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    5/2/2016 Teacher Observation Form - Google Forms

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    22 responses

    SUMMARY INDIVIDUAL

    Teacher Observer

    Teacher Being Observed

    Imma Sample

    Lisa Glaze

    Joseph Hebert

    Maria Illich

    Sue Licalzi

    Rosa Oliva

    Diane Wooten

    Joellen Piskura

    Norson Fernandez

    Grace Cheung

    27.3%

    36.4%

    31.8%

    Teacher Observation Form

    RESPONSES   22

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    Linda Stockton

    Alyssa Johnson

    Richard Garza

    Carrie Herms

    Gia Schilacci

    Grace Cheung

    Ashley Ben-David

    Ruth Lim

    Nancy Isla

    Denise Sterner

    Randy Graham

    Olga Jankowski

    Kristine Broussard

    Cindy Finnegan

    Morgan Dunlap

    Linda Schoenfeld

    Grade/Object Observed

    6th Grade Math

    6th Grade Math

    6

    7th Grade Religion

    6th Grade English

    3rd Grade Reading

    2nd grade Spanish

    Kinder Religion

    1st Grade Religion

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    01 : PM 1:00 PM

    02 : PM 2:00 PM 2:20 PM

    Objective Clearly Visible to Students

    Instructional Practices

    Grouping Format

    Yes

    No68.2%

    31.8%

    0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

    Teacher-Directe…

    Testing/Assess…

    Review/Closure

    Presentation

    Modeling

    Lecture

    Learning Centers

    Hands-On Expe…

    Guided Reading

    Guided Practice

    Faith Integration

    Discussion

    Direct Instruction

     Anticipatory Set   6 (27.3%)(27.3 )6 (27.3%)

    166 (72.16

    5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    6 (27.3%)(27.3 )6 (27.3%)

    4 (18.2%)(18.2 )4 (18.2%)

    8 (36.4%)(36.4 )8 (36.4%)

    2 (9.1%)(9.1 )2 (9.1%)

    6 (27.3%)(27.3 )6 (27.3%)

    8 (36.4%)(36.4 )8 (36.4%)

    4 (18.2%)(18.2 )4 (18.2%)

    4 (18.2%)(18.2 )4 (18.2%)

    3 (13.6%)(13.6 )3 (13.6%)

    14 (63.6%)4 (63.6 )14 (63.6%)

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    Student Actions

    Level of Student Work

    What's Happening in Class

    Students are learning

    Paired

    Small Group

    Whole Group

    6 (27.3%)(27.3 )6 (27.3%)

    2 (9.1%)(9.1 )2 (9.1%)

     (40.9 )

    0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22

    Other 

    Writing

    Working Han…

    SpeakingReading

    Observing

    Listening

    Demonstrating

    Collaborating   5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    7 (31.8%)(31.8 )7 (31.8%)

    6 (27.3%)(27.3 )6 (27.3%)

    13 (59.1%)3 (59.1 )13 (59.1%)14 (63.6%)4 (63.6 )14 (63.6%)

    8 (36.4%)(36.4 )8 (36.4%)

    8 (36.4%)(36.4 )8 (36.4%)

    5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

    Evaluation (…

    Synthesis (P…

     Analysis (Br…

     Application (…

    Comprehens…

    Knowledge (…

    17 (77.3%)7 (77.3 )17 (77.3%)

    15 (68.2%)5 (68.2 )15 (68.2%)

    5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    5 (22.7%)(22.7 )5 (22.7%)

    3 (13.6%)(13.6 )3 (13.6%)

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    ~ Began with Prayer

    ~Students worked independently for about 10 minutes on keyboarding. Teacher walked among

    students providing assistance and instruction

    ~Several students directed to relocate themselves to prevent distractions to others

    ~ After keyboarding, teacher announced names of students to meet with her to revive instructions for

    next projects. Rest of class expected to continue work Google Classroom. As students completed

    previous assignments in Google classrooms, they would meet with teacher for next task

    ~ Students working on variety of tasks -- Vocabulary, Word Processing, and Census Interview

    Students leraning about the Baptism and the Gifts of the Holy Spirit and Conrmation and the 12 Fruits

    of the Holy Spirit. Read through gifts and fruits of the Holy Spirit and gave real life examples to relate

    gift with personal life.

