Sunday, September 29, 2019

Homecoming Week!

Homecoming Week has arrived, and with it comes the chaos. What I've tried to impress upon my students is that the academics will continue, along with the fun.

As far as fun - the dress up days are as follows:

  • Monday - jersey day
  • Tuesday - pink out day
  • Wednesday - decade day
  • Thursday - camo day
  • Friday - blue/gold day
Monday and Friday will have assemblies at the end of the school day; the parade is Friday at 5:00, the game is at 7:00; the dance is Saturday (I think it's 7:00 - 10:00).

In the meantime, we are in the midst of Romeo and Juliet and Animal Farm. Last week English 9 worked on moving forward in Act I, and English 10 moved through Chapter 3 of the book.  This week, I hope to have English 9 done with Act I, and English 10 midway through the book.

Here's the plan:

English 9
  • Monday, 9/30 - Activity Schedule - bell work; words of the week - get definitions; continue Act I
  • Tuesday, 10/1 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in definitions; continue Act I
  • Wednesday, 10/2 - bell work; 1st Hour - quiz for Act I; 2nd/6th Hours - finish Act I
  • Thursday, 10/3 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; turn in reading logs; 1st Hour - watch Act I; 2nd/6th Hours - quiz for Act I
  • Friday, 10/4 - Activity Schedule - bell work; vocab. quiz; get new reading log; silent reading
English 10
  • Monday, 9/30 - Activity Schedule - bell work; words of the week - get definitions; 3rd Hour - notes/discussion for chapter 3; 4th Hour - read chapter 4
  • Tuesday, 10/1 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in definitions; 3rd Hour - read chapter 4; 4th Hour - notes and discussion for chapter 4
  • Wednesday, 10/2 - bell work; 3rd Hour - notes and discussion for chapter 4; 4th Hour - quiz for chapters 3/4, turn in notes, read chapter 5
  • Thursday, 10/3 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; 3rd Hour - quiz for chapters 3/4, turn in notes, read chapter 5; 4th Hour - notes/discussion for chapter 5
  • Friday, 10/4 - Activity Schedule - bell work; vocab. quiz; 3rd Hour - notes/discussion for chapter 5; 4th Hour - Herd Behavior article
That's the plan. I hope everyone had a great weekend. If you need me, you know how to find me.


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Homecoming Week! by Laura Stubbs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://www.laurastubbs.blogspot.com.

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Change is a Constant, So Why is it so Hard?

It's been one of those weekends where life just smacks you in the face. Life is all about change, and it's healthy and normal, but boy does it hit you in the heart sometimes. I got to go pick up my eldest from college on Friday night to bring him home for the first time in a month, and now it's Sunday morning and I'm looking at driving him back. Where did the weekend go? In addition, the first of the kids who've grown up nextdoor is permanently moving away. My kids have grown up for 20 years with the same people living next to us, and all 11 kids are more like siblings than friends. This weekend, a U-Haul pulled up next door, and as we speak, the oldest of the kids, the leader of the crew, the creative thinker, is packing up her stuff to move to NYC for her first real, adult job. How did that happen? Where did the time go? Twenty years, gone in a blink.

Alright, I'll pull out of my melancholy meanderings and focus on your kids.  It's been fun getting to know your children, and now that we're on week four, they're finally getting comfortable - which can be good, but can also be bad. Everyone has had their best foot forward up to now, so the goal is to keep it that way.

Both groups have now established norms: both will have academic words assigned on Monday, and tested on Friday; English 9 has independent reading to do five times a week for homework, with reading logs due on Thursdays; SAT/PSAT bell work happens every day. Along with these norms, I'm now going to try to pick up the pace a bit: I want to move through the texts we're reading more quickly. We're also heading for the first writings of the year - probably by next week.

Last week English 9 finished the preview information for Romeo and Juliet and started into the text. English 10 has finished the first two chapters of Animal Farm.

So here's the plan for this week:

English 9

  • Monday, 9/23 - bell work, get academic words of the week; continue reading Act I
  • Tuesday, 9/24 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in definitions; continue reading Act I
  • Wednesday, 9/25 - 1/2 Day - bell work; preposition worksheet
  • Thursday, 9/26 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; collect reading logs; finish Act I; quiz for Act I
  • Friday, 9/27 - bell work; vocab. quiz; get new reading log; silent reading
English 10
  • Monday, 9/23 - bell work; get academic words of the week; finish ch. 2; homework - verb worksheet
  • Tuesday, 9/24 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in definitions; read ch. 3; homework - notes
  • Wednesday, 9/25 - 1/2 Day - bell work; quiz for ch. 3; homework - verb worksheet
  • Thursday, 9/26 -  PSAT Advisory - bell work; common lit activity - conformity; homework - read ch. 4
  • Friday, 9/27 - bell work; vocab. quiz; quiz for ch. 4; common lit activity - herd behavior; notes for ch. 4
We have a lot on deck, so it'll be a challenge to get through it all, but we're going to try. I hope everyone has a great week. Ciao!


