My musings about life in the classroom. From the reliever/ supply/ substitute point of view. There will be thoughts, opinions (entirely my own) and work and resources I've created or found useful in my day-to-day classroom practice.
Showing posts with label reading&reflection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading&reflection. Show all posts
Storybox Guided Reading Program Smarty Pants
Stories by Joy Cowley (author)
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
I came across an awesome display in a school I was at the other day.
The students (Y0-2) Had shared this big book. They then drew some 'smarty pants of their own onto an A3 paper and painted them.
The teacher took their pictures and they placed their own torso on top of their smarty pants. The whole class was displayed but we're just going to have to make do with this blurred out photo I took. I will certainly be having a go myself later in the term if I can find the book at MY school. Let me know, by leaving a comment, if you've done something similar.
Boy
oh Boy,
published by Pearson Education Australia, is authored by Dr Tim Hawkes.
That 'Hopeless expression' maybe one of the catchphrases in the novel but for a
boy to not despair then hope needs to reside somewhere.Boys need hope. When things go wrong, mistakes
are made and even justifiable blame is apportioned boys still need hope.
“What is also important is that
having suggested the blame and diagnosed the origin of the problem, the boy
must be left feeling he is valued, safe and possessed of the necessary skill
and inclination to avoid the mistake again.”
Dr Tim Hawkes
So what drives a boy to learn?
He must beencouraged
to learn.
Believe in a future that requires learning.
Believe in his teachers.
But what discourages learning, beyond the opposite of the
aforementioned?
It is the boy’s self-esteem. Or there lack of. If a boy is
continually told he has behavioural issues or his thoughts and ideas are
substandard then this will foster a negative self-image, which in term hinders
long term self-esteem; which will prevent the brain from furthering knowledge
and understanding.
Parents, caregivers and teachers must give as much
affirmation as possible but Dr Tim Hawkes warns against ungrounded optimism or
care-free praising as the boy will see through it eventually and no longer lean
on that person’s judgement again.
In short we must blame boys where blame is true and
necessary. We give boys a hope and future for improvement and growth.
Boy oh Boy, published by Pearson Education Australia, is authored by Dr Tim Hawkes.
This
book is a practical and entertaining resource for those who wish to
understand the needs of boys and how best to meet those needs. Using a
refreshing mix of common sense and scholarly research, Boy oh Boy gives hope and inspiration to those interested in helping boys.
Over
the coming weeks I will be reflecting here on my reading of this
publication. I am not intending on copying large sections out but will
identify, through quotes, a few ideas it may raise and then I will seek
to comment upon it in light of my own practise and the boarder context
of the schools I am working in.
Boy oh Boy
In the introduction Hawkes seeks to highlight the importance of a quality teacher. The list is as follows:
A quality teacher can:
laugh with a boy.
paint a great picture in the mind of a boy.
growl while still maintaining a sense that the boy is valued.
My reflection
There
has been a shift in this post-feminist world where boys should not act
out. That they should know there place and continuously maintain a
proper and right demeanour. However, I am of the opinion that there is a
certain amount of 'boys will be boys' that should be seen as just that.
I'm not saying that it should be the excuse for poor behaviour,
rudeness or acts of violence. But each action should be seen in the
context of the peer group the boy exists in.
A
push is not merely a push. Depending on the context it could reflect a
boy's frustration with continues verbal abuse. It could the roughness of
friends playing together. It could be a single act within a hundred
that is part of the pattern of bullying. Context is everything. I
believe that we need to understand the lives of boys and boyhood as best
we can to become better teachers.
Can we laugh with a boy? Are we permitted?
How can we 'paint great pictures in our boys' minds?
And
growling? So often we do this to dominate, thinking that boys need to
know submission but really they are needing to be respected. The
behaviour needs to distanced for the person. So the boy can see the
behaviour not as a fundamental floor in their personality but rather
something that can be addressed and corrected.