential phase of our work, the one I am now calling ! phase, or Multiply Programmed.

There is a common opinion, floating about, that a rich diversity of classroom work is possible only when a teacher has small classes. "Maybe you can do that; but you ought to try it in my class of 43!" I want to be the last person to belittle the importance of small classes. But in this particular case, the statement ought to be made that in a large class one cannot afford not to diversify children's work-or rather not to allow children to diversify, as they inevitably will, if given the chance. So-called "ability grouping" is a popular answer today, but it is no answer at all to the real questions of motivation. Groups which are lumped as equivalent with respect to the usual measures are just as diverse in their tastes and spontaneous interests as unstratified groups! The complaint that in heterogeneous classes the bright ones are likely to be bored because things go too slow for them ought to be met with another question: Does that mean that the slower students are not bored? When children have no autonomy in learning everyone is likely to be bored. In such situations the overworked teachers have to be "leader-draggers" always, playing the role of Fate in the old Roman proverb: "The Fates lead the willing; the unwilling they drag."
"Messing About" produces the early and indispensible autonomy and diversity. It is good- indispensible-for the opening game but not for the long middle game, where guidance is needed; needed to lead the willing! To illustrate once more from my example of the pendulum, I want to produce a thick set of cards-illustrated cards in a central file, or single sheets in plastic envelopes-to cover the following topics among others:
1. Relations of amplitude and period. 2. Relations of period and weight of bob. 3. How long is a pendulum (odd-shaped bobs)? 4. Coupled pendulums, compound pendulums. 5. The decay of the motion (and the idea of half-life). 6. String pendulums and stick pendulums-comparisons. 7. Underwater pendulums. 8. Arms and legs as pendulums (dogs, people, and elephants). 9. Pendulums of other kinds-springs, etc. 10. Bobs that drop sand for patterns and graphs. 11. Pendulum clocks. 12. Historical materials, with bibliography. 13. Cards relating to filmloops available, in class or library. 14. Cross-index cards to other topics, such as falling bodies, inclined planes, etc. 15 -75. Blank cards to be filled in by classes and teachers for others.
This is only an illustration; each area of elementary science will have its own style of Multiply Programmed materials. Of course, the ways of organizing these materials will depend on the subject. There should always be those blank cards, outnumbering the rest.
There is one final warning. Such a file is properly a kind of programming-but it is not the base of rote or merely verbal learning, taking a child little step by little step through the adult maze. Each item is simple, pictorial, and it guides by suggesting further explorations, not by replacing them. The cards are only there to relieve the teacher from a heroic task. And they are only there because there are apparatus, film, library, and raw materials from which to improvise.
[] Phase. In the class discussion I referred to, about the meaning of length applied to a pendulum, I was reverting back to the college teacher habit of lecturing; I said it went very well in spite of the lack of Multiply Programmed background, one that would have taken more of the class through more of the basic pendulum topics. It was not, of course, a lecture in the formal sense. It was question-and answer, with discussion between children as well. But still, I was guiding it and fishing for the good ideas that were ready to be born, and I was telling a few stories, for example, about Galileo. Others could do it better. I was a visitor, and am still only an amateur. I was successful then
Messing About in Science    5
only because of the long build-up of latent insight, the kind of insight that the Water Rat had stored up from long afternoons of "Messing About" in boats. It was more than he could ever have been told, but it gave him much to tell. This is not all there is to learning. of course; but it is the magical part, and the part most often killed in school. The language is not yet that of the textbook, but with it even a dull-looking textbook can come alive. One boy thinks the length of a pendulum should be measured from the top to what he calls the "center of gravity." If they have not done a lot of work with balance materials, this phase is for most children only the handle of an empty pitcher, or a handle without a pitcher at all. So I did not insist on the term. Incidentally, it is not quite correct physics anyway, as those will discover who work with the stick pendulum. Although different children had specialized differently in the way they worked with pendulums, there were common elements, increasing with time, which would sustain a serious and extended class discussion. It is this pattern of discussion I want to emphasize by calling it a separate, O phase. It includes lecturing, formal or informal. In the above situation, we were all quite ready for a short talk about Ga1ileo, and ready to ponder the question whether there was any relation between the way unequal weights fall together and the way they swing together when hanging on strings of the same length. Here we were approaching a question-a rather deep one, not to be disposed of in fifteen minutes-of theory, going from the concrete perceptual to the abstract conceptual. I do not believe that such questions will come alive either through the early "Messing About" or through the Multiply Programmed work with guiding questions and instructions. I think they come primarily with discussion, argument, the full colloquium of children and teacher. Theorizing in a creative sense needs the content of experience and the logic of experimentation to support it. But these do not automatically lead to conscious abstract thought. Theory is square! []

