Celebrating National Pi Day (Slice 15 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

Last year I finally remembered on 3/14 to celebrate National Pi Day.  My math class did some exploration to discover this ratio so that they would remember what pi represents when working with circles.  Then I gave them a slice of pie.  It was so fun and I vowed to remember every year in the future so that I could highlight this ratio and make it memorable for my students.

This year I almost forgot.  Thank goodness for Facebook!  One of my friends shared this hilarious cartoon earlier this week and I was reminded and started planning the festivities.

My schedule on Thursdays is kind of crazy because my principal wanted all of our middle school level teachers to be able to meet at least once a week.  My students have a morning full of specials and so we end up with a lot shorter math class on this day.  I decided that this would not be the time to celebrate pi day so I came up with another plan.  
I wanted to incorporate this celebration into my afternoon schedule which had the added benefit of reaching more students.  In the afternoon, I have three Language Arts classes.  Looking at the March writing lesson of the month from Corbett Harrison, I discovered his writing notebook activity for Pi day.  So, yesterday my students and I ate pie and wrote pi poems.  Lately, I have tried a few poem formats with my students and have found it to be accessible and fun for all students.  (There were a few groans at first when poetry was mentioned, but they quickly realized that it was something they could do) 

This day of poem writing was another fun day and there is always room for pie!

Book and Bookmark Swap (Slice 14 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

This month I participated in the first book and bookmark swap sponsored by Jen and Kellee at Teach Mentor Texts.  We signed up to participate and filled out a survey about our favorite books.  Then we were given a name and we bought a book and a bookmark for our partner.

The theme for this first swap: Your favorite book or a book you think everyone should read.  I sent The Book Thief to my partner because I think that is a book that absolutely everyone needs to read.  The style of that book is so unique and it is a story that everyone should hear.

When my package arrived in the mail, I was super excited.  It was so fun to have that surprise and to get to open a box with my new book and bookmark.

Here is what was inside:

I LOVE IT!  Seraphina is one of the books that was at the top of my wish list!  I can’t wait to read this book.  And the bookmark is perfect too!  Jane Austen is my favorite author and I love the quote.  A huge thank you to Cindy Minnich for the book and the bookmark.  
I can’t wait for the next book and bookmark swap.  I hope everyone received some great books!  

Cookie Butter (Slice 13 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

Today for my writing time I decided to try an ode to a common thing.  I am trying to introduce my students to more poetry forms and came across the lesson on odes in my copy of Lessons that Change Writers by Nancie Atwell.  She uses some of Pablo Nerudas poems to have students try this form and write poems about ordinary things.

My poem is really rough.  I was just trying this out and wanted to play with the ode.  It is by no means finished and will be a work in progress for a while to come.  I am glad I tried this because it is a lot harder than I thought it would be.

Ode to Cookie Butter

You tantalize me with
your gingery excellence.
One swipe of you on my bread
and I am rapturous with delight.
How can I ever have lived
without this amazing spread.
As your flavor sticks
to the roof of my mouth,
I contemplate how best
to use you next.
An apple, perhaps
will be the receptacle
to receive your velvety
delicious
sugar taste.
You hail from Trader Joe’s
What magnificent creature
first dreamt of you
and worked
to make your sweet perfection?
As I bite into your luscious
goodness my mind starts to wander
and I wonder
how it was possible
that I never bought you before.

Obviously, as I said before, this poem is still very rough.  I think I will bring this in to my classroom and show students my first attempts and then work on revising it in front of them.  I am envisioning a class shared writing experience: Ode to Takis.

We had such fun with false apology poems.  I hope we can play with this form and have fun also.

Positive Vibes (Slice 12 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

Top Ten Reasons I feel awesome today:

1.  My lesson about the short story “The Lady and the Tiger” by Frank Stockton rocked today because of the pre-reading strategies I used yesterday.  The students were totally loving the story and excited about the fact that they got to choose the ending.

2.  Seeing the DVD of The Outsiders sitting on my desk, my students were totally excited about the possibility of watching this movie.  We just finished reading the book and I am planning to watch the movie and have them analyze the way the director and actors interpreted the book.  I can’t wait to have them do this to evaluate their integration of knowledge and ideas.

