See for Yourself

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Gail Boushey

August 6, 2015

August 7, 2015
Issue #368

Sarah stepped forward at our CAFE conference in Tacoma, Washington, and slowly but deliberately walked to where Joan and I were greeting attendees and answering final questions before leaving for the evening. Once no one else was in line, Sarah approached, looked me straight in the eye and said, “If I videotape myself teaching Daily 5/CAFE would you give me feedback on the implementation?” 

My years of experience and literacy coaching skills kicked in, and these words came to mind: “For us to grow as teachers, we need two things: a clear picture of current reality and a goal we want to achieve" (Fritz, 1984). Over the course of the two-day conference Sarah created a goal to implement Daily 5/CAFE correctly. She doesn't need me though. She has everything she needs: equipment to videotape herself, a reflective mind, and colleagues who know her strengths as well as the culture and climate of her classroom and the school. 

Jim Knight (2014) suggests that videotaping is the perfect vehicle to show what is really happening, helping us focus on our teaching and analyze the current reality so we can set a goal to move our teaching forward. “When video recording is shared in a way that supports each educator’s intrinsic desire to improve, it can be a powerful tool for rapid, significant improvement” (p. 18). 

Joan and I have been videotaped many, many times (we have 16 DVD’s and over 500 video clips on this site). For me, it is at the top of the list of painful, challenging, humbling, nerve-wracking activities. It is also the most powerful, insightful, thought-provoking thing I have done to change, modify, grow, and improve my teaching. 

In our professional culture, we must all be learning and improving our teaching. Consider videotaping yourself, finding out what your current teaching reality is, and setting your goal for improvement. Be okay with the truth that no lesson is perfect, and then dive in and learn. Grab a teammate or colleague and do it together. That's what Joan and I did, and we are all the better for it. 

Fritz, Robert. (1984). The path of least resistance: Learning to become the creative force in your own life.  New York: Ballantine Books.

Knight, J. (2014). What you Learn . . . when you see yourself teach. Educational Leadership71(8), 18–23.

 

 

News from The Daily CAFE


 

Questions Answered . . .

My math lesson takes too long. How can I fit it into the Math Daily 3 structure?
Take a look at how we plan for instruction and individual practice in our math block. 

 

 

Purposeful Practice . . .

Organizing Your Math Tools*
These questions and links will help you get organized and ready for Math Daily 3.

 

Assessment Matters . . .

Math Games—Valuable Informal Assessment Opportunities*
Math games provide a wonderful opportunity to assess students.  .
 

 

 

Try Today . . .

A Very Improbable Story by Edward Einhorn**
A story highlighting the math concept of probability.

 

Focus on Health . . .

Great Minds
Let’s use our time and energy to focus on ideas.

*Available to members

 

 

Professional Development Opportunities


2015 Live Workshops

At each location, we focus the first day on The Daily 5 and Math Daily 3. Day two is CAFE Intensive. Learn about all the new content by following any of these links.

Location

Dates

Minneapolis, MN
Radisson Blu Mall of America

Aug. 29 (Full) 
Aug. 30 
(Full) 

Fort Worth, TX
Hilton Fort Worth

Sept. 19 (Full)
Sept. 20

Las Vegas, NV
Tropicana Las Vegas

Nov. 14  
Nov. 15

2015 Online Seminars

Prefer short bursts of information combined with independent learning? Each session offers separate seminars on Daily 5, CAFE, and Math Daily 3.

September 6–October 3 (Full)
October 4–October 31
November 1–November 28

Learn more about Daily 5 and CAFE workshops, online seminars, and online graduate courses.

Up & Running with the Daily 5

Our new how-to video, shot in third-grade and fifth-grade classrooms, is available through subscription for online streaming or as a DVD at Stenhouse Publishers.

 

 

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