Friday, January 28, 2011

Mine's the BEST!

To know me is to know that my standards are exponentially high and as a teacher, you hear the refrains of, “You’re the best teacher in the world…” or “You’re my favorite teacher” quite regularly. So it is not lightly that I say, “My son has the best 2nd grade teacher in the world.” I know this as an indisputable fact because she is not just Xavier’s teacher, she’s also my colleague. Teaching with this woman has truly been, and will probably remain, the highlight of my career. As both a professional and a mother, I couldn’t be luckier.

I started this blog last Friday night after coming home and reflecting on our awesome 2nd grade Expo (which you can read more about later), but I needed to finish writing it today. I needed to finish writing it after she passed along a piece of free-writing Xavier wrote about a favorite memory.

Though the spelling has been improved, the wording has not. Here is Xavier’s story about his favorite memory to the ocean:

The wind blew gently against our faces. The waves were as still as a silk blanket. Joy of children fill my ears. Suddenly, screams interrupted the joy. The waves crash down on shore like lightening bolts. The wind blows hard against our faces. A storm fills the beach. People get in cars and go home. Suddenly, everything is still. I dipped my feet in. The water was crystal blue. For the rest of the day, I splashed in the waves.
-Xavier (age 7), 27 January 2011



 Where did this kid come from? Where did all of this brilliance come from? See, I’m not blowin’ smoke. It’s true. All of it. She’s amazing. And I know, I know, Rob and I have a lot to do with it—I mean, we’re no dummies. But these stories and his development in 2nd grade confirms that Indonesia was a good move for us!

Now, onto our PYP Expo! Last Friday, Maureen and I watched our students as they toured their parents around our PYP Expo. The Expo was a culmination of our last two units of inquiry in which the students, in a nutshell, investigated how things evolve from seed to plant to table.

Here are some of the highlights:

The kids are turning vegetables into bread by following my grandmother's recipe for Zucchini Bread and Carrot Bread. These breads became bitings for their parents at the Expo.

 







Our Invent-A-Garden where students used their knowledge of plants and their adaptations to invent a plant which they then created through paper mache.

Our ongoing PYP Unit wall where we show student learning (from pre-assessment to summative) throughout the unit. Thank God for assistants!


 

Xavier and his partner doing their choral reading of "The Great Kapok Tree."

 
Two girls show their moms how the roots and stem of celery pull the water up to the leaves. Other students were conducting a chocolate taste test. Which is better? Indonesian, Japanese, or Belgian (yup, we all know who won!) and showing their parents food's journey from farm to table.

Here, a student explains the food distribution chain (from farm to factory to market) while another student is showing off the brochure he made in technology about his invented plant.

Here, Xavier shows off our Grade 2 garden--look how much our rice has grown. 3 more weeks and we can harvest.











 
A student and his parents take food items out of a basket, find out where they are distributed from, and then brainstorm whether or not we should be buying locally or globally.

 

Here, a student is showing her mom the stomates of a leaf while explaining their importance to humans (they take in the carbon dioxide and give off oxygen). Another student shows her mom a math problem after going shopping in our classroom store (basically a part of our store room turned into a mini-market) using Indonesian Rupiah. Students had to show their adding and subtracting skills (to the 100,000) to demonstrate what they could buy. Can you believe they are only in 2nd grade?!?!

Every place has its pitfalls and Surabaya is not exempt. But here is proof that we have chosen the best place for our kids and why I can say, “My son has the best 2nd grade teacher in the world.” 

1 comment:

Boppa said...

We are totally impressed by the projects and important ways the children are learning to be good consumers and good citizens of the world! And how lucky those students are to have such excellent teachers! Kudos to you!


Margaret and Paul Carpenter