Post on 12-Jun-2020
“Teaching respect is not enough, you need to embody it.” –Gabriella Avallone
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and
those who matter don't mind." –Dr. Seuss
“In life, it’s not where you go-- but who you travel with.” –From the bottom of a
Charlie Brown Cartoon
Becoming a teacher would mean a great deal to me. It would mean that I will have accomplished
one of my life goals. Teaching has always been in me, I used to play teacher with my best friend
growing up. I helped her with everything she struggled with in school and to this day it still
happens. I have always been the person people come to for help with writing papers or just
needing someone to look over their paper if they needed a fresh eye to catch any mistakes.
Helping people has always been a passion of mine and all I ever get in return is the “AH HA”
look when something finally clicks and they understand whatever was troubling them, and that
will forever be all I need to keep fueling my love of teaching. ~Gabriella Avallone
Halloween 2012
Me as Lenny from Of
Mice and Men
Denver Football Game
December 2012
Me with Matthew
Whitwell
Teaching
It was a day like any other when I walked into the home of my babysitter one summer
around the year 1993. I had done the same action hundreds of times before but sitting in the
living room with my now best friend, Kristin, began my teaching career.
We were just sitting there playing house when I decided that she was doing it wrong and
wanted to play a new game. So I stood up and began to rearrange everything so it looked more
like a classroom instead of a kitchen and we started to play teacher. Of course I was the teacher
because I have always been a take charge of the situation kind of girl. We acted out a scene from
Sesame Street. I am pretty sure it was the episode where Elmo was trying to figure out how
different people felt happy in different ways, so my instructions to Kristin were to tell me how
she gets happy and act it out. But, she could not just smile and laugh, she did not get the
assignment at first so, being the teacher I hope to be one day, I swallowed my pride and I just
started to dance around and have fun. Kristin could see what I was doing made me happy and she
then understood. She got up went into the cupboard got crayons and paper and began to draw. It
was a very simple act of drawing a sun in the corner and flowers on the paper but her face lit up
and exceptionally happy.
I know that is not a normal example of playing teacher growing up but seeing Elmo and
the other characters on Sesame Street that day looking so happy just made something inside me
want to make sure Kristin got the same meaning out of that episode. No matter what it may be, if
it makes you happy, then go ahead and do it. And to remember to only color on paper because
her happiness spread to the walls and since she was having so much fun, the teacher abandoned
her post and joined her pupil by grabbing a crayon and enjoying our new assignment of making a
mural of flowers on the living room wall. When her mom came in from the family room and saw
our assignment was complete, she gave us our next assignment, a time out because we were not
supposed to let our happiness spread to the wall. Go figure.
The past may have been where I started my life goal of becoming a teacher just by trying
to find what made my best friend happy, but what is a goal if there are no plans to set everything
in motion. What do I want to share with my future students? That is a great question, I would
want to share with them that reading is a great deal of fun. When a student can grab a book,
cannot put it down, and lose all track of time that is one of the best things that can happen to a
student. Time sometimes feels like it is moving way to fast and what needs to happen is for
students or whoever really, to just sit down and read a book, just get lost in its pages for a while.
Another idea I would love to get across to my students is that everyone has an opinion
and everyone has the right to share that opinion without getting laughed at or feeling
embarrassed. One thing that I want to stress in my classroom is that all students have the right to
be heard and to ask questions. No one should feel embarrassed about whatever s/he has to say. I
would basically love to create a safe environment where students can be free to talk about the
assignment and show how they feel. As a classroom we should be there for each other because
everyone needs the chance to be heard and to feel respected.
I want to teach my students how to draw out their imaginations and translate what they
are thinking to paper. A unique way to do this would be to immediately write down what they
think about the reading assignment after they have finished reading or if they cannot put what
they are thinking into words have them draw. Once this is done, they can then begin their writing
assignment. This is just a way to have some of the assignments student based so they feel they
have a say in some of the work that is produced in the class. Of course, not all of the assignments
will be student based, I will have to step in there and teach them new ways to write and the
different aspects of writing. But, if they have more choices in which assignment or project they
want to do, hopefully, they can get excited about them.
