Wednesday, 24 February 2016

It's a small world

IFor the past 6 weeks we have studied a range of countries. We studied Canada, Italy, Australia, Japan, the Polar Regions and of course New Zealand. The topic started off by identifying the oceans and continents.

We began with Canada. I introduced children to a variety of books that I had borrowed from the library. We talked about what we notice is different compared to Oman. During this lesson a child pointed out the totem poles - this lead quite nicely into our art activity. We began by looking at the symbolism behind the poles and what influences the designs. The children then had to decide what they would put on their pole.


Our next country was Italy. For Italy we looked at the food they eat their, pizza being a main dish. We were pretty excited because we got to go on a class trip to a pizza restaurant called Pizza Express. From a teachers point of view I was very impressed with the trip, the staff were super organised and the kids were really engaged. We began by having a kitchen tour and seeing all the food storage and prep areas. We then learnt how to roll out our dough - children all got their own pizza pan and dough. Next they taught us how to spread the sauce and finally we were given a range of toppings to put on. The pizzas were all cooked and the children spent the next 20 minutes enjoying their creations. (The trip was a good set up for the weeks learning).
The next day we wrote instructions on how to make pizza - all children were able to do this with limited teacher input. We also made pizza art on paper plates and adding the 'topping' in the form of paper that was used. This then led into a math focus of fractions which children could grasp easily with the visual clue of the pizza.




For Australia we began by writing down questions for our Head of Primary who is from Tasmania. We had him  come and interviewed him to find out the information needed to answer our questions. Some of the funniest questions from grade 1 were: "Do you have pencils in Australia?" "Do you have cars in Australia?"
We then looked at the Aboriginal people of Australia and explored some of their art and the meaning behind it. We had a go a trying to create our own aboriginal art and they turned out really great.


Our next country was Japan. In literacy we focused on story retell. We watched a short film called Sleeping Dragon. I paused it just before the boy opens the well. Children then had to decide if they would or wouldn't open the well and why. I had a screen shot of this bit where children had to draw a though bubble to show what they would do. Following this we shared our ideas and then watched the rest. The following couple of lessons we retold the story using sequencing words. To finish we made some Japanese blossom trees which turned out awesome.






My favourite country was next. I introduced children to the Maori culture and we looked at the language and art. To begin the week we made the feathered headdress like the Maori wear. We then looked at the different art, we compared this to the Aboriginal art. Children had a go at creating koru which they did really well. I then taught them how to count to 10 which they were good out - the pronunciation tripped a few Arabic speaking learners up. During this week we also began learning about mammal, fish, birds, amphibians and reptiles. For this we talked about what characteristics each animal has. I then gave mixed ability groups a variety of cards and they had to decide which animal it was.
To finish this week we had a whole school International Day. In the morning we had a massive parade where each country walked around the field to their national anthem while every one else cheered. The next block was class visits. Children went with their class teaching assistant to other classes to learn about their country they had studied. I did NZ in my class. I started off by showing them a video of the NZ landscape (I think most chn now think NZers live in hobbit houses). I then played the Haka and we then had a go at learning it.






Finally we finished the unit looking at the polar regions. This was mainly animal focused as animals were our science focus. I gave children a variety of print outs on their animal and in mixed ability groups they had to look through the information and answer their questions. We created little animal drawings and children had to draw on their previous learning to label them. Children then created their own booklets with the information they had found out about their animal.





In maths we have been learning about place value and then money. Money was difficult to teach at first because it was penny and pound which is not what we have in NZ. I told the kids this though and they loved learning with me. I also allowed the children to bring money from their home countries which was awesome. We had money from Egypt, Morocco, India, Pakistan, Europe, Algeria, Serbia, UAE and Oman. I had a little shop which I set up in the class and the children loved using the play money to buy things.



To complete this unit we had an open classroom where parents were given the opportunity to come in and see the work that their child has done so far. This was led by the kids and was great.




Our next topic is The Giants Garden.

Monday, 23 November 2015

Transport

Our topic for the last 4-5 weeks has been transport. 

