Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about Boom cards!
I've been looking at them. Do they require students to have their own log in and password to use? Can you post a link to the cards on Google Classroom? Did your district pay for an account for you to use?
The student doesn’t need a log in or password . You can click on fast play and send the hyperlink to your students and they can access the activity for up to two weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about Boom cards!
I've been looking at them. Do they require students to have their own log in and password to use? Can you post a link to the cards on Google Classroom? Did your district pay for an account for you to use?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been teaching ESY this summer and it has been such a great experience! I have a mixture of students in my self contained k-2 class. DCPS has really enforced teachers using one platform teams. The things that have been the most useful has been having a morning meeting every morning followed by a read aloud. For morning meeting I use PowerPoint, starfall(calendar)and GoNoodle. For read aloud I have been using Vooks along with YouTube along with PowerPoint slides that I have created with questions and visuals -for responses. I try to have objectives posted on each slide and keep the questions similar each week so the students get used to structure. I hope to change it over time. Morning meeting and read aloud can go for 30-45 minutes.
I have been meeting with each of my students for 30 minutes one on one at the same time everyday.Families can get overwhelmed with different work times each day. Two days for ELA and 2 days Math. I send the PowerPoint lesson for ELA and Math before the lesson in case parents want to print it out. Downtown has also been printing out work for the students and mailing it to their house. I also send ELA and Math independent work at the beginning of the week to be completed throughout the week. Boom cards have been great to use to help students work on specific goals and then I can send the parents the link to the cards if they want to work on it later with their child.
During the school year I had only 50 percent of the students participating in online learning and now I have 87 percent.
I'm learning so much! Thank you PP!
I just checked out Starfall Calendar. Really useful! Do you show it on your screen and have the students talk about it or do you assign it to them and have them do the interactive activity?
Love GoNoodle -- looks like a great source of 5 minute active songs and brain breaks.
How do you do a read aloud with Vooks and Power Point?
So Morning meeting is 45 minutes daily, and after that you meet with students individually for half an hour twice a week? Once for math and once for language arts? How many students do you have?
Anonymous wrote:Tell me more about Boom cards!
Anonymous wrote:I have been teaching ESY this summer and it has been such a great experience! I have a mixture of students in my self contained k-2 class. DCPS has really enforced teachers using one platform teams. The things that have been the most useful has been having a morning meeting every morning followed by a read aloud. For morning meeting I use PowerPoint, starfall(calendar)and GoNoodle. For read aloud I have been using Vooks along with YouTube along with PowerPoint slides that I have created with questions and visuals -for responses. I try to have objectives posted on each slide and keep the questions similar each week so the students get used to structure. I hope to change it over time. Morning meeting and read aloud can go for 30-45 minutes.
I have been meeting with each of my students for 30 minutes one on one at the same time everyday.Families can get overwhelmed with different work times each day. Two days for ELA and 2 days Math. I send the PowerPoint lesson for ELA and Math before the lesson in case parents want to print it out. Downtown has also been printing out work for the students and mailing it to their house. I also send ELA and Math independent work at the beginning of the week to be completed throughout the week. Boom cards have been great to use to help students work on specific goals and then I can send the parents the link to the cards if they want to work on it later with their child.
During the school year I had only 50 percent of the students participating in online learning and now I have 87 percent.