Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Library, Marblehead Village School, 1.7 hours




After a week of MCAS testing in the library, along with every other possible space in the school, classes returned to the library for their scheduled times.  The children continued their work exploring Canada’s provinces and territories as part of the 4th grade social studies standard to study North America.  The lessons I observed on 3/28/13 showed the students involved in the inquiry process.  Prior to the students entering the library, the LMS had placed each team’s folder on a table along with books pertaining to that province.

Canada Geopolitical Map by E. Pluribus Anthony courtesy of Wikimedia Commons


As usual, the class began with a recap of previously learned concepts and terms.  For these two classes, a recap was especially crucial since it had been two weeks since their previous class.   There was a brief informal discussion of the 3 terms written on the board.  These terms were bibliography, plagiarism and paraphrase.  The students were able to give accurate definitions or descriptions of each term.  The other side of the board contained 3 bulleted areas the lesson would focus on.  The first was to go over a plan for the day which included splitting resources and each partner using one source.  The second was to collect all information on a resource sheet.  (See Resource Sheet below)  The third reminded the students to take notes in their own words or “paraphrase.”  I can see the reasoning in reviewing since one child had confused quoting verbatim and paraphrasing.  In a group environment, the LMS was able to clarify the misunderstanding before a bigger error was made by more than one student.  Mrs. Soghomonian then reminded the students of their goal which was to be such an expert on their province or territory that they would be able to make a commercial or website about it.


 
Resource Sheet Created by Mrs. Soghomonian


Mrs. Soghomonian then turned their attention to the books on the tables which the students would use to gather pertinent information.  She reiterated that the students needed to focus on the positives!  Student examples of areas of interest for their province or territory were scenery, weather, entertainment, historic sites and tourist attractions.  Mrs. Soghomonian briefly reviewed the tools available in the index and table of contents to locate the above information.  She was also pleased when the students were able to tell her where in the book they would look to find each of those tools.  Being able to quickly access the information is critical especially in this time sensitive learning environment.  Each student was directed to find between 5 and 8 facts about their location.  (Each class was at a different point in the amount of information they had gathered, so Mrs. Soghomonian altered the amount of information to complete this stage of the project.)


Montréal & Québec City by Sacha Jackson
I is for Island: A Prince Edward Island Alphabet by Hugh MacDonald


As I walked around the class, shadowing the LMS, the discussions that the students had with her showed that they were engaged in the learning process.  Discussions such as, “Are there really a lot of potatoes in Canada?”, “What do I cite if there is no author listed in a tourism book?” and “Is there an author for an article in an encyclopedia?” cropped up as Mrs. Soghomonian circulated among the students.  Mrs. Soghomonian had a variety of resources available from encyclopedias and tourism books to picture and nonfiction books on the provinces and territories.  As one student found out the picture books were easier to read but the information was not as easy to detect since there was no table of contents.  Even with previous reminders, the students needed some probing questions of what they were looking for and where they could find it.  As the time quickly ticked down, the LMS gave the class a 5 minute warning that the class would be ending soon.  As always, some groups were extremely productive and others were more jovial.  The LMS was aware of this and allocated her time predominantly between the higher need groups while still briefly checking in with the more self sufficient groups.  At the end of class, Mrs. Soghomonian announced that next week’s class would be their last opportunity to get all the facts that they needed.

After both groups left the library, I spoke with the LMS about this project.  Her concerns were the amount of time left in the next class for the students to have enough information.  Naturally, she had already devised a plan for those students that were not able to provide the facts and information needed.  While the goal was for each team to make a commercial or web site to get tourists to visit their province or territory, the LMS realizes that sometimes you need to reassess a project based on the individual students.  For those students that will not meet the information requirement, she will have them put together an informational flyer on their province or territory rather than a website or commercial.

Students discovered some great facts about their areas.  One attraction, that I found as interesting as the students did, was the Capilano Bridge in North Vancouver, British Columbia.  This popular tourist attraction is an enormous suspension bridge that the book prefaced was not for the faint of heart.  Just looking at it makes me appreciate its beauty nestled along a trail in the private nature preserve and be grateful for the firm land currently beneath my feet.  

Capilano Bridge by Leonard G. courtesy of Wikimedia Commons


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