Monday, December 10, 2012

Got Grit?

Who's got grit?

This student?
Or this one?



"Grit" is the new school buzzword. It means:
  • Stick with it.
  • Tough it out.
  • Keep plugging away.
  • Hang in there.
  • And that old classic: Try, try, and try again.
It turns out that big winners give themselves big brains when they stay on the job until it's done. Sez who?
   
Sez Angela Lee Duckworth, a smart cookie professor at the University of Pennsylvania. She tested West Point cadets, National Spelling Bee brainiacs, top teachers, and successful sales people. What did they all have in common? 

Grit. 

High achievers hit it out of the ballpark thanks to super determination and focus. Grit helped these winners unleash their talents over the competition. 

Want to find out if you’ve got grit? Take Professor Duckworth's Grit Test. There's no pass or fail. Your score on the Grit Test can tell you how much grit you already have and give you an idea of how to get more. 

So go get gritty. 

All this talk about grit is making Mizz C. hungry for shrimp 'n grits, one of her fav meals down South where she's visiting her family. 









Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Thanksgiving Shout-out To . . .

TURKEY


TURKEY, MASHED POTATOES, GRAVY, AND CRANBERRIES
PUMPKIN PIE

When you're down to the wishbone, and the dishes are dried, curl up with one of Mizz C's all-time favorite books. The first page opens on Thanksgiving Day and is out of this world! (Warning: It's an adventure and a tearjerker.)  
A SWIFTLY TILTING PLANET by Madeleine l'Engle

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Dumpster or Backpack? You Decide.





Do you feel like this when you need something in your pack?
Mizz C. knows you're busy. So she’ll make it quick and easy: 
  • Get a wastebasket and a recycling bin if you have one.
  • Dump out everything from your backpack onto a desk or table.
  • Put school books in one section of your backpack.
  • Put your notebooks in another section. It's like keeping your peas separate from your mashed potatoes.
  • Hunt down all loose pieces of paper. Pile 'em up. 
  • Put like with like--math homework with math tests, science homework with science tests, and so on. Find a place in your room—a shelf, a cubby, a box. Put those old tests and homework papers away.* Use them as test tools later on. Hold the bonfire until the end of the school year when all your tests are over!
  • Toss or recycle outdated papers, worn-out pens, markers,  pencils, peanut shells, and wrappers of things you ate or chewed in September.
  • Add fresh writing tools and paper but not too much.
  • Done! Now go find a skateboard.



 

Sunday, October 7, 2012

All Together Now: Study Groups


Exams ahead--call in the study buddies! No not these two:
 
                                       
          More like this:

Mizz C. has a few tips for studying with friends so that the work gets done and there’s still time for fun:
  • Keep your study group small, 2-4 people tops--the nerdier the better.
  • Meet a few days before the big test for one hour max.
  • Pick a place where you can talk quietly without distractions—no cell phones until the hour is over.
  • Ask all study buddies to do a couple things: bring their class notes and predict two or three test questions.
  • Spend a half hour sharing class notes. Fill in information any of you forgot.
  • Ask the questions everyone thinks the teacher is going to ask. Take turns answering the questions out loud. No interruptions, put-downs, or pile-ons. Be helpful.
  • Take notes on the answers you hear.
  • When the timer sounds, have fun.









Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Yes, you Khan!


Hey there, Middle Schoolers. Were you home sick when your teacher talked about quadrilaterals, and now the class is onto polygons?



Or were you in class on quadrilateral day but didn't understand what the heck your teacher was talking about?





What if there were a school with a calm, patient teacher who explained quadrilaterals in eight minutes flat? 

Oh wait, there is! It's called Khan Academy! All you need to go there is a few minutes of your time and a computer. No school bus. No attendance. No homework. This free online school offers hundreds of You Tube videos on almost every topic at every grade level.

Here's how it works:


  • Type the topic you want to work on.  
  • Click the video for that topic. Watch it as many times as it takes to get it down. 
  • Optional: Go to the Practice menu. Type in your subject again. Do a quick workout until you've nailed it. 
   
Best part? No report card except the one in your head.









Sunday, September 23, 2012

LOTS OF TEACHERS, LOTS OF BOOKS, OH YES!




Hey, Middle Schoolers. Was this you just a month ago?


Is this you today?
Mizz C. to the rescue with a study skill tip you can try out TONIGHT, yes TONIGHT-- and every night for the rest of the school year. This amazing study tip will do more than index cards, nagging voices, or class notes to help you prepare for tests, memorize information, stay focused in class, and get your work done. 

Can you guess what it is? 
Not!
                                                          
Mizz C. knows the energy you need for school doesn't come from a can. It comes from two things you can see in the picture below. You probably have both of them right in your room. 
pillow and alarm clock

Mizz C. has been accused of repeating herself. Now she's going to do just that. The best study skill you can master this year can be found in one of Mizz C's first blog postings, Sleep, the Super Study Skill. 

Now go catch some zzzs (unless you're in class right now or you haven't finished tomorrow's homework yet).  






















Sunday, June 10, 2012

No More Teachers, No More Books? Oh, No!



Hey, Middle Schoolers! Would you rather lie on a hammock with a book you love or go to summer school? If you said "summer school," Mizz C. knows you thought today was April Fools' Day. Who wouldn't choose lying in the nice cool grass, on the beach, or in a hammock and reading a book you love?

Go for it! Here's why. An incredible report came out in 2011 showing that students who read twelve--12, 12, 12--books over three summers scored as well as students who went to summer school.


Here's the best part. The twelve books weren't assigned books or books that parents or teachers picked out for the kids. They were titles the kids picked themselves--everything from books on celebrities, gossip, to gerbils and a wizard pupil by the name of Harry. Nobody had to write reports or get tested on the books they picked. They just read twelve books that interested them.


Why is Mizz C. not surprised? Every time you read a new book, you pick up new vocab words, new ideas, new kinds of information, and new ways different authors present information. Those are the very reading skills that get a workout on standardized tests.  


To find the best summer books just right for you, grab your library card. Ask a friendly librarian for book suggestions based on subjects and books you already like. 


Or go to amazon.com. Type in the title of a book you really, really enjoyed. The brainiacs at Amazon will list titles of similar books you'll also like. Read the real-kid reviews for the books Amazon suggests. Then track down some of those books wherever you can find them. 


So get with your very own reading program, whether it's Dancing with the Starlings, The Real House Flies of Beverly Hills, or The Snack Games



Happy summer, Middle Graders! See you in the fall. 


XO 
Mizz C.