    Students are learning about interjections

    Students listen to the story read on tape. Mrs. Licalzi stops the tape to clarify and discuss

    onomatopoeia. Most students are engaged and enjoy listening to the story as they follow along in their

    books. A couple of boys have their head down and are playing with supplies at their desk. Mrs Licalzi

    pauses the tape to ask a few comprehension questions. When the story is nished, she passes out a

    test that students my use their book to complete. She writes the AR number for the story on the board

    for students to take an AR test when they are done with their test.

    ~ began with prayer

    ~ reminded students of Friday early dismissal and no school Monday

    ~ distributed new worksheet as students got out workbooks

    ~ used picture ash cards for vocabulary

    ~ oral and written sentences in English and Spanish

    ~ ended class with songs of review of months, etc.

    Started classes with singing Christian movement songs. Bible story about the paralytic. Read story

    about the paralytic and then students acted out the story.

    Recalling Divine Mercy

    Students are playing matball.

    ~ students assigned to different centers

    ~ 4 groups -- 2 independent; 2 guided -- one with aide, other with teacher

    Teaching "I am" form ser. Taught the differences between ser and estar. Helped students distinguish

    difference between permanent, personality/physical traits, etc.

    Reviewing money. Identifying money.

    ~ students organizing materials for class

    ~ Super Sense Animal Project introduced

    ~ multiple students speaking out of turn

    ~ students copying project info from board

    ~ Internet research

    ~ students out of seats, talking out, and off task

    ~ students using iPads for phonics

    ~ Teacher directed Q/A

    ~ pair/ share -- partners

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    ~ students write original sentence

    ~ individual work submitted

    ~ constant assessment

    ~ 5 E Lesson Plan on board upon entry into classroom

    ~ Began with prayer

    ~ Q/A review of previous lesson without textbook

    ~ Used textbook for additional Q/A

    ~ Groups/tables given specic content to review and present -- only 2 of 4 groups presented

    ~ While groups worked teacher moved through classroom setting up mini-lab and check on groups as

    they worked

    ~ Group presentations

    ~ Mini-lab on atherosclerosis

    ~ Prayer before students dismissed

    The children reviewed colors on a coloring sheet before morning circle time. Morning routine included

    prayer and greeting. Students viewed a singalong video of the new letter focus, "R".

    Mr. Graham introduces new vocabulary before reading a short story. Students are assigned vocabulary

    words to nd corresponding magnet letters to post on the board and write their denition. Mr. Graham

    says he will leave the vocabulary words and denitions on the board for them to refer back tothroughout the week. There are 4 students in the class, one is absent. Students are mostly engaged

    but are reminded and redirected to stop dgeting with their textbooks, giving each other funny looks,

    and make more appropriate comments.

    Students are at different stages of completion of their assignments. Some are completing a lab, others

    an assessment, and the rest select work stations. Mrs. Jankowski helps with individuals as they

    approach her with questions.

    Group work

    Mrs. Finnegan begins the class by doing a visual homework check. She asks students to recall the

    denition of congruent objects. She introduces the lesson by saying they will talk about

    transformations today. She asked students if they know what a transformation is. There are a group of

    3 boys sitting in the front that have been talking to each other since the class began. Mrs. Finnegan

    corrects them after 5 minutes has passed. Mrs. Finnegan invites students to the board to demonstrate

    the different examples of transformations using shapes and magnets. Students on the left side of the

    room are quiet and follow along in their books but do not participate much in the discussion. The boys

    in the front continue to talk amongst themselves and draw on each other's books. Mrs. Finnegan gives

    examples and models how to solve problems like ones they will be assigned to complete later in class.

    Some students are making "racist" comments while Mrs. Finnegan and other students model solving

    problems on the board.

