Thursday, September 10, 2015

Second Problem Solving Workshop

Last Thursday was the first session (described here), and last Friday (the 8th day of school) we did the same problem with new numbers.  After doing 22-7, I noticed that most kids could get an answer, but there was very little understanding of place value (as tens and ones) and regrouping (in order to get more ones from a ten). Totally normal in the beginning of second grade, from my experience.

The workshop period follows the same structure of writing or reading workshop:  a mini lesson (10-15 minutes), a work period (115-20 minutes), and a close (5-7 minutes).  In this case, I wanted to address the way we build "bigger numbers", tool choices, and then sharing one strategy that a student had for regrouping. Then I would send them off to work on the exact same problem with even more complex numbers.

On the first day, I had seen many ways to make 22, but I didn't want to encourage all of them. There were ones I didn't love....here's one:
He was using the ten sticks like units, or tally marks, and needed 22 of them to make 22. It's not unusual, and he will figure this out (as of today, the 11th day of school, he was still doing this). I'm not sweating this (yet, haha) but I'm not offering it to other students, either.

So here's my mini lesson, to open up day two of our Problem Solving Workshop. I drew out the first tall train of 22 cubes, and the second 2 ten sticks with two extras way.  The last one, with two ten-cube trains and two extras, was added during the lesson, as were the marks cutting across the first tall train way.

I began by saying I saw lots of ways that people made 22...I said, I saw Mehdi make this tall train. (Added his name.)  When I asked if anybody else made it this way, we got lots of "me too" hand motions. I told them we would have to count them, to test his train, which we did chorally. When we verified that it was 22, I wrote it under the train. 

I went on to say that I saw some people making it this way, like Angel did. (Added his name.)  This also got lots of "me too" hand motions. (For "me too" we just do a thumb pointing to our chest, pinky stuck out in front of us, almost like a "hang ten" but pointing - often frantically - back at ourselves.) We counted it as 10-20-21-22, labeling as we went along and writing it under the train once we had verified it.

Now, my goal, always, is to get them talking and listening to each other. But it's with a nod to my sanity that I do a bit more of the heavy lifting in this area at the beginning of second grade than I am totally comfortable with. I can't tell you how many times I've started a lesson with "Jasmine did the most interesting thing yesterday, Jasmine, go ahead....tell us what you did" as a way of jogging her memory and handing off the discussion to a student, only to have the student launch into a totally unrelated, inconsequential account that usually starts with something like, "oh, first, I took all my blue cubes" (no you didn't) "and then I put 2 and 5 and 3 and then I..." (no you didn't) "I thought about what I should do and then I remembered that I had some red cubes" (no you didn't)..... enough already, let me handle this.

So Jasmine had built her 22 like this:
She had originally built it with the two ten sticks and the two extra cubes, but when I came back, she had built the second way, with the two trains of ten cubes and the two extra cubes.  When I asked her about this, she showed me how she took away the two, but then couldn't break the sticks:
Haha here she is trying to snap off a couple. So cute. During the mini lesson, I asked her to show us how she tried to snap some off, and at this point, I was able to say, can you now show us the NEW way you made the number 22? And she was good to know, she knew exactly what I was talking about and there we went.

So far, in the 10 minute lesson, we had addressed building the quantity three different ways, and we had shared a strategy for regrouping by using the cube trains rather than the base 10 ten sticks to build the number. (Notice that she didn't just regroup one ten, she redid ALL the tens. In direct instruction, we would no doubt instruct her to regroup one ten...virtually every second and third grader I've ever met does it the same way as Jasmine, before they make sense of just swapping out one.)

