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Recent articles from our "Of Particular Interest" feature are archived here. Some links will change over time as providers update their websites. If you'd like some help resolving a broken link, send us a copy of the complete entry in an e-mail and we'll see if we can find it for you! Use our Google search to find key words of interest to you.


NEW TEACHERS: STUDENTS BEHAVE WHEN TEACHERS ENGAGE
Anthony Cody began his teaching career in inner-city Oakland CA almost 20 years ago. It was a rough first year in his middle school, with many lesson preps. "My credential program had not really dealt much with behavior issues. The idea was to deliver a rich curriculum, and the management would take care of itself. If you are already teaching, you know this does not always work." After floundering the first year or two, he got some good advice from down the hall that he shares in this Teacher Magazine article. Follow his tips as a new teacher and you won't have to way a year or two to establish a harmonious classroom environment!

BLOG: THE TWEEN TEACHER
The latest entry in this excellent blog by CA teacher Heather Wolpert-Gawron begins: "I've been developing this Top 10 list of ways to take control of your teaching even in the face of, well, teaching. It's an advice list on how to encourage respect, and, if necessary, how to demand it as a means to make sure you aren't being taken for granted. Let's face it, if you are feeling appreciated, you will be happier in this difficult job. Consequently, your students will be happier, and quite frankly, if they are happier, they will be more successful." Check out Heather's Top 10 list, then explore her blog entries by category to find teacher resources, curriculum ideas, and reviews and policy reflections. Plenty here for novices and veterans alike. As she writes in her bio, "Teaching middle schoolers is like working with a herd of wild fillies. You have to rein 'em in and give them slack, rein 'em in and give them slack."

PRINT THIS OUT AND TAKE IT TO THE SHORE
In a truly thought-provoking article in the latest issue of Atlantic magazine, Nicholas Carr asks, "Is Google making us stupid?" Is everyone becoming a player in the Short Attention Span Theatre? "I'm not thinking the way I used to think," he writes. "I can feel it most strongly when I'm reading -- my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages. I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do." Read in short snatches. Smile.

SEVEN SECRETS OF STUDENT LEARNING
A recent “practice guide” from the federal National Center for Education Research distills what its panel of scholarly authors believe are seven of the best research-based instructional strategies teachers can use to improve student learning. The publication, Organizing Instruction and Study to Improve Student Learning (2007), follows a protocol developed in the health sciences which presents problem-solutions that are coherent, actionable, and well-supported by research in a concise guide for practitioners. In this instance, the guide offers “some of the most important concrete and applicable principles to emerge from research on learning and memory.”

UPDATE: RESOURCES FOR NEW TEACHERS
We've begun our summer update of MiddleWeb's resource collection for novice teachers (and teachers new to middle school). The latest additions include a series of “Teaching Secrets” and “Best Practice” articles authored by members of the Teacher Leaders Network and published at the Teacher Magazine website. You'll also find the best stuff from previous years, like the rough (but wholly engaging) transcript of a five-day conversation between newbies and master middle grades teacher/author Rick Wormeli. Of course there are plenty of Harry Wong links, including a direct jump to an EIGHT-YEAR index of Wong columns on successful teaching practice, for rookies and veterans alike.

THE PROBLEM WITH GIRLS AND SCIENCE
Technology teacher Laura Reasoner Jones has been organizing middle school GEMS (girls excelling in math and science) Clubs in her Virginia school district for many years -- even during the days when she was a pre-school teacher specializing in home visits. In a new feature article for Threshold magazine, Jones draws on her GEMS experience and her current work to make the case that educators are backsliding when it comes to preparing girls for STEM careers. “Younger teachers and parents feel that gender equity was resolved in the previous decades, and there are no longer any problems. As a result, society seems to have swung back to a pink and blue division…. The world has quietly divided again, and it continues to show in the academic choices girls make.” Download this PDF to see Jones' action recommendations and many supplementary resources, including a list of “what works.”

