Category Archives: Uncategorized

Music and its importance to learning

I was once asked what my greatest personal accomplishment was.  My answer was a no-brainer.  My greatest personal accomplishment was
overcoming a birth defect to go on to make a living for many years as a
professional vocalist, then teacher.

I was born with a hemangioma under my tongue which prevented me from speaking normally until after surgery at the age of five. The doctors said surgery would be too dangerous to attempt before then.  It turned out that the age of five was almost too dangerous.  As doctors were about to do a tracheotomy due to swelling, I began to breathe normally.  I suspect God had a long list of things for me to carry out with my voice!  🙂  Healing wasn’t easy and I had just come through years of being teased by other children.

The taunting left me embarrassed to speak so my parents encouraged me to sing to use my voice.  That I did! After surgery, my singing and a short stint in speech class found me off and running! (Or I should say “talking and singing”!)

Though my shyness remained, my junior high school music teacher helped me realize I had talent and encouraged me to use it. Because of his encouragement, I held many leading roles in high school and college theatre productions and went on to earn a living as a professional vocalist for many years before becoming a teacher.

MB900184975I have long shared with colleagues the importance of using music in the classroom – no matter student age.  I was thrilled to meet with my neurologist to review an MRI of my brain after falling and badly hitting my head weeks earlier.  He shared the pictures stating,  “All is well – you have a highly developed brain – especially your cerebellum.”

I knew the reason immediately.  “I have been a musician all my life!” I shared trying to contain my enthusiasm.

“We see this development in people having experiences in music from an early age on,” he shared.

Music has great significance to learning – especially to children who may lack self-esteem or sit through class day in and day out trying to fit a “one size fits all” educational expectation.  Learning is hard to without being provided creative experiences which create neurological connections that enhance learning.

One of the most important books on this subject is This is your brain on music written by Daniel J. Levitin.  For more information you may want to explore –

Cover of "This Is Your Brain on Music: Th...

http://daniellevitin.com/publicpage/books/this-is-your-brain-on-music/

Enjoy and be sure to listen to music!

Flu season and the classroom

With flu season in full swing now issneezing a great time to search for those books on “germs” taking residency on your classroom bookshelves. Presenting tips to avoid catching the flu to your students through literature is a valuable lesson this time of year.  Follow-up your readings with posting pictured tips on a classroom wall.

Preventing the spread?  What teachers can do:

1. Inform your students – knowledge is power.

2. Teach students the importance of proper hand washing – lather top and bottom of hands with soap and rinse thoroughly.

3. Teach students to cough inside of the arm or elbow.    Encourage use of tissues by having several boxes available at different classroom locations.

4. Provide hand sanitizer and encourage students to use it when entering or leaving the classroom.

5. Clean desks and doorknobs daily as well as any classroom items often touched by others.

6. Inform classroom parents of the steps you are taking in the classroom.  These tips can help them at home as well.

clean-hands_zps58626f13

Is it a cold or the flu?

Characteristic

Flu

Cold

Chest infection/cough Common.  Can become severe. Common.  Mild to moderate.
Fever Usually high (102°-104°) May last 3-4 days. Rare except in young children.
General aches and pains Usual. Can be severe. Mild.
Headache Common. Rare.
Sneezing/red, watery, itchy   eyes Rare. Usual.
Sore throat Occasional. Usual.
Stuffy nose Occasional. Usual.
Tiredness Severe. Mild.
Primary season Winter. Late August – April.
Duration Up to a month. 7 – 10 days.
Adapted/modified from:Balch, P. A., & Balch, J. F.   (2000). Prescription for nutritional healing   (3rd ed.). New York, New York: Avery.

children

Remember – a healthy classroom is a happy and productive classroom!

For other ideas see http://www.teachervision.fen.com/disease-prevention/resource/62164.html

For more information see http://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/season/flu-season-2013-2014.htm

2012 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The new Boeing 787 Dreamliner can carry about 250 passengers. This blog was viewed about 1,400 times in 2012. If it were a Dreamliner, it would take about 6 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

Aurora, Colorado – thoughts from a teacher

The theater shootings in Aurora, Colorado, top a long list of senseless shootings that plague society.  As each incident unfolds I recall an experience, I would rather forget.  My second year of teaching in a high crime area began with a gun pointed at my head.  Driving home from school one day I saw a young man flagging me down.  I quickly scanned his surroundings and noticed a crashed car.  That no other car was in sight gave me reason to pause.  As I slowly approached, he aimed a large gun at me from the passenger’s side of my car.  Our eyes met and I remember telling God I had too much to do – asking him to let me live.  Though the gunman appeared to shoot, he never fired and I sped on toward the large crowd of onlookers gathered several blocks away.

At only eighteen, he tried to kill his girlfriend and her mother.  He wrecked his car fleeing and was trying to carjack another – something he couldn’t achieve with the driver of the car he crashed into who fled as he was shot at.  The newspaper revealed shots were fired at other passing cars.  Why he didn’t shoot at me, I’ll never know.  I was “blessed” that day, something many of the Aurora survivors have recounted of their horrific experience.

