Thursday, December 3, 2009
Progress Reports
Tonight's homework: Using the prompt you drew from the box, fill out the persuasion map. Try to create the strongest argument possible! (due Dec. 4- A Day, Dec. 7- B Day)
**Don't forget to write your weekly summary! #10 is due by midnight on Sunday!
In Class: District Writing Prompt #3 (Dec. 4- A Day, Dec. 7- B Day)
Next week: Benchmark Testing in Science & Math on Wednesday & Thursday
Monday, November 30, 2009
Important: Accessing the Online Textbook
DuvalMcDLitSTUDENTreg
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Parent Portal, Spelling Bees, & Thanksgiving!
I hope you were able to come to JLCP's High School Information Night to get info about some of our local high schools. But if you missed it, you also missed out on the first opportunity to utilize a great new tool for keeping up with your student's progress. The OnCourse Parent Portal is now up and running, and UserIDs and Passwords are available at the school. The Parent Portal allows you to log in at home and actually see your child's grades in all their classes. This can help you stay in the loop about which assignments are being turned in (and which ones are not) as well as how your student is performing in class. If you don't have your UserID and Password already, you must come to the school with a picture ID to receive it. Please do remember, however, that it can take a week or so for grades to be fully updated. I know that I'm behind myself right now, but I'm hoping to have everything input before Thanksgiving!
In other classroom news, the classroom spelling bees are underway. I hope to have all the top spellers competing in the 8th grade run-off on Monday. The top 5 spellers from that group will go on to compete in the schoolwide spelling bee in January.
We have finished our unit on mood, plot, and conflict, and we are working on polishing our writing skills using SEEPS (Statement, Example, Elaboration, Personal Tidbit, Sensory Details).
Next week (Monday & Tuesday) will be Amnesty Days. On Amnesty Days, I show students exactly what work they are missing in my class and give them the opportunity to make those assignments up. MANY students have low averages right now because they are simply failing to turn in their work. I am hoping these Amnesty Days will help those students catch up. For the students who have turned in everything, there will be time for reading, board games, and maybe even a few extra credit opportunities.
After all that, I think we'll all be ready for Thanksgiving! I hope everyone enjoys their 5-day weekend! After today's writing workshop (in which we used sensory details to describe Thanksgiving food), I can already taste the creamy, buttery goodness of my Aunt Donna's mashed potatoes and the moist, juicy slices of turkey covered in giblet gravy. Yum!
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!
Remember to check the Homework Calendar, and don't forget to post those Weekly Summaries on ClassChatter Live!
Miss McCoy
Monday, November 9, 2009
Important Announcements & Dates
- I can finally be contacted through DCPS email. My address is: mccoyj@duvalschools.org (see contact info at right).
- NO SCHOOL Wednesday- Happy Veterans' Day!
- Make sure you are turning in all your in-class assignments, homework, and weekly summaries!
- Chapter Summaries are now due on SUNDAYS by midnight on ClassChatterLive. If you are having issues online, please write or type your summary and bring it to me Monday morning.
- Our In-Class Spelling Bee is coming up next week on Tuesday & Wednesday. "Bee" prepared! The top five spellers from the 8th grade will compete in the schoolwide spelling bee soon!
- Progress Monitoring Assessment #3 will be given next week on November 19 & 20.
- We will be utilizing a fantastic new tool to help us prepare for FCAT Writes! It is an online program called WriteScore, which allows the students to submit essays online for hand-scoring. The company then emails the teachers with detailed results. This resource will give students a realistic idea of their potential score on FCAT Writes. We will be writing and submitting our first expository essays to WriteScore next week on November 20 & 23 (changed due to shipping issue).
- Check the Homework Calendar to see what assignments are due as well as what we're doing in class!
Miss McCoy
Sunday, November 1, 2009
November is Here!
I hope you all had a safe and happy Halloween! I can't believe it's already November- it sure doesn't feel like it outside. (But it does feel nice!)
Well, I've been in the classroom with you guys for two weeks now. With Ms. Flynn's help, I've become oriented to the school, the 8th grade curriculum, and I've learned all of my students' names! We have hit the ground running!
The students were given the opportunity to interview me in class in an effort to not only allow them to get to know me better, but also to practice their questioning, listening, note-taking, summarizing, and writing skills. We have also taken the second Progress Monitoring Assessment, created PowerPoint/Keynote presentations on "Flowers for Algernon," responded to the second District Writing Prompt, and read a "killer" short story by Roald Dahl.
This week, we will be reading "Rules of the Game" by Amy Tan in our literature books (the text is available online at ClassZone). We will be discussing first and third person point of view as well as taking interactive notes throughout the story. In our Writer's Workshop, we will begin the process of revising, editing, and publishing our District Writing Prompt responses.
