Monday, January 1, 2024

Book Blitz and #OneWord2024

 Happy New Year!

The last blog post of 2023 was all about running out of steam and being rather tired. Since then, I've been indulging in self-care while still attempting to get things done. I sleep in until 10:00 am, which means it's either so dark and gloomy outside that I'm not getting the cue to wake up, or I'm still exhausted. 

One of the big things on my To Do list is to read all of the 2024 Forest of Reading nominees before I launch the program at my school in January. Later on in this post, I want to give a single-sentence-shoutout to many of the authors of books I've read so far during this holiday. It's related a bit to my new One Word focus.

These are the past One Word goals of mine:

2016 = continue

2017 = forgive

2018 = seek

2019 = enough

2020 = push

2021 = well

2022 = watch

2023 = lift

I was rather pleased with how my 2023 word played out over the past 365 days. On December 30, 2022, I deadlifted 205 lbs. Nearly a year later, on December 27, 2023, I broke that record of mine and deadlifted 220 lbs.


(Thank you to all the people on Facebook that liked and commented on the related post.) That fit my "looks like / sounds like / feels like" description from last January. I have continued to go to the gym and increase my weights. I have promoted the work of others (and will continue to do so, especially at the upcoming OLA Super Conference 2024). I fulfilled my 2023 travel dream and I used my written and spoken words to lift others up.

So, what's this year's word goal? How does it fit with the second half of this post?

I toyed with several words (like stabilize and believe) but the word that just seemed to fit for 2024 partly came from my daughter. She holds two jobs and her second position is as a food critic writer for BlogTO. Her visits to different local restaurants have expanded our culinary horizons and given us more meal options, to the dismay of my wallet! She works hard to craft her restaurant reviews and ensure that each one accurately describes and promotes the dishes available at these various eateries. My word for 2024 sounds like a word you'd use to talk about food.

savor

As is my custom, I look up the word I select to check out all the different meanings. This comes from the Cambridge dictionary:

savor
verb T ]
 US (UK savour)
US 
 
/ˈseɪ.vɚ/
 UK 
 
/ˈseɪ.vər/
to enjoy food or an experience slowly, in order to enjoy it as much as possible:
It was the first chocolate he'd tasted for over a year, so he savored every mouthful.
Love the fact that you are alive and savor everything that life has to offer.

I always seem to be in a hurry, working under self-imposed or external deadlines. There's always "so much to do, and so little time". It can be a struggle for me to slow down, to "stop and smell the roses". I often tell my friends with young children that they should enjoy these years with their offspring, despite being so tiring and tumultuous, because they don't last long. It's time for me to practice what I preach. A long time ago, at a previous Super Conference, I wept after meeting an author of a book that encouraged us to all slow down. (I can't recall the name of the book or the author and this is vexing to m; I have the book at school so I'll post the title after January 8.) It's not just about slowing down, but enjoyment as well. Merriam-Webster includes the words "to give flavor to" / "to have experience of" / "to delight in" with their definition of "savor". My school board is very focused on "joy" and I think savoring is a joyful experience. (Look at me, tying in my School Improvement Plan to my One Word goal!) 😉

I will make my #OneWord2024 a reality by:

  • still making deadlines, but taking the time to recall, document, or appreciate the process of getting there and some of the fleeting moments that garner a smile (keep taking photos!)
  • travelling with my sister - we are going to Portugal in July 2024 together - this trip is inspired by comments my mother made years ago, when she expressed interest in flying with her own older sister (who used to say we were "descended from Portuguese pirates") to explore the region her ancestors came from before emigrating to Guyana. My mother has dementia and her sister is quite old and physically incapacitated, so we will undertake this voyage that the previous generation can no longer complete themselves
  • eating delicious food
  • attempting a return to a more prayerful spiritual life - the pandemic did some damage to my regular religious practices, including my daily prayers. I stopped saying grace before meals or reciting a rosary in the car on the way to work. A while back, my daughter reminded me of our bedtime rituals, which including picking the best part of the day, recalling it, and saying "and thank you Jesus for that"; reflecting in a manner like this may help me revive my flagging relationship with God and the church and savor/recognize all my blessings
  • appreciating nature more by pausing before I leave for work each morning to soak in the environment, making those land acknowledgements we do at school a bit more significant 
Back to those Forest of Reading books. I'm a quick reader, so I race through the titles so that I can be ready to chat with students in the new year. I still need to avoid dilly-dallying, but I did want to savor the reading experiences a bit, and I thought I'd do so by listing the books I've read so far and a positive comment or appreciation. I was going to do more, but this post is growing and growing, so I may need to alter my initial expectations with this "salute to authors"! ETA After a point, I stuck to just thank-you notes. This isn't an indication of how much I liked or disliked a book; I just wanted to ensure I mentioned all the Forest of Reading books I've read so far!


