“Giftedness is not what you do or how hard you work. It is who you are. You think differently. You experience life intensely. You care about injustice. You seek meaning. You appreciate and strive for the exquisite. You are painfully sensitive. You are extremely complex. You cherish integrity. Your truth-telling has gotten you in trouble. Should 98% of the population find you odd, seek the company of those who love you just the way you are. You are not broken. You do not need to be fixed. You are utterly fascinating. Trust yourself!”

Linda Silverman~Gifted Development Center Denver


Showing posts with label Linky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linky. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 July 2014

What works in upper elementary? APEC

In Ontario, students write the EQAO assessments of mathematics and language in grades three and six. I have been a grade six teacher for the majority of my career and have been through many, many years of student testing. One thing I noticed over the years was that students did not come to me in sixth grade knowing how to answer open ended, extended response questions. Students find questions like this on the CASI reading assessments as well.

I started looking for ways to help increase student understanding of how to structure a good response.  A "mentor" for responding to open ended, extended response questions.  Students will find these types of questions in both language and mathematics.  For example, from the 2013 EQAO reading test "Explain why the narrator states that “The only ice cube I want to see again is the one in my glass of juice.” Use specific details from the text to support your answer." and from the mathematics test "A store has 11.2 kg of potatoes. Maria buys 572 g of potatoes from the store and Colin buys 1.42 kg of potatoes from the store. 
After these two purchases, how many grams of potatoes does the store have left? Show your work."

After introducing APEC at my school, many of the teachers in my school have started teaching it.  Even though most of the students coming to me are familiar with this structure, I still spend time each year modelling how to use APEC as an effective method for responding to open ended, extended response questions (including problem solving in mathematics).



Picture of APEC Answer Proof Explain Connect @teachingisagift.blogspot.ca

Picture of APEC Answer Proof Explain Connect @teachingisagift.blogspot.ca

Picture of APEC Answer Proof Explain Connect @teachingisagift.blogspot.ca

Picture of APEC Answer Proof Explain Connect @teachingisagift.blogspot.ca

Recently someone on Facebook commented that they were marking EQAO and that the coordinators of the marking told them that the "connection" part some students were including was "irrelevant" and that student should NOT be taught to respond by making connections.  I went on record stating that I did not agree with this stance.  If you look at the reading curriculum in Ontario, you will see "making connections" is a HUGE part of the reading expectation 1.6 "extending understanding".  I agree that students need to master how to "make inferences about text using stated and implied ideas from the text" but they also need to EXTEND their thinking, and this is what expectation 1.6 asks them to do. 


I model how to write effective responses all year long.  Whether it is as descriptive feedback after students write CASI in the fall, or during literature response groups, I make sure that we look at how to "show what we know" by constructing strong responses.

I have written about how I use APEC in mathematics before. If you would like to read more about it you can view it at this post.

When I was reading the Facebook posts about using APE (or ACE, or APEC) I started looking for my APEC freebie I had posted a few years ago.  I could NOT find it anywhere, so I decided to make some new cute posters for my classroom.  If you have read my profile, you will know I am the proud owner of two beautiful Boston Terriers, so I included the adorable Boston Terrier clip art created by Scrappin Doodles on my new posters.

If you would like a copy of this FOREVER FREEBIE just click on the image below.

Picture of APEC Answer Proof Explain Connect @teachingisagift.blogspot.ca 


How do you teach students to improve their responses in math and language?  I am always looking for fresh, new and effective ideas.






Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Dollar Days Linky

A Teacher without a Class
Click on the image above to visit A Teacher Without a Class
I am linking up again with A Teacher Without A Class for Teacher $ days.  I live in Canada so really NOTHING here is a dollar.  All our dollar stores are now $1.25 stores including Dollar Tree.  I love me some Dollar Tree though.  There are not a lot of them in the Toronto area yet, but I am lucky to live near one.  I love to roam around and get ideas for school.  I never leave without spending at least $20 on something for my classroom.  

Although I am no way close to being in "back to school" mode, I have not totally forsaken my teacher shopping habit.  In fact, in the two weeks since my mother passed away, one of the ways I have sought shelter from the chaos of the aftermath of the funeral, and the ongoing saga of being the executor of the estate, has been to indulge in a little "retail therapy".  I tell you I am going to need REAL therapy at the rate all of this legal, financial stuff is going.  But that is NOT for this blog post!

As I have posted about before on my blog, I like to create Back to School Survival Kits for my students.  I put them together during the week leading up to school starting up again, and then put them on the student desks the night before school starts.  I used to create them using paper bags, then I moved up to using pencil boxes, and then I went to using pencil pouches.  The students seem to like the pouches.  The other day when I was making my bi-weekly pilgrimage to Dollar Tree I spotted these




This is the closet picture I could find to the actual pouches I got from Dollar Tree.  I will NOT be putting scissors in the pouches for my students.  Last year I pre-ordered these from For Teachers Only.

I loved that they came with the pencils, the ruler, the two cap erasers and the sharpener.  They were actually LESS than a dollar a piece.  You can click on the image to see them online.  Well guess what?  This year, with all the chaos surrounding my mother's illness and palliative care, I was not able to order them in time and they are SOLD OUT!



Not to be deterred, I decided to make my own using items from Dollar Tree.  Now I do have to admit that it will cost more in the end, but I can tailor what goes into each pouch right?  I am going to put in one regular eraser, one pencil, one sharpener and the other things I list on here: 

While I was there, I got some more composition notebooks.  I started WHOLE CLASS JOURNALS last year and the kids loved it.  I really just wanted the students to be WRITING more often, and to be reading each others work.  The WHOLE CLASS JOURNAL idea worked really well with the group I had.  I am hoping it is as successful this year.



You can find lots of free WHOLE CLASS JOURNAL covers for your notebooks here Teachers Pay Teachers.