WIKI ROLES FOR STUDENT PROJECTS
Our pal Bill Ferriter is back with more useful tips on using Web 2.0 in your classrooms. This time he's sharing some of his own (hard-earned) ideas about managing classroom wiki projects. Bill begins with an observation about the the most famous wiki of all -- Wikipedia. “While some members will edit pages thousands of times and make significant changes in both content and structure, most will only make a few contributions every now and then.” If teachers leave their own wiki projects to chance, Bill says, “that same unbalanced participation pattern becomes evident.” That's fine for informal activities, but “I've found that when using wikis as a group project to assess learning, middle schoolers need a set of specific tasks. Sometimes, shared participation is more important to me than individual exploration.” To help you along this digital road, Bill describes the student roles he plans to implement in future wiki projects. If you like what you read, leave him a comment.

TAKING TEXT-MESSAGING LINGO TO TASK
Some teachers aren't waiting for text messaging to destroy literacy as we know it, says this story in Edutopia, part of a special package of new articles on the Digital Learner (see the scroll box on the right side of the page). The story highlights MW friend Cindi Rigsbee, a middle school literacy specialist, who talks about her response when e-messaging shortcuts begin to show up in student work. The article includes several examples of how other teachers are using the text-messaging trend to engage students in unlikely content (Shakespeare, for example), or to augment learning with cell phones and Twitter. One glaring omission in the article is a link to Rigsbee's Teacher Magazine essay in which she describes some of her specific strategies (ignoring a competitor?). We can correct that

PARENT INVOLVEMENT WORTH $1000 PER PUPIL?
Researchers using national data from more than 10,000 eighth-grade students in public and private schools, their parents, teachers, and school administrators conclude that “students do much better in school when their parents are actively involved in their education.” Not startled? How about this: “Parental effort is consistently associated with higher levels of achievement, and the magnitude of the effect of parental effort is substantial,” one researcher said. “We found that schools would need to increase per-pupil spending by more than $1,000 in order to achieve the same results that are gained with parental involvement.” Here's a direct link to the complete study (PDF).

UPDATE: MIDDLE SCHOOL BLOGS
If you've been waiting for time to begin exploring middle grades blogs -- and now have some -- here's a place to get started. We've updated our listing of middle school blogs on the Diaries page of our website. You'll find some great teacher writing and thinking at these links. You'll want to add a few to your list of favorites. No list? We've also included resources to help you set up a notification system that will alert you when your favorite blogs have new posts. If you'd like to add your own blog to our page, feel free to send us a note. But be sure your blog is well enough established to show you mean to stick with it.

MIDDLE SCHOOLERS WEIGH IN ON ACHIEVEMENT GAP
Principal Keven MacDonald started the Achievement Gap Club at Smedberg Middle School two years ago. "I came in with six binders of research and threw them on the floor," he says. "I said to the students, 'These experts don't have the answers. The gap has existed for 50 years. Why don't you tell me what we need to do?'" Thirty 7th and 8th graders continue to meet twice a month to discuss gaps in test scores among various student subgroups, why the gaps might exist, and how they might be addressed. Last year, says this story in the Sacramento Bee, "the students also made a video in which they and their teachers talked frankly about expectations, stereotypes, cultural differences and the achievement gap." Over time, MacDonald says, the club has become a "trust zone" where students are comfortable talking openly about their experiences with race and school.

REWIND: 25 IDEAS FOR BETTER BOOK REPORTS
This feature at the Education World website was originally inspired by some discussion in the MiddleWeb chat group (now NMSA's MiddleTalk), way back in 2001. So it has a nice middle school spin and plenty of teacher-tested ideas. Best of all, the EW editors have continued to freshen the material and update the links (most recently in March 2008). Ready to energize your book report assignments? This page has plenty of juice!

RESEARCH: WHEN IS MULTI-MODAL MOST EFFECTIVE?
According to a new research review commissioned by Cisco Systems, interactive learning doesn't ALWAYS trump the more passive "sit and get" approach to absorbing content. The Metri Group found that: "When learning basic skills, the average student's scores increase with multimodal learning. But the increase is greater — 21 percentile points — when the lesson isn't interactive. (Scores increase 9 percentile points when it is interactive.) When it comes to acquiring more ADVANCED skills, however, the situation is reversed: The average student's scores increase 32 percentile points with multimodal interactive lessons, compared with 20 points with noninteractive lessons."