    ~ Students logged in to Kahoot using iPads~ Kahoot quiz to review previous information

    ~ Students independently looking up/writing denitions for next set of vocabulary words

    ~ Teacher checking homework one on one as students work

    Ms. Schoenfeld introduces a new character in Greek mythology today, Arachne. The class takes turns

    reading a passage about Arachne and Narcissis while Ms. Schoenfeld pauses in between paragraphs

    to ask questions. Mrs. Schoenfeld uses cards to randomly select readers. Students read along silently

    at their desk and are engaged in the lesson, listening intently. Ms. Schoenfeld makes cross curricular

    references and applications with the base word arachnid and narcissism. She draws in real life

    experiences and uses story-telling to enrich her lesson. She shows a picture of a pot of narcissist

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    owers on her iPad to exemplify how the ower just sits by the water to look at its reection. She

    connects the latest Justin Bieber song, "Love Yourself" to further explain narcissism.

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    C: Consistently observedF: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    22.7%

    72.7%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    13.6%

    86.4%

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    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Fre uentl observed

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    13.6%

    81.8%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observedN/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    36.4%

    59.1%

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    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    Competency 2: Planning and Preparation

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

     

    31.8%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    18.2%

    9.1%

    18.2%

    54.5%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    31.8%

    31.8%

    27.3%

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    Competency 2 Comments

    Does not have all objectives or the day's expectations written on the board. Wrote the vocabulary

    activity when giving direction of tasks to complete after keyboarding. Vocabulary assignment was one

    that students should have already completed. Tasks for those who were nished were given verbally.

    Written and oral questioning are used to assess student learning.

    For needing to moved from classroom to classroom, you are very prepared & organized.

    Multiple activities available for students to complete if individuals complete tasks faster than others at

    table

    Students were excited about doing the investigation.

    Keeping the project short helped keep the investigation very focused.

    Could you have a task for students to do while waiting to conference with you?

    Lesson well constructed, building skills from simple phoneme to complete sentence.

    Did not watch time for shortened period; rushed last portion of class. I do understand how time can go

    quickly.

    Students responded well to the rush. I was impressed how the room was so quickly organized by the

    students before they exited. Those students near me reminded one another of the homework.

    The organizational structure of Mrs. Jankowski's class is a prominent contributing factor to student

    success and engagement.

    Great planner!

    Mrs. Finnegan assesses students in a whole group setting through free oral answering and then

    through assigned book problems. A greater variety of assessment methods or opportunities to engage

    all students instead of only those who shout out the answers will be benecial to meeting the needs of

    all learners.

    ~ Writing in red on the board was not easily red when the lights were out

    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed68.2%

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    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    13.6%

    77.3%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    13.6%

    40.9%

    45.5%

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    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    Competency 3: Classroom Environment

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    18.2%

    40.9%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    31.8%

    59.1%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    86.4%

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    Competency 3 Comments

    Gave instruction to students before all were quiet and listening when trying to give directions even

    after using methods for gaining attention. Had to raise voice over student continuing discussions.

    Shortly afterwards, had to give same instructions to those students who had missed the initial set of

    directions..

    Mrs. Licalzi gently reminded one student who was off task to put away his pencil without interrupting

    the class.

    More than half of students inattentive until pointing to students to identify gender to be used. Once

    they were focused, they were more on task and volunteered to answer. Calling on students who did not

    raise hands kept them attentive. Ignoring some behaviors proved effective for minimizing disruptions.

    Classroom well organized for both student and teacher. All areas visible from all parts of the room.

    Transition well dened and smoothly enacted

    Inconsistency in managing student calling out/raising hand

    Appeared to give immediate attention to those who interrupted while those following proper procedurewere left waiting

    You were quite calm, even with so many clamoring for your attention.

    Many positive statements to maintain order

    Students responded quickly to redirect for class to focus

    Teaching manners and respect within content

    The students demonstrated that they understood your expectations and classroom procedures.

    Assigning roles at each table did allow the transitions to ow very smoothly.

    Mrs. Sterner demonstrates strong mastery of Competency 2 as evident by student engagement andfeedback.

    Mr. Graham provides a nurturing environment by speaking in a very helpful and warm tone. The

    physical classroom is not conducive to a reading resource class due to its dual purpose as a music

    classroom.