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Change is a Constant, so Why is it so Hard? by Laura Stubbs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://www.laurastubbs.blogspot.com.

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Slow and Steady Wins the Race...Right?

Here we are on week three of the school year and I'm already behind. I keep reminding myself when I look at my calendars and plans (and my heart races because we're behind where I feel like we need to be) that it's most important to do things right, and if that slows us down, then so be it.  Hopefully I'll get better at planning so that I don't have to keep revising my calendars.

Last week we managed to get most of the introductory materials completed, and the kids went to pick up their books - English 9 grabbed Romeo and Juliet and English 10 grabbed Animal Farm. English 9 also started working with the idea of independent reading and we made a very necessary trip to the library and read in there (it's air conditioned).

Here's what we have coming up this week:

English 9

  • Monday, 9/16 - bell work; academic vocab. words - get definitions; Shakespeare notes; quiz over Shakespeare; vocab. cards for Shakespeare
  • Tuesday, 9/17 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in academic vocab. words; Act I Prologue worksheet; quiz for the Prologue
  • Wednesday, 9/18 - bell work; begin reading Act I of Romeo and Juliet - study guide
  • Thursday, 9/19 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; continue reading Act I of Romeo and Juliet - study guide
  • Friday, 9/20 - bell work; quiz over academic vocab. words; silent reading and reading logs handed out
English 10
  • Monday, 9/16 - bell work; academic vocab. words - get definitions; read Animal Farm Chapter 1 - Cornell notes
  • Tuesday, 9/17 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in academic vocab. words; finish Chapter 1; quiz for Chapter 1
  • Wednesday, 9/18 - bell work; Animal Farm Chapter 2
  • Thursday, 9/19 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; finish Chapter 2; vocab. game for chapters 1/2
  • Friday, 9/20 - bell work; quiz over academic vocab. words; start Chapter 3
And that is the plan. I hope everyone has a great week! Ciao!

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Slow and Steady Wins the Race...Right? by Laura Stubbs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://www.laurastubbs.blogspot.com.

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Off to the Races

Good morning! It's so odd to go from a completely laid back pace to racing at breakneck speed, but that's exactly what we're doing. Last week was so busy, and I got so behind on my pacing, but everything ultimately came together. Yesterday (Saturday) was a busy day as well, full of family and football, but today I'm back to the grind. I spent Friday night, Saturday early morning, and the morning so far planning and creating, so I'm set to share this next week with you:

English 9 - we will get background information on Shakespeare, his society, and we'll start Romeo and Juliet.

English 10 - we will get background information on Orwell, Soviet history, and we'll start Animal Farm.

I'm sure I'll get a bit behind again (I usually do), but I'm going to try to hit my goals and be in the text by the end of the week.

Here's the break down of schedules for the week:

English 9

  • Monday, 9/9 - bell work; get academic words of the week - define for homework; small group exploration of The Globe Theatre, Shakespeare, and Elizabethan society.
  • Tuesday, 9/10 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in vocab., get notes on Shakespeare and his society
  • Wednesday, 9/11 - bell work; quiz over Shakespeare; vocab. cards - finish for homework; read the Prologue for Act I and analyze/annotate it.
  • Thursday, 9/12 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; check in vocab. cards; quiz for the Prologue; read Act I, Scene i
  • Friday, 9/13 - bell work; quiz for academic words of the week; silent reading; reading logs will be handed out C
English 10

  • Monday, 9/9 - bell work; get academic words of the week - define for homework; KWL for Soviet History - finish for homework
  • Tuesday, 9/10 - Academic Advisory - bell work; check in vocab.; finish KWL discussion and turn in; small group discussion over Power
  • Wednesday, 9/11 - bell work; notes on Orwell; vocab. cards for Animal Farm; read Chapter 1 and do notes - homework=finish
  • Thursday, 9/12 - PSAT Advisory - bell work; quiz for Chapter 1; discussion
  • Friday, 9/13 - bell work; vocab. quiz for academic words of the week; read Chapter 2 and do notes - quiz Monday
So that's the plan. As always, plans do change, and we've got a ton of stuff to accomplish, so please be patient with me. I truly appreciate it. I hope everyone has a great week! Ciao!