We of the Elementary Science Study are probably identified in the minds of those acquainted with our work (and sometimes perhaps in our own minds) with the advocacy of laboratory work and a free, fairly O style of laboratory work at that. This may he right and justified by the fact that prevailing styles of science teaching are [] most of the time, much too much of the time. But what we criticize for being too much and too early, we must work to re-admit in its proper place.
I have put O, !, and [] in that order, but I do not advocate any rigid order; such phases may be mixed in many ways and ordered in many ways. Out of the colloquium comes new "Messing About." Halfway along a programmed path, new phenomena are accidentally observed. In an earlier, more structured class, two girls were trying obediently to reproduce some phenomena of coupled pendulums I had demonstrated. I heard one say. "Ours isn't working right." Of course, pendulums never misbehave; it is not in their nature; they always do what comes naturally, and in this case, they were executing a curious dance of energy transference, promptly christened the "twist." It was a new phenomenon, which I had not seen before, nor had several physicists to whom, in my delight. I later showed it. Needless to say, this led to a good deal of "Messing About," right then and there.

What I have been concerned to say is only that there are, as I see it, three major phases of good science teaching; that no teaching is likely to be optimal which does not mix all three; and that the one most neglected is that which made the Water Rat go dreamy with joy when he talked about it. At a time when the pressures of prestige education are likely to push children to work like hungry laboratory rats in a maze, it is good to remember that their wild; watery cousin, reminiscing about the joys of his life, uttered a profound truth about education.

Sunday, October 5, 2014

ACTIVITY: Make the world's smallest boomerang

Use a blank index card to make the world’s SMALLEST boomerang!

I give every student 1 index card and a pair of scissors and challenge him/her to make the world’s smallest boomerang!

I also give them these instructions/guidelines:

. Cut out a 1” square from one of the file cards
. Draw and cut out a small boomerang
. Use the remaining card as the launching platform.

Balance the boomerang on the edge and flick with your finger.

And the challenge?
Can you get the boomerang to return and land on the launching pad?

Activities: Make a marble run

THE MARBLE RUN

Here's a straightforward, easy to resource, team-building science/technology project:

 Challenge your  class to work in groups of two, three but no more than four,  to use the materials supplied (sheet of card stock, strips of paper, adhesive tape, and a marble) to build a marble run.

Challenge my students to:

  • Make a vertical marble run, then, 
  • change the design of the marble run to take 20 seconds for the marble to complete its travels.
Simple enough.

This past week, I saw the marble run activity at its ABSOLUTE best in my wife's 5th grade classroom........when I went through the door, groups of kids sitting on tables, on the floor, on cushions were making THE best marble runs I'd ever seen! The atmosphere was magical! The kids were engaged, highly motivated, coming up with design ideas, measuring, sticking, constructing, reconstructing. Jeannine was highly visible yet not getting in the way of any group's endeavors. The learning was, well, scientific, mathematical, creative, reflective, focused, positive and communal. 









WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

ACTIVITY: Cottonwood stars

COTTONWOOD STARS


During weekend walks, I collect the twigs that have fallen from the cottonwood trees. I break them at the growth scar. If I’m REALLY lucky, I find a beautiful star inside the twig. I then collect as many as I can and bind them in threes and give them to my students, telling them the Native American legend that all stars in the sky come from the earth below our feet.