To close the mini lesson, we went back to Mehdi long train and I asked them to partner talk about if Mehdi's way was the same or different as Jasmine's way.  After we discussed it, I posed the question:  Can we make Mehdi's look like Jasmine's? Are there ten-trains inside this long train? (The said yes, there are)  How many do you think we can get? (two) Let's try. (We counted up to ten, marked it off, counted up to ten, marked off....and saw the two extras, just like Jasmine's. I invited them to think and build their numbers using "TENS" and gave them their new numbers.
We did the same problem and I gave them the numbers on the yellow post it note (34, 18). We read the problem together as "Ishika has 34 shells. She gives Jaiyana 18 shells. How many shells does she have left?"
 
And here's Mehdi....he moved immediately from the long train to the ten-cube trains to make 34.  Proving, once again, that sometimes a kid hears the exact next idea they needed to hear, and that's all they will need to move forward.

 And here's Bryan and Ahmillyion making tall towers. Proving, once again, that when a kid is not ready to hear it, they will take a great idea....and do absolutely nothing with it.  No big deal, I will be inviting them to think in tens for the next few months.  They will get there!

During this work session, Angel continued to build his numbers with base 10 ten sticks and single unifix cubes.  When I asked about how he was giving away 18 shells, he showed me how he gave away as many as he could, then he used his finger to count down the markings on the permanent ten stick. He held his finger over the counted off section and said, "If I could take this off, I would." I told him about Brandon, a third grade student I had many years ago, who had this same idea and he discovered that he could mark them off with an expo marker. We got one, and I showed him how it would be fine, that it rubs right off, and he went right to work.


Here he has crossed out all of one ten with a straight line, then x-ed out 8 more from the other permanent sticks. He counted the remaining cubes as 1-2-3-4-5-6 and 10 more is 16.

Lovely!  Now we have successfully concluded our SECOND problem solving workshop. Students are making sense of a simple give away problem in context, and we now have several ideas for building bigger numbers with tens, and two ideas for regrouping (marking off, or swapping out) when we don't have enough ones to give away.  I will point out, that there is no way I could give my second graders a worksheet with problems like 34-18 or even 22-7 during the first week of school. It is only because they are using this "direct model" method that they are able to do the math, while simultaneously making sense of place value, and developing their understanding of the attributes and functionality of the different tools.

The close on this second day was straightforward:  I saved Angel's idea for the opening of the next session, and we cleaned up and reconvened on the carpet to recollect what a responsible classroom sounds like and looks like when it is time to clean up. Hint: there is no yelling, running, or swinging math bags over our heads. *ahem*

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

First Problem Solving Workshop

We did our first problem solving workshop (PSW) on the 7th day of school. The first five days were introducing, exploring, and practicing with our tool bags.  Once that was settled, we were able to dive right in....by which I mean oh wait, wait another day because my schedule got rearranged at the last second. Oh, last minute changes, you vex me.

The PSW is my very favorite way to teach math when it comes to operations. The entire thing is based on my understanding of Carpenter/Franke's Children's Mathematics (Cognitively Guided Instruction).  If you teach any workshop, such as reading or writing workshop, you can use the same structure to create space for students to make sense of, and solve, problems.

The workshop structure includes a mini lesson, a work period (which may include a mid-workshop interruption), and a close.  The whole thing takes about 35 minutes - 45 minutes.  Shared below, as our very first PSW of the year, is a mini lesson (introducing a problem together, including reading and acting out) for 15 minutes; a work session for almost 20 minutes including clean up; and finally a quick close on the carpet, less than 5 minutes.

I have been doing this for many years, and I have always started with a "put together" problem. For the first time, I decided, at the last minute (oh, last minute changes, I LOVE you ;) to make the "separate" problem the first one. I am too pleased that I did!

This is all based on Carpenter's work, which I highly recommend that you read, start to finish.  Until then, the main points are 1) children can resolve math story problems without you and your snappy ideas; 2) they do this in totally predictable ways that they construct themselves; and 3) not all math story problems are created equally....some "problem types" are harder for children to access until they have built up a barrel of number sense and an understanding of part-whole relationships.  In reference to #1, if you start with the most accessible problem types, you won't have to do any underlining of key words or circling of numbers or any of that other stuff. And that's because of #2, which includes the information that virtually all students (when we stop pecking at their necks) begin all understanding with a strategy called "direct modeling".

