It is 9:00 am, sixteen students walk down the main hallway of Milton Terrace North Elementary School for a typical Tuesday. Tuesday, students will come in and greet me with a smile, a joke, and a smile or laugh. While students file in the classroom with their books and clothes for PE, a vocabulary review worksheet will greet them at their desk. Jacob will be one of the first students there, and the first student to complete the morning work. Kara will be the last to arrive due to getting lost in the shelves of the library books next door. After her arrival in the classroom, attendance is submitted and then the homework check! This is dreaded by very few in my class, most students enjoy receiving their “Terrific Ticket” for a job well done rather than writing their name in the “Study Club” notebook. By the end of the homework check, most students are reading their chapter books and are waiting for me to say, “Please put you materials away and line up for PE.” Sixteen wide smiles are marching toward the water fountain to stand in a single file line. While walking silently to the gym, students have to endure what seems to be relentless nagging from the PE teachers, resulting in a great deal of laughter. One of the students says, “I love coming to gym!” One of the coaches replies, “The gym is a place!! This is Physical Education!” My favorite student quote was in April. Coach asked one of my students, “Where are your clothes for gym?” Clayton replies, “Daylight savings time.” and walks into the gym. Both coaches were speechless for the first time. While Coach G. and Coach Immel do their thing with students, I have planning time!
I’m not exactly sure what happens to my planning time, it seems to go by so fast, that it is time to go back to the gym to pick my students up. After returning to the classroom, Schallehn is begging me for a free write so she can write break her classroom free writing record of three pages (front and back) in 15 minutes. Today, we’ll learn about the different types of narratives and start writing a personal narrative. Narratives are fun, interesting, and students can construct a lengthy piece. Students notice Mr. Rabideau’s class walking by with their lunches, politely remind me that it’s close to
At this time, most students look very eager to learn something new, while a couple grunt and groan. They should not be grunting and groaning about the schedule because it’s been a very easy morning, I’ve come to the conclusion they are not fans of math class. Geometry has been a big hit in my class. Students get to use templates for tracing, snap cubes for building, blocks for tessellations, rubber bands and geoboards. This math lesson with all of these centers is a favorite of the students.
We certainly do not want the fun to stop here, so when the clock strikes