The First Digital Days of School
28 Aug
Dear Friends and Family:
School started last Monday in Prince George’s County. My new students are already lucky. First, they weathered an earthquake like brave scholars. (No injuries or damage at our school.) Second, thanks to my principals, they will (very soon) have iPads to work with. Building the tools, culture, and processes for a digital classroom will be an ongoing experiment, and I want to bring you all along for the ride.
While we missed a day of classes on Wednesday while engineers inspected buildings around the district, we still got lots of good work done. Students practiced classroom procedures; learned about Big Goals and expectations; talked about our jobs as scholars, teachers, and a learning community; and picked out their first independent reading books for the year.
The iPads should make their way from storage to our classroom within the next few days, and I don’t know if the students are more excited or if I am. In the interim, there are two ways you can help get us off to a strong start this year: by donating swag or by donating books. Please note that these asks are just suggestions of ways you can help support literacy for my scholars. I offer them because folks ask what they can do. If you’d like to share other immaterial skills and ideas, I’d love to talk about class visits, curricular suggestions, etc. Thank you in advance for all your support.
Donating Swag
Ultimately, learning should be intrinsically motivating, but sometimes it helps middle schoolers to have a little external motivation in the form of cool stuff. With the goal of making my scholars college and career ready, I’d much rather be able to hand them a college lanyard or a Google-branded pen, rather than Jolly Ranchers. In our class, scholars can earn prizes through raffles or by amassing our special in-class currency.
The ask here is just for freebies—nothing donated to the classroom rewards cache can cost you anything. If you’ve got some buttons, bags, or beanies you think 7th graders would be into and are willing to donate them, just let me know about it on this form:
Google Form: I Have Swag! 7th Graders Will Love It!
Donating Books
Last year, many of you helped support my classroom library with generous donations of books from an Amazon Wishlist. I’ve begun a new wishlist under a separate username so that my students can have access to both traditional paper books and Kindle Edition eBooks. That’s right: if you’re so inspired, you can give digital editions of the books on the list so that several scholars at a time (depending on the publisher’s DRM rules) can read the same high-interest novel. As well, the digital editions are immune to oily fingers and errant pencil smears. But of course, some of these books only come in the paper-and-ink format, which is wonderful as well.
Amazon: Wish List—Mr. Pratt’s Class 2011-2012
Here’s to another exciting week. On behalf of myself and my scholars, thank you.
Read, write, rock!
—Andrew (aka Mr. Pratt)