    High expectations are clearly exhibited in Mrs. Jankowski's class. The students are afrmed as

    independent thinkers and take ownership of their

    learning through the activities and assignments they are expected to complete by a given deadline.

    There are minimal to no classroom management issues because of a mutual respect for the learning

    environment.

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    22.7%

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    Always engaged with students

    ~ One student corrected another student for being annoying (but not overly loud). I corrected same

    student when he did not get the "hint"

    ~ The students knew the routine expectations and followed them. I did not get a sense of rapport This

    could have been simply due to the nature of the work.

    Ms. Schoenfeld gently corrects students who mispronounce vocabulary words.

    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teacthis time

    31.8%

    63.6%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%50%

    36.4%

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    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    27.3%22.7%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    22.7%

    9.1%

    36.4%

    31.8%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    40.9%

    22.7%

    36.4%

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    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4: Instruction

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    13.6%

    40.9%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    22.7%

    27.3%

    40.9%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    9.1%

    22.7%

    36.4%

    31.8%

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    Competency 4: Instruction

    Competency 4 Comments

    No large group instruction of content, only large group presentation of directions. Students worked

    individually to complete tasks. Each student was in a different place in the process.

    The students clearly understand the expectations and therefore Mrs. Licalzi does not have to model

    them. She gives individual reminders to a few students who need to be redirected during independent

    work.

    Repeatedly drew students' attention to study guide as a tool for both content as well as reminder for

    due dates. Patiently responded to students in both English and Spanish. Asked questions multiple

    times in Spanish for those who needed the repetition. While I liked that you had the students use the

    iPad for a review, I was confused about your timing. You were providing whole class instruction while

    the iPad was being passed from student to student. You seemed to lose one student entirely after he

    completed the iPad matching.

    Patience and love clearly evident even as students would lose patience with one another.

    Instruction to write notes on animals not given until majority of students off task and going to sites

    other than the one you listed. They were, however, exploring animals.

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observed

    N: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    45.5%

    9.1%

    40.9%

    C: Consistently observed

    F: Frequently observed

    S: Sometimes observedN: Not observed

    N/A: Not applicable to this teac

    this time

    31.8%

    18.2%

    18.2% 27.3%

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    Type of Technology Used During Lesson

    Commendations

    Great

    Allowing students to work at their own pace, yet maintaining expected deadlines for completion of

    projects/assignments. Students were engaged and working. Side discussions were limited. The

    majority of the students appeared to be making effective use of class time.

    You are very knowledgeable about the content. You did a good job providing real life examples to

    support teaching each gift of the Spirit. It was good the students shared their example about a gift of

    the Spirit. I like the way you claried what wisdom was in contrary to the traditional beliefs aboutwisdom. Nice use of different students to read worksheet. Great way explaining agape version of love:

    self-sacrice. Memorable example of Bill Gates' "charity."

    Good use of calling different students. I like how you provided a comic for the lesson as a fun,

    relatable way to teach interjections. Glad you walked around the different tables to check for

    understanding regarding the classwork. Nice trying to integrate music while students are working and

    you allowed student to voice opinion that she preferred no music and then stopped the music. Good

    that students did rough draft of comic. I like how you have student work displayed in the classroom.

    Students were excited about the class activity. Happy that you reviewed and closed the lesson at the

    end. Good use of integrating lesson by asking questions in order to dismiss class in a quiet,

    regimented way. I enjoyed the lesson!

    Mrs. Licalzi's class is mostly engaged and participating in the lesson. She redirected distracted

    students quietly and individually without disrupting the rest of the class. Students offer insightful

    answers to her oral questions, which show they are interested in the subject and understand the

    objective of the lesson (story telling, literary devices - onomatopoeia).

    I like how you simply began instruction when students started to lose focus as a group. They quickly

    got quiet and attentive.