In direct modeling, students will act out, with manipulatives, exactly what the story says, in the order it says it.  So if the math story says "I have 3 cookies. My mom gives me 2 mores cookies. How many cookies do I have now?" a child will read "I have 3 cookies" and place three blocks down. Then the child will read "my mom gives me 2 more cookies" and place two more blocks down.  When they read the question "how many cookies do I have now?" they count all the blocks they put down. (Worried that you have students who can't read this problem? Me too! I won't bore you with the results of my Fontas and Pinnell assessments I just completed, but please know that I have exactly 7 - out of 29 students - that would be considered on "beginning of 2nd grade level"....it's a real thing.)

Which is why, whenever we start a new problem type, we always start with a group reading and acting out of the problem. I like to use names of my students, and their real hobbies, to get us started. In this case, Ishika likes to collect rocks and sea shells, and her class buddy is Jaiyana.

The process is simple: I read it to them from the poster (with blanks....I say "hmmm" for the blank...Ishika has hmmm shells, like that).  We read it all together. I point out that not everyone is reading, so we read it chorally again. Except I have to interrupt us after the first sentence, because not everyone is reading. So we try again. Rinse and repeat UNTIL they GET it that EVERYBODY will participate, full stop. Once we've read it, I have them partner talk about what's happening in this problem. How would they describe what's happening?

This time they shared:  Ishika has shells. (What is she doing with the shells) She's giving shells away. (to whom?) She's giving them to Jaiyana.  (Who is "she" in the last sentence? Is it Ishika or Jaiyana?) It took some discussion, but they decided it was Ishika. Those referent pronouns with second language learners (21 of 29 are, for my class) can be tricky. It's worth talking about.

I gave them the black number pairs first, and taught them to populate the blanks with the numbers, in order. We did 8, 3 first and re-read it chorally as "Ishika has 8 shells. She gives Jaiyana 3 shells. How many shells does she have left?"  Ishika and Jaiyana come up and act it out with cubes. We prove the answer is 5. Then two other people play Ishika and Jaiyana and we did it again for the numbers 7, 2. Two other actors did 9, 3. And a final pair of actors did 11, 2. They would have gone on, but really, it was enough.
As you can see in the picture above, teaching this system of reading the problem with number pairs is extremely helpful as you try to differentiate in your classroom. For the student who finishes in seconds, you can quickly write two more difficult numbers on a post-it and tell them, "These are your new numbers" and they get right to work on it. Likewise, when you come across a Little One who just can't get started, who can't get any traction, you can quickly jot down two smaller, more accessible numbers and say "Try it again with these". Since you taught them how to populate the problem with any two numbers, they are good to go.

When I send them off to the do the problem on their trays with their bag of math tools, I sent them off with the red numbers, 22, 7.  We read it altogether one last time, and then we go to work. Super important: I always send them off with numbers that are just out of their reach....I want it to be a problem they haven't memorized as a basic fact, so that they will rely on the direct modeling intuition to solve the problem. In this case, I also want them to struggle with dealing with the notion of needing to regroup....If they build 22 with two ten-sticks and two units, they are going to be confronting some big math ideas right away. Yummy, I say!

