This week we finished our “spooky stories.” Overall, I think
my kids really liked the idea of the story, and I got some really creative and
interesting stories out of them. My fear
from last week did happen—I had a handful of students finish their stories at
the beginning of the week and the rest finished at different a different pace.
I still have 2 students who need to finish because of the interruption of
Halloween, a half day, and a fireman visit earlier this week. The first time I conference
with my students, I sat at one table and had them come to me. BIG MISTAKE. This
made the kids think that they had to come to me for every spelling question,
conference question, and every thought that popped into their mind. I found
them to be distracted, constantly coming up to me, distracting others while
waiting in line, and generally unproductive this day. So, the next day I said
that I would go from table to table and they were to stay in their seats and
keep writing until I came to them. I
also reminded them that I wanted them to sound out their words for these first
few days—we wouldn’t worry about spelling until the final paper. This worked
much better. There were still a few that would come up to me, but a quick few
reminders is all it took to get them seated and working again.
Overall I think writing went well this week. I think editing
their own work is something that is still a bit beyond them. They were very
frustrated by it, and right now correct spelling just isn’t something they are
ready for developmentally nor is it an expectation in my classroom. I would
like to revisit this in the spring and work on it then once they have become
more comfortable with sustained writing.
See, this is reflection at its best! You were able to quickly see what needed to be adjusted, and put it into practice for the next lesson. Continue using such skills as this as you wrap up GLT and start preparing for lead teaching. Great work Rachael.
ReplyDelete