best practices in your classroom

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Best Practices in Your Classroom Starting your Morning with More bang for your buck! Presented by: Ms. Axinia Zepeda & Ms. Stephanie Torres

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Best Practices in Your Classroom. Starting your Morning with More bang for your buck! Presented by: Ms. Axinia Zepeda & Ms. Stephanie Torres. Unite. My School Family- Dr. Becky Bailey. Unite. Video from Farias ECC. Disengage. Connect. “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Best Practices in Your Classroom

Best Practices in Your Classroom

Starting your Morning with More bang for your buck!

Presented by: Ms. Axinia Zepeda&

Ms. Stephanie Torres

Page 2: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Unite• My School Family- Dr. Becky Bailey

Page 3: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Unite• Video from Farias ECC

Page 4: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Disengage

Page 5: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Connect“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”

Twinkle, twinkle little star, What a wonderful child you are!

With bright eyes and niceround cheeks,

Talented person from head to feet.Twinkle, twinkle little star,

What a Wonderful child you are!

I Love you Rituals Becky A. Baily, PH.D

Page 6: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Connect“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”

Twinkle, twinkle little star, What a wonderful child you are!

With bright eyes and niceround cheeks,

Talented person from head to feet.Twinkle, twinkle little star,

What a Wonderful child you are!

I Love you Rituals Becky A. Baily, PH.D

Page 7: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Commit• Are you willing to keeping an open

mind and focus your energy in paying attention to learn something new?

• If so place your jewel inside the treasure box

Page 8: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Wish Well My heart to your heart. I wish you well

My elbow to your elbow. I wish you well.

My back to your back. I wish you well.

My eyes to your eyes. I wish you well.

How can we help everyone we know (open both arms in front of you, palms up to include everyone)

How can we help each other grow (Move both arms up over your head like a seed growing)

Sometimes it’s hard to know what to do (shrug your shoulders, with hands up as if to say “I don’t know.”

Wishing them well connects me and you (point to your partner and your partner points to you)

Page 9: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Wish Well Chorus: Repeat as before

My heart to your heart. I wish you wellMy elbow to your elbow. I wish you wellMy back to your back. I wish you wellMy eyes to your eyes. I wish you well

Chorus How can we help everyone we know

How can we help each other growSometimes it’s hard, to know what to doWishing them well connects me and youWishing them well connects me and youMy heart to your heart. I wish you wellMy elbow to your elbow. I wish you wellMy back to your back. I wish you wellMy eyes to your eyes. I wish you well

Page 10: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Wish Well Repeat Chorus You make a difference

Let’s move and wish your neighbor wellMy knee to your knee. I wish you wellMy shoulder to your shoulder. I wish you wellMy hip to your hip. I wish you wellMy hand to your hand. I wish you wellI wish you well. I wish you well

Page 11: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Brain Smart Start!• Unite• Disengage• Connect• Commit• Wish Well

Page 12: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Conscious Discipline Components!

Page 13: Best Practices in Your Classroom

More Conscious Discipline Components!

Page 14: Best Practices in Your Classroom

More Conscious Discipline Components!

Page 15: Best Practices in Your Classroom

What are the benefits of using brain smart start and

best practices?• Help children reach their highest potential for learning in a

classroom• Allows students to disengage stress• Gives students and teachers an opportunity to make connections

for the start of the day. • Provides the teacher a balance of teaching strategies in order to

meet students needs• Teach children to see themselves as learners and become

independent learners• Allows children to gain the tools to become problem solvers and

express how they feel.• Allows for a positive school family in the classroom environment

that supports and engages students language

Page 16: Best Practices in Your Classroom

What can I do and how do I use it during whole group?

Every student in your class is not at the same level nor do they learn in the same

manner. You can use a variety of techniques with Pre-K students in order to meet a

variety of needs. You can incorporate any of the following strategies into yourinstructional day in order to effectively meet the needs of your students.

• Conscious Discipline– Morning Greeting– Treasure Chest– Commitments– Breathing Strategy– Wish Well– Celebrations

• Calendar Time• Morning Message/Daily News• Classroom Daily Story/Story of the Day (Rice Literacy Project)• Buzz Book (K-Crew)

Page 17: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Calendar Time

• The calendar is not just used for math time; there are many objectives in various contents you can cover with the use of the daily calendar.

• Some of these include: letter names, letter sounds, number recognition, patterns…etc.

Page 18: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Calendar Time

Page 19: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Morning Message/Daily News

• There are a variety of ways you can do and use Morning Message/Daily News. Knowing your students and choosing specific tasks for the students to do during this time, will make your instructional time more effective.

Page 20: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Classroom Daily Story/ Story of the Day

• Students are very capable of creating their own story. Using this best practice can encourage oral language development as well as cover many writers craft language arts objectives. This strategy has been adapted from the Rice Literacy Project.

• “The Classroom Storytelling Project combines early literacy research with practice through classroom mentoring and seminar discussions in a yearlong training program in which

• Teachers implement strategies that help young children extend their vocabularies, develop print awareness, cultivate oral expression and develop an understanding of narrative form through the dictation and dramatization of their own stories

• Teachers address the role of language acquisition and the cultural dynamics of teacher-student relationships as critical factors in children’s learning to read and write;

• Teachers learn to create classrooms where children are eager to read and write through the uses of storytelling and other research-based early literacy activities.”

http://centerforeducation.rice.edu/slc/csp.html

Page 21: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Buzz Book

• The Buzz Book is an interactive or shared writing strategy that was taken from the K-Crew. It can be used to introduce or reinforce Language Arts strategies such as “phonics, language/sentence structure, punctuation, sight words, story elements and cueing sources”

Page 22: Best Practices in Your Classroom

What else can I do???• Teacher made flip books (sight words, names,

months of the year, days of the week)• Children name charts and names

EVERYWHERE!

Page 23: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Alphabet Chart

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Names Everywhere!

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Word Walls

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Interactive Walls

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Helpful Hints!

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Websites you can use…• Here are some websites I use. They help with whole

group or transitions. I frequently use technology in my class, so the students are very “entertained” for the 2-5 minutes they may last.

• Starfall- www.starfall.com

• Snapdragon- www.bbc.co.uk/wales/snapdragon/yesflash/menu.shtml

• Storyline Onlinewww.storylinonline.net

• Teacher Materialswww.kinderprintables.com

Page 30: Best Practices in Your Classroom

More Technology

• Sid the Science Kid

• Word World

• iPod Touch

Page 31: Best Practices in Your Classroom

In Conclusion…

• Starting your morning off with making connections and brains smart starts, can help your students learning process.

• You do not have to implement EVERYTHING all at once. Start off with what you feel is manageable.

• Best Practices can help you effectively use your instructional time in a classroom.

• Preparation is key to making the best use of Best Practices.• Children love the variety of activities you can do with them so

it does not become so routine. • Do not be afraid to try a new strategy or add to a strategy

you already use in your classroom.

Page 32: Best Practices in Your Classroom

Contact Information

• Feel free to contact us if you have any questions.

Ms. Axinia E. [email protected]

or

Ms. Stephanie R. [email protected]

Thank You!!!