Sunday, May 3, 2009

I'll Leave the Door Open!

You've probably heard that old commercial for a hotel, "We'll leave the light on for you."

I've been wanting to write to you all weekend and have finally gotten a chance in the calm and quiet of Sunday night.

On Friday morning as we were getting ready to go to school and packing up everything the girls would need for a weekend with their dad, I left the back car door open.....only for a few minutes....

Then I went inside and told Kate to put her guitar in the backseat....while I ran upstairs to the bathroom. I'm taking care of business when I hear a blood-curdling scream from the driveway.

Next I hear Hannah run out to see about the commotion.....

At the top of her lungs (and I'm sure my 85 year old neighbors loved that) she's screaming (and crying, I might add) because when she leaned in to put her guitar in the backseat, there was a squirrel sitting on top of her suitcase staring back at her! Her scream scared the poor squirrel right into the front seat where he couldn't get out from, until Kate ran away from the car and the squirrel made his escape!

Now, you might be wondering how I am going to tie this into technology, or the Mastermind Group, and I've had so much fun trying to figure that out.

First, retelling this story while recording as a podcast or movie would make a spectacular short digital story. Mix in some random photos of squirrels.....add some titles....pose some photos.....Perfect digital story!

Next, in light on having to "leave the door open" I'll also disclose the special, secret link again, for the exclusive way into the Mastermind Group of Educators..... click here.....
So, beware of squirrels that can become the perfect story for writing with voice.

Enjoy the day...
Kathy Cothran
"The Original Gadget Girl"

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Book Commercials & More!


I know I told you yesterday that I probably wouldn't write again until I made it to Hawaii due to the stress of preparing for our trip to Hawaii and all of the other events in our life this week, but I had such a good lesson today with my fifth graders that I just had to share it with you tonight.

Kids inspired to do book reports? Have you ever heard of such a thing?

You see, just a couple weeks ago we had an entire new computer lab installed filled with new desktop iMacs. It was like Christmas morning that day....we left school on a Tuesday with a lab filled with ancient old flavored iMacs and returned in the morning to the brand new machines. The energy and excitement from staff and students has been amazing.

Anyway, back to the totally cool lesson from today. I gathered a collection of my favorite picture books and had fifth graders spontaneously make "Book Commercials." Each movie needed to have an introduction, a summary, a lesson or message learned, and reasons people might want to read the book. Some students asked to use the book they've just finished and others chose a picture book. We used iMovie and the built-in cameras and almost all students were done within the 45 minutes of work time. Our only issue was that by using the built-in microphones and all students working at once, there is a lot of background noise in the recordings.

The technical aspects included adding titles, text, video of their book commercial, adding music during the intro and outro when the titles and credits are rolling and transitions.... Great success and enthusiasm for book reports! Better yet, this has inspired their teachers to try a book report in this manner next month!

I plan to gather a couple tomorrow so I can work to post them on the Mastermind site while I am in Hawaii! I'll let you know when I have some posted.

Hopefully the rest of your week is great.....even with the full moon.
Some of you wanted more information about how the Easter date is calculated (which does rely upon the full moon, which means the week before Easter will always be influenced by the moon), so click here for the article I wrote on the topic.

Another funny thing I can report about this Gadget Girl is how I managed to find babysitters for our dwarf hamsters by using Facebook tonight! I was really stumped about how I was going to leave them for over a week when I decided to try Facebook....and found multiple babysitters within minutes! Buddy & Snickers probably won't know what to do with all of the attention they'll get this next week!

And, finally, just another example of how kids integrate what they learn at school with their
playing.....Hannah had all of her Webkinz pets out and she's slowly moving them from one room to the next. Then she explains to me how they all live on a farm that makes them work, so one of the animals is acting like Harriet Tubman and moving the animals to safety....just like on the Underground Railroad! Never would I have expected that explanation of her play tonight.

Made me realize I should ask her more often about what she is playing and why.

Something to think about....

Happy Easter.....
Kathy Cothran
"The Original Gadget Girl"

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Do You Need Glasses To See This?