 My job during the work period is to move through the room gathering information, and to do what I call "match making"....finding pairs of students who should talk to each other. It's always the same at first, "Teacher the answer is 9" and that's immediately followed by another breathless student saying "Teacher the answer is 14" at which point somebody will say "No teacher isn't the answer 15?" and I will say, simply, "The three of you need to take your trays to the carpet and explain how you did the problem....do you agree with each other? Is there a way to prove which one of you has the right answer? Do any of you have the right answer?" And so on, until just about everybody is partnered up and discussing the mathematics.
The other job I have is to gather up which strategies they are using. Are there any that should be shared and promoted because they are efficient, flexible, or mathematically important? Are there any that make me want to cry? haha Not even kidding about that one.
This is a really common way of building the 22 in the beginning of second grade. This child is not yet thinking in tens and units, just counting all out by ones.
 This child is also counting all out by ones. The ten sticks are not being thought of as "groups of ten", he is counting each one as "one" and needs 22 of them to make 22. This is less alarming than you might think....lots of students interpret this tool as a "tally mark" almost, rather than as a group of ten. They will make sense of it shortly. In the tray next to him, some enterprising lovely has made 22 as two ten sticks and two units. Thank you, sweet one, this will be very helpful, very soon.

Also very common, is the really long train method of making any number. This is a version of thinking in units, rather than thinking in tens and extras.

That's it! Isn't it lovely? There's no real resolution at the end of these first session, but we have LOTS of information about how our kiddos are making sense of quantity and subtraction, and we have LOTS of great conversations and proof.

At the end of this first session, we clean up and meet back down on the carpet. So much math to share! But I hold it until the next day, when I can craft a sensible mini lesson out of all that math to start our next work session. For today, we close with a quick debrief on the way this works:  We solve our problem, and we get an answer....BUT....we are not "done" until we have talked about what we did with somebody else. Do we understand them? Do they understand us? Are we in agreement? Here is where we can make the point that talking about our math is what let's us test and prove our ideas.  Here is well I will also, gently, suggest that you can talk to each other without first asking me...find somebody to work with, you won't be sorry my Littles!

Sunday, September 6, 2015

First Week of Math - Exploring Tools

Over the first 5 days of school, we introduce, explore, and divvy up a set of math tools that the students will use during problem solving workshop for the whole year.  It starts on the first day of school. I start number talks on the second day of school, and it's always a "dot talk". This means that I need them to play with dots to exhaustion on the first day of school so I can protect my sanity when they need to use the dots on day two.

The first step is to lay down some ground rules. I'm not going to lie...this is a loud, sometimes crazy and explosive process.  My philosophy here has always been, "It's exciting to get an idea and test it!" As far as the students are concerned, they are pioneers!  Nobody has EVER thought to make a train of cubes that goes around the ENTIRE carpet before (everybody has thought of this haha but they don't know it) and thinking of this then doing this can be very exciting...which requires some hopping...and shouting.  I do try to minimize this, but I also ignore a lot of it during this free exploration period.

Before we start, we brainstorm what it "looks like" and what it "sounds like" when we are being responsible with the math tools. (They don't go in our mouths, up our noses, no throwing, we share, we ask if you are done with those before we grab them, etc.)  After we finish, we reconvene on the carpet and go over how we did....did it "look and sound" like the important and serious work that it is?  Here is where I will remind them that we should be using "level 2" voices, which is a normal voice, but not an outdoor voice.

Finally, before we walk through this, may I suggest a "shout out" call to attention?  Bells, chimes, sing songs....I do it all, as one must if you are serious about having their attention when it matters, but I have to admit, nothing beats a call and response shouting when the noise level creeps up.  For the last five or six years I've been (literally) yelling "yo yo yo!" and they (literally) yell back "yo what's up!" then everybody freezes and we have a window of opportunity to make an announcement, call for civility, and/or transition out of exploration.

We follow the same process every day. Set out a tray of one type of tool for each table group. Go! I walk around saying "yes" as often as possible. "Teacher, can I make the world's longest train?" Yes you may. "Teacher, can we work on the carpet?" Yes you may. "Teacher, can we have more red ones?" Yes you may. "Teacher, can I make a tower?" Yes you may. "Teacher, it got too tall, can I stand on a chair?" Yes you may. (Let me just stand here next to you though, how about that?) I also carry a clip board with this little checklist of observable behaviors, made by my dear friend and teacher extraordinaire Kristy. It helps me focus on the math that is happening amid the chaos, and it also lends an air of officiousness that is sorely lacking without it.