My first lesson was discussing what mode of transport go on land, sea or air. We did this together and then the children had to do their own.
Funny story - I drew the mountains green on the board and the kids got very confused as we don't have green mountains in Oman 😊

We have had a big focus on the character Mrs Armitage who has a bike and over time adds crazy things to it. We created our own Mrs Armitage stories where children had to create a story plan of what they would like on their bike and then turn this into their own story.

As a class we made a big brainstorm of all the modes of transport we knew. One of our discussions was to group the types of transport into categories. Children discovered they could in more than one category and there was many ways that transport can be grouped. It also started the discussion of how do we know it is a type of transport.

We have created some super art work this week with the transport theme. We looked at hot air balloons as transport and then we made these - this idea is from another teacher. 
First we painted the back ground and then on another piece of paper we covered it with tissue paper, this was either hot or cold colour or children could mix. We then cut our tissue paper out in the shape of a ballon and glued it in. Below is the final outcome.

We have looked at parts of a car and labeled these.



I have had my observations by my grade co-ordinator and head of primary and both were very good so I am pleased to have done them.

One thing I have been missing is my maths modelling books and my white board teaching table!!!! I have just recently set up a maths learning journal. In this I put my class modelling and it is referred to at the beginning of each lesson and accessible for all the children during the whole maths lesson. 






In maths we have been working on shapes, fractions, doubles and halves. I quite like teaching maths as the children do not differ hugely in ability and it is quite hands on learning.


In literacy I run what I would call reading rotation. I allow 45 minutes per day for this and I aim to read with 2 groups and work with a phonics group while my teaching assistant reads 1:1 with a group and takes a phonics group. The rest of the children are doing completely independent activities and these include:
- bingo
- play dough words
- read to self
- phonics games
- chalk words
- white board words
- library reading 






Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Pirates

At school we teach through themes. These are generally around 5-6 weeks long and all learning (maths, reading and writing is linked into the theme).

We started off with Pirates - I didn't take as many photos of our learning as I would have liked but I have a few. We had the head of primary come and drop of a letter that a pirate had delivered to him on the beach. It was a cool hook and the kids loved it. We split off into house colour and went on a treasure hunt around school. 

We made pirate hats - following instructions!

We wrote instructions - how to dress like a pirate.

We learnt poems and had a go at re-writing our own.


We made wanted posters for some pirates who had stolen some money.

To top it off we dressed up as pirates and had a fun game making maps, hunting for treasure and playing dress ups.


During pirates we also learnt about the 5 senses. The first week we learnt what they were and made and labelled Mr Potato Head.


The first week we went on a listening walk. We listened to the story the listening walk on YouTube first. We went and lay down on the basketball court for 5 minutes, then the corridor for 5 and then the classroom. We made a list of all the things we could hear.

Sight we played eye spy and spot the difference. We talked about what is used to help sight etc. 

Smell...I can't remember (we smelt something but not sure what it was - I'll add it when I do).

Taste we had a variety of food - sweet jam, bitter chocolate and sour lemons. The facial expressions when eating the lemons was halirious.

Touch I set up 7 stations in the class for the kids to touch, feel and explore. We had: 
- play dough 
- gloop (oobleck)
- cooked pasta
- ice
- shaving foam
- jelly
- dish liquid

The kids had a blast getting all messy!
















Setting up a classroom in an International School - The Middle East

Below are some pictures to start with - add into the factor that the temperature has not reached below 30 degrees yet!
Muscat International School

Before of my class

After

The children

Classroom door

Playground

Greenfield with artificial grass

Basketball court


Computer room


Library

During the first week of  being in Muscat we were getting the class set up and learning the way of the school etc. 

The first 1-2 weeks of school we're getting. The know the kids so lots of games and free play. I had 22 on my roll but this went up to 24 within the first week, my roll has remained at 24 but has the potential to go to 25.





During the first few weeks we had to identify children who were EAL learners and Special Ed chn. I have children on both of these rolls and identifying these children was not something I have had to previous do so this was an experience in itself. The identified students go to specialised teachers 1-2 per week.

