October 30, 2011

October 31, 2011

Happy Halloween!  I hope everyone had a wonderful weekend.  My oldest daughter had her last soccer game and scored a goal off a fantastic shot in the finale.  We have quite a busy week ahead of us.  Below is a quick breakdown of the week:
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Monday:  We will have a new student from Warren joining our class.  She is a first grader and her name is Hannah and she will have a younger brother attending the school as well.

Tuesday:  Keeping with Monday's theme, we will welcome a second new child to our classroom.  Her name is Azailia and she will be joining us from Montpelier.  She is a first grader, and some of the students had a chance to meet her last week.

Wednesday:  Ms. Hines will start her solo teaching week.  She will solo on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Monday, and Wednesday.  I will be in the building for most of her solo teaching, and using the time to test the two new students and work on my report cards.  Wednesday is also an early release day.  The students will be dismissed shortly before 12:00.

Thursday:  Wow!  Nothing out of the ordinary scheduled yet.  Stay tuned.

Friday:  Ms. Hines will start her our new science unit.  It is the study of the Earth, Moon, and Sky.  This is a unit Ms. Hines has developed herself.  She will be guiding us through this unit through the end of her student teaching (in December).
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We will be starting our Pen-Pal letters today.  The students will do some pre-writing today, a rough draft on Tuesday, and a final draft Wednesday and Thursday.

NOTES:

*Students need to have boots for recess.  If the ground is wet and muddy, I ask that you send in boots or other shoes for recess time.  We sit on the carpet quite a bit and it is nice to not have a bunch of mud and dirt on it.  Also, it prevents your child from having to wear wet shoes during the afternoon.

*There is math and reading homework this week. However, I won't send it home until Tuesday.  I want the kids to enjoy tonight.  Your child has a math game in his/her bag and a new reading log.  Please make sure your child fills out their reading log each night.  Feel free to write for them (especially the 1st graders).

That is all for now.  I hope you have a wonderful week.

Peace,
Tom

P.S.  How about those Steelers!



October 28, 2011

October 28, 2011

Good Afternoon,
  We had an absolutely beautiful hike today.  I did take some pictures from the hike and will load them over the weekend.  I accidentally left the cord needed to transfer them to my computer at home.  We will still collect food donations through next week.

  This morning the students worked on their Weekly News, and I tested each child on their weekly sight words.  I was very happy with this week's spelling results.  Please make sure to check your child's Weekly News over the weekend.  We will be reading your comments during our Morning Meeting on Monday.

  I hope you have a wonderful weekend.

Peace,
Tom

October 26, 2011

October 26, 2011

Good Morning,
  Today we continued working on our writings about Bob and jack and how different they are.  This has proven to be a challenging task for most, but their is definitely an excitement amongst the kids feeling like writers.  This afternoon the students will continue their investigation of geometry.  Today's focus was quadrilaterals.  During science, we will discuss the idea of force and the students will respond to the prompt, "Force is...".

  Please remember to dress warmly for Friday's hike.  I will make a final decision on Friday morning, but as of this moment the hike is a go.  Kids are encouraged to bring a water bottle as well and wear comfortable hiking shoes or boots.  Don't forget to bring in donations for the food shelf.

  Today was Beckett's first day back from his trip to Florida.  While he was gone, he kept a journal of his trip (as required/requested by all students whom leave for travel reasons).  During Morning Meeting, Beckett shared some of his entries and explained a few photos of his adventure.  Below are his photos.

NOTES:
*Reading Log and Math Surveys are due on Friday.

Have a wonderful day.
Peace,
Tom

 

October 24, 2011

October 24, 2011


Good Morning,

This week Ms. Hines will be the lead teacher for math.  Next week is her solo week and this will help her prepare for that week.  I will be in the room during math time but will be acting as the assistant.  Please let me know if you have any questions.

  Last week,  I tested the kids on their compliments of 10 and 20 (if appropriate).  This week's 1st grade homework is to work on the set of compliments that is indicated in your child's homework bag.  You will find it on a bright piece of photo copy paper.  This is a very important piece to helping your child become fluent with their math facts.  Second graders will have a doubles and doubles +1 game to play this week.

  This week, we will be using the book Hello, My Name is Bob, by Linas Alsenas.  The students will be asked to compare the two friends, Bob and Jack, and write how they are friends but very different.  They will use a Venn diagram for their pre-writing.  The students will then write a focused paragraph using their pre-writing notes.