The first time I met a class of pre K-8 students or teachers or university students, I used the cottonwood star protocol to celebrate each learner. I told them how I was looking forward to everyone shining like a star!! 

The Secret of the Star…..

Some Native Americans believe all things come from Mother Earth. They believe that stars form in the earth and search for the roots of the magical cottonwood trees.

They finally come to rest in the small twigs at the end of the cottonwood branches. Here, they wait.................until they are needed. 

When the Spirit of the Night Sky decides that she needs more twinkling, beautiful stars, she calls on the Wind Spirit to shake all the cottonwood trees.

The Wind Spirit blows and blows, and as the cottonwood twigs break off, the twinkling stars are released and race up to a special place in the Night Sky.

If YOU want to add a new star to the night sky, find some secret cottonwood twigs, wait for a clear night, and hold up your twigs to the sky - and SNAP!  
Then, look up into the night sky again.
Can you see YOUR star twinkling?
Imagine -   you have added a beautiful new star to the night sky kingdom......




ACTIVITY: WISHBONES

WISHBONES               

I collect chicken wishbones. I clean and bleach them in hydrogen peroxide. I use them to make wishes for the group’s success in working together, and bring closure to the protocol by telling my students about the scientific interest in chicken wishbones:



The FURCULA is the V shaped bone that we call the wishbone.  Discoveries of the last few decades have shown that the wishbone is a characteristic of bird-like dinosaurs (theropods), thus a major link to the modern bird.

Activities: Make a flip flop

A walk around a toy shop always gives me an idea or two for yet another science challenge.

Here's one that has become one of my favorite activities with 
young scientists.

The magical
FLIP FLOP machine!!


All you need is glue, marble, and a pair of scissors. 
Then,

·      Cut out the shape and fold outwards on the dotted lines
·      Fold over and glue the ends marked X
·      Place a marble in the middle
·      Glue the final end of the paper
·      There you have it!
·      Hold it in the palm of your hand and,

·       What happens?

Try launching it off a ramp. It's GREAT!























Setting up your science flavored classroom......

Since retiring from my lifetime's work teaching children and teaching teachers (running a long-time teacher preparation program, visiting scores of classrooms, mentoring umpteen new and experienced teachers, lecturing at university, running science classes - in and out of schools - for children and adults, and, long ago, teaching upper juniors and advising others about using science in their classrooms), I've often been asked: "Why don't you formalize and set up a formal mentoring program?"

Well, no, that's not what I want to do, but, here's my internet shot at that - to make use of my BLOG (and my google site: https://sites.google.com/site/johnpaullssciencesite/ )  in which I describe procedures/ideas that I have used/use/will always continue to use iwhen planning for the start of a new term with elementary kids and the tried and tested  - 'cos, for me, they work!

IF any reader would like to communicate with me for conversation about teaching or to acquire one of the countless articles (science and other things to do with classroom practice) I've written, s/he could either add a BLOG comment or write to me:

Johnpaull2011@gmail.com.

OK, here goes. Here's my first attempt, one, I'm sure, I'll constantly edit :) and change and add to.

Basics, first:       

I'm going to describe what I would do/have done, in my classrooms with children aged between 9 and 11 - let's say, 30 of them - in my ideal teaching space. 

I'm assuming that I can turn the clock back and will start teaching a new class in a new school at the beginning of a new academic year. I know, of course,  that times have changed: if it were today, there would be so many tests to put in place to find out this and that and the other about one's new class members..........so, when I describe my community build activities below, I hope that they fit in and around the necessary compulsory testing.