    It's very obvious how passionate about you are about teaching religion. I liked how you talked about

    what a paralytic is before starting the story. Great way to bring story alive by having students act out

    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

    Other 

    None Used

    Overhead Pr…

    Document Ca…

    CD/DVDSmartBoard

    Mimio Board

    MacBook

    PC Laptop

    Chromebook

    iPad   6 (27.3%)(27.3 )

    6 (27.3%)

    1 (4.5%)(4.5 )1 (4.5%)

    2 (9.1%)(9.1 )2 (9.1%)

    0 (0%) (0 )0 (0%)

    0 (0%) (0 )0 (0%)

    0 (0%) (0 )0 (0%)1 (4.5%)(4.5 )1 (4.5%)

    1 (4.5%)(4.5 )1 (4.5%)

    0 (0%) (0 )0 (0%)

    11 (51

    4 (18.2%)(18.2 )4 (18.2%)

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    the story after reading the story. Love the balloons!! This was a very enjoyable and engaging lesson.

    Job well done!

    I liked how you tried to use different techniques to get students quiet. I like how the students were

    recalling what they learned from the previous class. It's good that you're exposing the kids to Christian

    music while they work. Great that you have an additional page for them to do if they nish early. It's

    good that you provided an example of the nished product for them to see. You have a good rapport

    with the students.

    Students are engaged. No one was left alone and everyone participated. Students were excited andhad a lot of fun. This was fun to watch how the kids played matball. Very competitive!

    Lots of positive reinforcement, even if student interrupted group.

    Effective monitoring of groups.

    Students were actively engaged

    I like your greeting and welcome. Love how you go over the date, who's missing. Good use of ball to

    call on different students. Good you used butcher paper to have typed text instead of spending time

    writing that particular text on board. I liked how you said words/phrases in Spanish and then translated

    it into English immediately after. I like how you had the students practice individually in front of the

    class. I enjoyed your lesson!

    Good use of doc cam for timer. I like the triangle strategy. Kids were engaged, excited for the game. I

    liked how Uje was only able to pass out iPads to kids who were quiet. Great review game for the

    lesson. Good when teachers use iPads and technology to keep students engaged. I like how you called

    the students to go up and explain how they got their answer. I like how you have the desk students in

    pairs for desk arrangement. It's good how you had an example with the 3 5 dollar bills and one of them

    had a different design. This was a fun lesson to observe. Job well done!

    Students were enthusiastic about researching animals. It is a project to get them excited to learn and

    explore.

    Your students love coming to your classes. It shows in their exuberance.

    While this class is extremely physically active, the students were engaged in learning.

    Giving specic time limits for task kept the students working and on topic.

    I liked your 6 inch rule to maintain good volume level

    Mrs. Sterner provides many opportunities for students to experience and review specic concepts

    during calendar time - syllables, consonants, vowels, deductive reasoning, recall, applications. Her

    enthusiasm and passion is contagious to the students!

    Mr. Graham remains calm when students interrupt or do not comply with his redirections. His calm

    demeanor keeps the behaviors from escalating, but still sends a rm message. Suggesting that he willleave the vocabulary words posted for their reference is a helpful tool.

    Students are so engaged and interested in their learning in Mrs. Jankowski's class. Mrs. Jankowski is

    extremely knowledgeable of her subject and constantly seeks new ways to present that content

    knowledge in ways that are meaningful to her students.

    Always moving around.

    Helpful suggestions to aid in understanding.

    Mrs. Finnegan has clearly established good rapport with her students because they feel comfortable

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    to express themselves in her class. She walks around the room to ensure students are on the right

    track while completing their book work.

    Using Kahoot is a great way to review and do formative assessment at the same time. The students

    enjoyed it as well!

    Allowing the students to continue using the iPads to look up words did keep them on task a bit more

    on task.

    Mrs. Schoenfeld is passionate about this subject. Her use of story-telling and drawing real world

    applications into the lesson contributed to why the students were so engaged. She was animated inher lesson delivery, which made the lesson memorable and relatable.

    Suggestions

    Work on..

    ~ Allow more wait time for students to get quiet before giving verbal directions. This alleviates the

    need for a louder voice for trying to talk over the students.

    ~ Have a list of the day's tasks/objectives on the board so that students know the expectations

    immediately upon entering and will not have to ask if they missed the verbal directions. Need to meet

    needs of those who are predominantly visual learners.

