I have a parent who contacted me today and wants to help in the classroom, but I’m not sure how to have them help. Any suggestions?


How do you effectively co-plan lessons with a co-teacher to ensure equal participation?
Have you ever utilized letter or word sorts to early literacy skill building?
Free Letter and Word Sorts - continue to check out my website for more free resources!
A Slinky is a wonderful early language and literacy tool - check out the video I created on different ways to use a Slinky.
https://www.canva.com/design/DAGQ-Kjh6JY/7JhAzf8qvFx_Q3JOaAa-sw/watch?utm_content=DAGQ-Kjh6JY&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=editor
or
https://www.ginapepin.com/blank-19-1
I want to include some Science of Reading strategies in my science teaching. What are some ways to go about this?

What are committees in your school or district and how do they give input on the school climate or activities?


How do you develop a culture of reading in your school? How do you get students (and staff!) excited to read?


What are some fun activities/collaboration between buddy classrooms (3rd and kinder)?



Next week is "Celebrate Freedom Week". During that week, students will learn about different founding documents. One key statement that we discuss is, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed". What are some ways that your district explains the idea that government's power comes from the people. (This is a State Statute as well as a set of standards)
I have students who are struggling with reading. What are some strategies that I can use to help them?
First, you need to determine the area of focus that the student is struggling with. This can be done by using various assessments. Gather data on different areas of reading: decoding, sight words, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.
Once you have determined the area(s) of concern, you can apply reading interventions to address these needs.
Word Study
Phonemic awareness
Decoding
High Frequency (sight words)
Syllabication
Spelling
Fluency
Modeled and assisted oral reading
Prosody development (pacing, intonation, volume, smoothness, phrasing, expression)
Guided reading
Partner reading
Vocabulary
Teacher models and explains
Technical
Content specific (using different genres)
Teaching word parts (roots, prefixes, suffixes)
How do you structure parent/teacher conferences?
Do students attend or lead the conference or do you just meet with caregivers?
What information do you share during the conference?




I’m loving this idea—what are some ways you build discussion with your students?
What software or program does your district utilize for IEP writing? Our district uses Illuminate. What are your thoughts on the program you use?


How do you ensure that students with severe speech and language articulation or receptive or expressive disabilities take appropriate routine assessments? For example a student that struggles with speaking fluently i.e. stutters may be omitted from one minute oral reading fluency benchmark testing. Students with specific articulation errors should also not be penalized for these errors during early literacy screeners and benchmark tests. Our district writes the articulations errors on the Acadience test booklet to avoid such penalties.
How often does your Multi-Disciplinary team meet? In our building our team the Reading Specialist, Occupational Therapist, Social Worker, School Psychologist, Principal, Speech and Language Pathologist, Nurse... and select teacher meet on a bi-weekly basis to review students in the SST/RTI process, students in the special education process (reevals, referrals, etc), attendance concerns, teacher concerns/problem solving etc.