OK, here goes:

At the appropriate time, when I've had a holiday break, done all the gardening and house reparation that needed doing, I begin to think (and worry) more and more about school, my new class and what lies ahead. I know what needs to be done. I know before I start the new year with a new group of kids I need to:

  • check in with the Principal and hear what s/he has to say about my kids and his/her expectations
  • arrange a meeting with the parents about a week before school starts. I've always found this really useful as it gives the parents some insight into their child's new teacher. - and gives me insights into my parents and their expectations. I fix up meeting times with anyone who wants to talk with me privately.
  • ask the parents if there's any need for me to make a home visit before school begins - perhaps there's a student with significant issues whose parents would want a confidential chat with me
  • read and reread through the school records of my new class and check if there any significant issues I need to know about - perhaps contact the teachers who have worked with my new class.
  • go to school and see what my new classroom space is like - then do what I can to create the ideal classroom - ideal for me, that is, and hopefully, ideal for my new students. I need to make sure the teaching and learning design of the classroom is as I want it AND that I have plenty of community-building ideas to use, as I will want my kids to sense that they (and me, their teacher) belong to a community of learners.
  • find out where school keeps its teacher/student resources, and take what I need asap.

What's my ideal teaching classroom/space ?        Well, I'll, of course, take what I'm given, but I hope it's a classroom that has plenty of space for me and the kids to move around, good wall display opportunities, a large whiteboard, tables and chairs/cushions for my 30 children to sit in groups of four, suitable accessible storage for the class's resources, windows that oversee the outdoors where we can see the clouds and the sun, and where I would place a bird feeder and water container - oh, and close proximity to hooks for coats and restrooms.  

My classroom has, I hope,  what I call a work area, preferably tiled, with access to water and worktops, and a carpeted community area where children can sit on cushions comfortably on the floor. I hope there's hooks on the walls for me to suspend string  from the wall corners and ceiling for me to eventually hang children's work.  I hope there's a table with drawers and comfortable chair for me, close to a technology corner where there's four or five computers and a couple of printers.  I hope there's a book rack and plenty of wall space to display messages for the kids, and hang things on. I hope there's a good space for my old bookcase, converted long ago into a plant and small creature home.



As the opening day of the term approaches, as I become more and more pre-occupied in my head with what lies ahead, I just HAVE go to school as soon as I can and set up my room.

So, I go to my new school, find my room , open the door, and stare...............
  • Because of who I am and what intrigues/fascinates me, I look around wanting  to make sure my teaching space can accommodate points of interest, like, for example, the spider house in the picture above, that I have in the back of my car, brought in from home. I bring it into my classroom and set it up. Notice in the picture above the cushions and the picture reference books that are close by. These books are a mix of my personal copies, books from the school library, others on long-term loan from the local public library.
The science table will be resourced with magnifying glasses,
timers, balances, and anything else that helps my kids see and learn more 
about what's on display.
  • Close to the window  I begin transforming my room by creating a science/discovery/nature table, on which I set a range of  Mother Nature's delights. This table, placed against a wall with display space, will, I hope, be constantly changing,  and will be owned and managed by everyone in the classroom. Children will be assigned weekly to keep it neat and tidy.
  • OK, that done, I move the small tables and chairs and arrange the seating in fours (ideally, two boys, two girls) around small work tables. Then, I catch my breath, sit for a bit and I write the names of occupants and leave it in the middle of each table. I know I shall keep changing the group membership until I have it right. Ideally, a group will comprise two boys, two girls,  covering a range of culture and ability, who get on well with each other. I will set numerous community-building activities in the early days so that the team of four develop a working/social rapport.
  • Next, I check where to put my resources (those needed by the kids, that is, and those that will be needed by me) and make sure I have enough of this and that and the other (!) and that everything is accessible to the students. Again, eventually children will be assigned to look after the resources.
  • I write each student's name on a lollipop stick and place them all in a jar. and tighten the lid.
  • I then make a library/reading corner, complete with a couple of cushions brought from home, set out some books, another table for art near the classroom water supply, and then another for mathematics (similar in style to my science/nature table).
Then I go to the school's resource area and take what I and what my kids need - especially textbooks, writing materials, etc.

When everything is as I think I want it, for the time being, anyway, I stand by the door and take yet another look around............oh, yes, I can see forgot to cover all the wall display areas with colored paper and give each one a heading (for example, CLASS NEWS, CLASS PICTURES, SCIENCE TIMES, The WORLD of SCIENCE, The WORLD of MATHEMATICS, BOOK of the MONTH, CLASSROOM RULES, CLASS ART)! Oh, I also need to write my name on a large white poster and mount it on a stick........I'll place it outside so the kids know where to line up when they hear the first whistle/bell.

