Thursday, July 21, 2011
Contact
Chris Byron
15955 South Canaan Rd
Athens, OH 45701
cbyron@thecareercenter.net
740-438-3614
Friday, July 15, 2011
annotated bibliographies
I will miss you all. I hope the rest of your summer is restful.
Thursday, July 14, 2011
The Survey You Have to Complete
Babble On.
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Loved today.
Off to work on the annotated bib, which is not nearly as entertaining as rereading another diary from 1977 that I JUST found an hour ago while cleaning out my messy briefcase. I promise I won't subject you to any more after this, but just for fun, here's an entry on my first teaching gig ever:
January 11, 1977 (age 10)
Dear Diary,
Guess what? I am an official piano teacher! Yes, that's right, I gave Marsha Williams her very first piano lesson at 4:00 this afternoon. Aren't you proud of me? Well, I hope so. After the lesson, Mommy and I planted some dwarf trees.
Love, Cathy
Mimi Hughes
Also, great stories today everyone. Wow. I felt like we all needed a hug at the end of the day today. Intense and amazing stories. They left me kind of speechless. Whew...
Love you guys.
Mary Ann's Poetry Demo
I believe that Mary Ann has a great love and devotion to her students and their overall well-being, and she strives to help them to build self-esteem through positive awareness. Mary Ann has shown us how we can reinforce caring for one another in her demo, and she did it in a fun and non-threatening way by creating a scenario by using the post-its that the students could build upon. I loved her use of the "I Am Poem" because even though poetry is not my forte, this lesson does help to introduce the concepts of poetry in a class. This could be a fun way to begin a unit on poetry, and this could be the framework for maybe using the same poem to create multiple styles of poetry; for instance, take the idea from free verse, to ballads, to even sonnets (but form would have to be seriously revised to fit into a 14 line sonnet, but the concept could still shine through)! I loved the lesson, and though I really am not into country music at all, that song was interesting and relevant to the lesson. Job well done!
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Finally...
This morning's discussion on the inquiry paper and rhetorical analysis was really helpful. We all seem to have this deep-seated fear of doing it wrong because we have been so programmed to write research papers and essays with an idea and a plan before we get started. I'm really fighting this urge to start with my opinion first because I DO have an opinion about my inquiry but I am trying to ignore it and open myself up a bit more to be more questioning. Things seem to be coming together, thankfully!
Annotated Bib and Inquiry Paper
Tuesday
I also found Don's explanations helpful. The six terms should come in handy when I'm writing. I found that time well spent. As I'm writing my bib, I find that I have to stop and look different examples of how to credit one author, multiple authors. OWL was helpful. thanks! :)
Inquiry Paper and the Annotated Bib
Big message, small lecture
What a brilliant lesson! I wish that I could be in your class every March. What fun! I was amazed at how much we learned and how little that you actually had to lecture. Brilliant, I say! And multi-media WOW! You taught us through the PowerPoint, google video, and think-pair-share. I loved all of that. I sometimes do an Earth Day program in April and will definately be stealing the Lorax lesson. Thanks for the awesome lesson!
12 July: Annotated Bib and Seuss
Great Job, Ethel!
Ethel's Demonstration
Ethel's Demonstration
What an amazing multimedia presentation/lesson! I believe that this presentation is absolutely geared to hook the audience from the get-go and get students excited about reading! I can imagine a room full of excited, but deeply interested, children eager to learn all about Dr. Seuss and his fun and easy to read books. Ethel really believes in creating the perfect environment for her students to encourage reading. I was absolutely impressed with all of the books she had set up and passed around so that students could consider which book they might most like to read. I found myself wanting to buy the collection for my little four year old as a result of Ethel's lesson. I would bet that she has many students excited about reading after this lesson has been presented, and I would also believe that there are many more learning activities that could stem from this, such as a recycling program or planting trees within the community. Either way, Ethel is making learning fun - and she's doing it with social consciousness. Very well done!
Seuss,Seuss, Turn Us Loose
kept each of us engaged. Adults often forget that WE STILL LOVE picture books. It amazes me still today what a POWERFUL voice
Dr. Seuss has. His ability to approach difficult issues in this way is BRILLIANT. I can't wait to revisit this author within my classroom not just as a Unit, but will remember to examine and look for his work throughout the year as we encounter social issues. I also can't wait to research and learn more about the Think/Pair/Share strategy. Great job Ethel
Annotated Bibliography and Rhetorical Analysis?
