The Week That Was In 234

Sometimes, the demands of teaching and life outside the classroom can be overwhelming. This week, I felt the weight of it all. Trying to balance lesson planning, teaching, and taking care of my own well-being hasn’t been easy, but I’m doing my best to carve out moments for myself to stay sane. Still, Tuesday’s lesson reminded me that, despite all the challenges, we’re making progress—one step at a time.

Tuesday

Lesson Link

Our focus for the day was colonial government, diving into how the colonies were left to create their own systems under England’s “salutary neglect.” It was a great opportunity to make connections between historical events and the structures the colonies built, giving students a look at the roots of American government.

We kicked things off with a Gimkit review to get the students’ minds engaged. The scores were rough—class averages came in at 49%, 60%, 65%, and 68%. Not exactly the strong start I was hoping for, but it set the tone for what we needed to work on. It’s all about growth, and sometimes seeing those lower numbers is the push we need to make improvements.

Map and Tell: Visualizing Space and Context

Next, we did a Map and Tell activity. I wanted students to make the observation that England was far away from the colonies. This helped us place the lesson in the context of distance and the impact of England’s hands-off approach, leading to salutary neglect. It’s one thing to tell them the colonies were left to manage themselves; it’s another to show them the physical distance on a map and let them connect the dots themselves.

Pyramid of Power: Visualizing Colonial Structure

To reinforce the concepts, we filled out a pyramid showing the power structure in England versus the colonies. The top half of the pyramid was England, with the king and Parliament. The bottom half showed the 13 colonies with their elected assemblies and town meetings. This was my attempt to help them visualize how the government was structured differently on either side of the Atlantic. We also tied this back to mercantilism, which we covered last week, emphasizing how England’s focus on economic gain allowed the colonies to develop their own political systems.

Thin Slides: Chunking Colonial Government

After the pyramid, I had the students use a Justin Unruh Thin Slide to work through chunked readings about the different foundations of colonial government, like the Magna Carta, Mayflower Compact, House of Burgesses, English Bill of Rights, and Fundamental Orders. The goal was to have them engage with keywords and summarize these concepts visually.

But this is where things got tricky. The kids seemed overwhelmed by the task. I chunked the material into five slides, thinking it would make the information manageable, but even this proved daunting for them. I timed each slide at 5-6 minutes, but it felt like I was pushing a boulder uphill—students were struggling to keep up, and engagement was low. I tried to step in, reading the content aloud and shifting to an “I do, we do, you do” model, hoping to guide them through it.

By the time I got to the second half of the day, I realized I needed to adjust. I switched the Thin Slide activity to paper. It was a simple move, but it made a huge difference. With the material in front of them and fewer distractions, the kids seemed more settled, and the pace was smoother. It’s a reminder that sometimes we have to adjust and find what works best for our students, even if it means veering from the plan.

Wrapping Up: Finishing with Gimkit

To close out the lesson, we went back to Gimkit for a final review. This time, the class averages were better—70%, 80%, 74%, and 72%. It wasn’t a dramatic jump, but it showed progress, and that’s what I’ll take away from this day.

Reflections: Learning and Adjusting

It wasn’t the most productive day, and that’s okay. Some lessons flow smoothly, and others remind us that teaching is a constant process of trial, error, and adjustment. Switching from digital to paper was the right call, and it’s something I’ll keep in mind moving forward. If a strategy isn’t working, I have to be flexible enough to try something new in the moment.

It’s all about finding the balance—both for my students and for myself. Whether it’s adjusting lessons on the fly or taking a deep breath to center myself before the next class, I’ll keep moving forward. Sometimes, it’s about embracing the small wins—like those incremental Gimkit score improvements—and using them as building blocks for the next day.

Here’s to figuring it all out, one lesson (and one adjustment) at a time.

Wednesday

Lesson Link

We started the lesson with the “Brain” phase—classic retrieval practice. Students closed their Chromebooks and used their memories to answer a series of questions about the English Colonies. I set the timer for 10 minutes and challenged them to pull as much as they could from their own knowledge. The purpose was to emphasize thinking without relying on tech. As they worked, I could see some were really digging deep, and the effort was there. It was a great warm-up and laid the groundwork for the rest of the lesson.

Next, I had students highlight the questions they couldn’t fully answer, and that’s when we moved into the “Book” phase. Chromebooks came back out, but I was strict—no Googling! Instead, they had to rely on their notes and materials from previous lessons. I made sure to walk around, keeping everyone focused on using their resources the right way. This was all about reinforcing the importance of their own notes as tools and encouraging them to build solid study habits. The class was quiet but engaged, as students dove into their resources.

Once they had gathered their answers, it was time for “Buddy.” Students paired up and compared their responses, filling in any gaps or clarifying details they missed. This was the most interactive part of the lesson, and it was great to see them teach and learn from each other. I could tell that some students found confidence in what they knew, while others appreciated the chance to ask questions and catch up.

