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Boston Book Festival

Published Oct. 22, 2017, 4:54 p.m.

The Boston Book Festival is happening on Saturday in the Copley Square section of Boston. There is a ton of great speakers and workshops to choose from, centered around reading and writing. I encourage you to check it out!

Boston Book Festival 2017


October 10, 2017 - Midterm Effort Grade Updated

Published Oct. 10, 2017, 8:29 p.m.

As I told students in class, I have posted midterm grade updates on PowerSchool. I used a point total of 15 possible points in each category of effort: participation, preparation, behavior, and perseverance. Students will do a reflection in class, and hopefully their ideas are closely aligned with mine. If a student has a question about the scores in PowerSchool, he/she should stop by and see me after school.

October 2, 2017 - All Classes - Grades

Published Oct. 2, 2017, 8:14 p.m.

With the midterm approaching, I wanted to expand a little bit on the information in the syllabus about grades. Students in my classes earn effort grades. They will not see letter grades (A, B, C) on their progress reports. Effort grades are earned through students' preparation for class, level of participation, behavior, and level of perseverance. Much of this is hard to quantify, so things on PowerSchool are only part of the picture. Students should have a sense of how often they arrive with the expected materials, how actively they participate in class, how they behave, and how hard they work.

"Writing at the Rock" - September 25, 2017 - Launching Personal Narrative

Published Sept. 25, 2017, 8:44 a.m.

The first genre we will work on this year is Personal Narrative. We started by immersing ourselves in the genre by reading several examples. We tried to read "like a writer." This means we read, notice parts that seem to work well, and stop to think about what the author did to create that part or that effect. It's like a sports player watching game film, or a pastry chef analyzing how an elaborate cake was made.

We made a collective list of things that seem to make personal narratives effective and powerful.

The students also wrote an on-demand personal narrative, which will serve as a baseline to judge progress over time. Since then, they have begun drafts of at least two other pieces. The ideas for these drafts came from two strategies for how to generate topics: think of a special person, and think of an important place.

Each time they write, students are pushing themselves to produce a page or a page and a half of writing. They set their own goals and will be expected to continue to push themselves forward bit by bit.

"Reading at the Rock" - September 24, 2017- Building Good Habits

Published Sept. 24, 2017, 5:59 p.m.

Our work as readers and thinkers this year will be focused on building good habits. In Trimester I, we will develop good habits in the classroom, in our minds, and in our reading lives.

So far, much of our time together has been devoted to developing good classroom habits. These habits include: getting to know each other, talking about books and reading in productive and valuable ways, and talking/listening/responding to each other. Not only are these habits that will support students throughout their lives, they will also give us a solid foundation of respect and trust in the classroom.

Students are also developing the habit of documenting their reading. They do this by filling out and index card for each book read. The index cards will serve as each class' measure of their reading as well as a motivator. Students also record finished books on an individual Reading List, which will, over time, provide data about reading stamina, genres preferred, and level of challenge in books chosen.

Most recently, we have been working on the classroom habit of "making our thinking public." The work we do as readers and thinkers is invisible and silent. If it stays that way, we can't help, challenge, or support each other. So we need to find and use ways to make our thinking public in the classroom. We'll do this by sharing our thinking aloud when we are reading a text together, and students will do this by marking the text when they are reading independently.

Class Norms

Published Sept. 18, 2017, 3:03 p.m.

I have posted, under Resources, the norms we developed together. They describe how we want to be together this year so that we get the most out of our time.

Back to School Night

Published Sept. 17, 2017, 2:37 p.m.

Dear Parents,
If you were not able to come to Back to School Night, please feel free to reach out via email or a phone call if you would like to say hello or have any questions. I sent home a "syllabus" with your child.
Best,
Ms. Ackroyd

Back to School Night - Odd day classes

Published Sept. 17, 2017, 2:35 p.m.

Dear Parents of "odd day" students,
I did not get to meet you this past week at Back to School Night. Feel free to give me a call or send me an email if you would like to say hi or ask a question. I had handouts available about various reading related topics. If you'd like copies of them, please let me know. I sent a "syllabus" home with your child on Friday.
Ms. Ackroyd

Summer Reading

Published June 7, 2017, 11:27 a.m.

Students are working on formulating their Summer Reading Plans, with the help of their families. Pollard is expecting rising 7th graders to read 2 books: one that is chosen for them, and one of their choosing.

I am expecting students to read more than 2 books! Why? Because I know they can; because I know that it's through reading that they get smarter and learn new words; because reading fiction helps people become more caring and empathetic; and because I want them to develop lifelong reading habits.

For details and lots of great book suggestions, check out the Pollard Media Center's web page.

May 16, 2017: 3-even

Published May 16, 2017, 8:35 a.m.

After writing our debate articles, we dove into sports writing. As always, we started with reading - reading like writers. We read a few sports articles and generated a list of techniques and characteristics that made good sports writing what it is. We decided that the goal of this kind of writing was to connect with readers and to emotionally tap into deeper ideas. We noticed that good sports writing connects to bigger ideas, starts or contains a story, and uses metaphors, powerful images, sensory details, and sometimes hyperbole.

We brainstormed and chose individual topics and started gathering words, phrases, and ideas. We drafted and got feedback from each other in various ways. We drafted again and did lots of revising. Students got to share their final pieces with Mr. Resnick who, as it turns out, once worked as a sports writer!

Now, we are moving on to speech writing!