The Fort

by Gordon Korman

Gordon, congratulations on your 100th book published! 

I loved the references to the music and videos that the characters enjoyed while in their secret, special place, and how each of the main characters (Evan, Mitchell, C.J., Jason and newcomer Ricky) had issues but weren't defined by their issues. You use the shifting POV between chapters so effectively here!



Seekers of the Fox
by Kevin Sands

Kevin, all is forgiven for ending the first book of this series (Children of the Fox) on a cliff hanger!

The way that each chapter ends with a thrill that almost forces you to continue reading reminds me of the way Charles Dickens captivated his audience. I enjoy how "the Old Man" is still a influence in Callan's life and how the crew of thieves (Callan, Lachlan, Gareth, Foxtail and Meriel) care so much for each other and try hard to keep to their moral code. I plan on buying the final book in the series to read myself and then donate to my school library! (ETA - I bought the book already!)

Simon Sort of Says
by Erin Bow

How can a book about a serious subject also be so funny?

Erin, there are so many things I appreciate about this book.  A minor one but a plus for me was the way that Martin, Simon's dad and his work as a Catholic deacon was portrayed in the story. The stuff about the saints and people's responses to tragedy ... that was so accurate and real. I loved that all the characters (and not just the youth trio of Simon, Agate and Kevin) were portrayed, with no cardboard characters in sight. And yes, I cried.




Becoming Bionic and Other Ways Science is Making Us Super  
by Heather Camlot and illustrated by Victor Wong

Non-fiction books don't always grab me, but Heather and Victor, your book was intriguing enough, with a perfect mix of "I know that" information with "I never knew that" facts. I even read part of it out loud to my husband, who then went down a rabbit hole reading about Robert E. Cornish. Thanks for making my eldest smile with a call-out to Word Girl from the planet Lexicon.


The Journal of Anxious Izzy Parker by Alma Fullerton, illustrated by Beena Mistry

I just want to wrap Alma and Izzy up in a protective blanket. Knowing that Alma uses part of her own life experiences to inform and shape her books (like in Flipping Forward, Twisting Backward, dealing with dyslexia) makes her books even more meaningful and poignant. I'm so glad emotional support dogs (like Alma's Gibson, Izzy's Gandalf, and even Simon's Hercules from Simon Sort of Says) exist. 

Jude Saves the World

by Ronnie Riley

Ronnie, this is the first book I've read by you, but it won't be the last!

I love how joyful this book is. Just before reading it, I read a disturbing news article about current events in Gaza. This book was the perfect antidote to helping to diminish the horror that lodged in my head. Jude, Dallas, and Stevie are so gosh-darn likeable. I admired the absolutely brilliant way Ronnie deals with deadnaming in a way that protected and respected the character of Jude that I bet Alex Gino might envy. Clever solutions to problems too, Jude!

I've read these Forest of Reading nominees as well.

Thank you Hetxw'ms Gyetxw and Natasha Donovan for the Gitxsan perspective and beautiful artwork. 

Thank you Elizabeth Macloeod and Mike Deas - a fascinating book to read right now (some of us talked about this book and this article by Dr. Debbie Reese at the staff social).