Something else I would want to integrate into my classroom is different kinds of projects.
Much like the multi-genre projects, this is where a student can do anything from writing a paper
to making a CD as long as it is relevant to the readings their imagination can explode. Group
projects and discussions is another way to break up the day so they do not have to listen to me
lecture all class long.
The main thing I hope to see in my future students is excitement to learn something; it
does not have to be anything about English. But I just want to see drive in their eyes and not dull
lifeless ones that have just showed up to school that day because their parents made drove them.
As a teacher, I will do whatever is in my power to make sure I stay positive, keep a safe
environment, and stay up with new ideas so I do not bore my students to tears. I hope to instill
that learning can be fun in the same way Elmo inspired me to become a teacher just by finding
what makes me happy.
Unit: Fantasy Literature
Class: Adolescent Literature 1
Instructor: Gabriella Avallone
Dates: Spring 2014 March 3-28
The Rationale:
Adolescent Literature 1 is a course that will challenge students to look at different types of
writings. It will take them from poetry through novels and then ending up with graphic novels.
The intention is to introduce as many different types of writing that can be introduced in one
semester. Adolescent Literature is important for everyone to read no matter how old because it
introduces raw topics. Topics such as kids dealing with death, bullies, and mental or physical
deficiencies, Adolescent Literature is a way for students to see that they are not the only ones
going through tough times. Through this type of genre it will show how different cultures and
people deal with hard issues and hopefully this will open student’s eyes to think before they act.
The Summary:
Students will read Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs. They will
then discuss the idea of belonging, setting, the idea of fantasy as a genre, and relatable
characters. Daily they will discuss the book with classmates on the basis of how the book relates
to their life and how it relates to the world as a whole. Next the students will then be asked to do
a Multi-Genre Project where they will interpret the book individually and show me their
representation of the book through this project.
Essential Questions:
Can fantasy be related back to the real world?
How do the character(s) relate to the students personally?
Literacy Strategies:
Daily reflection
Brainstorming from the different pieces of art work individually and as a class
Interdisciplinary (connecting English with: art, science, history, and music)
Objectives:
Craft and Structure
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.4 Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are
used in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the cumulative
impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone (e.g., how the language evokes a
sense of time and place; how it sets a formal or informal tone).
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.5 Analyze how an author’s choices concerning how to
structure a text, order events within it (e.g., parallel plots), and manipulate time (e.g.,
pacing, flashbacks) create such effects as mystery, tension, or surprise.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.6 Analyze a particular point of view or cultural experience
reflected in a work of literature from outside the United States, drawing on a wide
reading of world literature.
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.7 Analyze the representation of a subject or a key scene in
two different artistic mediums, including what is emphasized or absent in each treatment
(e.g., Auden’s “Musée des Beaux Arts” and Breughel’s Landscape with the Fall of
Icarus).
(RL.9-10.8 not applicable to literature)
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.9 Analyze how an author draws on and transforms source
material in a specific work (e.g., how Shakespeare treats a theme or topic from Ovid or
the Bible or how a later author draws on a play by Shakespeare).
Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.9-10.10
By the end of grade 9, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, in the grades 9-10 text complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed
at the high end of the range.
By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 9–10 text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
Length of Curriculum:
Four weeks, meeting two or three times a week, for 50 minutes
Materials and Resources:
School- (1) copies of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (2) Access to
different Databases to help with the final Multi-Genre Project (3) Printing ability
Me- examples of art work from (1) the book and (2) time periods discussed in the book
Student- (1) Computer access (2) Writing supplies (ex.) pens, pencils, notebooks,
journals, loose-leaf
Assessment:
Formative:
o Daily reading reflections
o Draft work and peer reviews
o Quizzes
Summative:
o Multi-Genre Project
o Final Paper
Recommendation:
Students come to class willing to learn something new with an open mind be ready for whatever
the day may bring and to put forth a positive attitude.
