5 Ways to Give Your Students Choice

5 Ways to Give Your Students Choice

WHY STUDENTS NEED CHOICE

Students used to always ask me what they can do next. I would write down their choices on the board – sometimes more than once in a day. Every time we transitioned to a new subject, I would have to rewrite what I wanted my students to do.

It was almost always the same choices. I finally decided to create a poster/anchor chart I could post and refer students to when I got that question. Over time, I have adapted this idea to fit different grade levels and students.

I always teach these options to my students at the beginning of the school year. I show them what the expectations are and how to get started independently on their choice.

You can choose 5-6 options of choices that your students can work on. You could rotate between 2-3 favorites. Each of your classroom’s are unique and your teaching style reflects your values so go with what you feel your students need.

For those Type A people reading this. I get it. I’m with you. Giving students choice can be scary at first, but I am telling you that letting this small change happen and embracing it will lead to a more calm and focused classroom.

I’ll also share some more ideas with you that you can easily incorporate into your classroom routines. Giving students choice allows them to build problem-solving skills and keeps them engaged throughout the day. Keep reading to the end to find the FREE resource at the end of this post. My hope is that you find something that works for your classroom to give your students choice.

5 Ways to Give Your Students Choice

Anchor Chart or Digital Display

Create a list of activities that your students can work on when they finish another task before you transition. For some students who finish more quickly than others, teach and model how to choose an option and begin working independently. These options should always be low to no prep and can be print or digital activities.

  • Work on classwork or homework
  • Catch up on make-up work
  • Digital curriculum supplement
  • Websites/Learning Games
  • Virtual field trips
  • Explore virtual classrooms
  • What creative ideas can you come up with?
Virtual Experiences (Classrooms & Field Trips)

Put the world at their fingertips by letting them choose their next adventure. Let your students choose their experience or assign them a place to visit by allowing them to choose off a list you provide. Link it to your curriculum and embed opportunities for feedback, collaboration, and reflection. You can search for virtual field trips and find many lists and resources available. If you enjoy the virtual classroom opportunity, find templates you like that are premade or create some on your own. You can add all kinds of content using virtual classrooms to enhance learning experiences.

Flipgrid

Set up grids and topics and teach your students how to record videos and comment on others to engage with your content. The website is fairly simple to navigate, but can sometimes be confusing when using multiple grids and topics. There are many ways that students can use Flipgrid to use time productively during class.

  • Read alouds (teacher & students)
  • Fluency practice and assessments
  • Responding to a Prompt
  • Sharing their favorite part of the day
  • Recording a book review and/or summary
  • Presenting an argument on a topic
Book Reviews

Students usually have a lot to talk about! Give them a reason to talk using a method of presentation of their choice. Students can review a book they have read. Then, using Wakelet, Slides, posters, Flipgrid, etc., have students practice their speaking and communication skills.

Give your students an opportunity to use their critical thinking and problem-solving skills. Students will have to apply, analyze, and evaluate what they have read to connect it together.

Free Writing & Shared Journals

We should remember to add in some time for reflection and decompressing from what life brings us and our students. Let students write what’s on their mind. They can free write, you can give them a prompt, or you can do shared journals in your classroom. Shared journals are when you or one students starts writing. Then, other students add to the writing to continue the story. At the end of the notebook, students can read and share the book together as a collaborative effort.

Incorporating drawing and coloring with writing can motivate reluctant writers who may not be confident in their abilities yet.

 YOUR NEXT STEPS

Imagine what you want your classroom to look like this fall? While summer is on our minds now, we are all guilty of visualizing how we will create our new learning space. With a renewed sense of more normalcy in the classroom, we can start to think about the things in our classroom that worked well and we should keep. We also learned what didn’t work. There is no reason to hold onto those practices. We can give ourselves permission to let our students explore in new ways.

Your next steps are to determine which choices you want your students to have. Pick ones that you know you can teach and model and students can do independently after guided practice. Then, work them into your back-to-school routines plans. The last thing I will leave you with is to remember to be flexible. Some of the options you choose may not work for your students or that particular group of students. You are free to add, delete, or change each semester what choices students have available. You should never feel locked into these choices and students should understand that flexibility may be needed. Click here or on the picture below to receive your FREE Choice Board template. It is a Google Drive PDF document and will ask you to make a copy. This is not an editable document.

