Sunday, August 29, 2010

First Day of School

Wow! The first day of school was an exciting day for the students and the teachers! I had butterflies in my stomach as I entered the classroom. I took a look around at the work that we had accomplished over the last 2 days. The desks were all lined up; all of the books and materials were in their respective places. Yes, we were ready!

My observation revealed that I was unprepared for the amount of supplies that arrived on the first day. Many of those supplies were delivered by the parents and not the students. Of course each of those parents wanted to speak to the teacher (who most had already met during the open house, just 2 days before). I frantically unpacked each plastic grocery bag and carefully sorted composition books, crayons, notebook paper, boxes of pencils and tissues, 3-ring binders, glue sticks and bottles of hand sanitizer into organized piles. I now know that 24 students times "classroom supplies" equals the top area of 7 student desks! Luckily for us, we had planned for the students to spend the first hour on the carpet (not at a desk); which gave me time to find a better place for all of those materials. Because of this observation, I am lead to prepare a better method of collecting supplies in my classroom. I'm thinking a labeled tote for each item, in an assembly line format, would ease the chaos of that collection process. This is significant because many teachers face this day without a second set of helping hands!

In between my sorting job, I was recording transportation changes. "I'll pick "Billy" up today, since it's the first day of school". It sounds so simple. However, it's a transportation nightmare for a teacher who has already prepared the list of "car riders" and "bus takers"! I have since concluded that an "adult volunteer" in the classroom on the first day of school is an absolute necessity.

I know that the first day is a hard for the students as well. Most are still in "summer vacation mode". Their routines and sleep and eat habits have been disrupted. I learned that it is important to establish the ground rules on the first day, from the first hour. Schedules have to be followed and manners have to be re-taught. I believe the importance of these first day activities lead the way to a successful school year. We spent a significant amount of time discussing and practicing the daily procedures. Math and Comprehension assessments were completed and ability groups were defined so that relevant instruction could begin.

I focused on establishing who I was in the classroom; as a person of authority, to be respected and obeyed; because very soon, I will be the teacher!

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