Saturday, September 21, 2019

Reflecting on the first few weeks

I am having so much fun!

This is a great group of kids, the energy is so positive, I'm really enjoying these first weeks. In my homeroom, our advisory has been amazing. Kids willing to take risks, work hard to get to know new people and be leaders in our school. I have really enjoyed our new schedule, which allows us to have advisory first thing on Monday mornings. While, of course, I'd love advisory every day- having it to start the week has been a great change which really helps set the tone for a positive week.

In Social Studies I'm having an equally positive time. I'm trying a new routine where on Mondays when we "single block" our focus is on Current Events and Culture & Diversity. The students have seem to really respond! They have been engaged in the news of the world around them and this past Monday we focused on them getting to know their own culture better. We'll start doing a project on that next month. Hopefully we'll give this a whole new meaning!

In our Tuesday-Friday work we've been doing our school-wide Social Studies curriculum around Peace One Day. Students have been researching peacemakers and working on making a claim as to why that person is a great peacemaker. I have loved watching learners dig deep into their own opinions as to why so many great people in history have worked for peace. The message of peace from these peacemakers has really inspired many students to become change makers themselves. Many students have created their own statements of peace.

One of favorite things to the start of this year has been my literature group, or should I say groups! I have a large group (we all do in fairness because my team does not have any interns this year.) So when I saw that I was taking 17 students, I have the idea to split the group into 2 groups and use some student designed curriculum to help manage it. I'm blown away by how serious they have been in deciding on the two books (The Great Trouble and A Girl Named Disaster), and pacing their groups. They have set their own reading schedule as a group, hold their own book talks during class, checking in on each other if they've done the reading, and have shared so many great ideas when thinking about their research projects for this. What an awesome group of students.

I have so many more thoughts, but I don't want to write a super long post today. In personal news, I'm honored to be have been elected the next president of VAMLE (Vermont Association for Middle Level Education). I will spend this year as the president-elect before starting a 3 year term next school year. I'm nervous but excited for this chapter of my professional growth. I'm in year 2 of my National Board candidacy, I'm presenting at the AMLE national conference in November and I'm one of the leaders for re-writing the VAMLE/Middles Grades Collaborative document, Middle School is Not a Building. I'm very excited to see version 2.0 get edited, and republished over the next few months!