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    Guide to a Focused Classroom

    Guide to a Focused Classroom

     LOOKING FOR EASY SUMMER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT?

    If you are one of the lucky ones like I am, you have been able to enjoy at least a full week from all school-related duties. It has been glorious! My creative itch began to emerge. I was looking to share my ideas with others and decided to submit an idea for a session. Out of that, Cultivate Calm was written.  This guide features a lot of ideas to help you in the classroom.

    The idea for this came out of the past year I spent in an exhausted state. I barely made it through. I know I am not alone in realizing how tough it was. I questioned why I was still in the classroom.

    I knew I had to make a plan and hopefully help other educators along the way. You will learn:

    • Beginning and End of the Day Routines and Rituals
    • Morning Meeting
    • Time Gaps and Flexible Time
    • Handling Tattling and All Those Questions
    • Teaching Grit and Perseverance

    This guide is designed to give you ideas, guidance, and actionable steps to discover what works best for your personality and teaching style. Create your own action plan to start creating calm this week. As with all other teaching strategies you learn and attempt to implement, you get out of it what you put in.

    Here’s a peek inside!

     

     

    WHAT’S YOUR REASON TO CREATE CALM IN YOUR CLASSROOM?

    You are always rushing around in the mornings. You’re always tired and can’t seem to get ahead. Your classroom is chaotic at times and you are ready for change. You should listen to what your heart and brain are telling you. That you need to slow down, you need to reset, and you deserve a fresh start.

    What's Your Reason?

    Discover your reasons for wanting to cultivate calm in your classroom. Design your classroom to fit your teaching style and needs. Have flexibility in what you do and how you approach your teaching day.

    WANT TO SEE A SAMPLE CHAPTER BEFORE YOU BUY?

    If you are ready to make a change for yourself, I highly recommend checking out this free chapter sample to see if the ideas in the guide fit your personality and teaching style. We know what works best for us. Simplify your teaching by choosing how you will design your classroom.

     

    HOW TO TAKE BACK YOUR CLASSROOM

    Achieving a functional, calm classroom is attainable if you’re willing to put in the work. You have to be willing to devote your mindset and class time to teach your students to create calm within your class. This is not to say that classrooms bursting with noise and excitement are bad because sometimes mixing it up in your classroom is exactly what you and your students need to stay balanced. We all like to have fun and it belongs in the classroom! Just be aware of your trigger points that exhaust you and focus on creating moments of fun. Schedule them into your day so it does not become a spur of the moment decision that gets out of hand.

    One of the most important elements you should build into your schedule is a morning routine. This gives students a chance to work on meaningful work while you get administrative tasks finished. Think about incorporating music into your morning. This can be when students are arriving or after announcements to signal a transition.

    Next, have a greeting for when students come into your classroom. Over the years I’ve seen how important and beneficial it is to greet my students at the door. Harry Wong was right, of course!

    The next thing you should add to your morning routines is a predictable way for students to come in, put away their things, and begin working on morning work. Those activities should allow students to work on them independently. They can be print or digital. You can also let students self-assess or grade them yourself.

    After they finish morning work activities, you can have a choice board available for students to choose various activities. Ideas include EPIC!, Prodigy, XtraMath, virtual classrooms, and many more.

     

    FREE Sample Chapter

    Morning routines help you start your day with a planned set of activities. Learn more about the variety of options you have to choose from. Curate a list of favorite ideas you love to new things you want to try!

    A POWERFUL MORNING MEETING

     

    I started incorporating morning meeting into my classroom practice when I was a 1st grade teacher. That was 7 years ago! I knew with my little ones, it was important to review the calendar and include number sense in daily meetings. When I moved up to 4th grade, I knew I had to adapt it, but I was going to continue with it.

    I invite you to try this out or adjust it to fit your needs and try it for one semester. See the benefits you will experience when you set up your day with a focused plan. Here’s a peek into my morning meeting components.