CROSS-CURRICULAR RESOURCE: TURNING THE PAGES
With the widespread digitization of nearly everything, "many iconic treasures in the (world's) print collections...are now available online in high-quality reproductions that anyone can closely examine and virtually handle," says Douglas Cruickshank. A prime example is the British Museum's "Turning the Pages" website, where visitors can peruse (and read essays about) documents ranging from the Magna Carta to Lewis Carroll's original hand-illustrated Alice's Adventures Under Ground (audio included). Or how about Mozart's Musical Diary with audio clips of the composer's handwritten notations? These 3-D books have pages that really turn, and the variety is astounding. Teachers of science, art, mathematics (da Vinci's notebook!), as well as history and literature, will find items that can entice and engage students. Teachers can visit the Library's learning homepage for ideas about curriculum application. (Requires free Adobe Shockwave) Here's another DeVinci geometry item.

THE FACTS ABOUT FACS TEACHERS
Teacher Magazine blogger Susan Graham teaches Family and Consumer Science at a Virginia middle school, where her students discover a lot about the world as well as the home. In this recent entry, "Don't Be Too Quick to Label Me," the National Board certified teacher gives us a glimpse of accomplished teaching in a setting that invites a rich blend of hands-on learning and higher order thinking.

COLLABORATIVE TEACHING BRINGS CREATIVITY BACK
"Like many of our education colleagues around the country, we have struggled with the constraints brought on by the federal No Child Left Behind Act," write the teacher co-authors of TeamWork: Setting the Standard for Collaborative Teaching Grades 5-9 in this recent Education Week essay. "Like several of our fellow teachers, we viewed the law's directives as threats likely to suck every shred of imagination out of our instruction. But as we persisted in our work, we discovered that we could meet the challenges posed by the law with a powerful tool...collaborative teaching. In fact, we now believe that working together creatively is the only way to meet the ambitious goals of NCLB and state and district standards." (Requires free registration)

MATH AND TECHNOLOGY -- A STRONG MARRIAGE?
The National Mathematics Advisory Panel thinks so. The panel's recent recommendations include more use of digital tools in math instruction. This article at Edutopia summarizes the panel's advice and describes how some math teachers are already putting technology to work in their classrooms.

ARE THEY READY FOR MIDDLE SCHOOL?
Teachers are "expected to ease the transition of students from elementary to middle school," says this recent article in Scholastic Instructor. "But if you're an elementary teacher, you may not know what kids will be facing in middle school, and if you're a middle school teacher, you aren't always aware of what skills incoming students have already mastered (or not, as the case may be)." The article should promote useful discussion among middle grades teachers or (dare we suggest?) between a middle school and its elementary feeders. Our favorite section: What middle schoolers wished teachers had known when they arrived at your door. Our favorite tip (for elementary teachers): Never say, "Just wait until you get to middle school."

MICROSCOPE IMAGING AT THE EXPLORATORIUM
The Internet Scout Report loves San Francisco's Exploratorium— and so do we. One of the hands-on museum's most popular features is the Microscope Imaging Station. If you're not likely to make a field trip to the City by the Bay in the near future, the next best thing is this website where students and teachers can examine high-resolution images captured by research-grade microscopes. The Scout Report recommends starting in the Features or Gallery section to view images of animal cells and cellular activities. Then visit the Activities area for classroom ideas, printable flipbooks, and very cool desktop wallpaper (that's the background, not the screen saver). A zebrafish eyeball, anyone? Human red blood cells?

WHAT URBAN PARENTS THINK
A new report from the National School Boards Association, What We Think, examines the results of a recent large-scale survey of parents whose children attend urban schools. More than 10,000 parents (30% were males) from 17 states answered the survey, which gauged their perceptions about bullying; expectations of student success; influence of race; parental involvement; safety; and trust, respect, and the ethos of caring. Major findings are crisply presented in a five-page executive summary, followed by three pages of recommendations for schools. The report begins with a truism sometimes overlooked: "As previous participants in the system, (parents') views seem to transcend what may be current practice. Nonetheless, perception is reality. If they perceive the schools as open, respectful environments, they will interact with them accordingly. Conversely, if they perceive schools to be closed, disrespectful environments, they will respond as befitting this view." This observation is reinforced in a pair of "mentor" columns at Teacher Magazine, Here's PartI and Part II.