NOTES:

*We will have our Hike For Hunger trek on Friday.  We will be leaving around 9:15 and returning around 11:00.  So far, Michelle L., Elizabeth C., and Eva F.  Anyone else who would like to go is welcomed to join us.  Students should bring in donations for the food shelf this week.

*My daughter was home sick today, and my wife stayed with her.  If she is still sick tomorrow, it will be my turn to stay with her.  I am hoping that she is back on her feet when I get home today.

*READING LOG:  You will find a reading log in your child's homework bag.  Please help them fill this out each night.  I will collect these and the math surveys on Friday of each week.  The second graders are asked to work with the notion of elapsed time as well.

That is all for now.  I hope you have a great week.
Peace,
Tom


October 21, 2011

October 21, 2011

Good Afternoon,
  I am writing a very quick note style post today:

*Still need volunteers for next Friday's Hike For Hunger.  Please make sure to send in food donations next week.  (See Wednesday's post for more detail).

*We had a great science class today.  We worked together on one of our testable questions and learned how to record our data.  The students then looked at the tables they created and made a statement about the experiment's results.

*The books the students created from this week's Literature Project are being displayed on the back bulletin board in our room.  We hope you enjoy them.

We have had an awesome week, and we are very proud of the class' effort.  They are a wonderful bunch, with great energy.

We hope you have a great weekend.

Peace,
Tom & Brandy

October 18, 2011

October 19, 2011

Good Morning,


  I hope this is finding everyone well and enjoying the very last few days of the typical Fall weather.  Over the last two days, our science focus has been on the idea of "fair tests" and developing testable questions.  The students have been using the materials from our Forces and Motion unit to try and develop   their own testable question.  Today we tested a few of these questions out.


  Yesterday marked the "Official" start of our Reading Groups.  Please make sure your child reads the book that he or she is assigned for the evening, and returns it the next day.  Even if it is a chapter book, I would still like it to be sent back and forth each day.  For those kids who are beginning readers, the books that they are bringing home have been pre-read in their reading group.  It is expected and a normal procedure for new readers to use the pictures for clues.  You will also notice a bit of memorization of the book.  This is acceptable and expected as well.


  This year we will be doing Pen-Pals with my daughter's 1st & 2nd grade class.  I hope to start these next week.  I am going to try and pair up 1st graders and 2nd graders respectively.  My daughter's teachers name is Sally Kullis.


FIELD TRIP OPPORTUNITY:


  The Hike for Hunger is an annual event that takes place each October. Schools and community groups across the state pick a date within the month of October and a location within their community and hike to raise awareness about the issue of hunger in Vermont.  Mr. Hubbard and I are planning our hike for the morning of October 29th.  We will leave school around 9:15 and return around lunch time.  We want to walk from school and hike up the Old Center Fayston Road.  Please let me know if you would like to join us.  We will be asking kids to bring in food for the food shelf during that week.  If possible, see if your child can ask some of their neighbors or other family members for donations.  




  I would like to thank all of you that have offered your congratulations on the teaching award that I was honored with.  Today I will head up to UVM (after school) with Kaiya for the award ceremony.  I am truly honored to be part of the Waitsfield School, and I have been blessed to have worked with such a talented staff that has taught me how to set the expectation bar so high.


Have a great day.
Peace,
Tom


October 17, 2011

June 17, 2011

Happy Monday!



I hope everyone had a great weekend. We had wonderful Monday; it was a great start to the week. 

This morning we continued our Fundations work and station time. This week in stations we began a new literature project. We read the story A Pig Parade is a Terrible Idea by Michael Ian Black. The book is a funny picture book. It talks about the various reasons why pigs would be terrible in a parade. After reading the story, we shared stories about different ideas we had that just didn't go right. We then talked about how we can come up with new ways to complete our original idea. During the rest of the week each student will be writing a short story about their idea and how they can try again. 

We finished the day with math and library. Both first and second graders brought home new math homework for the week. Please check their homework bags. 

Have a great evening,

Brandy Hines


2nd Grade Homework:  Ms. Hopper should have put something in their math folders today. 


1st Grade Math Homework for Week of 10/17/11

20 FRAME CARDS

This week I am sending home another set of flash cards.  They are 20 Frame Cards.  If your child still needs work with the Ten Frame Cards, please use those and store the 20 Frame Cards in your child’s math box for future use.  