3.  Then we talked about how the pile of Romeo and Juliet was sitting on the table waiting for us.  I had multiple students SUPER EXCITED about reading this play. I LOVE this!  Holy cow, where did these readers come from?  Oh yeah, I have been using the unprogram this year…

4.  This week I started to use the idea of “sacred writing time” from Corbett Harrison on The Writing Fix website.  I bought his bingo cards and handed out the March one and told students they could write about what they wanted to write about or a topic from the card.  Almost all of my students were writing!

5.  We started a unit about symmetry today.  The students feel confident about this concept.  I loved the positive vibes about the math unit.

6.  I started my Technology Study Hall after school today which will include both a book club group and a creative writing group.  We had a lot of fun together!

7.  I got a bunch of literature group sets of books today.  There was a grant last year that the school ordered books with and we had not had this set of books yet.  I am so excited to have this awesome set of books to choose from for literature circles.  
8.  I went to my favorite beer bar tonight and talked to one of my fav bartenders.  He suggested one of the best beers I have had lately.  YUM!!!
9.  I went to my favorite Mexican restaurant tonight.  They all know us there and we have a great time. Such good food for dinner!  
10.  The best is that I saw one of my students at the restaurant and she went out of her way to say hello.  I love that I am a teacher that most students like to say hello to outside of school.  I love that my students know that I am a person and that I don’t live at school.  
I had a great day today and I am excited to have another great day tomorrow!  

It’s Monday! What are you reading? 3/11 (Slice 11)

I am doubling up on posts today.

Every week I participate in the It’s Monday meme which is hosted by Jen and Kellee at Teach Mentor Texts. It’s a chance to take a step back and reflect on what I have been reading this week and to think about my plans for the week to come.

I also am participating in the Slice of Life challenge this month hosted by Ruth and Stacey at  Two Writing Teachers.  In this challenge, I am writing a blog post every day in March.

This week was a slow reading week for me because I had report cards due and was trying to catch up with grading.  I also have been doing more writing with the Slice of Life challenge and some of my reading time was spent reading blogs and commenting.

Books I Finished This Week:

I finished Prodigy by Marie Lu earlier this week.  I actually stayed up too late to finish it because I had to find out what would happen to Day and June.  I liked this book better than Legend and after that ending I cannot wait until the third book comes out.  I am so intrigued by the world in this series and it will be interesting to see what happens next.

Finnikin of the Rock is an amazing fantasy adventure book.  I absolutely loved the characters and the original story.  I was surprised that it was definitely a book for high school readers.  I don’t know why I expected a more middle grade book, but I was pleasantly surprised.  I would definitely recommend this one to high school students and adults alike.  It is a book about how people can survive and hold on to hope even in the most dire circumstances.

Books I am Currently Reading:

I picked up Teach like Your Hair’s on Fire and started reading it this afternoon while waiting for my computer to load.  It seems like it will be a quick read so I will most likely keep reading it this week.  I also started Engaging Readers and Writers with Inquiry by Jeffrey Wilhelm.  I like his ideas and I am excited to read more.  I also am still listening to and loving The Night Circus.

Books I will read this week:

I think I will start Mexican Whiteboy tonight.  Next up on the list will be Hard Love and then Unwind.  I also have a huge pile of books that I just got from Scholastic which includes a number of treasures and award-winning books from this year.  I hope there will be more time for reading this week so that I can continue to whittle down the to-read pile.

Ownership (slice 10 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

This week at school was a strange week.  There wasn’t anything concrete that I could point out as being the reason, it just was an odd week at school.

On Friday, we were up to business as usual when one of my students came back to the classroom from an errand and informed me that the hallway display was falling and should he fix it?  So he took a stapler, some tacks, and tape out to the hallway and did his best.

Now, this display is really not the best.  I cobbled it together and did not probably take the time needed to make it look great, but I really wanted to have the students display their reading somehow.  We talked about it and worked out together what they might do and I left it to their creativity to give me some sort of display.  It is one that I am not very proud of, because not everybody participated and we don’t have all the books represented.  I do think the students who did add to the display did an excellent job and there are some amazing things there.