MIDDLE SCHOOLERS HAVE A SAY
Like farming, videography is persistent, slow, and steady work. A group of students at Vermont's Cabot Middle School have learned a lot about both farming and fliming as part of a statewide curriculum-based project called Lights, Camera...Leadership!. When their film "Farmers Have a Say" premiered at a packed public meeting, one student told the audience, "I learned that farmers do the work they do because they like to, not to make money." Students and teachers in eight Vermont towns are making documentary films that capture important stories about their rural communities. They use primary sources to study an issue from past, present and future perspectives, then synthesize their findings through the video development process. Most important, perhaps, they then organize and host a community premiere followed by student-led discussion groups. This story at the What Kids Can Do website describes how both students and teachers learn through this project-based approach to education.

SCIENCE FOR REAL LIFE
"Middle level science curricula should integrate science with students' lives and communities," reads the teaser on this article from the May 2008 edition of Principal Leadership magazine. The article would work well as an stimulator for team, department or schoolwide discussions about the quality of your science program. The focus, as you might guess, has as much to do with "content-specific pedagogy" as it does with curriculum content. There's a self-assessment tool that encourages schools and individual teachers to examine their beliefs and practices about science instruction. Another template offers a "Five E's Lesson Plan Format," based on stages of inquiry (two levels of engagement, exploration, and two levels of explanation). The author, Elizabeth Hammerman, is also co-author of Differentiated Instructional Strategies for Science K-8 (Corwin, 2008).

BACK TO THE CLASSROOM -- AND LOVIN' IT
Need a little booster here at the end of the traditional school year? We were inspired by the reflections of middle school literacy coach Kathie Marshall who, after six years of coaching, aged 61, is returning to full-time classroom teaching. As a "mature" teacher with limited energy reserves, she knows there's plenty of hard work ahead. "The saving grace for me, though, is the fact that I actually find middle school students energizing. Crazy, hormonal, silly, vexing, incessant, yes, but energizing nonetheless."

A POETRY FLIPCHART
Our friends at Stenhouse are inviting teachers to take a free flip through their new poetry flipchart, The Poetry Experience, which they believe will help students and teachers collaborate "to create a fun, word-rich, poem-filled environment." The 32-page flipbook includes an overview of genres and techniques, top 10 lists of favorite poems by grade range and genre, and strategies for writing, reading, and responding to all forms of poetry. It's all there for the viewing (but not printing - you'll need to take notes). Folks who decide to buy the book ($10) will like the reproducible masters, including a poetry timetable, 10 questions to ask about any poem, an observation checklist for teachers, and a personal poetry inventory for students.

THE CHALK TALK STRATEGY
Some of you may be familiar with the "Chalk Talk" technique. If not, it's a silent way to generate ideas, develop projects, check on learning, solve problems, or reflect. It's done completely in silence and allows students to interact visibly and directly with ideas and silently with each other. This detailed description from the League of Professional Schools (MS Word file) says it encourages thoughtful contemplation, generates questions and ideas, and gives students a change of pace. It can also be used with adults and "has been known to solve vexing problems, surprise everyone with how much is collectively known about something, get an entire project planned, or give a committee everything it needs to know with no verbal sparring." It comes highly recommended to us by a top-notch teacher.

THE TEACHING PENALTY
Lots of teachers (and principals) are talking about this new report from the Economic Policy Institute. In an environment where the recruitment and retention of highly skilled teachers is becoming a "high stakes" issue, are teacher salaries sufficient to attract and hold the best graduates into teaching careers? EPI says no. The Institute's researchers conclude that public school teachers "earn considerably less than comparably educated and experienced people, and less than people in occupations with similar educational and skill requirements."