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Off to the Races by Laura Stubbs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://laurastubbs.blogspot.com.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Welcome Back!

It's hard to believe, but we're about to kick off another school year. If I had your student last year, welcome back; if you are new to me, welcome to my classroom and I can't wait to meet you and your student!

This is something I do each weekend. I blog a little about what we did last week, and then I give fairly detailed information of what's coming up this week. It's not required reading, so it's just there if you want it. I email you all with the link to my webpage which has a calendar on it for the week and a link to this blog. As a parent, I know it's just nice to have the resource.

Just a little bit about myself:

  • I'm entering my 26th year of teaching; this is my 21st at AHS.
  • I grew up in the Lansing area and followed my husband to SE Michigan for work.
  • I have two boys: a 16-year-old junior at Pioneer High School, and an 18-year-old freshman at MSU (it's so surreal that he's now living where I grew up). 
  • I got my undergrad degree in English and Education at WMU way back in 1994, and my MA in Literacy Education from MSU in 1999.
I'm not sure what else you would want to know, but that leads me to a really important message: please feel free to contact me with messages and questions any time! The fastest way for us to communicate is through email, but if you call the main office, you can feel free to leave a voicemail and I'll get back to you. If you ever contact and I don't respond, it's because I didn't get the message, so please try again. As a parent, I know that when you contact a teacher it's because it's important, so I definitely will respond.

On to the classroom. As a school we are really working on using rigor and high expectations to help your student to raise their grades and their test scores. Every day we will start our hour with bell work focusing on both the PSAT testing format and important content for the class such as standard English usage which is needed for both written and spoken communication in the classroom and on the job (all 9th and 10th graders will take the PSAT in April). Then we will move on to various ELA skills like reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing and visually comprehending complex materials and work on those critical thinking skills for the rest of the hour. In the 9th grade we will push them to read difficult materials in class, while focusing on independent choice books on their own. Most of their homework is fulfilling independent reading requirements. In 10th grade, they will be required to do more of the difficult reading started in class, finishing it at home and working on assignments connected to those texts. Each week will include a small set of academic vocabulary which they will be quizzed over on Fridays.

This coming week, both groups will spend time doing activities that will help them get to know both the English content and also my procedures and how I do things. I'm really pushing to raise the level of skill in discussions so that their voices become more visible, enhancing their learning with academic "speak" with each other, so I'm going to begin training them for that.  Here's the schedule for both:

English 9
  • Tuesday, 9/3 - NO ADVISORY - class syllabus will be handed out for parent signatures (due back by Friday); bell work - prepositions; Words of the Week handed out - quiz Friday; station activity to get to know the class
  • Wednesday, 9/4 - bell work - prepositions; investigate the teacher; create the class rules; go over independent reading requirements; create class discussion guidelines.
  • Thursday, 9/5 - NO ADVISORY - bell work - prepositions; create class Google Slide presentation - Who Am I; review discussion guidelines and do small group discussions with the Globe Theatre
  • Friday, 9/6 - bell work - prepositions; quiz for Words of the Week; table talk; meet the library, get a book, and silent reading time - reading logs handed out.
English 10
  • Tuesday, 9/3 - NO ADVISORY - class syllabus will be handed out for parent signatures (due back by Friday); bell work - preposition review; Words of the Week handed out - quiz Friday; station activity to get to know the class
  • Wednesday, 9/4 - bell work - preposition review; investigate the teacher; create class rules; start a KWL for George Orwell and Soviet History
  • Thursday, 9/5 - NO ADVISORY - bell work - preposition review; create class Google Slide presentation - Who Am I; review discussion guidelines and do the L portion of the KWL; begin discussion over Power
  • Friday, 9/6 - bell work - preposition review; quiz for Words of the Week; table talk; work on article for background information for Animal Farm
And that's how this generally works. Note on Advisory and Getting Help From Me: I have been placed on the 11th grade team and will not have any Academic Advisory time to work with your student. If your student is in my 2nd or 3rd Hour Co-taught class with Mr. Lawrence, he is available; otherwise, I will work with your student to find a time when we can get things done. Tuesdays with Teachers is still on after school, and I can usually be available before or after school most days. If your student has the same lunch as I do (B-lunch) I can make myself available then, too.

So, welcome! I look forward to meeting you and hearing from you. I hope you have a great Labor Day, and a fantastic week! Ciao!

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Welcome Back! by Laura Stubbs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://laurastubbs.blogspot.com.