You probably don't need glasses to see this, or if you do, you are probably wearing them.
My personal story from this week is about my daughter Hannah. She's in third grade and has desperately wanted glasses for the past six months or so. This reminds me of how much I wanted glasses when I was in fifth grade...those kind that were really big, and had the arms that linked from the bottom of the lens and whipped upwards in a loop...very snazzy for the day....
So, I told my parents I couldn't see. They promptly took me to the eye doctor....(the same one Hannah saw yesterday)...and he was able to figure out that I could see the best when he had window glass in the viewer! Caught.... and then, one year later, I really did need to have glasses...and do you think my parents believed me? The girl who cried wolf over the glasses....but I finally did get glasses....and 29 years later...I'm sick and tired of glasses and contact lenses! So, why would I want to "help" Hannah get glasses when she seems to see everything without squinting? My guilt set in....she failed the test at the pediatrician, she failed the vision test at school....and, this gadget girl knows that Dr. Guinta is the gadget guys of eye doctors! He has a machine that can tell if you need glasses just by looking into it! So, now Hannah will have glasses for when she needs to see far distances....like at the movie theater or when we go sightseeing next week in Hawaii....but not for reading and not for watching TV, or even for ordinary school time....so I'm anxious to see how long the novelty lasts! The doctor doesn't want her dependent on them so she continues to strengthen her eye muscles....
So, that leads me into my next topic....
Do you need a few ideas so you can see clearly and spend less time planning and more time enjoying your hobbies and family? I've posted some new ideas at the Mastermind Group of Educators site....Some new samples of student work about plants, and soon I'll even post a presentation my daughter Kate had to make about a college for her fifth grade project. I figured you might want to see it since her class voted it the best presentation of the class.

Probably, when I write to you next, I'll be sitting under a palm tree in Hawaii. The girls and I are
going to visit my parents for 12 days and I think I need some time away (especially since it was
still snowing today!!!) Yet, I'll still be thinking about you and I bet I'll dream up a video or two
to share while I'm there! Stay tuned....
So, enjoy the holiday, and if you find yourself longing to think about school,
log in to the Mastermind Group of Educators.
There are great things happening there....
Happy Easter,
Kathy Cothran
"The Original Gadget Girl"
And, for those of you wishing you had
joined us when the special offer was
available...here's your Easter gift...
the secret link again...available only
through email these days...

P.S. Does anyone want to babysit our
adorable little hamsters while we are away??


Sunday, March 22, 2009

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Top 10 reasons why you need to join the Mastermind Group of Educators!

#10 The cool people are already members (OK...so that only works on 10 year olds!)

#9 The great ideas you can download for free as a member will make you look like a rock star in the eyes of your principal.

#8 There are lots of student work samples to look at in case you can't picture the idea!

#7 The ideas are ready for you to use tomorrow.

#6 There are tons of links to use for various subject areas that will make your kids think you are the best teacher they've ever had!

#5 I have to pay the bill for the site!!

#4 You get great deals on books, products, and new products!

#3 Someday real soon you'll be able to earn continuing ed credits on the site!

#2 You can still get all of the books for only $18.95 by celebrating my birthday with me!
(and clicking here)


and the #1 reason you need to join the Mastermind Group of Educators is....

#1 You can spend less time planning great lessons and more time playing and relaxing!

Join us now!

And, if you already have the books or don't want
any more books (even though you could give them
away as gifts!) then you could check out the
other way to try out the site by
clicking here!
What are you waiting for?


Have a great day!
Kathy Cothran

Top 10 things I learned in my 30s….but never wanted to know…..

(OK...so maybe this isn't technology related, but it is what is on my mind tonight!)

#10 How to be single parent to itty-bitty girls….
#9 Details about paying all household expenses
#8 What to do when the sewer pipes back up into the basement
#7 What to do when you’ve had the sewer pipes dug up from the front of the house all the way to the street and then the pipes still back up into your basement
#6 How not to sob (but still cry) to the contractor digging up the yard
#5 How to catch mice and deal with decomposed mouse guts inside of one of those fancy girly traps without dumping them onto the computer keyboard
#4 The intricacies of online dating (Did the guy really think I wouldn’t notice when he said he was 6 foot tall that he was only 5’2”?)
#3 How to waterproof the basement and have a sump pump installed and still have rivers running through the basement
#2 How to install a light fixture way up in the stairwell
And, the #1 thing I never wanted to know:
#1 What to do when the water from your shower on the second floor starts running through the kitchen ceiling.

Of course there have been many more lessons that I have learned in my thirties, but these are just a few that I really didn’t want to know about!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

How Late Papers Fit Into A Grading Policy


What role should responsibility issues of students play within the grading structure? Are we grading all aspects of the child, or are we looking at content mastery?

Grade level standards should provide the basis for determining grades.

There should be some performance standards as the reference points when determining the grades. Given clear descriptions of the performance standards, then grades will reflect that accordingly. For instance, proficient would equal a B.

