Showing posts with label Strategies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Strategies. Show all posts

His Teacher's Hand


The first grade teacher gave her class a fun assignment – to draw a picture of something for which they were thankful. Since it was the holidays, the teacher thought the traditional goodies would be the subjects of most of her students arts.

 And they were. But Douglas made a different kind of picture. Douglas was a different kind of boy. He was the teacher’s true child of misery, frail and unhappy. As other children played at recess, Douglas was likely to stand close by her side. One could only guess at the pain Douglas felt behind those sad eyes. Yes, his picture was different. When asked to draw a picture of something for which he was thankful, he drew a hand. Nothing else. Just an empty hand.

His abstract image captured the imagination of his peers. Whose hand could it be? One child guessed it was the hand of a farmer. Another suggested a police officer. Still others guessed it was the hand of God. And so the discussion went – until the teacher almost forgot the young artist himself. When the children had gone on to other assignments, she paused at Douglas’ desk, bent down, and asked him whose hand it was. The little boy looked away and murmured, “It’s yours, teacher.” She recalled the times she had taken his hand and walked with him here or there, as she had the other students. How often had she said, “Take my hand, Douglas, we’ll go outside.” Or, “Let me show you how to hold your pencil.” Or, “Let’s do this together.” Douglas was most thankful for his teacher’s hand.

"The story speaks of more than thankfulness. It says something about teachers teaching and parents parenting and friends showing friendship, and how much it means to the Douglas of the world. They might not always say thanks. But they’ll remember the hand that reaches out."




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The big ideas of Understanding by Design (UbD)

Purpose:
To become acquainted with the big ideas of Understanding by Design.

Desired Results:
  • Understanding by Design (UbD) is a curriculum-planning framework, not a prescriptive program.
  • UbD focuses on helping students come to an understanding of important ideas and transfer their learning to new situations.
  • UbD reflects current research on learning.

 As its title suggests, Understanding by Design (UbD) reflects the convergence of two interdependent ideas:
  • research on learning and cognition that highlights the centrality of teaching and assessing for understanding, and
  • a helpful and timehonored process for curriculum writing (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005).

 UbD is based on eight key tenets:
  1. UbD is a way of thinking purposefully about curricular planning, not a rigid program or prescriptive recipe.
  2. A primary goal of UbD is developing and deepening student understanding— the ability to make meaning of learning via “big ideas” and to transfer learning.
  3. UbD unpacks and transforms content standards and mission-related goals.
  4. Understanding is revealed when students autonomously make sense of and transfer their learning through authentic performance. Six facets of understanding—the capacities to explain, interpret, apply, shift perspective, empathize, and self-assess—serve as indicators of understanding.
  5. Effective curriculum is planned “backward” from long-term desired results through a three-stage design process (Desired Results, Evidence, Learning Plan).
  6. Teachers are coaches of understanding, not mere purveyors of content or activity. They focus on ensuring learning, not just teaching (and assuming that what was taught was learned); they always aim—and check—for successful meaningmaking and transfer by the learner.
  7. Regular reviews of units and curriculum against design standards enhance curricular quality and effectiveness.
  8. UbD refl ects a continuous-improvement approach to achievement. The results of our designs—student performance—inform needed adjustments in curriculum as well as instruction; we must stop, analyze, and adjust as needed, on a regular basis.

Source: The Understanding by Design by
              Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
                   (In-service Seminar)



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An Adult's Mistake that something to ponder

Perspective have Change. An adult's mistake is to immediately teach the youth.


I have to teach you” but the youth say “I’d rather learn from experience”.


I’d have to correct you”, But the youth say “Correct me in a nice way

You have to learn fast”, but the youth say “I have many interest, I’ll pace my own learning.”

Do it my way”, but the youth say “What makes you say your way is the right way? Being youth belongs to us, dont we know better?


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Children Live What They Learn

CHILDREN LIVE WHAT THEY LEARN...

NEGATIVE EXPERIENCES:

If a child lives with  CRITICISM

he learns to CONDEMN

If a child lives with HOSTILITY

he learns VIOLENCE

If a child lives with RIDICULE

he learns to be SHY

If a child lives with SHAME

he learns to feel GUILTY

POSITIVE EXPERIENCES:

If a child lives with ENCOURAGEMENT
he learns CONFIDENCE

If a child lives with PRAISE

he learns to APPRECIATE

If a child lives with FAIRNESS

he learns JUSTICE

If a child lives with SECURITY

he learns FAITH

If a child lives with  ACCEPTANCE & FRIENDSHIP

he learns to LOVE THE WORLD





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New Year's Tradition


Write about one of your family's New Year's traditions. Describe it in detail, tell how you feel about it and what it means to you.