Just so you know, I will be continuing the usage of ClassChatterLive for students to post their weekly independent reading summaries, utilize the drop box, and respond to the occasional topic blog. I am understanding and flexible with students who do not have computers and/or Internet Access at home, but I do feel it is very important to get students accustomed to using technology regularly in their schoolwork. After all, Julia Landon is a "college preparatory" school, and colleges seem to be regularly using Blackboard and similar online assignment programs.
Parents, please encourage your child to read nightly! Students, remember to keep track of your independent reading in your reading logs!
I am preparing for us to have a challenging, fun, and successful year! I am very happy to be a part of such a great school! 8th grade rocks!
Miss McCoy
"By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail." -Benjamin Franklin
"Be prepared!" - The Boy Scouts of America
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Coming Soon...
Monday, October 19, 2009
Register for your Online Textbook
The PDF may be found on your child's Class Chatter Live account under the Resource page. It is labeled, "How To Register For Your OnLine Textbook."
Please assist your child in registering for their online version of the textbook.
Make sure to scroll down after your registration is complete to add additional Activation Codes for other grade level books and Essay Smart.
We will be utilizing Essay Smart next week so it is imperative that your child have access to this great resource.
THERE ARE STILL SOME STUDENTS WHO HAVE NOT RETURNED THE BROWN PRENTICE HALL TEXTBOOKS. THOSE STUDENTS WILL HAVE A VERY DIFFICULT TIME BEING SUCCESSFUL IN THE CLASSROOM IF THEY DO NOT HAVE THEIR NEW MCDOUGAL LITTELL LITERATURE BOOK. WE HAVE BEEN UTILIZING THE NEW TEXTBOOK FOR TWO WEEKS AS OF THIS DATE.
-Kathleen Flynn, 10.10.2009
October Happenings
I have been assessing all students to find out strengths and areas for improvement in reading and writing. To give you an overall idea of where the students are, I can state the following:
READING:
Areas to work on – Continued reading on a nightly basis.
Research clearly shows that the reading of meaningful connected text results in improved reading achievement (Anderson, Wilson, & Fielding, 1988; Anderson, Hiebert, Scott, & Wilkerson, 1985; Elley & Mangubhai, 1983; Ingham, 1981; Taylor, Frye, & Maruyama, 1990). In one of the most extensive studies of independent reading yet conducted, Anderson, Wilson, and Fielding (1988) investigated a broad array of activities and their relationship to reading achievement and growth in reading. They found that the amount of time students spent in independent reading was the best predictor of reading achievement and also the best predictor of the amount of gain in reading achievement made by students.
FACT: Independent reading builds fluency.
FACT: Independent reading leads to increased vocabulary development.
FACT: Independent reading builds background knowledge, or schema.
Another extremely well established research finding is that students' reading ability is dramatically influenced by the amount of interrelated information (schema) they have about the topic about which they are reading (Anderson & Pearson, 1984; Ausubel & Robinson, 1969; Bartlett, 1932). By reading widely, students are exposed to diverse topics and information, which they can then use in future reading.
Improving in the areas of thinking about our reading.
Think writing as demonstrated in “4 Squares.”
Readers learn more if they become actively involved with written material. Think writing requires the reader to react to what the author is saying on an ongoing basis. Think writing requires the reader to note reactions to the text. Think writing requires the reader to note when meaning breaks down. Think writing requires the reader to note when personal connections are made. The 4 Squares personalize the learning situation and encourages readers to develop a point of reference with the writer by trying to interpret the words and meaning they read.
WRITING:
Strengths – There seems to be a genuine interest in improving their writing.
Areas to work on – Developing Thesis Statements.
Students need to understand the following about Thesis Statements:
A thesis statement:
· tells the reader how they will interpret the significance of the subject matter under discussion.
- is a road map for the paper; in other words, it tells the reader what to expect from the rest of the paper.
- directly answers the question asked of you. A thesis is an interpretation of a question or subject, not the subject itself. The subject, or topic, of an essay might be World War II or Moby Dick; a thesis must then offer a way to understand the war or the novel.
- makes a claim that others might dispute.
- is usually a single sentence somewhere in your first paragraph that presents your argument or main idea to the reader. The rest of the paper, the body of the essay, gathers and organizes evidence that will persuade the reader of the logic of your interpretation.
Please glance at the October homework calendar for updated information on assignments, readings, classroom activities, early releases, and no school days.
-Kathleen Flynn, 10.10.2009
Student Blogs
Technically, we have completed the first official week of school. I have introduced a new Web 2.o feature for our classroom environment, Class Chatter Live.
I chose to incorporate Class Chatter Live to encourage collaboration and to provide an engaging and meaningful learning experience for all students.
