TIES Conference 2018 and Game Changer: Amy Moe

This is a guest post written by Amy Moe, Instructional Technology Specialist at Pine Meadow Elementary. Do you need a scholarship to attend a conference?  Apply today

TIES 2018 & GAME CHANGER: Book Access for All Kids by Donalyn Miller by Amy Moe

With the assistance of CMLE, I was able to attend TIES this year.  It was my goal to find sessions that would allow me to enhance the initiatives and tech tools we currently use at our school.  For example, our district tech team is reading BOLD School: Blended Learning that Works.  I attended a session called “Blending and Techifying Instruction”.  The presenter shared ways to offer a mixture of face-to-face instruction and digital tools through station rotation, the flipped classroom, and/or individualized instruction.  Each option had a similar format that gave students direct instruction, practice, application of higher order thinking skills, and extension opportunities. These are viable options for our upper elementary classrooms.  

I also attended a session on utilizing formative assessments.  Formative assessments help teachers see into students thinking and gauge their learning.  It guides instruction and offers feedback. Attending this session reaffirmed my efforts in introducing staff to the advantages of using platforms such as Seesaw, Nearpod, and the Google Suite.  Student engagement increases throughout the lessons with interactive slides at the beginning, middle and end of a lesson.

After my two days at TIES, I traveled to Custom Ed Solutions in Champlin to hear renowned author, Donalyn Miller, speak about her latest book: Game Changer: Book Access for All Kids.  Donalyn focused on three key areas: time, access, and book choice.  

TIME: Students should have at least 20 minutes of independent reading time a day.  She claims this is vital because it provides an authentic opportunity to synthesize.  

ACCESS: Students need access to current and diverse book collections through their school and classroom libraries.  This is easy to achieve during the school year, but summer months are a challenge. We need to be creative in finding funding to get books in the hands of our most at-risk, struggling readers.  

CHOICE: Students should be given ownership in finding books that interest them.  This task can be difficult so students need to be taught how to find books.  This can be accomplished through book talks, preview stacks, book trailers, and read alouds.