At the end of each work session, as a new tool is cleaned up and put to bed, each student gets their math bag (students are assigned a number that goes with their name - "a" kids start with number one and end with "z" kids at *cough* 32 when I'm lucky) from the hook and counts out a number of the tool to add to their bag.

(The tool bags started as gallon ziplocks, but I eventually repurposed a few cheap sheets and maxed out my sewing skills by make three straight lines for the seaming and one hem for the drawstring. The dimensions are still roughly those of a ziplock gallon storage bag, though taller....13" tall by 11" wide, give or take, finished dimensions.) (ETA:  Each bag has a number written on it in fabric paint, which matches the numbers assigned to the students, which matches a number on the wall behind the bag, not yet affixed in this picture.)
 At the end of this period, each student puts 25 red/yellow counters in their bag.
 At the end of this session, they add 40 unifix cubes to each bag.

 
 At the end of this session, they add 40 ten sticks (not 4, worth 40, but 40 actual sticks) and 25 units.
 At the end of this session each child adds 60 flat square tiles to their bag.

Other things that will no doubt likely end up in their bags include an expo marker, a die, and some hundreds flats.  In the picture below, you can see that MORE of each of these tools is available in this open storage. As we begin to solve problems using our tools, we may find ourselves in need of more of one thing or another, and we can always come here and get them. That basket of hundreds flats is always available too, but doesn't usually gain popularity for some time.

  On the fifth day, we don't introduce a new tool, but we practice taking our bags out, using the trays (seen above stacked up on the side) and practicing using our tools in whatever way we choose, but focusing on keeping OUR tools on OUR tray. After cleaning up and putting everything away, we also introduce the "I Found This!" bucket, seen on top of the stack of trays below. When we find ANY math pieces, at ANY time, on the floor, kicked under furniture, inside our pencil boxes, any old where at all.....we put it in the "I Found This!" bucket (named thusly by the number of students who walk up to me and say "Teacher I found this").  Make sure you are clear....no puzzle pieces, crayons, broken pencils, hair (!) goes into this bucket. Only math pieces! At the end of each week, it's somebody's job to sort everything back into those open buckets.

I used to spend time, every summer, counting out the tools for each child. Sometimes, I even had them in little plastic snack bags INSIDE the math tool bags. But then, to be honest, I was wayyyyy too invested. I needed to just divest from the entire process. When I tell them to count out 40 or 60 of something, in all likelihood, some number of kids will miscount. Don't care. Some number of kids will eventually find that their bags are empty and/or a certain tool is totally not accounted for. Don't care. That's what the open storage is for, go get some more of whatever you need.  But as you can see, by the end of the year clean up photo below, somehow it all ends up back with me. It's a zero-sum game from my perspective....they go out, they all end up back. What happens in between, I had to tap out. I have enough crazy to manage without adding "what's in your tool bag" to the list.

I'm including this as your end of the year clean up tip, even though I'm assuming you are MUCH smarter than I am. This system works...Each table group gets a small bucket for each tool type. They sort their own bags into those buckets. Those buckets get dumped into the five (10?) gallon paint buckets we use for chairs at our reading table and writing centers. Kids who get done early can start making ten trains out of the cubes, since they store better that way.  Every couple of years we take buckets of tools out to the playground and add a bit of dish soap and water. When they ask why we are cleaning the tools, I tell them it's because they like shiny things. They agree, and we carry on. Love second grade :)

Here are the kids the first year I taught second grade, when we dumped ALL our bags on the carpet at the end of the year and tried to sort them into the buckets from there. It took four days, and they had lost interest long before any serious headway had been made.
 And here's me, on day two of four.  Just saying.