    Add use of technology during lectures. You can use projector and just show images of the Holy Spirit.

    Can play a song about gifts or fruits of the Holy Spirit and have students sing it. There were some

    students' heads that were down not looking at worksheet and students should have eyes on teacher at

    all times. Instead of shushing students, pause and wait for silence to occur before continuing lecture.

    Even though you ran over over time just take 30 seconds to review/close what was discussed and

    don't allow the students to move until you tell them to do so.

    Wait for students to be silent and looking at you before continuing when calling out page number.

    Don't move on until all are completely silent and still. In between calling students, make sure students

    are silent before moving on to the next person, as it can encourage side conversations. Try recalling

    the instructions for the class activity one more time before having students proceed. Maybe use a

    stopwatch of some sort to let the kids know how much time they have for the activity. Students should

    raise hand to ask to use bathroom instead of calling out to ask. Not sure you were Maybe try having

    students presen

    I would have liked to see the students engaging in discussion with one another; perhaps having the

    students ask the class some questions and calling on classmates to answer would have provided

    more variety in assessing student learning. Try to think of a way to better engage (Neil) who had hishead down on his desk through the end of the story.

    Maybe having designated iPad days or even using the computer lab for some language lessons would

    be more invigorating for the students and not cause a few to lose all focus.

    Avoid shushing students and only continue talking until silence and stillness occurs. You could say, "I

    like how ____ is putting away his worksheet silently." Maybe have aid pass out papers on the tables and

    dismiss silent students to their tables from carpet to table. Model for the students the class activity

    before dismissing them. Do one example and then dismiss them. Time permitting, you could also go

    over what each item on the coloring page to help build vocabulary. Maybe have about 5 minutes of

    silence before playing music to ensure students understand directions while walking and checking.

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    Review and close lesson about the paralytic just to check for understanding one last time.

    Need to direct students to pray immediately when they enter classroom. Spent 2 minutes waiting for

    them to get ready for prayer. Use countdown system, "We will be praying in 5-4-..." When telling

    students to get materials, one way to ensure that they are listening is to say, "When I say go, you will..."

    Something to keep in mind is that no matter what age you teach, you have to breakdown the

    instructions. Before doing Divine Mercy Craft, you should model how to make the craft step by step on

    the carpet and then dismiss them to their desks. It wasn't clear what color to color the

    background.There was a lot of chatter and students walking around without permission during the

    craft. Set the expectations on what the noise volume should be and that their bottoms should stay in

    their seat. They must raise their hands to get up from their seats. I would have 5 minutes of complete

    silence before playing music to ensure students are getting started with the work. Using a stopwatch

    would also help to move along the craft especially since you have only a 30 minute class period. Say,

    "When I say go you have 2 minutes to color the two triangles blue and red. When you nish you may

    proceed and start coloring Jesus brown. Go!" Have ziplock bags for the loose pieces for those who

    don't nish the craft within the alotted time. When yo do "God is good.." make sure they are completely

    still and silent before continuing on to talk. Review and close the lesson one last time at the end about

    Divine Mercy.

    When giving instructions, room should be silent to ensure that students are looking and listening to

    teacher. Have something in place for students who don't have proper P.E. uniform as it doesn't lookgood when everyone doesn't look the same. Before dismissing students just go over what the point of

    the game was and what muscles or skills the students were practicing during the game.

    Keep up the great work. You make teaching 4 year olds look easy!

    Can speak more Spanish like saying numbers in Spanish, "Bien" instead of okay. Do you have a Spanish

    bulletin board? It would be good to see student work from Spanish class out in the hallways. You could

    implement "Think, Pair, Share" teaching strategy after picking individual students to where they

    students have a partner and practice with him/her. I know you only had 30 minutes but if possible, it

    would have been good to have students write examples. Maybe focus on writing the notes for the rst

    class and then second class focus on oral exercises.

