Students often ask: “Do I really have to read the whole novel from cover to cover?” And the answer is: NO! Join us in this interactive workshop to explore how to design a student-centered novel study that will work for all types of learners. Participants in this workshop will practice a variety of strategies that will engage students in deep analysis of sections of meaningful text, while giving them the tool to discuss larger ideas presented throughout the entire novel. We will examine how these targeted learning experiences provide students with a specific purpose for reading when they are working with the novel on their own. Participants will walk away with a toolbox stuffed with planners, possible learning experiences, and authentic assessments. At the end of this workshop, teachers will be able to plan for an interactive novel study that supports all learners using any text.
90% of the English language is derived from Latin roots and each individual word part is used in an average of 20 words! If you teach a handful of word parts a week, students will have access to over a 1,000 words by the end of the year! This interactive workshop will have participants rethink the way they teach words in any content. Using the ARCS method, participants will be deconstructing complex words and determining meaning from context clues and word parts. Participants will have the opportunity to design similar activities with words from their own curriculum that they can use in their classroom.
In our rural slice of education, we are building relationships through our building relationships. Seven years ago a major shift occurred in our building and the new administration was tasked with changing building culture. Through extensive effort and data collection to identify needs progress had consistently been made with staff culture. Student culture continued to suffer, namely due to acting out behaviors and lack of parent support and/or follow through, which left staff culture on a plateau and also impacted student’s academic achievement. Through the challenges of a high poverty, drug use, and domestic violence school district we have chosen to implement a people-first model each day of the 2023-2024 school year focusing on touches of our humans each and every day. Every student and adult has a “touch” or interaction from the principals at some point throughout the day, 500 humans daily. These “touches” head off challenges before they ever get a chance to fester and grow into problems. These types of interactions take time management, care, thoughtfulness, grace, and humility. Ultimately, you solve problems by making connections, being proactive, and fostering great relationships through communication.
May educators are inundated with data without a clear vision of which data is useful for what. This session will address how to make the most of your data by identifying the appropriate purposes for each type of data and how to use the information effectively to suit those purposes. Participants will learn about the work being done in multiple districts to streamline data interpretation and implement processes for effective data use.
This presentation will explore our journey at Olympia Middle School as we examined the critical link between student attendance, positive discipline practices, and a successful learning environment. By fostering high attendance rates and implementing effective discipline strategies that focus on restorative practices, schools can create an atmosphere conducive to academic achievement and social-emotional well-being. This presentation will address the challenges faced in both areas and offer practical strategies for teachers, counselor, and administrators who are invested in improving student outcomes.