Friday, August 28, 2015

Classroom 2015-2016

Just finished the first few days of the school year. Last year I started with 35 kiddos...this year it's a perfectly reasonable feeling 28. The school I teach at was built in 1950....and it has not gotten many updates since then.  We have internet access, we boast whiteboards (haha no kidding it hasn't been THAT long), and just last year I moved up from an overhead projector to an elmo/projector combination.  The building classrooms were updated with central heating some years ago, but only the portable classrooms can claim a/c.  I teach in a portable for the last three years, since moving to second grade. Other perks (besides the a/c which is not trivial) are that all the walls are potential bulletin boards and we have a great relationship with the local fauna that nests in, on, and under our sweet classroom. Hello mice, squirrels, and bunnies!

A way too long look at this year's attempt to stay organized, functional, and charming. I used black sheets with colorful accents. I don't put anything on the bulletin boards to start the year....we always build it together.

 From inside the front door. Two small windows do not make my list of "pros"...I love natural light.
 Just to the right of the door is a small writing table and what I'm thinking of as a "work on writing"/language area.  I have since managed to cozy it up with a little rug and I did work those wires back behind the shelf. But I can't do anything about the fire alarm or the fire extinguisher just out of sight to the right. So I decorated it and explained to my Littles that it is not a toy and they should not touch it. They nodded carefully and never gave it another thought. I swear, kids can adapt to anything.

 Just past my filing cabinet (which is solely used for housing my mentor texts, in alphabetical order....BOOM) is my class library. And window number two. These books, after much back and forth angst, are mostly leveled for Guided Reading. I've really struggled the last few years with how to handle the class library. Up until this year, I've always had a section of leveled books, and then a bigger section by narrative genre, and another section on informational by genre, and a set of chapter books. But, after much soul searching, I just made the leap and leveled the majority of what I have. A to L.  M/N/O/P books are in the lower right, labeled not by level but as "LB" for "look books". I just found too many of my struggling readers staring at inappropriate books and not making much movement in their independent reading.  I modeled, reminded, coached, cajoled, begged....but they just have the hardest time getting into those "just right" books.  It's still my goal, but I had to just level for now.  We'll see how it goes. (They are not marked correctly on the boxes, but the books are labeled with dots...I need to make labels for the boxes. Adding it to my to-do-list as we speak.)
 Swinging around is the word work station. That was my grandma's antique desk. I don't have a teacher's desk, though this little treasure used to collect junk by the door to my classroom. It's better suited here. On the left in the color drawers are activities for the word wall.  Generic games that can be used with any set of words from the wall. On the right are the activities for the spelling/sound pattern of the week. (My students LOVE some books to DEATH every year...and I have to replace them. The bunting is made of pictures of a Knuffle Bunny Too book that fell to pieces last year.)
 I can't believe how toned down this area is compared to previous years, but looking at this picture it still feels so hectic. This is the listen to reading area. I've never successfully done it, I've never had an actual listening center. Now I do, the headphones are in the box and YES that's a little "boom box". I die. haha The books below all have CDs with them. I would love to have iPads or something where they could listen online. I guess I officially have access to chrome books now, thanks to a Google Grant we won last year, but...is it wrong that all I hear is WORK and CHAOS when I think of training these little squirrels on how to use them? :-/  The green framed board will have reading artifacts.  You might be able to see the clothespins at the top there, and in the next picture, too. They are hot glued right to the fabric and are perfect for holding our anchor charts.  I also decorated them with little rhinestone daisies in different colors because....sparkles.

The rolling cart is for student portfolios on one side and my emergency sub plans (5 days worth) on the other side.

 This is behind my small group table. There is a shelf here full of binders and resources I can't quite wrap my tiny addled brain around. My teaching friend and neighbor found those sparkly coils at the re-use place and she gifted me a few for the Science bulletin board. I am in love.