A couple of hours or so later, when I've done what was needed, and it looks all set to go, I check again to ensure I have what I most need for the first day that will focus on community-building activities - lots of paper bags, cottonwood twigs, small empty tins, the lollipop (oops, sorry, I mean popsicle) sticks, and my pocket museum. I put the bags and twigs and tins by the teacher's chair, pick up my pocket museum, fill up the bird feeder and bird bath, and head for home.........my mind abuzz. 

Of course, as already mentioned, in the preceding weeks and days, I've already given a great deal of thought to the boys and girls who will be in my class. I know from detailed reports the levels of achievement in reading, writing and arithmetic. I also know from staffroom conversations about those who have challenged their teachers for whatever reason. I know from meetings with my Special Ed. colleagues which children will require special attention. I'll  know as soon as school starts from staffroom gossip which parents will be most helpful to me - and otherwise. Knowing all this, though, I did not purposefully put certain kids together on their tables. For Day One, it's more to do with a balance of boys and girls (2 and 2, if that is mathematically possible which it never is).

All of the above, of course, takes up more than it should of my summer break, but, hey, being prepared in every way possible is worth every minute. 

OK. Now that I've been in school and set it up as best I can, I now have everything ready for Day One, everything I need to begin teaching in my classroom that I hope, physically and emotionally, meets the needs of my students, a learning environment based on mutual respect, co-ownership/responsibility of resources, with an over-riding atmosphere of respect and desire for learning. 

My science table 1974

DAY ONE..........just before the kids come in.

I'm sure the night before the kids come to school will be a restless night for me (it was always the same for me, year after year, term after term: I would spent half the night worrying about this and that and the other. Does that ring a pretty loud bell with you? I bet it does:) ).

Up and off early, I'll stop at the nearest Starbucks, get my black coffee, get to school (perhaps) before everyone else, put an orb web spider into the spider house that has light, soil and plants, and fiddle around in my classroom, moving perhaps a chair or table into yet another new spot, check for the millionth time the teaching and learning resources - especially the pens and pencils - writing and rewriting the date and the sequence of the day's events on the board.

Then, as school time approaches, I walk around the school and say 'hello' to my new colleagues, and when the yard fills with kids and parents,  I'll go outside, smile broadly, stand by my name tag, ready to meet my new class.........

When the whistle is blown and the kids line up by my name tag, I'll lead them to the classroom door and, beginning the day's emphasis on community building (the first day spent entirely on this saves many hours of teaching frustration throughout the forthcoming year!), shake everyone by the hand as they come into the classroom. As the boys and girls hang up their coats and bags, I'll invite them to sit around me on the carpeted floor.

When everyone is around me, I do a quick headcount, ensuring that everyone is with me......then, clearing my throat, I look around, making eye contact with each of my new class members, I'll introduce myself, and, as I speak, I slowly take an old OXO tin from my pocket.

Showing my wishing rock at a recent workshop....
My wishing rock and amber - found on a beach by me on my fifth birthday........


I'll stare at it, and by doing so, create an appropriate atmosphere and (fingers crossed) thus grab the rapt attention of my class. 

What's in the tin, they wonder.  WHAT IS IN THE TIN? It ALWAYS works! 

"This," I say in my quietest voice, "is my pocket museum." I fiddle with it for a bit and open it ………slowly. Inside is a small pebble - a wishing rock - I found many, many years ago. I'll take it out of the tin, and put the wishing rock in the palm of my hand. Using my softest voice, I'll tell the class why it’s important to me (I found it on my 5th birthday, 67 years ago).