How To Play:
 To use these cards, first make sure your child is clear that there are two Ten frames with 20 boxes total.  This step is very important.  Once your child understands this you are ready to start.  Hold the cards in a pile so that your child can’t see the dots.  Flip one of them over so that they can see the dots (for only about 2 seconds).  Immediately flip the card back over so that your child can not see the dots, and ask them how many dots did they see?  You continue to do this for each card.

What Are You Looking For?
*You want to see if your child uses their knowledge of compliments of ten to quickly figure out compliments of 20, understands 18+2 is the same as 2+18, and if your child is fluent with these compliments.

How Many Time Do I Play?
*I ask that you do this at least twice during this week.  However, feel free to do it more and/or continue to practice with the 10 & 20 Frames throughout the year.

***NOTE:  Using the 20 Frame Cards at this point in the year is advanced.  Most of the 1st Graders will still need to work on the Ten Frame Cards.  I wanted everyone to have these now, to be able to use when your child is ready.

October 14, 2011

October 14, 2011


Good afternoon! 

This morning we had an assembly where we watched the 2nd grade play on outer space. Both Lillian and Jonas performed; they did a fabulous job! 

We also worked on the Weekly News journals this morning. The students are bringing their weekly news home this week. Read their entries and feel free to write a note back! We always read some of the parent's notes back on Monday during morning meeting. 

This morning we worked on science. The students answered the question "Why are there no square wheels?" in their science notebooks. The students needed to use their observations and learning from a previous days experiment to answer the question. The students had fifteen minutes to write or draw their answer. After, we had a discussion of this question. It was very exciting! Students were using words such as round, gravity, points, etc. It was great to see them thinking and coming up with the answer on their own.

This afternoon we continued with our Investigations Math Unit and we ended the day at art class. 

On Monday, Tom will be out of the classroom for his last science course. I will be subbing for Tom on Monday. I'm having a wonderful year meeting all of your children.  

Have a wonderful weekend! Stay dry in the rain.

Brandy (Ms. Hines)  

October 11, 2011

October 12, 2011


Good Morning,

  I hope the math homework was not too confusing.  The students should now keep their math boxes at home and keep their items in the boxes for future use.  So, this week the second graders should keep their deck of 10 frame cards in their math boxes.  The first graders should keep their 10 frame flash cards in their box.  

  Yesterday was the first day of having a parent volunteer in the classroom.  Harmony Kahn joined us for our station time.  It was absolutely wonderful and the kids did a fantastic job.  It was nice having an extra set of hands to work with the kids on their sight words.  Yesterday was the first flash card test of the year.  The students have spent the last week and a half working with their sight words through a variety of sensory activities.  

  This afternoon, we will continue to work on our study of Forces and Motion.  In groups, the students will roll various shaped objects (ball, wooden cube, triangular prism, hardboiled egg, book) down a ramp. In their Science Journals, they will compare/contrast the different objects they tried on a scale of easy to move/hard to move. Afterwards we will discuss where the kids have seen an example of these ideas in real life and/or connect between this experiment and their family's car. We will look at the impact of the wheel! Students will then be asked to respond to the question: Using what you discovered today, why do you think there are no square wheels?

 ANNOUNCEMENTS:
*The math game survey form will be sent home on Thursday and is due Friday.  If you need to Monday to complete the form, please do so. 

*Jersey Day is Friday!!!

*There is an assembly on Friday.

 We are pretty much into our normal routine the last thing to fully implement is our reading groups.  I am very impressed with the group’s achievements over the first 6 weeks of school.  I hope your children are enjoying as much of the day as I am.

Peace,
Tom

October 10, 2011

October 10, 2011

Good Afternoon,
  I hope everyone had a wonderful weekend.  I don't think we could of had a better two days to be outside in October.  Today, I spent the day at Harwood with fellow teachers around the district.  This year, I will be working with other 1st grade math teachers to identify the underlying skills needed to complete each unit assessment.  It should be productive and meaningful work.

  This week's math homework:

1st Graders:  Below is a video that I made a few years ago.  It shows you how to use the cards for this week's math homework.  Please keep them in your child's math box.



2nd Graders:  This week's game is Make the Sum.  Please use the guide sheet to play the game.

I hope you have a wonderful evening, Tom

October 7, 2011

October 7, 2011


Good Afternoon,
  I was out of the classroom this morning.  My daughter had an orthodontist appointment up in Burlington.  This morning, the students went to the computer lab and logged on to their Type To Learn Account.  We wanted to make sure their passwords worked and that everyone had a chance to start the pre-test.  This test will measure the speed that the students type at.  The program uses this information to set goals for them and place them in the appropriate spot.  On Tuesday, your child will have a note in their bag that gives you all of their log-in information.  You can use this to log in at home and have your child practice their keyboarding skills.  This is not required but offered for those who are looking for a little more for their child (We didn't get to use the program today but we know each password now works). 

