iPads, MakerEd and More in Education
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My Favorite Back to School Middle School Science Activities - Kesler Science

My Favorite Back to School Middle School Science Activities - Kesler Science | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
Back to school always felt like a fresh start for me.  One of my favorite parts about teaching was that each year I got a chance to correct the wrongs from the previous year.  I used the first few weeks of school to build relationships with students and to put them into situations that helped build our class culture.  I’ve put together a list of my favorite back to school resources for a middle school science teacher.
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Design Thinking as a Back to School Activity - Louden Clear in Education

Design Thinking as a Back to School Activity - Louden Clear in Education | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
I am a procrastinator–to say the least–so as school was quickly approaching, I began to scramble to put together our first few days. I combed Pinterest, retweeted ideas, organized my Pocket with a BTS category. But still nothing stuck out for me. Thankfully, in mid-July I was part of a grant process that included two days of design thinking. My friends and I loved the process so much, that we thought “Why don’t we start the school year with design thinking?”

So we did.

And it was the best first days I have had in twelve years.  I’m not even exaggerating.
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What to Do in Week One? - Rick Wormeli - Educational Leadership

What to Do in Week One? - Rick Wormeli - Educational Leadership | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
n the school district where I taught for many years, school always began on the Tuesday after Labor Day. Our middle school teaching team, which served 185 students, competed every year to see who could learn every student's name by Friday. Most years, I won.

While students worked in my class, I used memory techniques to review their names. After school, I studied pictures of them. I asked students to switch their seats each day, sometimes even in the middle of class, and then I identified each one of them anew. I practiced naming them as they entered my room and in the cafeteria during lunch. I dared students to try to trick me into associating them with an incorrect name; I bungled a few, and there were a lot of laughs. But by the end of the fourth day of school, I knew all 185 students' names.

It was the first leg of the year's journey in relationship building. Parents wrote notes and e-mails marveling that I knew their child so well so quickly and predicting that this was going to be a great school year for their child. Of course, I didn't really know their children yet. But all of us feel honored when others whom we respect think our names are worth remembering. In that simple act, we make a connection.
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