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Monday, October 15, 2018

#MCM

I love my husband, honestly, like I think he is the VERY BEST thing in the entire world. He's super handsome and has a personality that if you read his eHarmony bio, you'd think he was too good to be true. (*disclaimer: he DOES NOT have an online dating account) 

And ya'll, he's an avid reader and phenomenal writer...
an author in his profession. 
This ELA gal is L-U-C-K-Y! 

Want to know a lil' secret though? I have another man crush.
A double whammy kinda guy. He's an author; an illustrator too. 
And he writes to my profession...KIDS!

You probably know him already. He's a big deal.

hello, Oliver Jeffers
(don't you just LOVE that name?!?!)

He's written and illustrated some of my favorite books
STUCK, The Moose Belongs to Me, Lost and Found

and illustrated these amazing books by Drew Daywalt
The Day The Crayons Quit, The Day the Crayons Came Home 

Obviously, he's SUPER talented, but he's got some other things going for him too...


But the MAIN reason I think Mr. Jeffers is just superb is because his books speak to children in a way that makes them think critically, even when they don't realize they are. 

Read STUCK and watch how your students analyze the choices the main character, Floyd, makes. Even the youngest readers understand that Floyd's problem could be solved in a much more logical approach. So way back in 2012, I shared the story in my classroom. My students giggled hysterically throughout the reading! They stopped to discuss choices and decision making. They inserted their own opinions. They determined cause and effect. They made connections, detected absurdities, and created solutions. A 15-minute read cultivated an hour long discussion! I knew I was on to something...

I went straight to Teachers Pay Teachers and didn't find much.
Sidenote: That has drastically changed; when searching again last year, I was able to find great products revolving around this book. 

I knew my students needed something. Something fun to drive home the comprehension piece, those ideas we discussed while/after reading the book, those pieces of understanding that could be taken directly from the text and those that needed to be inferred. 

Voila! 
An interactive game focused on cause and effect and order of events through explicit and inferential questioning of the text. 

It was a hit! A HUGE hit! Not just in my classroom, but in my friends' classrooms and with my own son (once he hit elementary school). It went on Teachers Pay Teachers and it was a hit there too. 

My creation was good.
...Or so I thought. 
Years later and awareness of copyright laws came about. I couldn't ignore the fact that my original product was infringing on my man-crush's creative property (I had copied unsecured images from Google). I couldn't do that...I couldn't "steal" from another person, a creative person, a person who I admired. And let's be honest, as a teacher, it's my job to be a role model for kids...stealing in any form is WRONG! 

So I had to fix it...and fast...before my conscience ate away at me or worse, Oliver (or most likely, his people) called! That is NOT the way I want to meet this man. One day, I want to look him in the eye and tell him how much I appreciate his work without that gnawing feeling that I was taking his artwork and making money on it. NOT COOL! 

I got to work and made an overhaul of the product. New images (with credit given to artists) and improved game board. And to make it worth the redownload for my original purchasers, I added a rebus reader. SAME PRICE...no bump. And my heart rests in knowing that I've done the right thing. 

Here are some tips/highlights: 
- give students the book for 
  reference if you think they 
  could benefit. 
- game board is easy to set up:
  print, snip, tape, laminate!
- plethora of questions! 
  55 questions in all. 

With my love of STUCK reworked and completed, I knew I had another project to attack. 

NEXT UP: My love for Oliver Jeffers' talent was cultivated when I first opened The Day the Crayons Quit by Drew Daywalt. I couldn't get enough of the text and the amazing illustrations. I created this Response to Literature/Comprehension Game for TDTCQ; now that my creative juices are following again, I knew I needed to bring fresh life to this creation. 
* No copyright infringements in original version, just wanted to give it a facelift. 
Updated version of original product
So go check out the updated version...more writing format options, added thinking maps, & rearranged graphics. Same great craftivity and game! 

Thursday, October 11, 2018

DAWGS on Top!

It's Fall. 
Most educators are thinking about field trips to the pumpkin patch, 1st quarter report cards, students coming off of candy-comas. 