 This week we read the book I Know Here by Laurel Croza for our literature project. The story is about a little girl whose family is getting ready to move to Toronto. The story focuses on things the girl knows about the town she lives in now, such as, her house, her road, the moose standing in the water, etc. She then paints a picture of all the things she knows in order to remember her town.The book has wonderful painted illustrations, by Matt James. All the students then brainstormed things they see and know in Waitsfield. They painted their ideas. We have paintings ranging from wolves, rabbits, the town library and houses. All the paintings represent things that the students see in Waitsfield. The students worked very hard on the paintings. The paintings will be hung in the classroom bulletin board by Tuesday morning. Come check out your child's work!

  Below is the parent volunteer schedule.  It will also be posted on the volunteer page on our blog.  If you look to the right of this page, you will see the link for this page.  Our volunteers will start this Tuesday.  I would appreciate if you could arrive by 9:25.  This way I can go over the station work that you will be in charge of.  We have been working very hard to get ready for our parents to help in the classroom.  I have talked to the students about our volunteers being teachers and that they had to be treated that way.  I have also reminded the kids that they have a job to do, and if their parent is in the classroom they must still focus on their job.  I ask that kids don't sit in their parent's laps while we are working.  Again, I thank you for all of the help that we have this year.  Right now Sharon Dube has offered to do every Monday.  She was the only one able to sign up for this day.  If anyone else would like to take on a Monday every now and then, please let me know.

2011-2012 Volunteer Schedule

9:30-11:00       1st & 3rd Week          2nd & 4th Week
each day           of the month              of the month

Monday:         Sharon Dube               Sharon Dube

Tuesday:          Michelle Lepp              Harmony Kahn

Wednesday:         Hillary Downing               Elizabeth Cadwell


Thursday:            Susan Hans                           Chris Cook  

Friday:                Eva Frankel                 Kathy Haskell

**If there is a fifth week in a month, I ask that the two volunteers talk to each other and decide who would like to come in.  Both of you coming in is always an option.  If you can't make your week, could you please try to get someone to fill your spot.

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

*No School on Monday

*I will post a blog on Monday.  It will have information about this week’s math homework.

I hope you have a wonderful weekend.
Peace,
Tom



October 5, 2011

October 5, 2011

Good Afternoon,
  I want to thank you for attending the meeting the on Monday evening.  It was nice to have so many families represented, and it is very rewarding for me to have the turnout I did.  I hope you found the information useful, meaningful, and that it helped paint a clear picture of your child's day.  As always, if you have any other questions or concerns, please feel free to contact me.  E-mailing me is the best way to get a hold of me.  I usually look through my e-mail and respond after school or during the evening hours.

  Over the last two days we have been talking about the idea of push and pull and how it relates to items moving.  The students have been working in partners as we have toured the school looking for items that are moving.  They then had to use a Venn diagram to determine if an item moved because of a push, pull, or a push and pull motion.  I then asked the kids to draw a sketch of two of their observations and label where the force was being applied.  They used their science notebooks to record their drawings.  I then asked them about 5 items that I noticed around the school that were not moving.  I asked them why they thought this was so? The goal of this lesson was for children to understand that objects at rest stay at rest and that there must be a force applied for an object to be moved.

*Please don;t forget to fill out the Parent Volunteer forms and return them to me by Thursday.
*Friday is Jersey Day.  Wear your colors with pride.

I hope you have a wonderful week.

Peace,
Tom

October 2, 2011

October 3, 2011

Good Morning,
  I hope everyone had a nice weekend.  We found ourselves standing in the cold and rain cheering for our girls at their soccer matches.  They seemed very happy to hear the final whistles.  I am sure many of you found yourselves in the same situation.


Today, we started our third Investigation in our first unit of our math program.  During Unit 1, the class has focused on counting order, comparing quantities, and working with the operation of addition. Students also worked on finding addition combinations up to 10 and learned to make sense of and solve story problems. They have been/will be introduced to several of the classroom routines that practice and reinforce work with counting, developing visual images of number, collecting data, and working with concepts of time (calendar/clock).  


This week I will continue to assess the kids reading ability with the goal of starting reading groups next week.  Spelling instruction has begun, stations are in full swing, and we are officially underway with our science unit of Forces and Motion.  The students really seemed to enjoy the station work last week.  Now that the students understand how station will work, I will start our parent volunteers schedule next week.  I will post the schedule on Wednesday's blog.