I am embarrassed to be admitting this (beause I have apparently been out of school for so long), but at no time have I ever created an annotated bibliography in my educational career, which includes two bachelor's degrees, one master's degree, and another master's started but stopped, and I've never been asked to write one. I have, as the resident English teacher, been asked to help others create one, and I've helped colleagues by referencing The University of Wisconsin at Madison's Writer's Handbook and Purdue's OWL. I'll admit that I'm anxious about writing a research paper and the annotated bibliography. I've just been out of school for so long I wonder if i remember how to do write in this way.
What does teaching rhetorical analysis me to me? I think this gets at the heart of a text, speech, or conversation (hereby referred to as "the message") of examining not just what was said, but how it was said, and what was the intent of the message. Mom used to say this, "It's not what you said, it was how she took (interpreted) it. I think rhetorical analysis is something, like that. The process of decoding the message/content.
Judy Demo
Monday, July 11, 2011
3 X 3
Times ticking away....
Tick, tick, tick...Argh! There it is again! That blasted inquiry paper keeps peeking at me from around the corner. Quick! Somebody lock the door!!!
Tick, tick, tick...
Judy's Demo
I think that students would really like this exercise. It just looks so non-intimidating. I mean, how can three words hurt you, but it really makes you think and reach beyond what you ever thought you would.
I can see how this could be adapted for most any other subject. It could be used for any type of story or article or topic in any subject. Great Job!
3x3's
Teacher research
You all have to watch the Ken Robinson clip I posted - it connects beautifully to what we were talking about this morning about how when we are little we are sure we dance, sing and draw, but that gets sucked out of us with each passing year of school. It's also extremely funny - enjoy!
Hope everyone made it home safely - see you tomorrow!
Today's Reading Group
early morning demo
research
Make up blog
Judy's demo
Judy Groff's Demo: Cion Revisited
I believe that Judy values her students' thoughts, and she encourages positive interaction in her classroom. By having students work in comfortable pairs or trios, students will feel more at ease in sharing and presenting their ideas, which also establishes a positive and non-threatening learning environment. By establishing clear instructions, this lesson seems more like a very creative game versus the traditional lecture/review/discussion. Suddenly students' creative ingenuity is allowed to shine through, and even if a group makes errors - everyone learns!
Judy's lesson is sly because it will fly in under students radar and make learning fun by sneaking in: Students learn a major concept in English: BREVITY! Students will learn that short powerful sentences can maximize meaning. Too often students believe that "they have to write a whole bunch of stuff." This lesson focuses on the essentials. Students will be aware of effective word order, strong word choices (with both verbs and adjectives), review on proper nouns and pronouns, word repetition awareness, "to be" verbs, cliches, and articles.
This is a lesson that could be modified for use in any lesson in any class. I loved it!
Friday, July 8, 2011
My Jumbled Thoughts
Finally!
Thanks gang!
Thursday, July 7, 2011
For Susan and Megan
This is for our music teachers - a phenomenal ensemble called Project Trio. They came to Athens last spring for a free show at Mem Aud and it blew us away. This is their take on "Peter on the Wolf." Enjoy!
Cathy
Technology in the Classroom
Slideshare
ELGG for Moodle
Morning activity
Susan's lesson
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Inquiry anxiety
Just had a crazy coincidence
Cion
Sciolist
And yes, sometimes I read books again. Not all of them, just certain ones. Maybe I want to visit that world again or maybe I want to try to see the story from another characters point of view. I think the first time through a book is often magical but the second time can be more for understanding.
Good discussions today!
Would the Real Sciolist Please Stand Up?
A quick search into Emory University's Department of English defined meta-fiction as:
[Begin quote]
. . . . Patricia Waugh also provides a comprehensive definition by describing metafiction as "fictional writing which self-consciously and systematically draws attention to its status as an artifact in order to pose questions about the relationship between fiction and reality" (2). Metafictional works, she suggests, are those which "explore a theory of writing fiction through the practice of writing fiction" (2). Mark Currie highlights current metafiction's self-critical tendency by depicting it as "a borderline discourse, a kind of writing which places itself on the border between fiction and criticism, which takes the border as its subject" (2). Yet, he too encompasses works that are marginally metafictional by proposing that, "to see the dramatized narrator or novelist as metanarrative devices is to interpret a substantial proportion of fiction as meta-fiction"(4).
Despite the subtle differences between their definitions, most theorists agree that metafiction cannot be classified as a genre nor as the definitive mode of postmodern fiction. They suggest that metafiction display, "a self-reflexivity prompted by the author's awareness of the theory underlying the construction of fictional works," without dividing contemporary metafiction from older works containing similar self-reflective techniques (Waugh 2) . . . .
