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杭州会议感悟

2009年11月19日孙传美老师.小朝学校的尚好看老师.和我三个人,一行去了杭州,这是我第一次带着学校的期望与任务参加了这次会议,我既感到兴奋又感到责任重大,同时我对这次会议也抱有很大的期望.

在这次的回忆中我接触了一个新鲜的东西: 班级读书会,这是我们关爱学校乃至于整个山西所没有接触过的一种新型的阅读讨论形式,会议中展示了三种不同的班级读书会的形式与样本,使我们对班级读书会这个新的概念有了一个大致的认识与了解,但是在专家的解说与自我感觉中,班级读书会还可能有其他多种形式,在这里只是展示了三种:阅读前的阅读推荐班级读书会(学生对所推荐的这本书一无所知,老师通过让学生看书的封面或读书中的精彩片段或者是让学生读梗概等方式让学生猜测与预测这本书的内容,从而感染学生的阅读兴趣);\阅读后的读书分享讨论班级读书会(学生已经读了这本书,然后让学生重新回到这本书上,老师采用阅读情节单,角色日志,心情日志等来共同分享这本书);\阅读后的对比阅读班级读书会(这中形式也属于阅读后分享讨论会,只是这 more

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post 杭州会议感悟

2009年11月19日孙传美老师.小朝学校的尚好看老师.和我三个人,一行去了杭州,这是我第一次带着学校的期望与任务参加了这次会议,我既感到兴奋又感到责任重大,同时我对这次会议也抱有很大的期望.

在这次的回忆中我接触了一个新鲜的东西: 班级读书会,这是我们关爱学校乃至于整个山西所没有接触过的一种新型的阅读讨论形式,会议中展示了三种不同的班级读书会的形式与样本,使我们对班级读书会这个新的概念有了一个大致的认识与了解,但是在专家的解说与自我感觉中,班级读书会还可能有其他多种形式,在这里只是展示了三种:阅读前的阅读推荐班级读书会(学生对所推荐的这本书一无所知,老师通过让学生看书的封面或读书中的精彩片段或者是让学生读梗概等方式让学生猜测与预测这本书的内容,从而感染学生的阅读兴趣);\阅读后的读书分享讨论班级读书会(学生已经读了这本书,然后让学生重新回到这本书上,老师采用阅读情节单,角色日志,心情日志等来共同分享这本书);\阅读后的对比阅读班级读书会(这中形式也属于阅读后分享讨论会,只是这 Read the rest of this post

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post 会跳舞的乒乓球

玩乒乓球是常见的,可你知道乒乓球怎样跳舞吗?五年级同学能让乒乓球跳舞。拿两个杯子,把乒乓球放进一个杯子中,用嘴把它吹进另一个杯子。我们进行了一个比赛,任超在五分钟之内就吹进去40多次。最后让他们想一想,还有什么办法可以让乒乓球跳舞,学生还尝试用嘴吸,拍打杯底,智慧无限!

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post 会跳舞的乒乓球

玩乒乓球是常见的,可你知道乒乓球怎样跳舞吗?五年级同学能让乒乓球跳舞。拿两个杯子,把乒乓球放进一个杯子中,用嘴把它吹进另一个杯子。我们进行了一个比赛,任超在五分钟之内就吹进去40多次。最后让他们想一想,还有什么办法可以让乒乓球跳舞,学生还尝试用嘴吸,拍打

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post (中文) 悬浮的鸡蛋

乒乓球

今天,五年级的同学科学实验:会悬浮的鸡蛋。首先我让学生猜想鸡蛋怎样悬浮在杯子中,学生看我拿了盐,就认为鸡蛋会悬浮在盐水中。我让学生试一试,结果漂浮在水上。那怎样才能悬浮在水中呢?学生想到墨水,再试了一次,结果鸡蛋沉入瓶底。我建议学生试着把两种溶液汇在一起,鸡蛋悬浮在杯子中间。最后学生在尝试放进其他溶液中,看鸡蛋会不会悬浮。

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post (中文) 悬浮的鸡蛋

今天,五年级的同学科学实验:会悬浮的鸡蛋。首先我让学生猜想鸡蛋怎样悬浮在杯子中,学生看我拿了盐,就认为鸡蛋会悬浮在盐水中。我让学生试一试,结果漂浮在水上。那怎样才能悬浮在水中呢?学生想到墨水,再试了一次,结果鸡蛋沉入瓶底。我建议学生试着把两种溶液汇在一起,鸡蛋悬浮在杯子中间。最后学生在尝试放进其他溶液中,看鸡蛋会不会悬浮。