There's always an Oooh, Aaah  reaction to this story and plenty of questions. "Can you really send wishes, Mr. Paull?"
I smile. "What do you think?" I ask. I tell them what happened when I sent my mum my very first wish. She told me that she felt the wish - it gave her a tingle down her spine! From that day to this, I tell them, I have sent oodles and doodles of wishes........:)




With appropriate ceremony, I go through the sending a wish routine, and tell the class that my wish to them with come around 5 pm....they'll feel the tingle down the spine......:)

I'll put the rock back in the tin, close it and put it back in my pocket. Then, as I now HAVE the class's attention, I open another tin and take out a handful of cottonwood twigs that I collected over the summer. I'll  pass them around the class, asking the boys and girls to take one taped pack of three each.

I'll hold one twig aloft and ceremoniously break it at the growth scar. Unless I'm REALLY unlucky, I find a beautiful star inside the twig which I show and pass around and show to the kids. There's always plenty of Ooohs and Aaahs. 

I then will tell them the Native American legend I first heard when working in Wounded Knee, South Dakota, many years ago, the legend that all stars in the sky come from the cottonwood trees that grow in the earth below our feet.


The Secret of the Star…..

Some Native Americans believe all things come from Mother Earth. 

They believe that stars form in the earth and search for the roots of the magical cottonwood trees.
They finally come to rest in the small twigs at the end of the cottonwood branches. Here, they wait.................until they are needed. 

When the Spirit of the Night Sky decides that she needs more twinkling, beautiful stars, she calls on the Wind Spirit to shake all the cottonwood trees.

The Wind Spirit blows and blows, and as the cottonwood twigs break off, the twinkling stars are released and race up to a special place in the Night Sky.

If YOU want to add a new star to the night sky, find some secret cottonwood twigs, wait for a clear night, and hold up your twigs to the sky - and SNAP!  

Then, look up into the night sky again.

Can you see YOUR star twinkling?

Imagine -   you have added a beautiful new star to the night sky kingdom......


"Now," I say, "break yours........and release your star."

After lots more Ooohs and Aaahs, I tell the kids how I  look forward to everyone shining like a star!! 

By now it's time for the children to introduce themselves to each other, so I ask them to take their seats around their tables, greet their new partners, face me and listen to the instructions for the Picasso in a bag!! activity.

It’s easy to resource and easy to put in action. All each student needs is a large paper bag, a marker pen, and a sheet of white paper.

I'll model the process by putting my white paper inside the bag. Holding my pen in hand, I'll rest it on the middle of the paper and let the bag cover my hand. Then I'll look at a person next to me, and without looking inside the bag, I proceed to draw his/her face.

When I’ve finished, I ask the students to look at the person closest to them and do what I did – draw the person’s face, resisting the temptation to look in the bag! The room goes quiet as the students draw, and then erupts into laughter when the results are shared. (The drawing then can be saved and, later, displayed on the wall near the white board).

OK.......stage one of building my community is over. It's now morning snack/break/recess time. I'll go outside with the kids and interact with them - if and when that is appropriate.

At the end of the break, I'll again stand by the door and shake everyone's hand as they enter the room. They go to their seats. I stand at the front of the class, point to the science table and talk briefly about what's on show there, emphasizing that it belongs to them and thus will constantly change.
I point to the spider house and tell them a little about its occupant. "Hopefully," I tell the class, "the spider will make a beautiful web...........let's check it each day and see what she's up to."

Next, I explain where things are kept, take a few questions, and point to the board and explain how the rest of the day will play out. Then I ask the class to write some personal detail to go with their Picasso picture, saying that I will stick all the pictures on the wall.......

As they scratch their heads and begin to write, I circulate and interact with as many as kids as I can..........

When everyone has completed their Picasso picture personal detail, I give everyone a sheet entailed: 
WHERE'S THIS KEPT IN OUR CLASSROOM? - this comprises a list of resources which the children quickly have to find.

That done, I then set a challenge for each team of 4 - either build a bridge from newspaper that links one table to another, OR, build a tower from newspaper that reaches and touches the ceiling. The resources required for this activity are newspaper and sticky tape. 

When each team finishes, I walk around the room and I test the strength of each bridge/tower (a rock is placed at the middle of each bridge/I place an orange at the top of each tower).



OK.........I check the clock.......that's the morning done......it's lunchtime.