Thank you George Paul and Loretta Gould for this three-language book about land, creativity, pain, and process.
Thank you Cathy Le Blanc, David Chapman, and Loretta Gould (such a prolific illustrator!) for providing such a clear example of Two-Eyed Seeing by teaching us about how the Mi'kmaw understand the seasons.
Thank you Nancy Vo for a funny and informative book (pigs have 12-14!) that a lot of people will want to read.
I met Lydia Lukidis at OLA Super Conference last year and have my own autographed copy of it. Lydia, thanks for the neat mix of poetry and science, and thank Juan Calle Velez for the gorgeous art.
Thank you Zain Bandali for showing that not all Muslims come from the Middle East (like my dear friend Parviz, who also comes from Tanzania), and to Jani Balakumar, for the expressive facial expressions, beautiful skin tones and fancy mehndi designs shown.
Thank you Linda Trinh for the multifaceted glimpse at a Vietnamese-Canadian household and illustrator Clayton Nguyen for the appealing pictures that connect the three siblings but also keep them unique.

Thank you Etta Kaner and Brittany Lane for the book that indeed kept me guessing (and some of my guesses were wrong) about what I was seeing and why they look the way they do.

Thank you Danny Ramadan and Anna Bron for a story with so many layers packed into such few pages. Don't give up, Salma! Don't destroy your drafts.
Thank you Peggy Janicki for sharing such a personally significant story (and for sewing those pockets into the UFV Indigenous grads). Thanks also to Carrielyn Victor for the evocative images.

Thank you Matt James for this tender tale that zig zags like the swimming path of those little creatures that live in puddles.
Thank you Michael Hutchinson for combining a mystery with some important teachings and learning about so many things, from dog sled races to trapping, from dealing with those with opposing viewpoints to the influence of land in our hearts and minds.
Thank you Nathan Fairbairn and Michele Assarasakorn for this graphic novel that has mass appeal. (We already had a copy in my school library and it's loved by comic fans, dog lovers, and readers who want stories about friendships.) 
Thank you Jon Klassen for giving me more questions than answers and a fantastic addition to the "librarians have superpowers" story.
Thank you Sara Alfageeh and Nadia Shammas for what can only be described as epic - one in which I enjoyed reading the end matter just as much as the main storyline.
Thank you A.T. Woodley and Mike Deas (another hard-working artist with more than one book on this list) for creating such a quirky fantasy, unlike any other I've read lately. I'll have to take photos of my eldest offspring's collection of stuffed octopi to celebrate getting to know Elliot's friend Octopus (and you can't forget Granny Yilba!).
Thank you Colleen Nelson for sharing your affection for a special place and making a great story about family, community, activism, and artistic expression.
Thank you Rachelle Delaney for a good mystery that also doubles as a useful reminder that grandparents have separate lives before becoming Grandma and Grandpa, and that grief expresses itself in different ways.


I still have 8 more books that I need to read before school starts up again. Appreciations in advance to all the creators. I'll get them done but I'll still try to savor my reading as much as I can.

Monday, December 25, 2023

Running Out of Steam

 Merry Christmas to those who celebrate! 

The last time Christmas Day fell on a Monday was in 2017. (Answers was able to tell me that since my birth in 1972, Christmas has been on a Monday eight times. Only two of those times have been while my blog was up and running, including today. I composed this blog on Saturday so I could focus on the holiday with my family.) 

I'm tired. I could definitely use the break.

One hint that my energy level was not up to its usual standard was our student council's door decoration contest. I wasn't too concerned because I thought only the classroom teachers would participate. Then I saw our ESL/music teacher and our French teacher with décor on the door and I started to sweat. What was I going to produce in a very short period of time? The student council declared that the theme was "Winter Wonderland" and even had judging criteria posted. 

This was my entry. Excuse the blurry first photo. The second photo gives you a better idea of the way I addressed the theme.



Thankfully, this effort was enough to put a smile on the faces of some of the adults and looks of puzzlement and intense concentration as some of the students tried to find the listed items on the door. I didn't win any of the prizes but the other doors were amazing. I was going to post the photos I took, but I realized that many of them have student faces as part of the decorations, so I can't.

This past week was filled with holiday singalongs, our staff social, a jazz quartet concert, games day, and PJ day. I was brave enough to try a Audience Reception Theory lesson involving the Grinch (see www.aml.ca for the synopsis) and foolish enough to attempt to give a social studies test to five classes on the last day of school. (Don't judge me - I needed the marks!) 

