I want to try to update the blog weekly to let you know what's going on in language arts. Better communication with parents is a huge goal of mine this year, and I want to make sure you're as in-the-know as possible when it comes to what your kids are doing.
We started using the flipped classroom model in language arts last week, and it was pretty successful. Below this post, you'll see four posts from Friday that show reflective conversations about how the kids think the flipped classroom is going, and they seem to love it so far. I do, too! It was a really great week, and I look forward to continuing with this model throughout the school year.
Here are a few thoughts from our first week:
- Many of the students chose to watch the videos at school instead of at home. This is fine, but each video takes between 30-45 minutes to watch, which means it takes up almost all of their language arts hour. If they have other obligations to fulfill during our LA time, they may need to start watching the videos at home, after school or during study hall time. If students use their time wisely, they should be able to watch the videos during class, but they shouldn't count on always having a free day to view them - especially if they wait until the last minute.
- The students had two mandatory videos last week and one optional video. I strongly suggest they watch the optional videos, but they are not required. The mandatory videos are taking place of the instruction I used to do during class time, so those definitely need to be viewed by every student. Next week, we will be starting note-taking during each video, and students will get a participation grade for taking notes as they watch.
- I like the pace of mini-lesson videos so far. Two mandatory videos a week seems pretty manageable. If I need to do more lessons, I will most likely just teach them in class as a group. Optional videos will continue to pop up, but may not be something you see every week.
- After each video, I would like to include links to other resources. If you watch the video with your student and aren't sure they get the concept, or if you just see them struggling, feel free to use these extra resources to help. Parents regularly ask me how they can help at home, so I thought that might be a feature you would find useful.
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