During Morning Meeting, I reviewed our three logical consequences and looked at the idea of You Break It, You Fix It a little deeper.  This consequence works well when a physical action has happened (i.e knock over someone's block tower, spill someone's drink, or write on a person's paper).  However, if feelings are hurt it takes a little more attention and personalization to learn from our mistake.  This is called an Apology of Action.  You will see that this is not a simple thing to teach and takes a lot of modeling, and the ability for each child to be both empathetic and assertive.


I will see all of you tonight at the parent night at 6:00.


Peace,
Tom



Apology of Action and Literacy

Skills that Grow Together
by Sarah Fillion, Lisa Garsh, Rachel Poliner, Jane Shilalie, and Kristen Vincent
Responsive Classroom Newsletter: 

Making amends is more than giving a verbal apology. When feelings have been hurt, truly making amends requires taking steps to restore trust and a sense of harmony. It requires taking responsibility and deciding what can be done to repair the relationship. This is true in real life and is reflected in the best fiction. Good stories offer interesting characters in relationships that twist and turn with events and choices about how to interact.
Recognizing this link between life and literature, we have combined the teaching of apology of action with explorations of fiction in our elementary classrooms in Needham, Massachusetts. The result has been that students gain more insights about both. Students learn how to take responsibility when they hurt someone, how to manage themselves and their relationships, how to understand conflict and reconciliation in fiction, and how fiction connects to their own lives. This is so important because the goal of classroom management isn’t just having a calm and constructive environment, crucial as that is; it’s also teaching children to self-manage. In this article we offer our stories of using literature to teach and practice apology of action.

Our approaches in brief

As a first step, we worked with our students to create classroom rules and introduce logical consequences (see “Apology of Action: When ‘Sorry’ Isn’t Enough,” below). This is a critical foundation that must be in place for apology of action to work at its best. Once students had lived with their classroom rules for a while, we used several ways to connect apology of action with literacy. We read a piece of literature and then introduced and applied the concept of apology of action, or vice versa: introduced apology of action and then applied it to a story. We explored the connection as a whole class and within guided reading groups, and we used brainstorming, journal writing, cooperative group writing, art activities, role-plays, and reflective discussions to further understand and practice apology of action. We know that students need modeling, practice, and coaching to learn a new interpersonal skill, and we’ve integrated literacy into each step.
Apology of Action: When “Sorry” Isn’t Enough
 
Managing hurt feelings is a skill taught explicitly in the Responsive Classroomapproach. “Apology,” children learn, means letting someone know you’re sorry, and “action” means to do something. Through apology of action, children learn what to do to make amends when saying “sorry” isn’t enough.
Laying the groundwork. First, children articulate their hopes and dreams for what they will learn during the school year. Then teachers help them devise rules that will make the classroom a safe environment where everyone can learn. Next, teachers discuss with children what will happen when they forget or choose not to live by the rules—the concept of logical consequences.
Fixing physical messes. One of the three broad types of logical consequences typically used in the Responsive Classroom approach is “you break it, you fix it.” Children first learn to apply “you break it, you fix it” to physical messes: If you knock someone’s block tower down, you help rebuild it. If you spill milk, you clean it up.
Fixing emotional messes. Teachers next introduce apology of action, an extension of the “you break it, you fix it” concept, to help children mend emotional and relationship messes. Teachers help the children learn how to ask for and make an apology of action that is realistic, respectful, and relevant to the hurtful situation. For example, if a child hurts someone by refusing to include her in a game, the child could promise to sit with her on the bus going home. If a child makes fun of someone, the teased child could ask for an apology of action, and the teaser might write a note telling what he or she likes about the child.
A better way to manage behavior. Instead of making children feel bad about their actions and themselves, apology of action helps children learn to solve problems while giving them a dignified way to rejoin the community. It helps children see themselves as part of a community whose members need their respect and kindness—and from whom they deserve respect and kindness in return.