There are always extra duties and activities on top of the usual required tasks during these holidays. Even though I'm not a cook, a week or so ago, I prepared garlic pork, a traditional Christmas dish in my family of origin. 


Hubby and I also continued going to the gym three times a week. Last Saturday (December 16), we had a team challenge where we had to build a snowperson using equipment in the gym; we could only add a piece after complete 100 sets of a particular exercise. Here's a picture of our team's snowperson, plus some of the others from the 9:00 am and 10:00 am classes. (Our snowperson is completing a handstand push up, in case you wondered why he/she/they was upside-down.)






This week (December 23), we had a "12 Days of Christmas" themed workout, where, just like in the song, you had to return/revisit previously done exercises. For instance, in round 7, we completed

  • 7 wall balls
  • 6 push up
  • 5 ab-mat sit-ups
  • 4 toes-to-bar
  • 3 burpees
  • 2 ring dips
  • 1 rope climb
In round 8, we did 8 alternating hand dumbbell snatches, plus everything listed above. I only made it to 10 rounds before the time cut-off. I was relieved! These workouts tucker me out.

I'll leave it here for now. I have lots to do over the break (like preparing presentations, reading Forest of Reading books, and getting ready for report cards as well as the winter session of the York University TL AQs), but I will try to get some R&R in there as well.


Monday, December 18, 2023

Concert Completed - Post-Show Thoughts

 Wednesday, December 13, 2023 was our school concert. The afternoon and evening performances were the culmination of months of rehearsals and preparation. We continued some of the procedures we experimented with at our March 2023 concert and it went well.

I wish I could share more photos from the actual event, but there are too many faces to block out to make it suitable for sharing online. I hope this single shot that I've edited, originally taken by our wonderful French teacher, Mme Tran, gives you an idea of the energy emanating from the stage.


This photo is a scene from the 4-class mega-skit based on the improvisational game they love so much, Toy Store. This number had the potential to be a disaster because of all the moving parts, but it actually went quite well, thanks to the teachers helping to supervise backstage and the focus that most of the students had when performing. This was especially important during our matinee, because in the middle of their act, there was a medical emergency. It happened while the "toys" were frozen on stage, just before music started to indicate their dance. Thankfully, there was a paramedic in the audience and the situation was dealt with quickly. Still, our students stayed unmoving, waiting for their cue, for a lot longer than I thought they were capable of remaining still. We carried on with the show ("the show must go on") with most of the children unaware that something unexpected had occurred.

A lot of planning goes into a concert, but we weren't planned for something like this. We are so grateful that everyone was okay and no one seemed traumatized by the unforeseen event.


There are some reflections that are meant just for the concert committee (or even smaller subgroups). We had to make a last-minute alteration to one of the acts, which made sense but did induce some extra stress. Big thanks to those who were brave enough to notice and mention the potential issue, as well as to those who shifted their schedules and used their crafty construction skills to pull off the switch. 

The finale of our show was an incredible feat of organization and a powerful visual and sound experience for those who got to witness it in person. The entire school learned a song called "Let Love Light the Way" and they sang it all together in the gym as the last performance of the evening. Imagine seeing rows and rows of students, from ones that have only recently left their toddler years to ones entering their teen era, all singing in union the chorus:

So come walk with me / Sing along, and you'll see

On this holiday / Let love light the way

You'll need nothing more / Than those you adore

On this holiday / Let love light the way

This wasn't really a holiday concert, or even a winter concert. The focus was on the many ways that people show love. The families enjoyed the show and the students are still singing and humming the songs they learned.

I saw this image on Facebook and had to copy it as the "finale" to this blog post. I don't think we realize how exhausting concert prep can be. Our show was on Wednesday and I was still dragging my behind on Friday. (I came home after 5:00 pm, ate dinner, went to bed at 6:00 pm and didn't arise completely until 9:00 am on Saturday. That's how tired I was.) Multiply this tenfold for the leader of our concert, Connie Chan. She (and her husband, a fellow music teacher) was actually sick the weekend before the concert and missed school on Monday, but was back running the dress rehearsal and shows. She deserves a lot of credit for the success of the concert. 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, December 11, 2023

Playing Hi-Tech Pretend and Union Understanding

 This is another "I have two things to say and can't choose which to focus on" post.