    RE-IMAGINE YOUR CLASSROOM

     

    Take the summer to refresh your mind and soul. Flourish in the summer moments that give us a taste of our childhoods. When things were simpler – or so it seemed to us. Now that we are adults, we must pause and reset ourselves. Listen to what this past year has taught you and move forward with a new perspective.

    What parts do you want to hold onto? Which ones are you okay with letting go? Really think about designing your classroom to cultivate a calm and focused classroom. Don’t overwhelm yourself with trying too many. Choose 1 or 2 to start with and build from there.

     

    Take care,

     

    How To Overcome Overwhelm In Your Teaching Job

    How To Overcome Overwhelm In Your Teaching Job

    A GROWING ISSUE

    I started to write this post on July 19, 2020. As I sit here on a quiet, dreary October evening, I realize that I have managed to hold it together through the 1st Quarter. I read a few posts by Angela Watson the other night that really struck a cord with me. She has been my “cornerstone” and go-to person since I found her website about 10 years ago. I was beginning my career as a teacher and was searching for quality information that fit my pedagogical style. A few of her blog titles caught my eye. I was feeling hopeless the other night endlessly perusing the internet for nothing in particular. I was shocked when I came across a post from Angela saying she was taking a sabbatical. She didn’t know when she would be back officially, but committed to appearing again in 2021. My initial thought was shock, but then I thought “Good for her! I wish I was strong enough to do that right now.”

    Then I realized that if I am going to survive this school year and remain in the teaching profession, I have to actively decide to practice self-care as well. Mine is going to look different, but that’s okay. I have been fighting a dreading sense of loss of normalcy in teaching and was able to read comments from other teachers around the world who are experiencing the same thing as me. Our profession can be a lonely one to begin with, but the current state of our world has exacerbated the loneliness and despair of what teaching has become.

    Time has dredged on. Now I find myself sitting back down to write with two weeks to go until Thanksgiving. Where did the time go? Now, we are hearing word that we need to brace ourselves for the possibility of returning to remote teaching. Even though I’ve lost my excitement for the job at this time, I find myself enjoying those small moments of joy being with my students in the classroom. Knowing that I might not be able to help them in person soon makes my time with them now more important than ever. With all of the uncertainty happening around us, it is so important that we choose to live our days in a certain way. We must choose joy. We must choose what we can control and forget about what we cannot. We must choose to show up each day and give our students the best we can. This, my friends, is what grit is all about.

    Our kids need us more than ever now. What will you do to help make that one child’s day a little better? What can you do better for your kids that requires grit from you?

     

    CHOOSING TO CHANGE

    Now that 2020 is behind us and as we are looking forward to a new year, new presidency, and a new way of doing things, I have to remind myself how lucky I am to work for a district that has allowed us grace while we figure it all out together. My to-do list still continues to be endless and I work to check off and cross off tasks, meetings, and responsibilities. I found myself needing something more – a balance that worked for me and my lifestyle. I’ve been teaching for 7 years and I feel like I have earned my right to have a better work/life balance. My mindset has to change because that should be something that everyone strives for instead of earning your right to it.

    Our literacy coach/3rd grade teacher (she was put back into the classroom to support our need for an added 3rd grade section) offers book studies for those who are interested. The title of this month’s book – “Balance Like a Pirate:  Going Beyond Work-Life Balance to Ignite Passion and Thrive as an Educator” by Jessica Cabeen, Jessica Johnson, and Sarah Johnson. I didn’t hesitate to sign up for this group, knowing that this is probably exactly what I needed right now. We are two weeks into discovering our four quadrants in life and what fuels us as educators. I’m excited to see what action plans we can come up with to help balance our lives professionally and personally. I have realized that this is part of the grit that I need to keep me going forward. I have to work on myself and really devote time to self-care instead of just talking about it. I NEED the balance, but I have to choose it and make changes to get there. It is a work in progress.

    I feel that enough time has passed for us to be able to look at 2020 in hindsight, take stock and reflect upon what we learned during that time, and forge a path for moving forward that gives us balance in our lives as teachers while nurturing our personal lives as well. So, when we are facing the unknown, let’s find grit in these uncertain times for our students, our families, and ourselves. Find one thing you can do to persevere through these times and make it a habit or part of your daily routine.