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The Best Gift You Received


Write about the best gift you ever received this Christmas. What was it and why did you like it so much? What made it so special?




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Christmas Decor

     
Christmas decor made of used prepaid cards and empty jelly caps.

An artwork credit goes to Cammile Legaspi, Cherry Escoba, Salazar Zilla, Basooc and Jonathan Marasigan

Craft Materials:
(Recycled)
Used prepaid cards
Empty jelly caps
Yarn or ribbons
Glitters
Glue

Recycling is the re-use, retrieval, recommission of element/matter for any and all-purpose necessary to healthful and productive living. The process by which waste materials are transformed into new products in such a manner that the original products may lose their identity.



MellowYellowBadge


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Group Project

Cooperation is essential in group work or project. Students work in groups to produce a particular group product to share with the whole class. Each student makes a particular contribution to the group.

Challenge:
Learning and sharing complex materials, often with multiple sources; evaluation; application; analysis and synthesis among the group.

Strategies:
Conflict resolution, discovery, application, and presentation skills


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Journey to Fantasy

Activity Instruction:

  1. Participants sit comfortably with soft background music is played;
  2. They are invited to take a trip: to a favorite place;
  3. They imagine what they would be like ten year from now, in particular chosen place;
  4. Lead group to analyze activity: their choice of place and state of life.


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Growth Flaglets

Activity Instruction:

  1. Opposite of paralysis chain, positive traits are written in strips in exchange of negative which was removed;
  2. Strips are formed into flaglets;
  3. Activity is process stressing: change is the most permanent reality in life...


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Paralysis Chain

Activity Instruction:


  1. Participants are asked to write on trips of paper a negative traits;
  2. Strips are formed into large chin, each participants connecting his strips of colored paper to other strips;
  3.  Process activity emphasizing: negative traits if not changed will paralyze efforts toward growth or change, as if binding person with a chain.


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Board Scrabbles

Activity Instruction:


  1. Have a lively group discussion;
  2. Ask challenging, writing beginning letters of answer on the board for participants to guess;
  3. Variation: participants may be ask to rearrange letters or fill in missing letters of answer or words.

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Concept Strips

Activity Instruction:


  1. Participants get strips of paper, they write on strips their idea about topic;
  2. They move around to find similarities and form groups;
  3. Groups to find similarities and form groups;
  4. Groups formulate statement on topic by their own understanding.


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Somewhere Out There

Activity Instruction:

1. Set mod using line: did you ever know that you’re my hero?;

2. Participants may triadic sharing on their ideal person: what made them choose such a person as a “hero”;

3. Synthesize sharing by charting traits or qualities of persons chosen.



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One Moment In Time

Activity Instruction:

1. Ask participants to take comfortable position;

2. Lead them to have flashback of memorable event;

3. Dyadic sharing follows on how they felt, what they thought as they recalled event;

4. Encourage group to surface learning’s.

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Freedom Board

Activity Instruction:

1. Brainstorm on topic;

2. Motivate participants to write ideas, insights on board;

3. Comment on responses arriving at meaningful event.
scriptures selection.



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Dessert Experiences

Activity Instruction:

1. Participants choose their own “deserts” where they could be alone;

2. They reflect on their lives...allowing Christ to touch them in the process;

3. Sharing session follows, direction toward efforts for change growth.

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Killing Me Softly

Activity Instruction:

1. Participants are invited to reflect on their past experiences, particularly hurting/frustrating/ discouraging ones;

2. They justify their choice of particular “traumatic experiences”;

3. Lead discussion to answer question: how did this particular event or people involved and help shaped my life?;

4. Summarize responses, reinforce learning with experts’ opinion or scriptures selection.

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Trust Walk

Activity Instruction:


1. Pair of participants walk in or out of session hall: one of the pair is blindfolded and the other serves as guide;

2. If the time allows it, roles may be changed: sharing of experiences follow;

3. Analyze activity leading to importance of trust and confidence.


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Trust Fall

Activity Instruction:

1. Volunteer participants is blindfolded and stays at the center of a small circle;

2. Others in the circle push volunteer back and forth but care is taken that blindfolded member does not fall;

3. Process activity in terms of feelings, thoughts, reactions, learning, discoveries, realizations.



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