Heading Class: Adolescent Literature Your Name: Gabriella Avallone Name of Lesson: Fantasy Time Frame: 50 minutes
Rationale Being able to recognize Fantasy in everyday life is a way to broaden your imagination. Getting inspiration from anywhere in your everyday life could lead to you becoming the next big name in the writing world.
Objectives Understand fantasy genre Understand Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
Materials Books, supplies, pictures
Instructional Framework
Initiating Constructing Utilizing
Lesson Plan Format
Teacher Centered: Direct Instruction: go over the fantasy genre Presentation: present ideas of how real world inspired some aspects of fantasy novels Concept: relating to real world Student Centered: Discussion: what happens in the real world that books this book can relate to Cooperative Learning: come up with more examples of how fiction comes out of the real world Problem Solving: make up their own fiction story to help others understand something in their everyday life
Grouping Whole Class Group work Individuals
Materials & Resources
School – books Teacher – pictures Student – paper, pens, pencils
Literacy Strategies Brainstorming Working in groups
Phase One Discuss fantasy aspects and the book they are required to read -character -setting -themes
Phase Two Work in groups to come up with how this book relates to fantasy and then to the real world
Phase Three Wrap up what I want the students to walk away with from the book
Formative Assessment
Working in groups Class discussion
Summative * Assessment
Explain final paper Explain MGP
Homework Assignment
Read chapters 1,2,3
Reminder The paper and the presentation will 50% of their grades
Lesson Plan Day 1
Heading Class: Adolescent Literature Your Name: Gabriella Avallone Name of Lesson: Fantasy Time Frame: 50 minutes
Rationale This lesson is to help improve not only your grade but your classmate’s grades. It is also meant to improve critical reading skills and being able to recognize mistakes in writing.
Objectives To edit others papers Learn constructive criticism
Materials MLA handbook, supplies, papers
Instructional Framework
Initiating Constructing Utilizing
Lesson Plan Format
Teacher Centered: Direct Instruction: get everyone paired up Presentation: go over constructive criticism and the form they are filling out to edit each other’s papers Concept: Learn to edit Student Centered: Discussion: each other’s papers Cooperative Learning: fixing one another’s papers Problem Solving: learning how critically read another’s paper and then in turn look critically at their one paper to fix any errors the peer-editor may have missed
Grouping Whole Class Group work Individuals
Materials & Resources
School – MLA handbooks Teacher – form they need to fill out Student – paper, pens, pencils
Literacy Strategies Editing papers
Phase One Discuss constructive criticism Get students into pairs
Phase Two Have the students edit 2 different papers and fill out a form for each one
Phase Three Wrap up the day get ready for the next class
Formative Assessment
Working in pairs Class discussion
Summative * Assessment
Explain final paper Explain MGP
Homework Assignment
Bring in rough draft of the entire paper
Reminder The paper and the presentation will 50% of their grades
Lesson Plan Day 6
Heading Class: Adolescent Literature Your Name: Gabriella Avallone Name of Lesson: Fantasy Time Frame: 50 minutes
Rationale This lesson is meant to get everyone prepared to present their findings to the class. It is also expected of students to give everyone respect while they are presenting their projects.
