Sunday, March 10, 2019

Friends vs Friendly, Free Markets and Five Day Weeks

The first day back from a vacation can be a challenge. Waking up to an alarm, refocusing attention and being aware of others all come back into play. And the same is probably true for students! This year I've been using those first days back to work on light-lifting, low stress but teachable lessons on empathy, kindness and reestablishing relationships. We did our improv work after summer vacation to work on our listening skills, after the holiday break we worked on the kindness pledge and this time around we did some direct instruction on empathy. I used a lesson from Tolerance.org to help. I explained to my students that you can be friendly to anyone and that doesn't mean you have to be friends. Before we got to the role-playing part we focused on the 3 keys to developing empathy- 1) Put yourself in an empathetic mindset. 2) Be an active listener. 3) When following up, ask "you questions" rather than making "I statements". Students role-played different situations and worked on their empathy skills. We closed with a whole group circle exit task where we shared out big takeaways and things we could go out into the day practicing that show empathetic thinking.


From there we started our unit on economics. Economics is tricky because there are so many unit specific vocabulary words. I gave kids a handout that we used some literacy strategies to read aloud, take notes on and then answer some comprehension questions around. I explained that the goal wasn't vocab mastery but starting to familiarize with terms like producer,  consumer, market economy, supply & demand, etc. Friday we read a Newsela article on the different types of economies in the world. Newsela is great because it allows students to adjust the reading level of the article, highlight words, and take a check-in at the end to make sure they understand what they just read. From the teacher dashboard I can see what reading level each student selected and what words they highlighted. I asked them in particular this time to highlight words in red that they still didn't know so I can build a vocab wall in the room. The big piece of understanding students needed was to learn what resources are being talked about when describing the market of a certain country. Starting tomorrow, students will pick a country from anywhere in the world and research their markets with the goal being to make a claim as to whether they are capitalist, communist or socialist markets by the end of the week.

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