I hope you had an awesome summer
and that you’re refreshed and renewed and ready to rock and roll for a new
school year! As usual, I learned a lot this summer. I have hard data and soft
data on my summer ...
Hard data is quantifiable -- you
can count it and add it up. Here’s some examples of “hard data” from my
summer...
·
Miles traveled by car --- 2,714
· Miles traveled by plane -- 2,098
·
Number of times I read the same picture book to my toddler on the
plane -- 41
·
Number of my relatives seen -- 16
·
Number of my husband’s relatives seen -- over 50
·
Number of ferry boat rides -- 4
·
Number of subway rides -- 2
·
Number of museums visited -- 6
·
Number of states visited -- 6
·
Number of mermaids seen – 7 (and one mer-man)
·
Number of finger-paints spilled -- 5
·
Number of swimming lessons taken by my kids -- 54
·
Number of artworks created by my five year-old -- 230
I also collected some “soft
data”. Soft data is harder to measure, harder to quantify.
·
My five-year-old is so much more pleasant when she has protein for
breakfast
·
Those Weeki Wachee mermaids are really amazing athletes.
·
Twelve hours in a car with a toddler feels like it
lasts for days.
·
Light-up shoes are really helpful (and funny) in a cave.
·
Climbing up the pedestal in the Statue of Liberty is more work
than it sounds.
·
My backyard DOES flood when it rains for 21 days in a row.
·
The zoo is half-empty when it’s hot outside. That’s probably for a
good reason.
·
A dinosaur-themed wedding is more fun than you think it will be..
As we start a new school year,
with new students, new courses, sometimes new classrooms, I know that you will
collect and pour over tons of hard data -- last year’s grades, FSA scores, EOC
scores, PM tests, AP scores, free-and-reduced status, languages spoken at home,
reading levels, attendance records, discipline history, arrest records, test
specs and blueprints..... It’s enough data to get lost in!
I would like to HIGHLY encourage
you to collect some “soft” data during the first few weeks as well. Learn some
less-quantifiable data about your students and classes -- and RECORD that “soft
data”.
·
where they do their homework (and if anyone helps them)
·
what their first impressions are about your class.
·
whether they enjoyed and/or were successful in their previous
social studies classes)
·
what sports/clubs/extracurricular activities they enjoy and are
involved in.
Then, put that info in your
gradebook, in MS Excel, in a notebook -- something! Do something with that info
and make it easy to use. I used to collect some of that info in my class, but I
always put it away, meaning to “do something” with it later. But I never did.
Put it on your wall (the no-name
stuff, of course), put it in your folder, or somewhere. But make it accessible
so you can get to it and use that data.
“Soft data” is just as valuable
as “hard data”. Find a good system to collect, organize, and reference it
regularly. I promise, it will be totally worth it!
Do you collect any “soft data”?
Do you have any tips on organizing and using it? As always, I love to hear from
you! Email me at newmantr@pcsb.org
Tracy
Newman
Reading-in-Social
Studies Coach
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