I go in the lunchroom and sit with some of my kids and check how the morning has gone.....then I go to the yard, again interact where and when appropriate, and watch.

After lunch, we'll gather together on the carpet. This is the time I set aside for questions and comments..........and is often a lively and useful time, especially for anyone still nervous and/or shy. I begin the process by taking out a lollipop (sorry, popsicle) stick from the jar and read out the name: "Jack, you ok? Enjoying the day so far? Any questions for me?" Then another stick, and another.......

I explain the seating arrangements and tell the kids that it will be different the next day........and that I'll continue to move people around until /I/we have got it right. I ask for volunteers to look after everything that's in the room, and then write the names on a large sheet which I stick on the wall (looking after the science table, the spider house, art resources, library books, etc.)

When that's done, I suggest we have time to talk with each other, using our INSIDE voices.

It's now mid afternoon...............time for me to hand out an empty tin for each student ('Hey, here's your first pocket museum tin') and a Scavenger Hunt sheet and then go outside for about 15 minutes. 

I'll take the class to the school lawn and talk about the scavenger hunt activity, stressing that they check off the list as they find what they are looking for, and that only ONE thing is to be collected and put into the tin.

Here's the Scavenger Hunt sheet:

‘I’m a Collector’
 When you go for a walk, don’t disturb the small creatures 
that live outside. It’s their home.

See if you can find………….


Something green

Something red

Something yellow

Something brown

Something black

Something pointy

A blade of grass longer than your index finger

A piece of petrified wood

An animal track

A piece of bark

A spider web

A feather

A pine cone eaten by a squirrel

A heart-shaped rock

A pebble smaller than a dime

A pebble the same size as a quarter

wishing rock

A white pebble

A black pebble

A leaf skeleton

Something a bird would eat

A dead branch as long as your thumb

A flower

A flower seed

A tree seed

A twig with pine bark beetle galleries

Some moondust!!

Something really, REALLY cool!

                      


When we return to our room, we'll sit in a circle and show and share the really cool things we found, and then place them on the science table.



I'll end the day by asking them to take home their tin, decorate it if they wish, and put something special inside and bring it to school on Day Two, and share with their class.

I thank them for a dead good day and hope they have the best of evenings........

When the kids have gone, I sit and think back on what I learned about them during the first day. I make a few notes: what/who stood out in my mind? What, if anything, will they bring in to share tomorrow? How was the grouping? 

I gather the Picasso pictures and stick them on the wall near the white board, set out the resources the class will need first thing in the morning, check that the spider has everything she needs, then I go home, sip a glass (or three) of wine, and start worrying again........:).

Did I do everything I wanted to do? Let's go through the checklist: cottonwood stars, Picasso, OXO pocket museum, scavenger hunt, showed the kids all the resources, talked about the science table, looking after the spider house, used the jar with the kids' names on the lollipop sticks.............yep. Did all those things. Good. OK. now, tomorrow.......

READER: I have stuff I've written about the wishing rock, how to make a pocket museum, the secret of the cottonwood star, and Picasso in a bag. If you'd like me to email you a copy of any of them, just let me know.

So, Day Two.........what lies ahead?

Well, here's my plan:

Change the seating, have a show and tell pocket museum time, describe the function of the Treasure Chest, table team challenge, read something from The Science section in Tuesday's NYT and post it on the display board near the science table, negotiate/discuss class rules and responsibilities, agree student jobs (feeding the birds, checking on the spider, etc.) my hopes for the year, give out writing books, text books for mathematics, start reading a story to the class.....

Can't wait to show my kids this Sphinx moth that I found.........I'll put it into a pocket museum
and show them first thing in the morning. Just doing that will tell them more about me.......


As day 2 is a Tuesday, I'll start reading the Science Section in the NYT
and see if there's anything that is appropriate
and interesting to read to the kids
and  
I'll put these out on the science table

I'll show them the Class Treasure Box

and, and and, and............ 