I didn’t think the kids were all that proud of it either until Friday.  After this boy proceeded to fix the display, it stayed up for the rest of the day without an issue.  The problem is that all I have in the hallway are cork strips so there isn’t much support for this big paper.  At the end of the day, as students were lining up to leave, I saw another student stapling the top of the display back to the cork strip.

Now, I was perplexed.  What was it about this display that made students care if it was up or falling?  Aren’t they the same students that will walk past posters that fall without a care?  What is the difference?  And then, it dawned on me that these students had ownership of this display.  It is a compilation of the work of multiple students and they helped me decide what it would look like.

What a good reminder for myself about the power of belonging and having some say in the classroom.  I will be thinking about this as I plan for the week.

Books, Books, and More Books (Slice 9 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

I just got home from Half Price Books where I bought this book stack:

Although all of these books were in the clearance section and I got a fabulous deal, I really had no business buying more books.  I think I might have a problem.  Is there a book-lovers anonymous to help me with this book addiction?

The reason I should not be buying more books is the fact that I already have waaayyyy too many books on my to-read shelves.  Yes, that’s right it is plural.  These are my to-read shelves at home:

This one only has books on 2 of the shelves

This one is stacked full of books that I have yet to read.  

This does not include the dozens of books that I want to read in my classroom or the ones I have stored on my Kindle (must stop looking at the daily deals).  I seriously need to stop spending money on books for a while.  This year, with the addition of Twitter into my life, I have become even more of a book nerd than I used to be.  Now I know all the titles on the clearance shelf at Half Price Books, and I want to buy the whole warehouse at Scholastic sales.  The worst of it is that somewhere along the way, I converted my husband into a book nerd too.  (This isn’t really a bad thing it just stops us from having the voice of reason when it comes to book buying.  He is on a graphic novel kick right now and our collection is growing steadily)

So I am starting it now.  No more book buying.  Hello, my name is Andrea and I am a book addict.  It has been an hour since I bought my last book.  Where is the twelve step program and the support network for me?

Friday Night Fun (Slice 8 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

Today I went out with my husband.  We have a favorite bar in our neighborhood that is an awesome beer bar.  They have been named in the top 100 beer bars in the United States in multiple magazines.

This bar is Sugar Maple in Milwaukee, WI.  The bar has 62 craft beers on tap.  Because of our patronage at this bar, I have become a beer snob.  What I love best are the bartenders that we know well.  It is fun to catch up with Josh and Rob when we go there.  It kind of feels like Cheers to us at this point.  Woo-hoo for friendly places with excellent beer!

The next stop for us was our favorite restaurant in the city.  This is an authentic Mexican restaurant with the best Mexican food I have ever had.  If you are ever in Milwaukee, you should visit Guanajuato Restaurant in Bay View (or GTO as the locals call it).  I had some amazing enchiladas tonight, but everything I have tried on their menu has been awesome.

I came home tonight ready to take the night off.  I have spent all week working on grades and tomorrow I need to finish with report cards.  I enjoyed the night off with my husband and now it is time to read…

Middle School Readers (Slice 7 of 31)

This post is a part of the Slice of Life challenge which is hosted on the Two Writing Teachers blog.  The month of March the challenge is to write a blog post a day.

In a middle school classroom, one can never quite know what to expect.  I can make plans and work to follow them, but life sometimes throws in curveballs.

Yesterday was one of those days.  Brainstorming at lunch we came up with the possibility that maybe it was crazy because kids thought they were going to have a snow day and then they didn’t.  It felt like a full moon day with the crazy antics of the students and things just not quite right.

My morning was quickly interrupted by a group of girls trying to discover what was happening and how a rumor had started.  One girl was crying because the rumor was about her and made her boyfriend mad at her.  Three girls were angry at the girl who started the rumors.  That girl was retaliating because she thought the other girl had shared a secret of hers.  Luckily, I have 8th graders this year that can use their brains and do not resort to fighting right away.  This is not always the case in an urban school.  Oh, and this was supposed to be reading time.

