Moving Beyond, “I’ve Tried Everything”

Even with a lot of support, teachers often believe that they have tried everything and become discouraged. Expand your “everything.” Bring energy, passion, and a positive attitude back to students who are struggling while developing their literacy skills. Become more aware of over 120 practices that will ignite improved student achievement and bring struggling learners the joy of success in school. Learn how to use powerful scaffolds to build the confidence and skillfulness of struggling and disinterested learners. See how you can add to your strategies that motivate students to become engaged, empowered, and ready to achieve without watering down content material and lowering standards. Participants will be involved in fast-paced reflection activities to more closely examine issues and options related to low student literacy performance.

 

A NOVEL approach to a Perennial Problem: An Empowering Design Plan for Equitable Learning for All

In this energetic session, panelists with over 80 years of collective experience share how they design innovations to successfully tackle the puzzle of meeting the needs of a wide range of learners within a single classroom setting. Attendees will participate in interactive scenarios; learn to contribute to effective change; and receive procedures for developing discussion-centric, inquiry units to ignite student curiosity and honor their humanity.

Connecting Students with Their Communities Through News Media Literacy

Explore media mindfulness as a way to help students connect to their communities and be aware of their wellbeing as media consumers. This session demonstrates an activity in which students reflect on what news is meaningful to them and how it makes them feel. This is a powerful tool to engage students with local and current issues, help them process rapidly-changing news events, and encourage a discourse culture that is inclusive and open-minded. Session attendees will receive free core materials of the Thinking Habitats curriculum.

The Secret Magic to Literature Circle Success

Literature Circles, in my experience with teachers, have had hit-or-miss success. If you are committed to embracing the energy and power of student choice but not sure what’s getting in the way of these units fully clicking into place, this session is for you. In this session we will design Essential Question threads that unite book choices and give teachers the opportunity to focus on skill building and supplementary content. You’ll walk out of our session with at LEAST one fully planned unit! This session requires participants to bring a device to the session.

AI in Student Writing: Preventing Plagiarism and Enabling Responsible Use

Student-facing AI can support inquiry and learning, but also risks AI plagiarism in writing assignments. We must find a way to preserve authentic learning AND enable students to use AI responsibly. Come hear how you can do this with Scrible, the world’s first “show your work” writing process platform that’s been used by Illinois schools for years. It mitigates AI plagiarism by making the writing process visible to teachers and shifting assessment to writing as a process. Scrible now also offers Rese, a brand new genAI chatbot enabling students to use AI responsibly in the research and writing process. 

Frag-Free Fluency: The Importance of Complete Sentences and Sentence Variety in Dialogue, Reading, and Writing

This session will teach participants how to provide more opportunities for student-to-student discourse, giving written and verbal feedback, and utilizing tech, activities, and research-based strategies to improve communication in the classroom while answering the age-old question posed by students, Do We Need To Use Complete Sentences? This session can provide elementary and junior high teachers with valuable insights and practical strategies to en- hance their literacy instruction and support their students’ development as proficient readers and writers.

 

Cultivating Resilience in Reading Through Emotionally Intelligent Teach

Students are overwhelmed and anxious. They are showing up to class and not engaging in well-intentioned activities. How do teachers reach these students and re-engage them without losing patience in frustration? This presentation explores the complex relationship between affective factors and reading comprehension, tapping into how students engage with text on an emotional, motivational, and attitudinal level. This session will also explore how teachers’ own attachment styles align with our students’ attachment styles and how teachers can build on this knowledge to further student engagement in analyzing texts. Participants will walk away with practical strategies they can use to help students self-regulate in order to better their overall literacy

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Authentic Assessments with AI

Authentic Assessment with AI is a workshop that attempts to align project- based learning with AI supports. Whether researching a topic for an essay, developing an in-class paragraph, or designing a creative project, students can utilize AI independently or with teacher supports to create prompts that address the fundamental structures of an assignment or assessment while also evaluating and reflecting on their decisions in the development of a product. By using authentic assessments with AI, teachers can show students the limitations of AI in this process when it comes to the authentic learning experiences they engage in as well as the critical thinking skills necessary for student success.

Participants will be provided with some purposeful review and examples of project-based learning with practical application for a high school setting or relative experience in middle-school or college. Participants will also explore, design, and outline their own authentic assessment with AI. Organizationally, participants will be provided with an overview of the steps of a project-based learning assessment and will be shown where AI can be used to support student learning. Though not necessary, attendees are suggested to bring a device with access to ChatGPT or MagicSchool AI to allow for some person- alized exploration.

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The Nostalgia Project: Discovering Community Through Poetry, History, and Human Impact

In preparation for a return to school following the pandemic in 2021, East Aurora School District partnered with Dr. Badia Ahad, Loyola University Provost, to train staff district-wide on the concept of Nostalgia, Reclamation, Regeneration, and Retribution. Following the training, The Nostalgia Project was born. As an element of a four-part interdisciplinary unit ending with a four- part podcast, students shared their oral and written histories in the format of narrative poetry inspired by George Ella Lyon’s poem “Where I’m From” while considering their childhood homes, families, and community. Transitioning to social studies, math, and science, students learned about the history of their city and the diverse immigrant groups that worked to contribute to the identity and uniqueness of where they are from; compiled information about demographics of the area they chose to investigate and created their own data representation with projections; and proposed a way to resolve a social, environmental, or political issue in their city in a way that would benefit the community as a whole. In this session, educators will gain specific knowledge of the project in order to collaborate with their colleagues to provide a rich interdisciplinary experience for students to become experts in their community and to “forge a better future.” Attendees are suggested to bring a device to access links to resources presented during this session.

Session materials: PDF 1; PDF 2