I also read two books by John Spencer and A.J. Juliani, Launch and Empower, which addressed the same themes and applied it to younger students. These books certainly connected to my work with elementary dispositions. The COVER dispositions - Collaboration, Optimism, Visualization, Experimentation, Reflection - in tandem with the Chappaqua Design Process (see below) give a frame and common vocabulary to this work. I am feeling more comfortable with this disposition format, and am looking forward to using it to support my efforts to move my classroom in a more innovative direction.
Chappaqua Design Process |
One other element of my planning for next year comes from the Make Writing Camp I am currently participating in with Angela Stockman. This experience has convinced me of the value of treating writing as part of the design process and utilizing building ("making") as a way to spark ideas and play with words, phrases, and concepts.
I now plan to make some significant changes to my 3rd grade classroom for the 2017-18 school year, and look forward to seeing how they transpire. All of them link to exercising and developing the COVER dispositions.
1) More flexible classroom set-up
I will be experimenting with making multiple work spaces around the classroom, instead of individual desks. My hope is that this will encourage greater collaboration and allow for more opportunities to experiment and problem solve, especially in math, writing, and social studies.
2) Beginning math and writing with "challenges"
One aspect I felt my math teaching lacked last year was consistent opportunities for the students to problem solve in a way that developed collaboration, visualization, and experimentation. I decided to begin my math lessons this year with a chance for the class to address an open-ended math problem in partners. An "open-ended" problem would be more like: how many pizzas should we order if we had a class pizza party? And less like: if a pizza has eight pieces, how many pieces would nine pizzas have? My district currently uses Math in Focus, but I decided to go through some "math minute" materials I had saved from a number of older programs (like Math Land and Investigations). I was able to find a number of "challenges" that met my criteria. I plan to record and evaluate these as we go along.
Possible build materials |
3) Move towards greater Authenticity
An area I continue to struggle with is finding authentic tasks and audiences for my third graders, especially audiences beyond the students' peers and parents. I am inspired by Launch to renew my commitment to this aspect of the design process. This will affect all areas of my classroom. For example, I will attempt to choose authentic problem solving challenges in math; point towards more extended authentic audiences in writing; create authentic coding exercises and outcomes; and encourage authentic research, observation, and application in social studies.
4) Strive for increased student Empowerment
Page from Empower |
include my students in the process of learning.
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ReplyDeleteWarren, this is so inspiring! Your students are fortunate! I've been working the last two years to tweak the existing MiF "Learns" in order to offer students the very kind of open ended opportunities you describe. It is really what is intended! I'd be happy to collaborate/co-plan any time.
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