In the midst of high drama in the hallway, I stood back and took a look at my classroom.  It is not easy to inspire adolescents to be readers.  Many come into the classroom with the idea that reading is for nerds and that they hate to read.  While I may not get every single one of them to be the voracious reader that I am, I can inspire them to give books a chance.  Many of my students have read their first book ever this year.  And all of them have at least 10 books under their belt at this point in the school year, many are closer to 25 or 30 books read.  Yesterday, when I really needed to have some peace and calm, I got it at independent reading time.  Every one of my readers in the classroom is reading a book they enjoy.  This was a time to savor the place I had created with my students this year.

It is always so calming to step back and observe the positive.  It is tempting, on a day when there is drama and crazy kid behavior, to dwell on the challenges that I have and the lack of motivation that students seem to have and the negative attitudes about school that they bring.

Yesterday, I focused on Estefany and felt better.  Estefany is a student that came into my classroom thinking that reading was boring.  She is a second language learner so reading has always been difficult for her.  This year, I worked hard with her to find books that she would enjoy.  We started out with easy books.  She read all of the Franny K Stein series even though she knew they were for younger kids.  Then she burned through Babymouse and enjoyed Dear Dumb Diary books.  One day she came into school with the book Bobby Vs. Girls by Lisa Yee.  “Ms. Payan you have to read this book.  It is SO GOOD!” she exclaimed.  So naturally, I took the book home and read it.  Then, Estefany wrote to Lisa Yee on Goodreads and got a reply.  The reaction was epic (as the 8th graders like to say).  This author was a rock star in her eyes!  She had been steadily reading multiple books at a pretty good pace until about a month ago.  That is when she discovered the Maximum Ride series.  Estefany went from reader to READER in the blink of an eye.  She read the entire series in a week and then went on to burn through the Witch and Wizard series, Graceling, Entwined, Cinder, Shadow and Matched.  The moment I knew that this girl was now a book nerd was when I heard her friend one morning.  “Are you CRAZY?” yelled her friend, who usually is a very quiet girl.  “She stayed up until 3 in the morning reading!”  Oops! I created a monster.  Estefany and I talked about how I understood this need to finish a book, but perhaps a school night was not the best time to do this.  She promised she wouldn’t do it again and we went about our day.  This is the kind of data that I think people should be paying attention to.  This reader will improve and has already improved in her reading.  If I had given her any one of the books in the list at the beginning of this school year, she would not have been able to read it. This is a success story and this is what I focus on when things start getting nuts in the classroom.

There are other stories like this one in my classroom this year, but none so dramatic a change.  In  a time when their lives are volatile and everything seems unsteady, I am glad I can give my middle school students an outlet and a chance to live vicariously through characters in books.  Even though life in a middle school classroom keeps me on my toes, I willingly dodge the obstacles so that I might inspire them to become READERS.

Review: Grave Mercy

Title: Grave Mercy
Author: Robin LaFevers

Publication: April 3, 2012

Source: Kindle Book

Goodreads Summary:
Seventeen-year-old Ismae escapes from the brutality of an arranged marriage into the sanctuary of the convent of St. Mortain, where the sisters still serve the gods of old. Here she learns that the god of Death Himself has blessed her with dangerous gifts—and a violent destiny. If she chooses to stay at the convent, she will be trained as an assassin and serve as a handmaiden to Death. To claim her new life, she must destroy the lives of others.

Ismae’s most important assignment takes her straight into the high court of Brittany—where she finds herself woefully under prepared—not only for the deadly games of intrigue and treason, but for the impossible choices she must make. For how can she deliver Death’s vengeance upon a target who, against her will, has stolen her heart?

My Thoughts:
This book was amazing.  I was sucked into the story from the first page and enjoyed the book immensely.  Ismae is such a believable and strong character.  The web of intrigue surrounding her is very difficult to navigate and this makes for a very interesting plot.  I found myself unsure of who could be trusted as Ismae worked to uncover the plots against the Duchess.  The love story was subtle and did not overshadow the real action but was enough to make me happy for Ismae.  What I loved most about this book was the strong female character who learned to question the authorities in her life and follow her own path.  I liked how there is a subtle message about conforming to something that doesn’t feel right to you.  I cannot wait to read the next book in the His Fair Assassin series.  I hope all the women are as strong as Ismae in this amazing world that has been built by Robin LaFevers.  
5 of 5 stars