Example 1:
Fourth graders brainstorm apology of action options

In one fourth grade class, students learned about apology of action one day, listing many ways feelings can be broken and ways to “fix” broken feelings, friendships, and trust. The next day, they listened to A Day’s Work, in which Francisco’s lying gets himself and his grandfather into a mess in a gardening job. Students gasped, eyes wide, as Ben discovered Francisco’s and his grandfather’s gardening mistake. Before reading the rest of the story, the teacher posed the question, “What could Francisco do to show he is sorry? What could be his apology of action?” Students went back to their seats to think alone and write.
Gathering again as a whole class a little later, the children discussed their ideas for Francisco’s options: He could buy new flowers, take only half pay, work to earn money and put the plants back, or invite Ben for dinner.
The class then read the rest of the story to discover how Francisco and his grandfather fixed the problem. A discussion followed in which the children talked not only about how the characters’ actions allowed them to make amends, but how people’s actions reflect and communicate to others the type of person they are and want to be known as.

Example 2:
First graders identify apologies of action in a read-aloud

Late in the year in a first grade readers’ workshop, the teacher read aloud The Honest-to-Goodness Truth about a girl who inadvertently hurts friends and neighbors. Students found apologies of action in the story even when the teacher hadn’t: As the class got to the end of the story and discussed some character traits, one student said, “This book is about an apology of action. She said sorry and then helped people by doing something nice that made sense.”
Since that unexpected but insightful observation, the teacher has used this book to introduce apology of action in a two-day sequence. On the first day, she reads the book aloud and introduces the concept of apology of action without pressing the connection. On the second day, the teacher reads it aloud again with the students stopping the story when they hear and see an apology of action, which they do very successfully.

Example 3:
Third grade class evaluates brainstormed ideas, adopts apology of action

One third grade class demonstrated what might happen if a brainstorm of apology of action options leads to some suggestions that might be inappropriate. After reading the first half of The Summer My Father Was Ten, students brainstormed what the main character could do to make amends after destroying Mr. Bellavista’s garden. Quickly, all of the students could see that saying sorry would not be enough. After the class generated more than ten options for further steps, one student, using language the class had been practicing for respectful class discussions, quietly said, “I respectfully challenge the fourth suggestion. I think carving vegetables into the shape of a baseball would remind Mr. Bellavista of what was done to his garden.” After some discussion, the students agreed that option would not restore trust. Their conversation showed that children, given opportunity and guidance, can handle the complex business of evaluating what actions would repair relationships and what actions would not.
This class didn’t stop there. After deepening their understanding of apology of action with the literature discussion, the students began implementing apology of action in their classroom. They created scenarios about mean comments, destroying someone’s property, or hurting someone physically. They role played the scenarios, then made two posters giving step-by-step guidelines for what to do if such scenarios happened in their classroom life. One poster was for the person who “crumpled” someone’s feelings. It listed steps such as being a good listener, apologizing, and choosing and doing an appropriate apology of action, along with suggestions for possible actions. The other poster told the person with the “crumpled” feelings the steps he or she could take, including asking for an apology of action, waiting for it, accepting it, or maybe even taking more time to contemplate and heal.

Example 4:
Third graders create new book endings

Another third grade class initially learned about apology of action with the help of Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse. A student made a notable connection to The Summer My Father Was Ten, which they had read much earlier in the year, realizing that the main character in both stories had made amends with actions. The class continued the connection-making by discussing their own recess problems, after which they made an apology of action poster, called “Garden of Actions,” that listed things they could do to repair hurt relationships. In a guided reading group in this same class, students responded to a question about Molly’s Pilgrim, “What are some of Elizabeth’s character traits?” The seven children quickly generated a list: unkind, mean, not thoughtful, a bragger, not inclusive. “What were some of Elizabeth’s actions or words that can support your claims?” the teacher asked. The students listed many ways that Elizabeth was hurtful to Molly. The class had already learned about apology of action, so the group discussed whether this strategy could be applied to the story. The children readily came up with creative and appropriate ways for Elizabeth to “fix” the problems caused by her actions. Following the discussion, each student wrote an additional chapter to the book that included an apology of action, which they shared during subsequent group times.

Reinforcing the learning outside the classroom

The combination of literature and apology of action has allowed our students to learn more effectively why and how to offer an apology of action and to gain deeper insights about the plots and characters of the stories they’ve read. The skills they’ve learned through this process can be reinforced outside their classrooms, too. In one of our schools, an assistant principal has in her office some of the same books that students read in their classrooms. Children who are in her office upset about an incident involving hurt feelings can often calm themselves by re-reading these books and remembering how some of their favorite characters took responsibility. In another school, a schoolwide read-aloud offered the chance to introduce the concept of apology of action to all students and to reinforce the building and restoring of trusting relationships as a community value. We have seen the difference it makes in our classrooms and across our schools when children learn to take responsibility for harm they have caused, and learn to assert themselves when they’ve been harmed.