Friday, September 28, 2012

Daily 5...My Way

I would like to take some time to explain exactly how I run Daily 5 in my first grade classroom. Let me start by saying that I am by no means an expert in Daily 5, and this is the first year I have truly implemented it in my classroom so it's constantly evolving as I learn what works and what doesn't. The great thing about Daily 5 (well, one of many) is that you can tweek it to fit the needs of your classroom and students, and it's very flexible. I read the books over the summer, and they were pretty life changing (well, from a teaching standpoint). I will NEVER go back to doing "centers" as I did for so many years in kindergarten. Centers are a ton of work, you have to change them every week (and train the kids on the new centers every time you change them), and you have to monitor and organize who goes where every day. It's extremely time consuming. So, here's my take on Daily 5...

The number one benefit of Daily 5 is that students learn to work independently and monitor their own learning, which allows you uninterrupted time to work with small groups, conference with individual students, and assess as needed.  Once they are properly trained on the procedures and have had ample time to practice and build stamina (this does take quite some time...we are two months in and just now getting to the point where students are making choices, working independently, and I am free to work with groups), Daily 5 time is amazing. It's a quiet, peaceful time in the classroom where students are building reading fluency by practicing (either by themselves, with a buddy, or through a computer program), becoming better writers by practicing writing for a variety of purposes (lists, how to, letters, stories), and working on sight words using fun materials.

For Daily 5 in my classroom, students each have a book box that contains all of their Daily 5 materials (leveled readers and library books, notebook, monthly writing journal, and folder). During the initial introduction phase, each component is practiced for just a few minutes at a time, adding a minute each day until they are able to work for 20 minutes without interruption. We call this "building stamina". We make anchor charts as we discuss the rules and procedures for each component, and after each practice round we come together and discuss how we did. We also graph our stamina. The first two components students learn are read to self and work on writing. They start off doing both at their seats, but eventually they work up to being able to choose where they sit in the classroom (the floor, a table, etc.). During the introductory phase of work on writing, students are taught the different purposes for writing and they are assigned a writing assignment each day based on what they are learning. Eventually they get to start making choices about their writing. I keep a ton of writing materials, paper, and supplies in my writing center, and each month they receive a journal to use for prompts. They must start with either their journal or a specific writing assignment, then they can choose fun things like bucket filler slips, lists, letters to a friend, and picture stories. After awhile, we add in read to someone. I choose their partner, and they either practice reading our reading story for the week or our fluency story for the week. Once these three components are going smoothly, I add in word work. Initially (the first month) we do word work together. They start with a "must do" which is usually some type of practice with sight words or word families that must be handed in. Then they have the option of practicing their sight words for the week with a variety of materials such as play dough, keyboards, wikki sticks, magnets, white boards, or stamps. These are the "may do" word work choices. I know that all sounds super confusing, but it really does run smoothly once the initial training phase is over and students are able to work independently.

We are now pretty much to the point where we can do 3-4 20 minute "rounds". At the start of each round we review procedures and expectations, talk about any "must do" work for word work and work on writing, and I call each students name and have them tell me where they want to start. They can do Daily 5 in any order they want, and they won't get to all 5 components every day because of time, but they must do word work and work on writing every day, and each of those two components has a "must do" that is to be turned in, that way I can monitor students and make sure they are actually working.

This is just a basic overview of how I have started using Daily 5 in my classroom, and I hope to add more details and advice (as well as pictures and resources) as I go along. I also think it is important for parents to understand how Daily 5 works, and how it truly improves student achievement in literacy.

Busy, Busy

I think any teacher would agree with me in saying that August and September are just plain crazy. The first month is all about training. Yep. You have to train the kiddos on how things run in your classroom. Rules, procedures, all that fun stuff. Then before you know it, you are in September and all of a sudden report cards are upon you...which means assessing, assessing, assessing. PHEW! I have been busy lately to say the least, and I apologize for the serious lack in blogging. Teacher fail. I will say that the past two weeks have been exciting. Well, for me anyways. I am FINALLY starting to see the classroom running itself, which I LOVE. It means all that training is paying off and my kiddos are starting to get the hang of things like Daily 5 (man, that requires a TON of practice in order to run successfully...who knew?), Whole Brain Teaching, and all the other things that are new to them as big first graders like "clicker tests" (we get to take our weekly reading tests with a super cool remote control). I am also getting into my groove as a first grade teacher. Having taught kindergarten the last 4 years, I am still finding out what's I like and what's going to work with first graders (and what has failed miserably). It's a learning process. But I finally feel like I am liking the way things are headed.

So after that ramble I will get onto the good stuff. What's going on in room 202 these days? I think the best and most exciting thing would be how well Daily 5 has been going and how proud I am that the students are finally at the point where they have gained enough independence that they can make their own choices. They have now learned 4 of the 5 components, and they have the freedom to choose between read to self and work on writing each day. Next week I am going to add read to someone as a choice. After fall break I am going to go crazy and throw in word work as another choice, and hopefully shortly after that I will be able to introduce listen to reading which will allow students to choose computer reading programs such as Reading Eggs, MyOn Reader, and Accelerated Reader. Daily 5 rocks, and I have a big post all about how I run Daily 5 coming soon. Stay tuned. Here are some fun pictures taken during word work:

The other fantastic thing I see going on in our classroom is the sense of community that is starting to develop. We are all starting to come together as a team, and that is a special thing in any classroom. I mentioned Bucket Fillers in an earlier post, and I have to mention the sweetest thing ever. We started using the Bucket Filler forms during work on writing and the students have been so incredibly sweet and thoughtful and it melts my heart! You would just die if you sat in on community circle on Fridays. I pull out the slips from each bucket and read one aloud. Their faces just light up when someone fills their bucket and I could just cry it's so darn sweet. My favorite is when they notice that someone's bucket is empty and they make an effort to fill ALL buckets by Friday so no one is left out. It doesn't always happen, but we get close, and everyone has had at least one bucket filler. Next week I hope to get some pictures of some of the darling things they write to one another. And wow does it build self esteem. I just love it. It's my favorite part of the week.

We also had our first student reach level 2 on the Super Improver wall. Congratulations student #3!!!



Oh, and our cafeteria is doing this neat program where they deliver an "unsual" healthy snack once a month for everyone to try. This month we tried a "seckle pear". All but two students loved it, and they DEVOURED it.
 Hopefully next week I will be able to finish my new math tubs so we can enjoy some fun math games on Fridays. I did teach them how to play "Bump" last week, and we played a fun Halloween version called "Boo Bump". I know it's early, but I love Halloween. We are also playing the scoreboard to earn a Halloween party. That should be fun:)