[End quote]
The Department of English at Fu Jen Catholic University in Taiwan also referenced Waugh's work on self-reflexivity within a postmodern work, such as Cion, and introduced the concept of parody (FJU) as well. Works such as Don Quixote and even Forrest Gump entered into our dialogue (as referenced by the scholars at FJU) as we began to tackle the concept of meta-fiction and Cion.
In analyizing Mda's Toloki, we agreed that he (Toloki) acknowledged his creator, but we didn't believe that the sciolist was Zakes himself. Given the working definition of meta-fiction, as presented by Waugh, and the concept of parody introduced via FJU, we suggested that Zakes sciolist was possibly a construct, a character entity, perhaps a literary persona of Mda, who created Toloki - especially since the sciolist was previously described as having brown skin. Was that Zakes poking fun at his own creation? A tease to pique the minds of the curious? A hint?
We questioned the concepts of literary personas that authors may allow to develop, and we gave consideration to the idea that characters suddenly take on a life of their own. We discussed the commentary of Stephen King and how he has said that sometimes he does not know what a character will do (my loose paraphrase of our discussion) until the moment comes. We believe that just as their are many layers in Cion there are many "levels of being" that the sciolist passes through as we look into this world through Toloki's eyes. Toloki wants and needs to be free. We think he is about to step out, and we are waiting!
We were enjoying our discussion, but we realize that we were only getting started on this idea when we had to report back to our whole group discussion.
Thoughts?
Relevant Links:
Emory
FJU
The sciolist...
Cion
Metafiction- A Whole New World!!!
Again I want to shout out to all of you.....WHAT AN AMAZING BOND WE HAVE ALL CREATED! It is surreal to me that we will be parting ways next week. I sincerely hope we all stay in contact after the institute.
Value of Rereading
Discussions on Cion
Golfing is educational and fun!
Lynn's Demo
I think that the group comparisons were helpful and I think that students would like those as well. It allowed the students to work alone, but also allowed them to have some sort of check and balance to their work by seeing what their neighbors had written. I think that the hands-on activity that then lead into the writing activity made the writing seem more real life and the students would see it as a more worthwhile activity.
I think that this hands-on activity leading into a writing activity could be adapted for any type of subject area. I really liked this a lot. Lynn did a very good job, and I think that most any teacher could use this for any subject. I can think of many ways that I could have used this in my business classes and it would have been useful because of the immediacy of the writing response after the activity.
Lynn's Presentation
Lynn believes that to study physics and the laws of motion that in order to best demonstrate these concepts, his students should see and experience how these laws are applied. Through hands-on learning, the students can not only see these laws in action, but they can also feel them, too. This lesson is great for kinesthetic learners!
I love how Lynn integrated writing into this assignment. He had his students stop to think how those laws functioned and then asked them to transfer that knowledge into the written word. Some students used diagrams to help illustrate the laws of motion with the given props.
I thought this was an excellent demonstration, and it could perhaps be modified for students with disabilities if there was some way to use sound to help mark the distance of the swing.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Intersting Article from CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2011/LIVING/07/05/farr.mixed.race.couples/index.html?hpt=hp_bn8
Diversity
Our Reading Group Rocks!
thoughtful discussion
Today's Discussion
July 5, 2011
everyone for the thought provoking discussions!
Mary Ann
Social Injustice
Social Injustice
Social Justice
The Concept of Social Justice in the Classroom
I really enjoyed the "Art Show by SS#" activity in this morning's session, and this is a strategy that I would like to use in my own classroom to assist in teaching writing. The form of the activity was anonymous so that we could get at understanding one another's ideas without knowing whose idea we were reading/evaluating/commenting upon. Having said that, I found myself in agreement with Agents 125 and 081 (whoever they were):
Agent 125 suggested that "awareness is key." I wish I had the time to have carefully noted his/her total quip, but my take their stance was that, "Anything and everything we do helps us to increase awareness and understanding of any given value - if we just open ourselves up to that experience", and I believe that is what education is all about.
Similarly, I was also impressed with Agent 081's thoughts, which evoked this response in me: "I absolutely agree! Given common knowledge on an issue (any issue) helps us to present ideas on WHAT WE CAN WRITE ABOUT and helps to put every participant on an even footing. Even students who fear writing, who may say, "but I don't know WHAT to write about" - that common knowledge presented and shared on a subject helps each of us to get at good dialogue on any given issue, and with that [we hope] comes understanding.