 Just past my small group table is a larger rainbow drawer set with puzzles and art/craft activities for "Fun Friday" type time. I haven't worked all that out yet, aside from collecting various things all in one place. Then a basket full of hundreds flats (as you do) and some math manipulatives. My beloved math trays are stacked on top of the tiny shelves, which have rulers on the top shelf and a basket of calculators under that.
 This is a little something I like to call HELL YEAH. The number one hateful thing about being in these portables is the lack of storage. No really. Have you seen ANY yet? The open shelves with my class library....that's it, and here we are in the back corner of the room. I mean....really.  Behind those curtains are a host of professional books. I have culled out many, but these have made the cut, currently. I don't want to see them and now I don't have to. The black boxes have math games, word work, language work, etc. by topic. And those colorful boxes are....wait for it....empty. Yep. If you truly want to declutter and organize an entire classroom, I highly recommend this little thing called "margin". You simply MUST have spaces that are not accounted for. 30 people, all the work and thinking and excitement....it generates STUFF. Leave some empty spaces to absorb that STUFF.  You will be so happy you did.  The trays stacked on our spare chair are the Day Two "math tool" (unifix cubes) that we explored this week.

 Turning now, the wall opposite the front door. We are skipping the sink, nothing special there, especially if you enjoy sparkling HOT water that is undrinkable. It may not even be legal, but there it is. The clipboards and whiteboards are always there, the pompoms and colorful bunting are just because. A few years ago, my class made the art by melting crayons.  Learn. Create. Laugh. I stand by that.  The boxes and blue tub are the math games and centers. Under the counter storage, four file boxes behind each curtain, for (you guessed it) more math, some social studies, and science. There is a box of rocks in here, and that's all you really need to know about how odd it is to be a teacher.
 All the way to the end of the room with our TWO whole cupboards and one DOUBLE WIDE CLOSET. I'd show you inside them, but it's not safe to look directly at them. Glue sponges and scrap buckets, another hanging plant...and the ugliest wall ever. In addition to a random fire alarm smack in the middle of a wall, they take up most of this wall with a thermostat box and a vent. Like, what? Our two rules, committed in wooden letters:  Be kind, work hard. Easy-peasy.
 Most of my whole group lessons happen here on the carpet. Teaching students in desks makes me grumpy. There are just too many of them, spread too far apart, with too many distractions. Get into your casita (little house) we are going to do some learnin'.  The book boxes are on the shelf behind my grandma's rocking chair. The beautiful hand made quilt was gifted to me by a dear friend when my brother was ill. The bulletin board behind here is impossible for me to maintain, or at least unappealing to update, so I will eventually hang the Daily 5 anchor charts here and call it a day. The bunting is a combination of cute red polka dots and a Clifford book that also bit the dust.

 On top of the book boxes is a small shrine I keep for my brother. He passed away in April, 2014 and it was devastating. This brings me great peace, these little pieces of him.
From the back corner, facing the front door. The math bags are hung under the white board from cup hooks. These will be full of a variety of tools the kids use with the trays during problem solving workshop.  Our very low key calendar is the brown thing hanging on the far side of the whiteboard. Above the white board is a birthday board. Every month is there, and I will add a group picture of that month's birthdays. The cubbies are full of writer's workshop folders and notebooks and stationary and office supplies, the board above it (with more clothespins) is for the writing anchor charts. And that little beauty next to the door is where their published writings will go. Yummy!

These pictures were all taken before school started...three days in, and it already feels so different! It may look quite decorated, but truly, every class comes in and makes it their own, in ways both subtle and overt. Our school is almost 70 years old...it's not well maintained, honestly. For years they were going to close it....they don't talk about that anymore, but it really is not pretty to look at. Chipped and pealing paint, power washed walls to remove graffiti, old playground equipment, scorched earth where there should be grass, even the asphalt on the playground is coming up in chunks. No, really, it is not cute. It means a lot to me that my students come through the door and know that in this room, they are cared about. The environment is pleasing and respected and THEIRS. There are very few things in this room off limits to them, actually, and that feels right to me.