There are far too many similar incidents – Tuscan, Fort Hood, Birmingham, Omaha, Virginia Tech… As teachers, we know that perpetrators of such crimes may be any of the students we taught over the years.   There are always the questions – once innocent children, students – at what point does their life change?  What signs might we have seen in the time spent with them?  Is there anything we might have done to redirect their path?

The victims – also someone’s child, someone’s student.  Finding their way.  Becoming who they are meant to be.  Again the questions – why?  In the wrong place at the wrong time?  A victim of time and circumstance?  How did we influence their paths toward becoming well-intentioned, effective members of society?

At times like these there may be no answers to the questions.  Let us hold all involved in such tragic events in our thoughts and prayers – the ripple effects reach far and wide.  Each involved has or had a life story to tell and any of us may have shared in it.

Empathy: Taking a walk in someone else’s shoes

Another impressive moment in “stand against bullying” …

kidsbridgemuseum's avatarBullying in the News

Bullying is a problem that affects everyone. The inaugural June 3rd Kidsbridge WALK2STOP BULLYING at The College of New Jersey was designed to raise awareness of positive social strategies to create kinder, more empathetic interactions among kids, teens and adults.

Research shows that empathy is declining precipitously in our society. Kidsbridge aims to reverse this trend by teaching youth and educators to not be afraid to stand up and speak out when they see bullying behavior. That is the only way things will get better.

Some 400 walkers completed a two-mile course following an energetic presentation by Grammy-winning kids’ entertainer Amy Otey (Miss Amy) and a ribbon-cutting by TCNJ President Barbara Gitenstein, New Jersey state lawmakers, walk co-chairs and Kidsbridge board Chairman Frank Lucchesi.

After their trek around campus, many walkers visited the open house at the Kidsbridge Tolerance Museum in TCNJ’s Forcina Hall, where volunteers answered questions.

The only…

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A Teacher’s Summer

Long after the last child has left the classroom and a teacher rolls a cart of materials home to work on over the summer, the reality of what a “teacher’s summer” means sets in.  For many, summer means teaching summer school – the extra income supplements a steady decline in teacher salary because of budget cuts and increased teacher expenses.  There are professional development workshops to attend, doctor’s appointments to make and keep, and of course, a plethora of new materials to prepare for the upcoming school year.  Too many things to do can find stress seeping into what should be a stress-free time.  Summer is the time to “body de-stress” allowing it time to heal from a far too intense school year experience.

Create a meaningful summer by taking time to sleep in, laugh, read a good book, and find joy in simple things.

Sleep is the body’s natural healer.  Be sure to get some extra winks in over the summer.  You’ll feel better going into the new school year because you did.

Research shows that those who laugh more often stay healthier longer and heal more quickly.  Watch a few good comedies with family and friends to lift your spirits, and lift others’ spirits as well.

Read a good book.  There is something to be said for a book that takes you away to real or imaginary places without the stress and money involved in actually going there.

Find joy in simple things – they are everywhere!  The warmth of the sun, the bluest of skies, a puppy enticing you to play, a child’s smile, and the pleasurable company of family and friends.

What are your plans for summer?  Here’s hoping they’re meaningful and serve you well!

How People Learn

These are great tips to consider when teaching a class too!

CJ Bowen's avatarPushing a Feather

Or at least, how some people best process oral-visual communication. But still, these are helpful things to be aware of, and the visual typography is a lot of fun.

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Making the case for teaching morals in the classroom…

“Living is a constant process of deciding what we are going to do.”    Jose Ortega y Gasset

The study of morals and values dates back thousands of years.  Within the United States – hundreds of years.  Its inception began with Horace Mann (1796-1859), the Massachusetts statesman and champion for morals education in the classroom.  John Dewey (1859-1952), educational reformer, followed suit stating morals education was of significant importance in schools.  Sadly, morals instruction has eluded successful drafting into a definite curriculum.  Instead, it has been “thought” intuitively learned at home, school, and church.

Although assumptions of morals learning sound good in intent, it is clear that time has come to seriously consider “making time” for morals education in schools as shown in the recent bullying of a school bus monitor in Greece, New York.

Society has changed – most children come from single parent families, one out of three teenage girls is a mother, and church memberships are down.  While bullying and character programs have been on the rise in the classroom, they do not adequately set the purpose for the learning that needs to take place, which is “learning to do what is right for right’s sake.”

Morals learning should scaffold like any successful curriculum, beginning with a foundation in the early years and emerging over time.   Unless educators provide adequate morals instruction in the classroom, our students have a slim to none chance of developing moral values on their own…

Alice came to a fork in the road. “Which road do I take?” she asked.

“Where do you want to go?” responded the Cheshire cat.

“I don’t know,” Alice answered.

“Then…,” said the cat, “it doesn’t matter.”

                                                                  Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland


NEA – Write a Grant

Summer is the perfect time to write!  For great ideas on grant writing…

NEA – Write a Grant