Objectives To edit others papers Learn constructive criticism
Materials Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, first half of MGP, papers
Instructional Framework
Initiating Constructing Utilizing
Lesson Plan Format
Teacher Centered: Direct Instruction: get everyone set for the day Presentation: get everyone on track for what I expect from the papers and the MGP Concept: Time in class to finish up homework Student Centered: Discussion: if they have any questions Cooperative Learning: helping each other out to come up with ideas for what to do next for the MGP Problem Solving: finalizing paper
Grouping Whole Class Group work Individuals
Materials & Resources
School – MLA handbooks Teacher – form they need to fill out Student – paper, pens/pencils, first half of MGP
Literacy Strategies Finalizing paper and MGP
Phase One Turn in homework
Phase Two In class work
Phase Three Hand back MGP and notes, talk about the next class
Formative Assessment
Class discussion
Summative * Assessment
Final paper MGP
Homework Assignment
Finished paper and MGP be ready to listen to the people presenting or be ready to present if it is not your turn
Reminder The paper and the presentation will 50% of their grades
Lesson Plan Day 8
Date: Activity:
Day 1
Tuesday
3/4
-Introduce book: discuss first half of the book. (characters, themes, setting,
fantasy genre)
-Class discussion on how the reading is going and how so far the fantasy genre
relates to the real world, how the characters are beginning to grow, what themes
are in the book, and how the setting affects the book
-Find out where students stand with the book
-Introduce writing assignment
-Homework-read chapters 1,2,3
Day 2
Thursday
3/6
-Reading reflection
-Discuss first 3 chapters.
-Go more in depth about the paper assignment
show example of what I am expecting
-Go over and questions the students may have
-Homework read chapters 4,5,6
Day 3
Monday
3/10
-Reading reflection
-Discuss the chapters
-Brainstorm on how the characters are developing
-Homework read chapters 7,8,9
Day 4
Wednesday
3/12
-Group work on how they think the book will end
Art Day.
-Show pictures of WWII and pictures from the book
-Partner up to make a story about one of the pictures that differ from how the
book uses them
-Homework read chapters 10,11
Day 5
Friday
3/14
-Reading reflection
-Discuss the book as a whole
-Assign the paper and introduce the MGP
-Individual work on brainstorming for the paper
-Homework come in with a rough draft of half the paper
Day 6
Tuesday
3/18
-Partner up and peer edit the paper (2 different times)
-Individual work to look over what others have said about the paper
-Homework bring in rough draft of the whole paper
-Assign MGP
Day 7
Thursday
3/20
COMPUTER LAB DAY
-Time to fix any errors on the paper, ask questions, get help
-Look up ideas for the MGP
-Homework first 4 assignment for the MGP
-Draw numbers to see when and who presents
Day 8
Monday
3/24
-Have students turn in first half of the MGP make sure they are on track, give
back at the end of the class so they can continue working
-Last day to work on the paper in class that will explain their take of their MGP
and the book
-Homework finish the paper and last 4 MGP are due next class
Day 9
Wednesday
3/26
-Turn in the paper
-Talk about my own MGP and ask if anyone has any last minute questions before
the presentation start
-Start the MGP presentations
Day 10
Friday
3/28
~PRESENTATION DAY~
Multi-Genre Projects include a series of generic
documents that are linked by a
central idea, theme, or goal.
They may forward an argument,
trace a history, or offer multiple
interpretations of a text or event.
They are rigorous forms of
writing, involving all of the
elements of a traditional research
paper: research and citation, coherence and
organization, purpose and aim of discourse, audience
awareness, and conventional appropriateness.
Ideas for a Multi-Genre Project
Journal Entries
Poem
Cartoon
Epilogue
Song Lyrics
PowerPoint presentation
Tabloid Article
Map
Personal Letter
The list can go on and on. It is up to you in deciding which
way the project will go. BE CREATIVE!! Good luck and
remember due dates are always closer than they seem.
Journal Entries
Evidence you read the book, a
summary possibly
Explanation of the direction you took
your MGP
MLA citations if needed
Multi-Genre Project (MGP) Important Dates and Deadlines:
3/4 Book is Assigned Read
Chapters 1,2,3
3/5 Read Chapters 4,5,6
3/10 Read Chapter 7,8,9
3/12 Read Chapters 10,11
3/12 ART DAY
3/14 Paper is Assigned
3/18 Rough Draft Due
MGP is Assigned
3/20 COMPUTER LAB
3/24 1/2 of MGP Due
3/26 Paper is Due
3/26 MGP Due
3/26-3/28
PRESENTATIONS
The Paper
Miss Avallone’s Class
Adolescent Literature 1
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children March 3-28 2014