I believe that awareness (or the raising of awareness - of any issue) is the main ingredient in the process of educating our youth. Be the awareness as simple as what "homework assignment is due when" or the in-depth examination of a particular unit of study or even a major concept of a research paper/project. Without awareness, how can there be any education at all? Too often today too many people exist as automatons. They simply aren't "aware" at all. Now, then, how to build awareness? Comedians use sarcasm or satire, but to us, as teachers, we can raise awareness in the classroom through active engagement and discussion. Most especially, in writing.
I believe that the concept of social justice helps to build awareness in the classroom, and by choosing to study literature - and in making an attempt to actively respond to that literature (or concept within the literature) that we are helping our students to learn to take a pro-active stance to deliberately and consciously interact with their thoughts and ideas that they may have never before considered. By selecting issues in social justice, we are helping to pave the way for even the most reclusive student to have an equal footing on sharing his/her thoughts on a given issue.
Social Justice
racism
Social Justice
Social Injustice discussions
Role of Teaching Social Justices
Social Justice talk
<b>Cathy's Demo</b>
I loved Cathy's demonstration today! I love how she made the concept of delivering bad news real - and how to do so with both class and style! It was a wonderful thing to see how bad news can typically be delivered, but also how we can show how bad news can be structured so that relationships can be kept intact - or even improved. The examples (handouts) were perfect for discussion and review prior to asking students to actual,y begin their own writing.
Well done! I would absolutely use this plan in my teaching of business letter writing!
Letter assignment
Cathy
Great job Cathy!
Cathy - the good news letter
Cathy's Demo
Cathy's Demo
I loved your demo. You have such a sweet, calming voice that "lulled" us into being a captive audience. I feel that this lesson is extremely valuable and would be very useful in the classroom. Letter writing is a skill that I personally feel has been abandoned with use of the blogs, comment boxes, and the overall use of technology. Students today do not realize the impact of their "word choice" when it is put in print. Dialogue is a difficult concept to teach and appropriateness of the format needs to be taught so that they convey what needs to be told. I feel that you also bring your "heart" into teaching when you shared the story of Julie and the inappropriateness that her boss used when dismissing her from her job. I really appreciate your sensitivity and compassion when you shared. You definitely "care" about your students.
Mary Ann
Cathy's demo
Cathy
For once I can actually say that I love chain letters!
Bad News Letters
Cathy's lesson
Cathy
December 25, 2011
Dr. Squeekers, Head Clown
Big Top Productions
123 Floopy Shoes ln.
Des Moines, IA. 65421
Dear Dr. Squeekers,
It has been our privilege to have you on our staff for the past fifty years. We have found that the relationship has been profitable for everyone.
Over the last few years, several aspiring clowns have filled the role of ghost students as a form of evaluation of your classes. While these evaluations have been upbeat, they show some signs that your teaching style may not be compatible with our modern approach. Your knock knock jokes are out of date and spraying people with seltzer water flowers is now considered juvenile by today’s forward thinking audiences. Your striped costumes are reminiscent of prison attire and as such degrading to Incarcerated Americans.
We have decided to let you keep your prop boxes and have contributed enough money to your retirement fund so that you can retire with full benefits.
If you have any questions, please call Bobo, in human resources.
Sincerely,
The Top Hat Board of Clowns
Mr. Poet
Mr. Poet
396 Tier Way
Marietta, OH 45750
Dear Mr. Poet:
We would like to thank you for your submission of poetry our journal Esteemed Poetry Journal. We appreciate your readership of our publication and hope that you will continue to patronize our publication.
Our publication tends seek material on themes related to academia, scholarship and classical values. The traditional forms of poetry have what made our publication such a long-standing entity in this region. However, in reviewing your poetry we have found that your type of poetry does not meet our submission guidelines.
Although we will not be publishing your poetry we would like to recommend other publishing houses that may be more appropriate to your style of poetry. Freestyle Poety.com and PoetswithPassion.com are two websites to research.
We look forward to seeing your poetry in print sometime in the near future.
Sincerely,
EditorX
Business Letter
Frito Lay Corporation
Sun Chips
To Whom It May Concern:
I have been a loyal consumer of the Sun Chip Brand for many years, and you have satisfied many late night cravings. In recent years you have conformed to the bio-degradable era which I fully agree with, however, the material that you now use to package your product is extremely disruptive while sneaking in a late night snack.
Recently while indulging this passion for your product I woke up my entire house due to the noise that was created by opening the bag. We have small children and it was very difficult to get them back to sleep.
So unfortunately, I regret to inform you that we will no longer be purchasing Sun Chips. If at some point you could change the material that you use to create your packaging we will consider patronizing and consuming your product once again.
Sincerely,