The very nature of student work will look and feel different this year. Students will be participating in online classroom assignments and homework. Students will have the opportunity to display their work. Students will have the opportunity to view other students’ work. But the best feature is the prompt feedback from others and myself. This larger participative audience will create a more collaborative, educational conversation where students’ experiences become more authentic.
Class Chatter Live simulates real life experience where the students’ ideas are no longer subject to “just” the teacher’s feedback. They are interacting with their peers, while getting immediate authentic feedback. They will be involved in more discovery, exploration and clarification in their learning than ever before. We will gradually go forward toward this student-to-student collaboration, but at this point, they are trying to get used to this way of learning and submitting assignments.
Class Chatter Live is an exciting technology that I hope inspires students to reach new levels of creativity and ability, faster than ever before.
If you are having technical difficulties, your adolescent has been informed of their assignment well before the due date. I have encouraged them to do the assignment as soon as possible so that there are no worries. Students who do not have access to the Internet are expected to make prior arrangements with me to get the printed assignment and they must make arrangements with me to turn in a written assignment.
-Kathleen Flynn, 09.01.2009
Reflections from Week One
Throughout the first week, I have demonstrated the belief that every student, regardless of background, can excel academically. They will be held accountable for their achievement. There is a sense of urgency and responsibility for their learning as our goal is to be successful as a 21st century learner. Students will be held accountable for their own results on Florida's high stakes tests. Our classroom will be results oriented; big and small.
Students will be provided clear feedback to guide their learning. Rigor, inspiration, and motivation will be the culture in our classroom.
Students will exhibit appropriate behaviors, confidence, and a sense of possibility. They will demonstrate the ability to listen for understanding from diverse perspectives, backgrounds, and experiences. They will have opportunities to generate ideas, articulate points of view, and respect the viewpoints of others (ask your adolescent about Wait Time.) We will successfully build relationships.
I have established the expectation that technology will be a large part of their learning experience and that they must have access to the Internet and technology. I have created student blogs which are monitored and controlled by me. The purpose of the blog is to provide students with a unique learning experience that meets students' diverse and unique learning needs. Our students are different learners than a couple of years ago. I understand that need. IT IS IMPORTANT TO NOTIFY ME IF YOU DO NOT HAVE INTERNET ACCESS so that I can make arrangements to provide your adolescent with paper copies of the assignments. I also highly recommend investing in a Public Library card. It is easy and free to apply for a library card. The San Marco Library is a block away. Located at 1513 Lasalle Street, Jacksonville, FL 32207. Their phone number is 904-858-2907. They have a wonderful, safe facility where your adolescent can do homework, access the Internet, print black and white materials (free!), utilize the library's live homework help, do e-research, and of course, ask a real librarian anything! Regarding homework that is due on their student blog . . . I do not accept what used to be "The dog ate my homework," to today's "My Internet wasn't working," and "My Microsoft Word had a glitch in it." It is your adolescent's responsibility to do their work before the due date so that if issues arise, they are able to get the printed assignment. They will then be expected to turn in the hand-written paper assignment on time!
It is the expectation that your adolescent bring their supplies to the classroom. The black binder with the blue, red, green, and purple folders and the composition notebook are their portfolios. The portfolios will provide instructional activities to help meet their academic goals and ensure that students are meeting state standards.
The concept of community supplies is to inspire leadership and a commitment to ongoing learning. Students who donate to the community of supplies are truly helping those in need. It has always been my desire to provide all students with the materials they need to be successful, which is why I continue to personally donate much of my salary back to our community. This year I have found the need to seek extra help. In the event that a student forgets their materials, we have the community supplies. Every student will use our supplies at one point or another. OUR COMMUNITY SUPPLIES DEMONSTRATE TO OUR STUDENTS THAT THEIR LEARNING IS IMPORTANT. Their learning and their learning environment will run in an efficient and effective manner and, as adults, it should be our desire to contribute in the service of all students.
Finally, your one-stop-shopping for parents and their adolescents alike: FLYNNIESCLASSROOM BLOG! Parents, my communication has always been transparent. As a parent of four children ranging in ages from 20 years to 9 years, I understand the need to have that communication with your child's teacher. I want you to feel empowered to have those conversations with your adolescent; What did you do today? What did you learn? What did you like or not like about what you learned today? HAVE YOU DONE YOUR HOMEWORK AND WHEN IS IT DUE? Please utilize my blog (especially the homework calendar) to keep in the know. Please keep the student blogs the students' blog! If you have a concern, please feel free to leave a message on my school phone or email me directly.
-Kathleen Flynn, 08.29.2009
Welcome!
