Thursday, September 4, 2014

Week Three Mentor Report





What did I do to prepare?

Conferenced with co-mentor last Monday.  Clarified our plan to switch up week 3 and 4 books, as Lindy has a substitute this week and I am gone next.  We should be back on typical schedule Oct 2.  Youth were aware of this the first day of school.  No surprises.  

Discussed orchestrating a fail/growth day this week, in two areas:
  • Opening the class with a pop quiz so that in two areas class members begin to see the need to step up their study habits,  and annotate with better prepared study notes. 
  • Reviewed and graded blue books, worked on personal essays and studied P Henry. 
Plan for Next week
  • Printed  7 Habits Colloquia, workbook and Essay questions for when I'm gone. 
  • Contact new student parent:  Blake Jones.  
How did class go?   It was successful -- EPIC FAIL.  One girl noted, "I've never even gotten a C before."  I responded, "and you haven't yet.  You got an F which could mean fixable."  We discussed college consequences, how professors can't give you another week on the book.  We discussed good, better, best.  How we build on foundational books and can't miss out on one and the youth decided to meet for a conference call and make-up colloquia together Monday , 11:30 and will crunch over the weekend to study the book.  

Received writing papers from two, requested them all sent email.  

What I would do different?  Go deeper into what is taking all the time.  Found out later one student--who turned in a beautiful eight page writing paper--has disgraphia and could have discussed speech recognition software with her in class.  

Looking forward with renewed spirit to beauty from ashes, 










Week Two  

What did I do to prepare?

             Reviewed reading, and created study guide on Luther, prepared lecture. Created a timeline                          for events in Luther's life.
             Printed and passed out final exam.
             Printed essay questions to prepare for workshop next day.
             Initiated first draft of submission essay and submitted to writing coach. 
  
            Set up the writing workshop for Friday.

Colloquim:  Went well, Luther's life was nicely personified by the students through the Here I Stand theme.  Saw some breakthrough epiphanies.

What would I do differently?  Will work on having everyone know the answer.  I like the thought that we ask open-ended questions and have them raise their hands as we  ask, so that all can become cognizant of what we are asking before we answer.

Plan for next week?  A switch for week three and four, Patrick Henry since there is a substitute for Lindy.  We will reiterate last two weeks training for the new student.  (WE HOPE BLAKE will join us.  I taught him in seminary this morning and he is a Rock STAR addition to the group. )

Week Three

What did I do to Prepare?  We had a great workshop, learning 5 paragraph essays to start.  Many of our students had not done that yet.   Called on Monday to be sure everyone had first submittal to writing coaches.     Prepared a time-line for P. Henry.

What will I do differently?



Week One

What did we do to prepare?
 Read ahead, Luther, 7 habits, Patrick Henry, Gandhi,
  Calendared events, movie nights,
  Called and texted youth to create excitement.
  Set up the blog:  okquest.blogspot.com
   Educated myself in the concepts - everything I could find on mentoring,
                  Mindset, Brainstorm, The Element, Tjed,
  Met with co-mentor two days before to solidify responsibilities

Lecture: 3 Systems of Education  Make two games and a matching hands on for class.
Discussion:  Submit, learn to master oneself, mind over matter.  Discussion of the Battle of Marathon and how we gain submission by submitting, the move gravel story,

How did it go?    We have three great students who are overwhelmed and excited simultaneously.  Co-mentor used food visual for three systems.  Very effective.

What would I do differently?   Talk less in class--ask more open enders.

What is the plan for next week?  Luther,


____________________________________














Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Why Blue Book Essays?

Tips for use of Blue Book Exams

http://www.southernct.edu/student-life/academic-success/study-skills-enrichment/links/university-exams.html

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Lincoln Quiz Answers

DONT PEEK until you've done the quiz.

1  c
 2a
3b
4a
5d
6c
7b
8d
9b
10b
11 -
12 -
13d
14a
15d
16a
17b
18a
19a
20c
21a
22b
23c
24b
25a
26b
27a
28b
29a
30d
31b
32d
33c
34d
35b
36b
37b
38c
39c
40b
41d
42b
43b
44a
45b
46c
47d
48b
49a
50a

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Note Taking Procedures

Sat Aug 30, 2014 6:20 pm (PDT) . Posted by:

alysiahumphries

Most people don't naturally know how to take notes well unless they have an example. Which is why we were taught to model note taking for the students, using a whiteboard. During lectures we had one person teaching and another mentor taking notes on the board. We asked the kids to take out their note papers at the beginning so they would know to take notes. 
One side of the board was for summarizing ideas/keywords, the other side was for personal thoughts and questions that came up from the class members in the course of discussion.
You could also do a quadrant for vocabulary words that come up. (This was taught to us by our trainer Aneladee). You might teach the kids to make these sections on their papers whenever taking notes. I have also seen bookmarks made by various TJEd sources that have 3 sections for these 3 areas, usually with just space for a page number or reference number where the longer thoughts are written. So the bookmark doesn't hold the notes but it keeps a record of them . 
When we modeled this in class, at first the kids mostly copied what we wrote into their notes , but we tried to encourage them to write down their own thoughts, and we lessened the amount of writing on the board we did gradually throughout the semester so that their notes would come more from themselves . I do think some of the kids probably stopped taking notes at that point since they knew we weren't looking at their notes , so asking if anyone had things to share from their notebooks later might have helped 
Novel/Book Annotation:  
When I'm taking notes in a book and not on a lecture, I just write my thoughts in the margins and sometimes create a key in the back where I can find page numbers with my thoughts and what topic. . I think showing them exiles of commonplace books and getting them excited about creating something lasting they can leave their mark on could be very inspiring .

Friday, August 22, 2014

Note-Taking Hips and Tints

NOTE TAKING TIPS
Rebecca Harper

SPACE IT OUT         ·  Use spaces and indentations to organize your notes.  

HIGHLIGHT             ·  Note the key structure of the lecture with numbers, underlining, all caps, etc.  (like in last week's lecture, there were TWO specific things so we numbered in our notes 1. and 2.).

SHORT CUT              ·  Save time and abbreviate common words that could be easily recognized as an abbreviation.  Examples: w/o = without, govt = government, w/ = with, attn = attention.

SCRIBBLE OUT       ·  Don't be afraid to erase (but only minimally, or it will take too long) or to draw arrows.

BE MESSY                ·  Notetaking on a lecture is often messy and incomplete.  That's okay.

REWRITE                  ·  When you return home after a lecture, rewrite your notes, emphasizing the most important concepts and adding missed ideas.  This is a great way to study and review the material, and then when you return again to your notes to study for a test, your notes will be clear and readable.  I did this all through high school and my university studies, and it made such a difference! 

Write ONCE               Likely to remember.

Write TWICE             AND LEGIBLE = even more likely to remember!


TEACH IT                  And it’s yours forever!  

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Friday, August 1, 2014

Teen building Strategy Game Link

Moon Landing
Labrynth game
Lost at Sea game

http://insight.typepad.co.uk/insight/2009/02/moon-landing-a-team-building-game.html