Achievement of the standards should be the sole basis of the grades. Attendance, participation, attitude, responsibility, effort or potential should be scored separately.

Due to the deadly effect of issuing zeros for the failure to acquire the desired knowledge or to complete a learning activity, the only mathematically-sound practice would be to issue 50% E scores. Never should there be a score in the grade book below the 50% score.

Think about the students that typically turn in work late. There are a couple categories of students. One group are the children who struggle with the content. Another group are the children who are capable and disorganized. And finally, there are the academically talented children who are disorganized and disinterested.

Looking at the group of children who struggle: The activity is hard, they are unsure of what to do, may not have parents to help at home, and the activity takes them longer than expected. So, contemplate the idea that the child finally turns in the activity finished. Most is not correct, but the score is scraping by at 62% D-. Now you take another 31% off for being late since the grading policy says 1/2 off late papers. What has been achieved for this child? It will only take a couple of these activities scored in this manner for the child to be unable to pull himself out of E range even if he turns in a bunch of A papers. And what is that chance? Now the child is doomed for the entire marking period, and at the end, there still isn’t any concrete evidence that he has or hasn’t learned any of the content presented.

The next group of children are capable yet disorganized. The activity has been finished with a degree of accuracy and then folded up into a book, squashed into the back of the desk, or put into the black hole of the backpack. After repeated reminders the child produces the work, probably completed at an average or proficient level. By the time the late paper policy is imposed on this child, her grades reflect D or E level which would indicate that she hasn’t learned that content. Often a child’s assignment report in this group would have A's and B's for all of the assignments turned in and E's and F's for those hit with the late grade policy. Again, the grades imposed on the report card do not reflect concrete evidence that she has or has not learned any of the content presented.

The final group of children are the academically talented children who can respond to classroom activities in a manner that seems to be disorganized and disinterested. In this scenario it is imperative to discern whether a child knows the content that is being graded. Looking at the root of the issue and the content being graded and how these relate to the performance of the gifted child will glean important insight. Often these children do not need the same amount of practice to master a skill and that manifests itself as missing assignments, which turn into poor grades, which is then related to the report card grades as not mastering the content when the reality is that a child has learned the content and is bored. These children are often heard saying, "Why should I do this? I already understand." And if the answers to this question include "Because everyone else has to" or "Because the teacher says so" or "Just play the game and do what the teacher says" then there should be some reevaluation of the assigned activity. Again, with this group of children, the grades imposed on the report card do not reflect concrete evidence that he or she has or has not learned any of the content presented.

What are some solutions to this grading dilemma?

One option is to grade only for content mastery. The grades on the report card reflect whether a child knows or does not know the content. When using this method, another assessment tool is provided along with the report card to evaluate the proficiency of life skill types of attributes such as work ethics, classroom behaviors and initiative and study skills (as seen from a rubric used by Hudsonville Public Schools.)

Another option, if late papers must be integrated into a scoring system, would be to use a policy that a late paper/assignment/project cannot ever earn the grade of an A. In this manner, the child can still prove to be proficient in the content. Most grade book programs will allow for an assignment to be noted as late. Yet, this won’t affect whether a child is proficient in content area, just not exemplary.

Another question is about redoing learning activities that do not reach the proficient level on the first try. Looking back at child development we see that children learn to walk, talk, or use the bathroom at varying ages. So why would we assume that all children can learn to perform a task in the exact amount of time?

If using grades to reflect learning, then allowing for retesting or redoing assignments and then replacing with the new score should be the standard rather than averaging the two scores together. Again, most grade book programs allow for footnoting that an assignment was redone to meet the goals. By using proficiency of content as the goal, then children achieving "not yet proficient" scores should continue to work on that assignment until proficient. Having to continue working on an assignment until it is right (even during recess) is a much better lesson for children to learn than just getting a bad grade and moving on. There are children who find it easier to just do enough of an activity or none of an activity and get the bad grade than to apply effort. The pain of a bad grade lasts for a little while, but having to continue working on an assignment until it is correct builds strong character. Soon the child will understand that it is easier to do the activity right the first time.

Grades should be a reflection of learning. The bottom line is that the grades assigned to students should be a direct reflection of the knowledge the student has acquired. Did your students perform an understanding of the content? When parents read a report card does the grade given reflect the learning that the child has accomplished?

(Ideas in this article are based on experience and the rubric mentioned is referenced from http://www.mymassp.com/content/grading_mastery_middle_level)