Here’s a sneaky way to get students to analyze snippets of primary text: Who said it: Kendrick Lamar, Winnie the Pooh, or Voltaire? This activity instantly engages minds and activates conversation. And, it’s trickier than it seems: Kendrick Lamar and Voltaire actually agree quite a bit about the state of the world and the rightsContinue reading “Kendrick Lamar, Winnie the Pooh, or Voltaire?”
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Engage: Agree/Disagree Walkaround
Here’s a quick activity to get students interacting with each other and talking about big ideas. How to set it up: Here’s a link to an Agree/Disagree Walkaround I shall use this coming week to launch a study of government: Government: What is it? Why do we need it? You can use it as isContinue reading “Engage: Agree/Disagree Walkaround”
Step-by-Step: Building Paths for Individualized Learning
I begin each year with the best of intentions. I make my little pacing guide. I map out the year: what I will “cover” each quarter. Every student will master x in quarter 1, y in quarter 2, and so forth. Easy-peasy, right? Ummm…no. This is just not how learning works. There is nothing wrongContinue reading “Step-by-Step: Building Paths for Individualized Learning”
Classroom Management: The Sticky Solution
So much about teaching comes down to personality. Or, rather: it begins with personality. As I have written about here, we teach from the inside out. I believe this is also true about classroom management. Just like lesson plans and creating a supportive classroom culture, one should sample others’ ideas, but then select and adaptContinue reading “Classroom Management: The Sticky Solution”
Reader’s Theater: Why, What, and How
It’s magic. It instantly engages students. They are fully immersed in the text. They are acting it out; they are living it. They become the characters as they portray them. It makes learning social. It leads to the kind of discussion and outloud thinking that supports comprehension in the moment and builds good reading-and-thinking habitsContinue reading “Reader’s Theater: Why, What, and How”
Learning Happens Day 1: Non-Fluff Icebreakers
Icebreakers! To some, they’re a necessary evil. To others, they are the best thing ever. I love facilitating them in my classes, but I hate having them forced upon me. Hello, first staff meeting of the year! I don’t like putting myself in a socially vulnerable position in a place where I don’t know peopleContinue reading “Learning Happens Day 1: Non-Fluff Icebreakers”
I Dream of Betty
Betty White, that is. Allow me to explain. Back-to-school anxiety dreams. We all have them, right? I had my first of the year last week. It was a usual for me. I was unprepared. I couldn’t find my materials. And–as is always the case for my BTS dreams–I was teaching in an L-shaped room whereContinue reading “I Dream of Betty”
Creating Culture Through Peer Writing Feedback
“Words are, in my not-so-humble opinion, our most inexhaustible source of magic.” J.K. Rowling I first encountered writing workshops as a pedagogical practice back in the nineties. I learned at the feet of such greats as Donald Graves and Nancie Atwell. Over the years, I have experienced writing workshops from all angles: teacher, writer, workshop-facilitator.Continue reading “Creating Culture Through Peer Writing Feedback”
Here I am.
My name is Susan; I’m Ms. Yergler at school. I am here to share my love of teaching. I am here to encourage. I am here to inspire. I am here to share fresh ideas in the craft of middle grades ELA teaching. I have taught English in various capacities and to various ages for moreContinue reading “Here I am.”