I also very quickly got use to the idea of students going to Arabic, Islamic and Physical Education all of which are taught by another teacher. During this non-contact time I complete marking or planning. Below is my timetable (blue is my teaching time and orange is non-contact time.

I have duty once a week which has been hard because it is so hot but the children generally play well together in the playground.

In grade 1 there are 4 teachers so we doing all our planning together which makes life a lot easier and it is nice having the ideas from others. 

Settling in has been good, but I have missed my old class and the fact that they knew all the routines etc (I know with time my class will get there).

A big challenge in Muscat and not just the classroom is remembering not to compare it to home. It isn't the same country, expectations are different, the people are different etc.

Monday, 22 June 2015

Week 5-9

It has been a long time since I have made a post. Over the last wee while I have had the Year 3 students come back into my class and over the last two weeks I have had 3 new students join. I have found some challenges in going from 7 students up to 15 (even though this isn't a huge number the learning differences are rather large). I can now say that my programme is running much smoother after having made several adjustments.

Reading was quite easy as my Year 3s knew my expectations and how Daily 5 works in Room 6 so that was easy. The 3 new students were buddied up to Room 6 classmates so they have picked this up fast. I currently have 6 reading groups and ensure I read with 4 groups each day.

Writing has been a bit harder to manage as there have been so many needs in my class. I had an observation by my principal and together we decided to just bring it back to the basics and just focus on one thing at a time. So that I am not overwhelmed and students are not overwhelmed. Each lesson I have a whole class focus (this changes each day) and then I work with one group only per day.

Maths has been going good. I run my maths similar to Daily 5 where children are in their rotation and I just pull them out depending on their needs. I have had to adjust activities to meet students with higher or lower needs.


Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Week 3/4, term 2

I have had a busy start to the week. We have had a re-jig in our school to even out class sizes etc. So I am now teaching a Year 1-3 class which I am pretty pleased about because I was struggling a little to get conversation flowing with only 7 students.

Over the last two days I have spent time reintegrating the Year 3's into the class and going through what is expected, routines etc. They have picked it up fairly quick as it was only a term ago that they were doing it.

In writing my goal was to have children verbalising what they are learning and their next steps. My Year 2s, and some Year 1s can, however I will need to work on this with my Year 3's. I have created a visual set of posters similar to the butterfly lifecycle which I plan to have them using tomorrow. I also was working in allowing time at the end of a lesson for reflection. Which I have done a couple of times but need to make sure I do it more often.

For reading we have been making use of the word wall and I have noticed my students also using it a lot during writing which is awesome to see. My next step in reading is to develop some independent activities for my Year 3 students that aren't to easy.

For maths my focus was to have students practicing their basic facts each day which I have achieved - wahoo. My goal for the next 2-3 weeks is to get my maths programme running smoothly with 5 extra students who have a range of learning needs.

Monday, 4 May 2015

Week 1/2, term 2

We have had a great start to term 2.

My goals at the end of term 1 were:

  • Writing - to have students being able to voice what they are learning, how they will know that they can do it and their next steps. 
  • Reading - to add follow up activities after chn have read with me.
  • Maths - complete an inquiry/stick to it.
So far in writing I am doing well. We have a great collaborative teachers facebook page that has heaps of awesome ideas. My principal 'tagged' me in one that had visual cues for writers. I printed this out the next day and put it on my wall. It is super easy to understand and my students know exactly what they are learning and where to next - so I can tick that one off.

My focus for week 3-4 is to ensure I allow time for reflection at the end of each writing lesson. I use to do this well and it makes it easier that we visualisers.

On reflecting on my end of term reading goal I don't think it is necessary for me to change this as I do the Daily 5 programme and this has heaps of follow up activities that the kids learn from. My focus for week 3 is to make use of the word wall and ensure I or a buddy goes through cards with the kids.

In math I have been doing whole class teaching of measurement. However I have gathered my data and made a range of basic fact games to do with children. Today I set aside 5 minutes after maths calendar for my target students to play the game. My goal is to have students play their basic facts game everyday for the next 3 weeks.