HELPING STUDENTS REMEMBER
Marilee Sprenger, the author of "How to Teach So Students Remember," works with schools on using brain-based teaching strategies and memory research in the classroom. In this interview with ASCD's Education Update, Sprenger advocates making the seven steps in the memory/learning cycle explicit to students. "I believe that the more a student knows about how she learns, the better learner she may be. I always teach my students about how their brains work, how memory works, and how to get information into long-term memory in a retrievable fashion." For more discussion of recent research on memory and the recall of information, see this Wired magazine article, SuperMemo.

REFRAMING BULLYING IN MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Do we expect bullying from adolescents? Are they brutish, evil, aggressive, and immoral, as some media stories and anti-bullying programs might lead us to believe? Middle school principal Sarah Shulkind thinks it's time "we stopped pointing fingers at adolescents and look instead at the culture that has produced rampant cruelty in many public middle and high school." Shulkind points to overcrowded, poorly maintained schools and zero-tolerance policies that can leave students feeling anonymous and imprisoned. She shares the story of Dillon, the coolest boy in the 8th grade, to press her pragmatic point that "brutish or tender -- we get the behavior we expect. It's all in the messages we send, the attitudes we display, and the expectations we communicate." (Education Week - free registration)

MATH FOCAL POINTS
There's a new series of Explore in Depth mathematics resources at the NSDL Middle School Portal. Grades 5, 6 and 7 are already available and grade 8 should appear soon. Terry Herrera, who taught math in both middle and high school, writes these publications, which tie NCTM's new curriculum focal points to supportive resources on the Web. In Grade 7, for example, we find the focal point: "Developing an understanding of and applying proportionality, including similarity," followed by annotated links to engaging problems that deal with ratio, in the concrete as well as the abstract. One activity has students working hands-on with online images that make visual the abstractions of ratio and percentage. A high-quality resource developed by math educators at Ohio State University.

GRADING: SHOULD IT BE DIFFERENTIATED?
Middle grades teacher Deidre Grode is ASCD'S Outstanding Young Educator for 2008 — recognized for her focus on student community service and global citizenship. In a recent entry at the ASCD Community Blog, Grode (who teaches social studies and language arts in New Jersey) reflects on two workshops she attended at the recent ASCD national conference. Both pushed her thinking about formative assessment and led her to pose this question: "How much can we differentiate student to student...when it comes to something as objective as grading?" She'd like to have your input, so leave a comment. It's simple to do!

GRADING: DO RECIPES REALLY WORK?
Speaking of talented young teachers who are puzzling through the mysteries of grading, let me introduce you to Ariel Sacks, a new blogger for the Teacher Leaders Network. She poses some challenging questions for herself and others when she writes: "Today, testing has been thrust into the position of Single Most Important Measure of Student Learning in the life of a school, and I'm wondering, what kind of assessment would I put in its place? Would I prefer to rely instead on my own classroom grading system? If not, what is its purpose? And what am I really grading?" Ariel has the creeping notion that "grading recipes," which she and many other teachers use, are "a totally inadequate measure of student learning." Her thoughtful reflections have already produced a slew of comments. Add some more!

COPYRIGHTS AND WRONGS
"I don't think most teachers willingly ignore copyright issues," says David Ensign, a professor of law at the University of Louisville, in Kentucky. "But I do think many have the impression that any use of material in education is fair use." Not so, says Ensign. This short article from Edutopia magazine highlights the legal nuances of fair use of Web materials. Suffice it to say: Downloader, beware. But not to leave YOU with a downer — here's one terrific source of photography (over 40 million images) that can be used without acquiring specific permission, thanks to Creative Commons agreements.

FRESH IDEAS ABOUT TEACHING STUDENTS TO EDIT
Teacher-author Jeff Anderson says he's been in quite a few classrooms where teachers who do great stuff with writer's workshop and craft lessons get out the spoon and the bottle of castor oil when it's time to work on editing and grammar. "In the classic daily oral language drill, a teacher puts up a sentence filled with errors and students shout out all the things that are wrong with it." What messages are student's taking away from all this examination of bad patterns, he wonders? In this 45-minute webcast at the Stenhouse Publishers website, Anderson talks with a teacher audience about a different strategy involving the use of "wonderful mentor sentences" that students are invited to analyze and imitate. It's easy to watch the webcast, all at once or in segments, and you don't need special software—just your browser.