    How To Reclaim Your Time and Get Organized

    How To Reclaim Your Time and Get Organized

    GET HONEST WITH YOURSELF 

    As I was going through my email the other day, I realized that I had stored and stashed away ridiculous emails that I thought would benefit me – one day.

    When you find many emails full of free resource links (that don’t even work anymore) saved in your email for 8 years – you need to update!! I had a reality check when I stumbled on these hoards of emails. These files and my bookmarks that I have been curating for years sadly became a graveyard of broken links and 404 error pages. Ugh! I get the basic idea of the article/resource from the title and jot down anything interesting.

    I realized it was time for a change, so here I am committing to organizing my professional life as an educator. I will be switching grade levels at the end of this school year – from 1st to 4th. It was a voluntary change and one that I applied for, but now it comes with the realization that I have a ton of teaching materials that are no longer useful or meaningful. Some that aren’t even valid anymore!

     

    JUST BREATHE!! 3 STEPS TO TAKING CONTROL

    I am now in the process of starting to sort, organize, and throw away or delete all of my teaching materials. The past 10 years of stuff has become too much. I feel that I can simplify my planning process and implement more meaningful material if I take care to choose quality materials. Here are three tips to help you wrap your head around all that STUFF!

     

     

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    Create a toolbox of useful and meaningful resources.

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    Purge paper copies, digital files, and resources including professional development books.

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    Sort digital files and keep what you will really use.

    CHALLENGE YOUR MINDSET

    For this to work, you need to be real with yourself. All those procrastination thoughts and motivation killers need to be dealt with! Everyone is going to approach organization different, so it’s important you choose something that you know will work for you – not because someone else makes something look fabulous. Second, change it if it’s not working! Too often we get stuck in our routines because it is routine. However, we forget that we can also get stuck in a rut that way. If it doesn’t suit you or seems like “too much,” ditch it and try something else. Last, those paper piles! We all have them. Some of us stick them in filing cabinets, some in drawers, and some are just left out in the open for all to see. TAME THEM! You know you don’t need all of those copies of similar skills and strategy worksheets.

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    Choose an organizational style that works best for you.

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    Don't be afraid to change if it's not working!

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    Tame those paper piles!

    RESOURCES

    Teaching has become more digital and Google Drive is being used by more teachers as a way to streamline in-person, remote, and hybrid teaching. I have been following Kristen from Ladybug’s Teacher Files for about 10 years now and her organizational advice is extremely helpful; especially if you are tech savvy. Her blog post about organizing and color-coding your Google Drive was extremely helpful for me in getting organized. 

    Recently, I found myself looking to Angela Watson’s courses to regain control of my career. With the ever-changing demands of teaching, I had to do something before I hit burnout mode. I never felt like I could get caught up. Once I did, I could never maintain it. Her books and courses on conquering anxiety and overwhelm helped ground me. Her “Fewer Things Better Project” is a way for teachers to realize it’s okay to say no and take back your life. You shouldn’t feel guilty about self-care.

    Another great resource I relied on was Core Inspiration by Laura Santos. She has an amazing library of classroom organization posts to help you tailor organization to support a self-directed learning environment. One MAJOR time saving resource that I found was Laura’s FREE digital lesson plan book template. I adapted it to fit my needs and reorganized it to match my preferences and includes the standards number for each lesson. One of the best parts of using a digital lesson plan book is that you can link your resources directly to your plans! I use this method all the time to quickly access lesson videos, Google Slides, Docs, websites, etc. By adapting this practice, that took time to get used to, I have cut hours off of my plan and prep time because I have been able to streamline everything.

    Of course, none of these tips and strategies will help you if you don’t choose to put work, time, and energy into it. No one else can get you out of the rut that you might be in. There are a lot of resources to help you along your journey, but you have to reach out for help. That can take the form of self-discovered blog posts, websites, like-minded colleagues, organizational consultants, or therapists. Whatever path you choose; just start. Changing your mindset is none something you can check off a list. It’s a journey and is constantly changing. You will always need to learn new skills and adapt to changing situations.

     Invest in yourself. It’s worth it.

     

     

     

     

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