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BrainNinjasWP

How to Celebrate Halloween In the Classroom

by BrainNinjasWP

Are you looking for ways to celebrate Halloween in your upper elementary classroom? We gathered up some of our students' favourite activities for you to try. Come take a look!

Halloween is such a special time for many students. In past years, we’ve had parades and assemblies and handed out candy. There was a time when bobbing for apples was a good idea. Now, since the pandemic, the thought of countless students scrambling to bite into an apple floating around in a tub full of mouth germs…ugg.

Our classroom is usually bustling with parent volunteers who help out at different Halloween-themed stations. Still, some years, there might not be as many parent volunteers available as you need, so it’s nice to have easy alternatives in your back pocket.

If your school and students are celebrating Halloween, here are some generally easy ways to have a little fun.

[Read more…] about How to Celebrate Halloween In the Classroom

Filed Under: Classroom Tips Tagged With: celebrations, classroom celebrations, Halloween, halloween activities, halloween art, halloween art lessons, halloween celebrations, halloween leessons, halloween logic puzzles, halloween math, Holidays and Seasonal, Pandemic Teaching, physically distanced celebrations, socially distanced celebrations, Teachers Pay Teachers

How to Reconnect From Your Teaching Island

by BrainNinjasWP

Is teaching making you feel isolated and disconnected? Come read through some of the strategies that may help you through the tough times. Your mental health is much more important than your teaching job, so let us help.

Teaching has always been an isolating profession. We spend all day in a classroom with little people who get our jokes. The adult conversations we get happen during recess or staff meetings or in the bathroom line waiting for a toilet. It can leave anyone feeling disconnected.

My husband has a joke about teachers, they can seek each other out anywhere in the world. It never fails that when we travel to another country and meet another couple, one of them will be a teacher. He calls it teacher radar.

And it’s true. When two teachers meet in the wild, they talk about teaching. Because it’s another human in the world who actually gets it.

I mean, Mr. Ninja tries to be supportive, but unless you’re in the trenches, you don’t really get it.

How do you connect with other teachers? Come read about our struggles and some of the solutions.

[Read more…] about How to Reconnect From Your Teaching Island

Filed Under: Classroom Tips Tagged With: Covid-19, first-year teachers, new teachers, Pandemic Teaching, Student Teachers, Teacher Mental Health, Teacher Wellness, Teacher Workload

Your Must-Do Back to School Survival Checklist

by BrainNinjasWP

This year is different than any other back to school seasons, so what are some of the things you can do to get yourself prepared regardless of whether you're teaching in person or online. Come take care of your own mental health before your students return!

We created a back to school checklist to think about what might happen this year. It’s not possible to predict exactly what will happen. Things tend to be getting back to normal, but it the past few years have tuaght us anything, don’t get complacent. You might be teaching in person, online or some sort of combination of these things.

You might be teaching a new subject or a new grade level. You might not know anything about what you’ll be doing.

None of it is within your control. So, let’s talk about the things you can control and get ready before you have to go back to school no matter how it looks.

[Read more…] about Your Must-Do Back to School Survival Checklist

Filed Under: Classroom Tips Tagged With: Back to School, building rapport, building relationships with students, Emergency Sub Plans, Survival Kit

How to Set Up Your Reading Comprehension Schedule

by BrainNinjasWP

If you use our weekly reading comprehension sets (or maybe you want to learn more), come see how we schedule the first month and get some ideas for how you can use these reading and grammar activities in your classroom whether your instruction happens in the classroom or online.

If you are struggling with reading instruction in your classroom, you’re not alone. Upper elementary teachers are often not trained in how to teach students to read, despite the fact all the students in their classroom are unlikely to be reading at grade level. Setting up a reading comprehension schedule is one way to get on track.

We designed our Weekly Reading Comprehension Skills specifically for our students. We needed reading material for science and social studies that were at the right reading level and needed to teach grammar and reading skills. You might want to read this post about how we came up with them: Add Great Content to Your Literacy Lessons.

[Read more…] about How to Set Up Your Reading Comprehension Schedule

Filed Under: Engaging Lessons, Teaching Strategies Tagged With: distance teaching, Google Apps, Guided Reading, Guided Reading Instruction, Reading, reading comprehension, reading strategies, reluctant readers, Teachers Pay Teachers, Teaching Reading

How to Get Your Classroom Set Up in One Day

by BrainNinjasWP

Are you stuck in a time crunch with one day to set up your classroom? Yes, it can be done. Get down to the basics and leave everything else for later. Come read about how we've set up our classroom in one day.

It was the first day we were allowed to reenter the school after a major renovation. It was a disaster. Before the end of the previous year, we packed up everything and carefully labeled it. Nothing was returned to the classrooms. Students would be arriving in ONE day! Yup! You heard that right.

What a nightmare! Fortunately, we worked with the most amazing staff on the planet. We planned out a solution to bring everyone’s anxiety level down to a manageable level. We hosted a walking set-up bus.

What is a walking set-up bus? Keep reading to find out.

[Read more…] about How to Get Your Classroom Set Up in One Day

Filed Under: Classroom Tips Tagged With: Back to School, Classroom Organization, Classroom Set Up, Holidays and Seasonal, Setting Up Technology, Staff and Faculty Activities, Teacher Mental Health, Teacher Wellness, Teamwork

Add Great Content to Your Literacy Lessons

by BrainNinjasWP

There are so many things to teach and just not enough time for it all. We started using content from science and social studies to teach grammar and reading comprehension. Game changer! Come find out what we did and how we did it in our upper elementary classroom literacy lessons (even during distance teaching).

It took fifteen years of teaching and professional development before we felt confident teaching reading to students in upper elementary. Reading is one of the most important skills any teacher is responsible for, but it is often taught by stabbing at strategies until something works-only to find it doesn’t work for the next student. Literacy lessons were hard to design and we didn’t really know where to start.

The most important thing we’ve learned is that reading comprehension skills are also skills related to grammar, word parts, word families and patterns, and writing. The same skills are used in a variety of ways.

If a student missed one of these skills, they trip over it in everything other subject. By the time students get to the end of Grade Three, if they aren’t reading at grade level, they are statistically unlikely to catch up. So, what is a teacher to do?

[Read more…] about Add Great Content to Your Literacy Lessons

Filed Under: Engaging Lessons, Teaching Strategies Tagged With: grammar, Guided Reading Instruction, Reading, reading comprehension, reading strategies, Teachers Pay Teachers, Teaching Reading, Weekly Reading Skills

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