THE BIOLOGY CORNER
This teacher-built site comes recommended by The Scout Report for its wealth of lesson plans, useful handouts, lab ideas, and other classroom activities. Science educator Shannan Muskopf also has a master's in technology ed and has included webquest ideas and other digital enhancements she's adapted from the Web (see, for example, the guppy simulation). Another site worth visiting, which includes complimentary references to Muskopf, is MY SCIENCE BOX, subtitled "hands-on science curriculum for the adventurous teacher." The boxes contain kid-tested 4-6 week middle school science units built around activities, projects, and field trips.

SUCCESSFUL CLASSROOM BLOGGING
This week we point you to two resources that can help teachers and students turn classroom blogging into meaningful learning. The first (link above) comes from OPI regular Bill Ferriter, who answers the question: "How much emphasis should be put on maintaining a higher level of spelling and grammar while still encouraging students to be active users of the blog?" Bill, who teaches sixth grade, begins by cautioning teachers not to blog for blogging's sake. Instead, "decide what exactly it is that you want students to accomplish with a blogging project before you even begin." Bill includes a link to his wiki about teaching with web tools, which he's compiling for a book project. We're also pointing you toward a new article from Educators eZine titled "Student and Teacher Blogs that Succeed." Canadian educator Dean Shareski begins with the intriguing observation that "blogging is way more about reading than it is writing."

ENERGIZE YOUR TEACHING CAREER
As teachers advance in their careers and increase their effectiveness, how do they continue to grow professionally and find personal satisfaction? You'll find fuel for thought about 'Energizing Your Career' in Teacher Magazine's new print periodical, the Teacher Professional Development Sourcebook. Among the offerings are articles about school-based coaching roles, new-teacher support, online professional development, and revitalizing your classroom practice. There's a good interview with teacher-author Coleen Armstrong who offers practical ideas for teachers suffering from mid-career doldrums. We also spotted some excellent tips aimed at helping teachers and school teams avoid Professional Learning Community burnout, written by Friend of MiddleWeb Anne Jolly, a middle school science teacher turned PLC coach.

LIFE IN THE ROMAN REPUBLIC
You'll find several excellent articles about life in the Roman Empire at this website developed by author Judith Geary, in connection with her YA historical novel Getorix: The Eagle and The Bull."The free articles include topics like "Republican Roman Names" and "Big Changes in Ancient Rome." Geary teachers at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina. Here's a detailed review of the novel.

NEW TEACHER HELPLINE
Let's say you're a newbie who's nearing the end of your first year, and you still have questions -- maybe even some doubts about your future in the classroom. You might want to grab a few minutes (hard as that can be) and check out Scholastic's "New Teacher Helpline." We see a lot of teacher discussion boards around the Web and find that most are unfocused or undependable (you ask a question and then keep checking back in vain for an answer). The Scholastic board seems to be well populated, with responses coming both from other visitors and from a savvy moderator who is also a full-time teacher. The range of participants is K-12, but heavier on the K-8 end. For a sample, take a look at this recent post by "Bad Teacher" and the replies.

BULLYING: STORIES OF US
Here's a university-supported anti-bullying initiative known (in shorthand) as Stories of Us. The video series and supporting materials have been developed in partnership with middle grades students -- an unusual and effective idea. NASSP's Patti Kinney offers this catchy testimonial: "The storylines and dialogue are that of the students and it is so realistic that I felt at times I was reviewing a surveillance tape instead of watching a scripted drama unfold in front of me." This site worth a visit, whether or not you're in the market for a structured program to address bullying and promote positive peer relationships. You can read synopses of the videos, watch several sizeable excerpts, and peruse commentaries by two dozen students involved in the project.

INTEGRATING LA AND SS WITH WEB 2.0
We've mentioned sixth grade teacher Bill Ferriter enough times to send him an invoice for public relations work. But hey, the guy is good -- as evidenced by this recent Edutopia feature highlighting his Web 2.0 teaching strategies. The story provides a fulsome description of the innovative work Bill and his kids are doing the free web tool Voicethread. What's that? "VoiceThreads might best be described as interactive media albums," the article explains. "They are essentially online slide shows of images, documents, or videos that enable viewers to comment on any slide (or at any point in the video) by typing, recording an audio or video comment, or drawing on the image itself." Read the story and find out how Bill is using this tool (and others) to integrate his language arts and social studies instruction.