OK, Day Two       

Early start, as usual, strong coffee at Starbucks, I double check I take everything I need for the day ahead(the NYT, stuff for the science table, empty food cartons, my diary and notebook, etc, etc.)  stop at the nearest Starbucks' for a hot, medium strength coffee, get to school, go to my room and shut the door.

The first I do is get the resources on the tables for the morning's team challenge: Make a marble run.

 
I put out a large piece of cardboard, strips of paper, tape and a marble on each table.

This is what the kids will do:

Make a marble run, using the paper strips as runway for the descending marble.
Place a couple of books under one end of the marble run.


·      Did the marble run without stopping from top to bottom?     
What happens when you alter the height of the ramp?

·      What happens when you DOUBLE the height of the ramp?
     
·       Can you make a VERTICAL marble run? Is it BETTER than the marble run you rested on a ramp?

! Think about the following questions.  Guess before testing.
  • How long does it take the marble to run from the top of the run to the bottom?
  • How can you make it faster?
  • Can you make a VERTICAL marble run?
  • What else could you investigate?

Then I put my latest sciency finds on the science table:

Dead wood with sap..........lying alongside a piece of amber which, millions of years ago, 
started its life as sap

Some shells from my holiday....

A mushroom from the front garden

OK, when everything's ready I go out in the yard before the whistle goes and chat with some of the parents.

When my class lines up at the sound of the whistle, I'll go inside, ready to greet each one of them at the door. I shake everyone's hand, and ask the class to sit around on the floor as soon as they have put away their coats and bags.

I'll read out the attendance sheet, asks who's staying for lunch, and then, after a pause, I take out my pocket museum that has the moth inside.
"See what I found yesterday." I show my kids the moth, telling them I found it lying dead outside IKEA........"See, you never know what you're going to find if you keep your eyes wide open!"

After telling them what I know about the moth, I put the pocket museum in the Class Treasure Chest.
"Anyone wants to take a closer look at the moth, it's in the Treasure Chest. Use a magnifying glass, though......don't touch it with your fingers, please. OK? OK, showtime! Who has anything to share? who put something interesting in their pocket museums?"

Up go the hands.

When all the sharing is done, I tell everyone to put their pocket museums in the Treasure Chest, go to their new tables, and take on the team marble run challenge. 

I visit every table and watch the kids at work, sharing ideas, agreeing on the best way to do this, that and the other.This activity takes us up to morning recess/break time and tells me more about who really should be sitting with whom....

After recess, we again sit in a circle and negotiate and agree classroom rules - which I try to keep at a minimum and focus more on what students CAN do as opposed to what they CAN'T do. When the rules are confirmed, I write them on a large sheet and display on a wall. Now it's time for sorting out the other class responsibilities (looking after the work tables, for example) and, again, writing and displaying them on the wall.

OK.........all done, I hope. Now we need to start the curriculum teaching and learning routines. I will make necessary changes/additions when the time is ripe, especially the permanent seating arrangements.

So, time to make their own personal journal covers from food cartons ......

This box, one of many that I bring in to the classroom,  will be cut 
and used for the front and back of the student's private journal

When the atmosphere is at its best, when the classroom is buzzing, I stand up and show the class a plastic bottle, quarter filled with water. I turn the bottle upside down over a bowl. I take off the top. As the water runs out, creating momentarily, a vacuum inside the bottle, the air and the atmosphere of excited learning rushes in. I immediately screw the top back on.


I wave the bottle around.

I'll ask my class to think about what I’ve done. I have, of course,  captured the time and the moment, the smells and the atmosphere of curiosity and excitement, all locked up forever in the bottle...........Think about it......:) I stick a label on the bottle and write the time and the date.......and tell my class that there, forever, we have captured a special moment. The bottle will be the first of many.

When we've finished sharing, I tell everyone to put their tins in the class treasure box.......when that's done, I ceremoniously place the bottle on a shelf, and we get on with our day's work.

During the day, I take note of the success or otherwise of the new seating arrangements, noting where I need to make changes on day 3.

To finish the day, I tell my class about my collection of tins and bottles......




My community of learners are on their way. 

The rest is easy peasy.........:) 

Let the learning begin.......