    There was some side chatter during instruction. Only move on until complete silence and stillness

    occurs. I would model on doc camera what students will be doing rst with the Show Me the Money

    activity. Get a student and demonstrate each role before beginning activity. With the triangle strategy,

    make sure you have 100% of them up before continuing. Say, "We have 75% of the class with triangles

    up. We're still waiting for 100%." Don't respond to students who call out or don't raise their hand. I know

    you just got your doc cam and make sure you learn how to lessen the light because the money couldn't

    be clearly seen and on more than one occasion students complained they couldn't see the dollar bills

    clearly. You want to avoid distractions like that.

    I am concerned about students running in the classroom.

    "1,2, 3, eyes on me" may work better than countdown followed by instruction to look at you

    Have some nonverbal cue regarding volume, such as music softly in the background. Perhaps

    attending a classroom arrangement workshop will help you get more idea.

    Keep up the wonderful work!

    Perhaps requesting a set of 4 to 8 iPads and Apple TV for the lab would provide better presentation

    options. The small white write boards made viewing info difcult for those in the back of the room.

    Mrs. Sterner could take the letter of the day to another level by wearing a color that begins with the

    letter of the day. For the letter of the day grab bag activity, Mrs. Sterner could invite a student to pick an

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    object out of the basket and show the class instead of solely using teacher modeling.

    Further exploration in classroom management or motivating all kinds of learners can be helpful for

    more effective instruction. Incorporating and modeling specics reading skills/vocabulary acquisition

    strategies will help struggling readers progress.

    Adding a station with a mini lesson taught by Mrs. Jankowski would provide yet another avenue of

    lesson delivery and discovery. Posting student work could also add an element of ownership in this

    independent learning environment.

    School-wide need for strategies for struggling students.

    Studying Transformations in geometry lends itself to be an interactive lesson because there are so

    many different applications of the concept in the real world. Helping students make those connections

    in a concert or hands-on way can promote greater ownership of their learning. Each student could

    have been given their own sample transformation instead of only the teacher or one student modeling

    in the front of the class. Also, because geometry is very visual, use of technology to present the

    information in a different way could have benetted visual learners. Mrs. Finnegan gave a link to a

    helpful website for students to copy down and visit over the weekend. Showing the website in class

    could help motivate students to visit the site again at home.

    A Mimeo or Smartboard would be helpful for interacting with items projected on board. If nothing else,

    a wireless mouse might be useful so you don't have to keep walking back to your laptop

    Perhaps on days when the class assignment is such as today's, you could have multiple tasks for them

    to complete, or allow them to work in groups. Since they had the iPad, they could have done a

    collaborative document in Google.

    Posting student work inside the classroom in addition to outside in the hall can help students further

    show pride in their work. Incorporating technology into the lesson will add an additional element to

    engage all learners.

    Additional Comments

    I always enjoy observing computer classes!

    Use Bloom's Taxonomy for Objectives Board

    I really enjoyed seeing how far this group has come since I taught them in 1st Grade! They are mature

    and diligent workers who understand Mrs. Licalzi's expectations of their work.

    That was a fast 30 minutes! You presented a lot of information. I know to wear mi traje de bano to the

    pool!

    Let me know if you would like for me to come in and teach one of your classes so you can see how I

    manage rst graders and breakdown the lessons.instructions as this could benet you and I'd be

    happy to do so.

    Is Hilena allowed to wear those pink shorts? Not sure what the standard uniform is for P.E. Also, Odi,

    Chelsea and Soa Macias are wearing blue polo shirts. What are the consequences if people don't

    have their P.E. uniform? Is Soa Macias wearing P.E. appropriate shoes?

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    You have so much to offer your students. They love you and your love for them shows!

    I hope that the students who did not have time to present on Tuesday have an opportunity Wednesday.

    The group near me was disappointed.

    I want to be a Busy Bee!

    Mr. Graham applied some Gospel teachings into the lesson and challenge students to think deeper

    than the message on the surface.

    I would love to be a student in this class!

    Class knows what to do.

    There is so much that I know you are able to do in literature classes. You should not be afraid to do

    more. It's always a learning experience even if it ops!

    I had been told to "lighten up" during my rst couple years of teaching middle school. I, too, was very

    intense and really wanted to do a good job.

    I was entertained and engaged!