Your 8th grader will be expected to do a significant amount of reading outside the classroom. In fact, nightly reading. They will read a variety of texts from a range of genres, including stories, novels, essays, poems, and plays, and they will be asked to keep a log and journal of their readings. The log will help them keep track of the 25 book reading standard. The journal will be used to record their reactions to and questions about the texts they read. A typical text might be To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee or The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros - coming of age stories in which the characters face issues and make decisions that help determine who they are and what they believe in.
As they read and discuss these texts, they will develop skills in four specific areas:
Increased Word Knowledge. Your teen will have formal vocabulary building through weekly word lists and an examination of word roots, suffixes, and prefixes. Eighth graders learn how to use context to determine the correct meaning of a word without using a dictionary.
Understanding of Increasingly Complex Texts. Your eighth grader will be reading more complex materials this year - texts that use more sophisticated vocabulary and sentence structure, deal with more sophisticated ideas and abstractions, and require readers to draw more of their own conclusions based upon "clues" in the text. Students will learn how to summarize these texts, identify and express the main idea of a passage, and identify the sequence of events in a story or article. They will also spend a significant amount of time developing critical thinking skills, and reasoning skills by learning how to use specific details from the text to support an argument or idea.
Recognition of Elements of Literature and Literary Devices. The literature eighth graders will read will be more sophisticated, so it will require a better understanding of literature to grasp meaning. Eighth graders will build upon their knowledge of the elements of literature - plot, setting, characterization, point of view, tone, symbolism, style, and theme - and learn to recognize them in increasingly complex literature. They will also learn to recognize more sophisticated literary devices, such as allusion, complex rhyme schemes, and satire while reinforcing knowledge of devices such as alliteration and figurative language.
Literary Analysis. By carefully reading and recognizing elements of literature and writing strategies, students should be able to conduct basic literary analysis to determine theme. They will be encouraged to make connections to their own lives and to historical and current situations. They will learn how to identify cause and effect relationships in a text, to predict possible outcomes of a reading situation, to compare and contrast similar aspects within a text or between two or more texts.
This year there will be a continued emphasis on writing as a process. Our writing instruction will focus on the five steps that create a final written product: pre-writing or "brainstorming" strategies, such as listing, freewriting, mapping, diagramming, and outlining; drafting, reviewing; revising; and editing.
Your teen will be expected to participate in peer reviews. Thus, they will be developing two very important skills: the ability to judge the effectiveness of a piece of writing and to accept constructive criticism from their peers. They will then be expected to use their own evaluation and the evaluation of their peers to make appropriate revisions to their work. Don't be surprised if they engage you in this review process as well!
Writing will be focused on specific writing strategies. In the eighth grade, there will be a strong emphasis on understanding audience and purpose and on organizing ideas effectively. Your teen will practice several different ways of organizing ideas, such as order of importance, comparison and contrast, and cause and effect. They will also learn strategies for writing more meaningful introductions and conclusions, and because your teen's argumentation and abstract thinking skills are developing, they will see an increased emphasis on stating a clear thesis and providing detailed support for that thesis.
Eighth graders will write several types of essays and stories, with most papers running five to seven paragraphs in length. They will be expected to be proficient in the narrative essay, expository essay, argumentative or persuasive essay, and finally, they will formulate a research paper.
In all of these essays, the emphasis will be on the idea your eighth grader is "arguing," and on providing strong support for that argument. Students will also be learning how to logically organize and develop their own ideas and how to write in a way that demonstrates an understanding of their audience, such as selecting an appropriate style and tone. A good deal of attention will be paid to helping your teen develop a strong writing voice so that their personality comes across in their writing.
On the sentence level, your writer will be expected to pay greater attention to word choice, and to use several stylistic and poetic devices in their work. They will be expected to have a greater variety in sentence structure and be able to edit their work carefully to eliminate errors.
Rubrics will play an important and critical role in your teen's writing experience.
To handle this challenging schedule and curriculum, your eighth grader will need to have a good handle on their study skills. Your teen should be able to:
* manage time effectively
* listen effectively and take notes
* manage projects
* solve problems
These skills are not an official part of the curriculum - that is, they probably won't be specifically taught in any class - but they will be reinforced across the curriculum.
As you can see, eighth grade is a unique, transitional year for your adolescent, whose curriculum will challenge them to use their developing reasoning skills. It is important for your teen to manage time well and develop and maintain strong study skills. Don't be surprised if they experience some growing pains this year as they face new, more difficult subject matter and approaches; they may need a little more time to develop their abstract thinking skills and may need extra support as they learn how to approach problems systematically.
You can help your teen through these difficult times and stay involved throughout the school year.
- adapted from What Your 8th Grader Is Learning in School
-Kathleen Flynn, 08.29.2009