LITERATURE CIRCLES RESOURCE CENTER
Developed by the co-author of Getting Started with Literature Circles and Literature Circles in Middle School, this resource center at Seattle University includes plenty of ideas about ways to fit the literature circle concept into a balanced literacy curriculum in the middle grades. There's a wealth of material to explore, so we propose that you start (as the creators suggest) by clicking on "How to Use This Site." If you want to go straight to a middle school example, visit this page.

BLOG: THE DREAM TEACHER
We're becoming big fans of The Dream Teacher, a blog written by NC middle grades educator Cindi Rigsbee, who brings a warm voice and a sharp, self-critical eye to her musings about the public school teaching life. Rigsbee, who has twice been named a North Carolina regional teacher of the year, is currently a reading specialist at Gravelly Hill MS, but her blogging is less about literacy than "the teaching life." Introduce yourself to her fine writing style by clicking on March and reading "Other People's Children," where Cindi reminds us that a few thoughtfully spoken words can change the whole parent-teacher dynamic.

EARTH SCIENCE: PROJECT CENTERED TEACHING
We'll stretch the definition of middle school to include 9th grade today. Sakhalin Finnie teaches science to freshmen at the Harbor Teacher Preparation Academy, in Wilmington CA (part of the Los Angeles Unified School District). A former chemical engineer, she was recently named one of Edutopia's "Daring Dozen" for 2008. Her kids won the district earth science challenge this year with a 10-week project that fit nicely into the geo-dynamics of their local terrain. Finnie's students designed an emergency earthquake plan for the home, complete with emergency kit. They also created an illustrated newspaper that "tells someone who doesn't know anything about earth science" all about earthquakes, volcanoes, and plate tectonics just how they're all related. The kids clinched their contest victory with a five-minute earthquake safety commercial, presented in the form of a rap song. Kind of a feet-on project.

STUDENTS: "WHAT HELPS US LEARN"
Here's the last in a series of articles from the What Kids Can Do organization drawn from their new book Fires in the Middle School Bathroom. In this segment, middle schoolers talk about what teachers and schools can do to help them grow into confident learners. You will likely nod your head and say, "Yes, schools should be doing these things." Earlier book excerpts cover topics from "what makes us tick" to fair grading practices and school lunch. The book would be a good addition to your professional library. You can find out more about it here (it's about $16.50 at Amazon).

GRANT WIGGINS' BIG IDEAS
Now here's a treat -- a site that features articles by Grant Wiggins (Understanding by Design) and his associates on effective teaching and learning strategies. It's called "Big Ideas," and there's lots of interesting stuff on grading, curriculum design, report cards, effective feedback, and other topics familiar to those who follow Wiggins' work. Also (and maybe this should be our headline) there's a link to another Wiggins website, THE FACULTY ROOM, which features a dozen bloggers selected by Wiggins and his staff. Every couple of weeks, Wiggins poses a big-tent question and the diverse crew of bloggers post their thoughts on the issue. Readers can add their two cents by commenting on the blog entries -- and many do. The result is lots of high-quality content. Recent topics explore whether teachers should assign homework and why, whether teaching is overrated as a profession, whether should we be grouping students, and much, much more. What a great idea!

NANCY YI FAN — A WRITING INSPIRATION
There's much that might interest and inspire young writers at the Nancy Yi Fan website. Last year, at age 14, HarperCollins published Fan's first fantasy novel Swordbird, which reached the New York Times childrens' bestseller list. Her new book Sword Quest is a prequel, as she explains in an interesting podcast that students will enjoy. You'll find a link to the podcast on Fan's website, along with lots of other interesting material, from video interviews (Martha Stewart, Today Show) to Fan's tips for middle school writers. There's even a Halloween story she wrote in fifth grade. In the Young Writers' Chatroom, kids can post reviews of Fan's books, talk about their own writing ideas, and jump to a blog she kept during her recent US book tour. Also see this story about Fan on Jackie Chan's website. Nancy arrived in America in 2000 speaking no English. "Who could imagine that only six years later she would become a published author — in her second language!"