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post (中文) 悬浮的鸡蛋

今天,五年级的同学科学实验:会悬浮的鸡蛋。首先我让学生猜想鸡蛋怎样悬浮在杯子中,学生看我拿了盐,就认为鸡蛋会悬浮在盐水中。我让学生试一试,结果漂浮在水上。那怎样才能悬浮在水中呢?学生想到墨水,再试了一次,结果鸡蛋沉入瓶底。我建议学生试着把两种溶液汇在一起,鸡蛋悬浮在杯子中间。最后学生在尝试放进其他溶液中,看鸡蛋会不会悬浮。

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post (中文) 悬浮的鸡蛋

今天,五年级的同学科学实验:会悬浮的鸡蛋。首先我让学生猜想鸡蛋怎样悬浮在杯子中,学生看我拿了盐,就认为鸡蛋会悬浮在盐水中。我让学生试一试,结果漂浮在水上。那怎样才能悬浮在水中呢?学生想到墨水,再试了一次,结果鸡蛋沉入瓶底。我建议学生试着把两种溶液汇在一起,鸡蛋悬浮在杯子中间。最后学生在尝试放进其他溶液中,看鸡蛋会不会悬浮。

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post Beekeeping Journals

Bees 1

Students examine a honey comb

Guan Ai has a group of very inquisitive and energetic fifth grade boys. Last semester, they took an interest in the bees which buzzed around the school yard and crawled around water droplets on the faucets. For several days in a row, one or more of these boys would rush into the RCEF office, exuberant, bearing the latest live specimens they had captured and put in “habitats” fashioned out of discarded bottles, tape and wooden chopsticks. “What kind of bee is this?” they wanted to know. “Is this a wasp or a bee? How can we keep it alive?” Seeing that their curiosity was not just a passing fad, we decided to take the students to learn from real beekeepers. Utilizing the recess time before dinner, we walked through the fields to a village about fifteen minutes away where an elderly couple raised bees in their backyard.

The beekeeper critiqued the students' homemade bee hive.

The beekeeper critiqued the students' homemade bee hive.

Faced with a group of nine boys tumbling over themselves, one question leading to two more, the beekeepers were undaunted. In fact, they turned out to be very kind and patient teachers. The boys asked about the bee hives in their yards and the “grandma” and “grandpa” beekeepers (as we called them) satisfied their every curiosity, even letting the boys touch bees wax and opening up the wooden boxes to let the students observe the insides of a hive from a safe distance. Each student (and their surviving bee specimens) even got a sweet taste of peach

Students each got a taste of the sweet honey.

Students each got a taste of the sweet honey.

blossom honey from the end of grandma’s chopstick. Over the course of a few such “mini field-trips,” students learned about how a bee colony functions, how bees collect nectar and pollen from different kinds of flowers, and how beekeepers collect the pollen, honey, and royal jelly to sell.

Afterward, the students voluntarily spent an hour or so every day for a couple weeks (eschewing nap time with their teachers’ permission) transferring the notes they’d taken into “bee journals” that they wrote and illustrated themselves. While their classmates slept through the afternoon heat, we gathered in the relative coolness of the library to

Posing proudly with their finished books.

Posing proudly with their finished books.

consult books that had pictures and information about bees or surf the internet on my laptop for more information. The boys worked in groups of three so that all could contribute to the writing and drawing. All the books are now in the school library on a shelf of student-made books for their classmates to browse. The boys proudly brought their finished books to show the beekeepers, who pronounced them very good and “mostly accurate.” The only point of dispute raised was whether queen bees can really lay 2000 eggs a day, a factoid we found on Wikipedia, but which the beekeeper thinks is much too high from his own observations.

This “bee project” was driven by the students’ own interest and initiative. Since no one on staff had experience with bees, we were fortunate to be able to interview the village beekeepers.

Students show their books to the beekeeper.

Students show their books to the beekeeper.

They were farmers who didn’t even have grandchildren living at home but they were wonderful with these fourth grade boys, providing a chance for them to learn about the subject firsthand instead of just consulting a textbook.

There are many opportunities like this to draw on the rich knowledge of community members to educate rural children. However, it requires that the school principal and teachers are willing to let children go outside the classroom on field trips or invite villagers into the school as guest speakers. Guan Ai has a history of this and RCEF is going deeper this year in making these

connections between community and school. This year, these same ebullient boys are in the young inventors’ extracurricular activity class and RCEF is continuing to develop curriculum that proves how effective it is to involve farmers and rural community members into children’s education.

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