
Ideas & Innovations
DISD Curriculum & Instruction Newsletter Dec 2017
This month, we want to help you enjoy the holidays, at school and with family & friends. We hope these "gifts" add to your holiday cheer and celebration this year!
Houston Area Holiday Events and Activities
Houston Zoo Lights Educator Night
Teachers, school administrators and other educators get $9 admission on Thursday, December 7. Use discount code ZLEDU17 and show your educator ID when you arrive.
A Charlie Brown Christmas
Main Street Theater, December 9 & 16
Tickets $20
http://www.mainstreettheater.com/youththeater/charliebrown_christmas.html
Campfire Christmas
Journey back into time to Christmases past with this one-of-a-kind, time-traveling holiday experience!
https://www.georgeranch.org/programs-events/campfire-christmas/
Ice Land & Moody Gardens Festival of Lights
Value Days - Sun - Thur through December 14.
Cookies with Santa
December 24, 11:00am - 3:00pm
The man in red invites you to fuel up with milk and cookies at the Children’s Museum of Houston before his big departure!Alvin Christmas Train
An old-fashioned train ride though Christmas scenery and over 300,000 lights.
Tickets $7 online, $10 at the door
The Houston Museum of Natural Science
Dayton Christmas Parade & Tree Lighting Ceremony
Saturday, December 9, 7:00pm
Dayton Chamber of Commerce Santa Fun Run & Walk
Dayton Community Center
excerpted from TheCornerStoneForTeachers.com, by Angela Watson
We’re heading into the home stretch here, and it can be one of the hardest times in which to maintain order in the classroom. Fortunately, there are ways to make the last few days count and maintain your sanity:
1. Don’t build anticipation.
Assemblies, presentations, and other holiday events are unavoidable in December, but you can prevent your class from getting over-excited by staying focused on daily routines instead of special activities. I list my schedule changes in a prominent place for the type of children who need to have a plan, but I don’t mention the special events at all unless we need to prepare. If a student asks when the holiday party is, I point to the schedule, then change the subject.
Right before an event, I explain what’s happening in a calm voice: “We’re going down to the cafeteria now for the chorus performance. That will take up part of our math time. When we get back, we will complete our math warm-ups just like we usually do, and then continue with our graphing activity.”
2. Resist the urge to ease up on your behavioral expectations.
Believe me when I say that easing up will backfire completely. When the teacher is lackadaisical, it just adds to the environment of chaos that the students are slowly creating and makes it harder to get the class back on track. If the kids run to line up, shake your head and nonchalantly tell the whole class to sit back down and try again. “I know you’re excited about the chorus performance. But we need to line up in a quiet and orderly way, just like we always do. Let’s see which table is ready to try again. Watch Team Three as they walk at aappropriate pace over towards the door. Notice how they pushed their chairs in. Do you see how they are facing forward and not talking? Excellent. Team Four, your turn to try.”
Yes, it’s December. And yes, you still have to do this.
3. Review your procedures and expectations.
It’s probably been a few weeks or months since you’ve articulated and modeled some of your classroom procedures for the entire class. (Just because you tell the same four kids over and over that NO, they cannot get a drink in the middle of a lesson, does not mean the rest of the class was paying attention when you reiterated your expectations.)
4. Integrate high-interest projects and group work into your regular routines.
I like to finish the majority of my content instruction early in the month so that students can spend most of the last week before break just practicing and applying skills. On the last few days of December, they typically published their narrative essays in writing, completed main idea partner activities in reading, created multiplication fact houses in math, and made land form changes pop-up books in science.
These activities are interesting enough to keep the kids focused on their work, and don’t require them to be sitting still and following along with me. We did, however, continue with regular routines for morning work, reading groups, math and writing warm-up assignments, and so on, to send the message that this is a regular school day with regular expectations.
The idea is that the kids don’t notice a change in the way the day is run; only you as the teacher are aware of the subtle differences in the way content is presented and activities assigned.
5. Don’t feel pressure to do all of the elaborate holiday stuff that other teachers do.
So what if the teacher across the hall covers her room in tinsel and lights and creates extensive holiday-themed centers which culminate in a life-size replica of the first North Pole expedition? Don’t compare yourself, and don’t wear yourself out trying to keep up. New teachers, especially, need to resist the urge to take on more than they can handle. Figure out some simple festive things you can do that won’t create a lot of stress, and stick with those. You can always add a little more next year.
This advice goes double for buying students presents. Your teammate may choose to spend $50 on trinkets, and that’s fine. But you’re not a bad teacher if you don’t.
6. Keep the last day before break low-key.
Three hours before you pack up your whole family and make an eight hour trip to grandma’s house is NOT the time to plan an elaborate fraction-review-gingerbread-house-decorating activity. You’ll be distracted by your own holiday plans, the kids who actually show up to school will be too excited to follow directions, and you’ll be running around like crazy to clean up so you can leave on time.
Instead, give meaningful work assignments that the kids will enjoy completing, and enjoy the last day together. This will also help you…
7. Get prepared for January before you leave.
Try to use the day before break to take down any seasonal decorations you have up, change the calendar, finalize your lesson plans and materials for the first day back, etc. There’s nothing worse than coming back to work after a week off to discover silver glitter and unwritten thank you cards all over your desk. A new year is coming. Give yourself a new start!
Free Holiday Resources
Here are some great projects to keep your students tech-involved over the holidays. They take lots of critical thinking, problem-solving, and are worth the effort! Let me know how these go:
Create a word cloud of holiday-themed words in Tagxedo, Tagul, or Wordle.
How to make a holiday newsletter in a desktop publishing program like Publisher. Time required: 30 minutes.
Make a Holiday Card or Write a Letter to Santa
Have students practice writing skills with a holiday card or a Dear Santa letter. Uses Word, KidPix, but can be adjusted for other word processing programs or drawing programs. Time required: 30 minutes
OR
Create a holiday card in a desktop publishing program. It’s easy in Publisher, but can be adjust for other DTP with card templates. If students created holiday cards in a drawing program last year, this is a fresh approach that will teach them new programs and skills. Time: 10 minutes-20 minutes
Create a festive holiday flier to announce a school concert, party, or Christmas celebration. Time required: 15 minutes
A Holiday Story for Grades 2-7 or A Holiday Letter for Grades 2-6
Practice writing skills with a holiday story, then decorate it with borders, graphics, colors, and more. Time: 30-45 minutes
A Holiday Newsletter in Publisher
Build a newsletter to tell everyone about holiday events. Time required: 45 min.
A Holiday Calendar in MS Publisher for Elementary School
Build a holiday calendar to keep students and parents up to date on all the holiday happenings. Time required: 25 minutes
Holiday Picture with ASCII Art
Create a festive holiday picture using ASCII Art. All you need is a grayline picture and a keyboard! Complete in 10 minutes.
Holiday GIF
Build this in Lunapic (no log-in or registration required) with one of their several templates. Time required: 5 minutes
23 Holiday Websites For Your Students
Lots of websites to get students ‘in the mood’ at home and school–and they’re kid-safe.
Thank you for your gifts of love, leadership and learning. Happy Holidays from the DISD Student Services Department!
I'd love to hear from you!
Email: shanna.mccracken@daytonisd.net
Website: daytonisd.net
Location: Hayman
Phone: 936-258-2667 1153