INCLUSION: A MARRIAGE MADE IN MATH CLASS
The daily ASCD SmartBrief newsletter featured this essay from Teacher Magazine last week, with the headline: "Teacher Collaboration Makes Inclusion Work." It's a wonderful article by longtime MiddleWeb contributor Laurie Wasserman. Laurie, a special education teacher, and her colleague Craig who teaches 'regular' students, decided to experiment and co-teach an inclusionary Connected Math class. The results were good, test scores went up, and they'll be doing it again next year (along with the rest of their school!). The essay includes lots of info about their collaboration and why they think it worked. Laurie teaches sixth graders in Medford, MA on the outskirts of Boston.

KIDS MAKING HISTORY WITH PHOTOSTORY (ETC)
This new article at Edutopia describes how students are using Microsoft's free PhotoStory and other digital software like Google Maps and CommunityWalk to create reports in history, geography and other content classes. "The collaborative environment of the Web is especially conducive to creating place-based digital-storytelling projects," the article says. "These projects can teach kids about such subjects as social studies or literature using digital tools -- maps and timelines, for instance -- that will develop a relationship between narrative and history, time and place." And the software tools are easy to use. Really! The Edutopia story includes comments from talented teacher Brenda Dyck, who is an editor at MidLink magazine and tech integration columnist for NMSA's Middle Ground. You can visit some of her projects, if you're looking for a bit of inspiration.

PODCAST: LEADING AN URBAN MIDDLE SCHOOL
What does it take to lead an inner-city middle school? James Dierke, an NASSP Middle Level Principal of the Year, talks about his work at Visitacion Valley MS in San Francisco in this podcast. Dierke is interviewed by Patti Kinney, another national principal of the year who now leads NASSP's Center for Middle Level Leadership. The interview, recorded in March 2008, is about 20 minutes long and can be heard online by clicking the link above. To download to iTunes, visit this page. While you're there, check out other interviews in the series, including a chat with famed "What Works" author Robert Marzano about the research on effective instructional support.

SCHOOL TUBE
Okay, we're loving the new website SchoolTube! You know about YouTube (the better and the worse), and you may have visited TeacherTube, where teachers share multimedia materials with colleagues. SchoolTube has some similarities but puts a special emphasis on student-made products. As the promo material states: "SchoolTube is for educators who want to share approved videos nationwide; empower students and encourage creativity; join recognized leaders in video broadcasting; access lesson plans and helpful classroom information, and encourage students to compete in moderated competitions." Click on the Help button in the top navigation bar to learn more about the hows and whys — including why it's safe. There are tips on unblocking SchoolTube on your school's network and instructions on how to share videos from your own school.

TUNE INTO WEATHER CHANNEL RESOURCES
The Weather Channel Kids website has plenty to interest young students of meteorology. Start here at the teacher resources page to reach standards-based lesson plans for Gr. 6-10 in several categories, including Forecast Earth, Weather Classroom and Weather Ready (safety). The educator resources are "by teachers for teachers" and are prepared with environmental and earth science curriculum objectives in mind.

TIERED MATH & SCIENCE ASSESSMENTS
Geoffrey Smith, middle level principal at Jakarta (Indonesia) International School, points us to the website Challenge by Choice in Middle School. JIS teacher Dave Suarez shares a tiered approach to teaching "extremely diverse" student groups. Suarez hopes other MS teachers will contribute their own ideas. At the page titled "Tiered Instruction and Assessment," you'll find Suarez's rationale for (and results of) differentiating for diverse readiness levels. In his model, students are given the responsibility for determining their own readiness for assignments at various challenge levels. A series of videos demonstrates how this works in actual classrooms. You'll also find examples of math and science units and assessments "tiered by challenge."   

QUICK RESOURCE: PERSUASIVE WRITING
A recent issue of Classroom Tools and Tips (from EduHound) pulls together a nice collection of web resources about persuasive writing. You'll find basic principles, lesson plans and activities, and several strategies to involve students in writing editorials and other opinion pieces.

 

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