Playing Hi-Tech Pretend

Even though a lot of our focus in school these days is on our upcoming concert, learning is still going on. For the kindergarten students I see, we've taken a fun turn that incorporates music and drama and media. Our term theme is all about imagination. I brought in a mysterious package and the students guessed what was in it. 



It was a trumpet. With a lot of mouthpiece washing, we allowed students to try playing the trumpet. I loved seeing the look of surprise and delight on the students' faces when they were able to produce a sound. There was some direct teaching involved on the difference between buzzing their lips and merely blowing air. They loved it!



They discovered that playing a trumpet is not that easy. We talked a bit about where they hear trumpet music and tried to recognize trumpets in music pieces. I set up a booth in the class and library with a green screen and invited students one at a time to select a background and pose with the trumpet.



It was a great opportunity to look at how media create versions of reality, to be playful, to make noise, and to pretend. Here is one of the photos (with student faces blocked). 



Union Understanding

Friday, December 8 was Federation Day. I attended virtually this year. There were a lot of lengthy and powerful talks by people. Instead of my usual "summary / 3 key points / so what and now what" format, I'll just make a few sentences about each section. Please excuse the quality of my photos. I took them of my computer screen while listening.

Helen

Our ETT president, Helen Victoros, made her opening remarks. She reviewed some of the terms of the recent central tentative deal. I appreciated her honesty that the ETT Executive is not unanimous in their opinions of the deal. 


Randy

What is the state of Ontario's finances? It's not as dire as the provincial government would have you believe. Randy Robinson is the director of the Ontario office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. He gave a detailed overview of the numbers that matter and how they are spun. (Thank you Karen Jutzi for the image and post below, from Facebook.)


Jesse

Jesse Wente is an author, broadcaster, and to quote the ETT website, "Indigenous advocate and pop culture philosopher". Some of the important ideas he shared were: We need to focus on being (a more Anishinaabe concept) than Western notions of doing. Are we ready to sit in circle with Jesse's children? The soft stuff (empathy, media literacy [yes, he said media literacy]), the "hall stuff" is important. Be future builders.  



Me (and Chelsea)

Chelsea Attwell and I ran a session called "Magnifying Media in the New Language Curriculum". We had a very large group of people log on. I kept taking photos to actually note the number of participants. (If you can't see, those numbers go from 58, to 281, to 308 to 315.) Now, I'm not going to fool myself into thinking that everyone was hanging on our every word. Attendance was mandatory and I'm sure a lot of folks had the computer on while doing something else. Another worrisome moment was when we didn't have host privileges and people forgot to mute their microphones and we could hear people ordering food and playing music. Thankfully, a last minute email Chelsea sent rectified the situation. Big thanks to James and Daniel and Mila for the conversations afterwards. 





It was lovely to see familiar names at the opening plenary. I hope everyone got something out of the day. Big appreciations go to all those people who organized a workshop, as well as the ETT Federation Day organization committee. 

Monday, December 4, 2023

Printing and Handwriting Adventures

 


Note: This image was created using Dall-E with the prompt "A child riding an oversized pencil in the style of surreal, digital art" on December 2, 2023. I know Andrea Sykes showed us how to do proper citation for AI generated texts, but I'll get better at it in 2024, I promise.

D2.2 - this is the expectation code that caused the most commotion when the updated Ontario Language curriculum was released in June. For Grade 2s, it says:

print legibly and fluently, with appropriate formation patterns, size, placement, and spacing

For the Grade 4s, this same expectation says:

write in cursive, forming letters of appropriate shape, size, proportion, and slant to improve the legibility of texts, and begin to develop fluent keyboarding skills using touch-typing techniques

How do you fit in this type of instruction, along with all the other requirements of the curriculum? Last week, I decided to conduct a "one-off" lesson on printing and handwriting techniques in conjunction with my drama focus. We are preparing for the big concert in December and I wanted to communicate with the families about what outfits the students would need for the show. To "kill two birds with one stone", I elected to create a fill-in-the-blank letter that would allow students to practice printing or writing while paying attention to all those criteria listed in the new expectation.