Me?
I'm utterly and completely obsessed with college football. 
Like ESPN's College Game Day broadcast is on the living room TV at promptly 9am each Saturday morning. I love the analytics, the back stories, the predictions, the signs - you name it, I like it. 

But I don't really care about most college teams. I care about SEC teams because I'm a born and raised Southern girl. And I only truly care about one team...the BEST team in my humble opinion. 
The University of GeorgiA!!!

To be honest, I don't think I ever had a choice. My dad loves UGA football. He analyzes every play of every game. He scrutinizes the scouting. He picks a part pretty much every aspect of the team. He knows who's coming and who's going. It's impressive, actually. 

So why does this even matter? Well, now you know my football-loving heart and what I'm about to show you will make sense...especially if you are in the DAWG Nation too. 
My son was a struggling reader. He wasn't making the progress that I always thought he would...he's a reading teacher's kid for goodness sakes. He hated the leveled readers and complained they were "boring". Eventually, I just let him pick out whatever books he wanted. I needed to let go of reading levels and let him find books that spoke to his interests. 

Fast forward and my boy is in 3rd grade now. He's a good reader; he reads without complaining. He reads a pretty good assortment of genres. He still works on improving his accuracy and fluency, but his comprehension is sky high. 

Watching my boy struggle was heart wrenching, but light came when he was able to dive into topics that sparked his interest. One of his favorites is FOOTBALL; my boy has adopted my love of the Bulldogs. He could read about specific quarterbacks, teams, heck even fantasy football. If it involves the pigskin, he's in. 

So HUNKER DOWN is a gift of love to my boy. Created and developed for him and those like him. The kiddos that love football, specifically UGA football. 

Activities center around an included non-fiction reading passage that details the history of UGA football, the uniforms, Uga the bulldog mascot, traditions, and the infamous SEC opponents. 
- click to purchase -
The reading passage is most suited for 1st-3rd grade students who can read or be read to and understand the content of the text. 
HEADed to GEORGIA gives kids the chance to use their art skills to redesign the team's helmet and use their persuasive or descriptive skills to explain their rendering. 
While, DAWG details offers kids the chance to put their gained knowledge to use in an expository writing. 

Fact Check Field is a True/False PPT slide that you can use in a game or as a review for kids after they've completed the cut & paste sheet. SEC Logo Match gives students the chance to use context clues or prior knowledge (PPT slide included too). 
Between the Hedges is a Fact or Opinion game that requires students to back-up their beliefs.
To wrap it all up, OVERTIME Opinion is a brief writing for students to state their thoughts on UGA football...my students know to have positive points for extra credit ; )

I think I covered all my bases (wrong sport) - the skills I wanted to cover with my boy. He thought his opinion was always fact...sometimes he still does. If he can back it up, it must be believed by everyone. Oh to be 8! 

Meanwhile, I'm wrecked from pouring over these activities for hours. 

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Back in business

The last several years have been...well, BUSY. 
In a nutshell, I took some serious time away from creating to focus on being a teacher, a grade-level leader, a mother to a struggling reader, a wife to a stressed-out spouse, a pregnant lady moving across the country, and a supportive daughter. Those roles didn't define everything about me, but they took a lot out of me. They didn't leave much room for creativity.
And now? Now, I'm back. I've stepped out of the classroom to focus on being a mom to a baby, a time that I treasure as these little moments are fleeting. I get to be the ever-present being in my 3rd grader's life and pour into the humans that surround me. It's stressful at times, sure, but it's my life at this moment. And it gives me the opportunity to create without feeling bad that someone/something else isn't getting my best. 
I create because I care, and because it fulfills me. It helps me take all those little ideas that have been floating around in my head, you know those ideas that pop up in the middle of a lesson and you think "I should do that. I wish that existed. It would be so awesome if..., etc"; turn them into actual tangible things. They are the resources that would have saved me tons of time or helped my students better understand. They are the activities that would have spoken to my students' interests while giving me the insight to their learning. All the ideas that just sat in my head (and in my journal), waiting for me to turn on the computer and create. 
So here I am. Back at the computer. CREATING! Doing what makes me smile and knowing that one day, I'll put these creations to use when I go back to the classroom. I won't have to wonder...they'll be there, ready.