And that's when I came up with the idea for Serendipity.
September 23, 2017
Serendipity--The Fun, Fast Review Game That My Kids Can't Get Enough Of
Over the past six years, I have tried every game you can find on the Internet to help my students review--Jeopardy, Grudgeball, Trashketball--you name it, I've tried it. But with every game I tried, I found some flaw or another that made it less than ideal. Kids didn't care much for Jeopardy, Grudgeball and Trashketball had a lot of instructional time wasted on side activities...there was always something.
September 16, 2017
6 Ways To Have Fun Teaching Commas
I am one of those
teachers who loves teaching grammar, though not for the reason that most
teachers love it.

The reason I love
teaching grammar is that it is easy to make movement-based, interactive, and
accessible to all students. With such short classes, I have to be creative with
my "brain breaks." Because so many of my reading and writing
activities require such high levels of thought, many of my students view the
simple application of grammar rules as a welcome chance to move around,
interact, and use their minds for some "light" thinking.
September 4, 2017
Taking students' descriptive writing from blah to BLAM!--Show, Don't Tell
In a previous post, I discussed having
students master theme by writing their own stories designed around a
self-chosen theme. But why stop with mastering a reading skill when we can
incorporate a writing one as well?
I can't tell you how many stories I have read where
the main character was "pretty," "popular," or "smart."
No further description needed, to many a middle school mind. If I wasn't to
tear my hair out with boredom, my kids needed to learn to "show, not
tell."
August 27, 2017
Meaningful Main Idea Instruction
I try to teach main idea
and summary towards the beginning of each school year, because I know that once
my students can understand the central ideas of a text, it is much easier to
delve deeply into the finer details.
Main idea isn't an easy
skill to teach, however, especially once you reach fifth grade and beyond, where the
Common Core State Standards require that students find two or more central ideas in a text I can't express how many times I've heard cries of, "What?!
There's more than ONE big idea in the text?!"
Like with anything you
are teaching, main idea will stick best when it is made meaningful and
relevant. The following steps have helped immensely in my quest to bring students towards mastery of this
difficult concept.
August 21, 2017
Make Your Students Want To Use Correct Grammar!
Raise your virtual hand
if you have ever had a student over the age of eight years old who still
doesn't put capital letters at the beginning of his or her sentences. Every
year, I receive countless of these students, along with the students who don't
write in complete sentences and the students who don't bother putting any punctuation
whatsoever in a paper.
August 15, 2017
Using Pop Culture To Teach Reading Concepts (Minilesson suggestions included!)
I have been in many
classrooms where the introduction to a reading skill consists of copying notes,
maybe reading a short story together, and then practice worksheets. While I
know the teachers who are creating these lessons are intelligent, creative, and
hardworking educators who do many wonderful things in their classrooms once
they get past this introductory stage, even I find myself drifting off during
these lessons. I can only imagine what this experience is like for students who
hate reading and fail to see its relevance to their lives.
To battle this boredom
and make introductory lessons more meaningful, I use pop culture to introduce
my lessons. Here’s why:
1. It keeps students
engaged.
I have been asked if
using music videos to introduce theme or a documentary to introduce main idea
dilutes students' understanding of the concepts. My response is always to ask
if stories that are sung don't have themes that are as important. I think my
students' understanding is actually enhanced by using these media, because
everyone gets actively engaged in these introductory lessons.
August 13, 2017
How I Taught My Middle Schoolers The Value Of Everyday Heroism
Perhaps you've been in that meeting
where the principal/district administrator/some other person who is not in a classroom declares that you are going to solve all the problems of middle school by
integrating some form of social emotional learning into the classroom. Likely, this was accompanied
by some form of internal or external groaning, as you realized that you had one more thing to do in your already
over-stretched class.
This
blog is going to focus a lot on how social emotional learning can actually be
the basis for an extremely rigorous and fulfilling curriculum. Turns out, that administrator may have been right 😃 Reading,
writing, and discussion can lead to better citizenship, more empathy, and just
generally better human beings.
Today's
post will not focus on rigorous reading or writing, however, but will again ask
students to work on building their discussion skills (see posts about teaching
academic discussion skills here and here). One of
the first tasks I ask students to do as a community building exercise is to
complete and present a Pyramid of Heroism.
![]() |
| A completed Pyramid of Heroism. |
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The reading program that changed my view of reading programs
I have never been a fan of reading programs. Lacking in rigor, authenticity, and originality, the vast majority that I have seen turn teachi...
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I have never been a fan of reading programs. Lacking in rigor, authenticity, and originality, the vast majority that I have seen turn teachi...
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Over the past six years, I have tried every game you can find on the Internet to help my students review--Jeopardy, Grudgeball , Trashketbal...
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Any middle grades teachers knows that understanding, or even thinking about, others' points of view can be difficult for students of thi...