 A very long time ago, I purchased a CD-ROM (!) that provided several kinds of printing and handwriting fonts with lined backgrounds. This made generating my letter template easy.


I drew the equivalent lines on the board and did some direct, explicit teaching on how to form letters.

I took photos of every student as they wrote their letters. One reason was to note their pencil grip. Another reason was to capture evidence of their printing or handwriting results. The third reason was to eventually add some of these photos to their BrightSpace portfolios, with a short audio reflection by them on their thoughts about learning to write in cursive or print.



I know that there are certain printing methods or techniques. I did not religiously follow any of those. I reviewed "ground", "grass" and "sky" letters so students would know where on the lines to place the letters.


The challenging part about this "one-off" lesson, especially for the students learning cursive, was that there wasn't a lot of opportunity to practice certain new letter shapes over and over. Capital letters in particular are extra-hard, because there are a lot of loops and curves (and the formation depends on what method you adopt - I found this article on cursive writing styles and this overview article with visuals of how the types differ). I know my own handwritten capital letter F doesn't look like the "traditional" capital letter F. Is my way "wrong"? Or just different? When do we move from saying a letter formation is different to being wrong?


I have to give huge credit to the Grade 3 teachers in my school. Both of them have conducted specific lessons with their students teaching them how to form letters. Honestly, I pushed the students a bit too hard and fast with this task. I asked them to sign their names at the bottom of their letters in cursive and many of them explained that they didn't know how because they hadn't covered those letters yet in their homeroom class instruction! Not quite fair, was it? I modelled a lot of signatures on the board and they all gamely tried to mimic.


To try and comfort my students, I told them the true story of when I was in Grade 5 or 6. Back then, you weren't allowed to write using a pen unless your handwriting was deemed "up to snuff". You had to use a pencil until you were "good enough". Despite the fact that I have excellent penmanship now, it took me all the way up until the third term before I was permitted to use a pen to do my school work. One of the students asked a brilliant question in response: "So what if the teacher had bad handwriting? Did that mean the principal took away their pens?" I've heard of older teachers remembering their time in teacher's college being scolded or reprimanded by their host teachers for not having model handwriting skills. Neat printing, along with playing the piano, used to be two requirements for kindergarten or early primary teachers. How times have changed!


I still have a few weeks left in my Media Part 2 Additional Qualification course, and I promised that I would reflect on the media literacy implications from this lesson. 

  • Key Concept #3 is that audiences negotiate meaning. Who determines what the "best" way is to form a capital letter F? How many people need to be able to decipher someone's handwriting for it to be considered "legible"?
  • Key Concept #4 is about economic implications. How many cursive writing primers have educators purchased (or illegally downloaded) in order to teach their students how to "do" handwriting?
  • Key Concept #5 centers on value messages. What does neat handwriting "say" about a person? Did this value judgement get lost when educators stopped teaching handwriting? Will this connection between student and print quality return? Why do students have to learn about printing and writing in cursive when keyboarding skills are also required starting in Grade 4? Which skill set (typing using touch-typing methods or printing) is more important? 
  • Key Concept #6 focuses on political and social messages. What cultures or languages might have an advantage when learning to print or write in English? How does the technology of ink influence the attention to handwriting? How does it connect to calligraphy? When do we switch from all being able to print the same to the evolution of our own individual, unique signature? How important is it nowadays to have your own signature? What occupations are known for their terrible handwriting vs excellent handwriting, and why? When will the Ontario Ministry of Education finally release the examples for teaching these various expectations, including D2.2?
  • Key Concept #8 looks at aesthetics. What is it about cursive writing that appeals to some. How does a nicely printed letter compare to a well handwritten letter? 
I hope that this authentic use of handwriting and printing was useful. (I learned that only 1/3 of the Grade 1 classes have explicit printing lessons, at least based on what the students shared.) I'll try and sprinkle in more opportunities to practice so that the classroom teachers aren't overwhelmed with all the responsibility of instructing.