Finally, we wrapped up with “Boss” mode—that’s where I stepped in. Students brought their remaining questions or uncertainties to me. I loved this part because it gave me insight into areas where they needed more support and gave them the opportunity to check their understanding. I made it a point to answer their questions directly, clearing up any misconceptions they had about the material. It was a great way to wrap up the review while ensuring that everyone walked away with a clearer understanding.

The Results: A Big Improvement

I didn’t reveal the Brain-Book-Buddy-Boss framework upfront—I introduced each step as we went along, keeping the students curious and engaged. By the time we got through all four phases, they were fully on board and energized. We ended the lesson with another Gimkit assessment. This time, the class averages jumped significantly: 92%, 88%, 87%, and 86%. It was a major improvement from the 60%-70% range we had last week.

And the best part? I had them put away their notes and Chromebooks for the Gimkit—just their brains, again. The progress showed me that the strategy worked, reinforcing not only content knowledge but the value of retrieving information from memory.

Final Takeaway: Why I’ll Be Using This Again

The Brain-Book-Buddy-Boss approach hits all the right notes for an effective review session. It builds on retrieval practice, collaboration, and direct feedback—all while keeping students actively engaged. The step-by-step method allows them to build confidence, reflect on what they know, and fill in gaps—all in one lesson.

I’ll definitely be using this strategy again. It’s a win for the students and a win for the teacher, and it’s exactly the kind of structure we need to keep moving forward in our learning journey.

Thursday

Lesson Link

Thursday was a turning point in the classroom as we launched into a new unit: the Causes of the American Revolution. The focus was all about understanding the shifting relationship between the colonists and England, and how things went from cooperation under Salutary Neglect to conflict. I knew I needed a hook that would be engaging, relevant, and just disruptive enough to get their attention—so I turned to PBIS.

Hooking Them with the PBIS Bathroom Trick

Let’s be honest—classic hooks like pretending to tax pencils or papers just don’t cut it anymore. Kids see right through it. So, I pulled out a move that was a little more realistic. I went into our PBIS rewards system and created a store item—a bathroom pass—for a steep price: 150 PBIS points. When I announced this to the class, they were outraged, and that’s exactly what I was going for.

We launched into a discussion about why they were so mad. The students had a lot to say, calling out the fairness of it all and pointing out that I had never cared about bathroom usage before—so why was I making it a big deal now? That’s when I pulled out my “Aha!” moment. I explained that this frustration they felt was exactly what the colonists experienced. England had ignored them for years under Salutary Neglect, and then suddenly, it started enforcing policies and making them pay their “fair share.” The students connected instantly—it wasn’t just a random history lesson; it was a situation they could feel.

This hook worked because it was something they genuinely cared about, and it was believable. It’s way better than the cheesy, outdated “tax” tricks. When you tap into something realistic like PBIS rewards, they buy in because it’s their world.

Retrieval Practice and Review: WordWall and Gimkit

After we had our discussion, I wanted to keep the momentum going with some retrieval practice. I’ve been making a conscious effort to build retrieval practice into the routine so it becomes second nature. We started with a WordWall activity where I posted a 13 Colonies map and had students, from memory, drag and drop to match the colonies. They got one shot to do it. Most students nailed 13 to 14 colonies correctly, which was awesome to see—proof that the practice is starting to pay off.

Next, we switched gears to a Gimkit focused on the French and Indian War. I prompted them with the question: “Think about what changed the relationship between the colonists and England?” This helped frame the conversation about how England’s policies started shifting after the war, leading to the tensions we’d see later.

Thin Slides and Sourcing Parts: Making Connections

To dig a little deeper, we did a quick Thin Slide on Padlet. I asked the students to find the European country that controlled Clermont County, Ohio, in 1754. Their task was simple: one word (the country) and one picture (a map) to support their answer. It took about 5 minutes, which was longer than I usually like for Thin Slides, but they needed that time to explore and find the info. I’m okay with a little extra time if it means they’re engaging with the material.

We moved on to Sourcing Parts using the famous Join or Die cartoon. The goal was to pick apart the cartoon and write a summary of its message. This activity took about 10 minutes, but I was impressed. The students noticed details like the letters and abbreviations representing the colonies, which was exactly why I had started with the WordWall retrieval practice earlier. It set the foundation for them to make the connection to the colonies depicted in the cartoon.

Experiment Time: Guided Notes vs. Sketch and Tell-o

Here’s where the day got interesting. I tried an experiment with my classes: for the first three, I used guided notes while I talked about the French and Indian War. For the last class, I switched it up and used a Sketch and Tell-o, letting them read about the French and Indian War on their own and create their own notes. I wanted to see if one approach would yield better engagement or retention.

We ended with another round of Gimkit. The scores were all over the place:

  • First class: 45% to 69%
  • Second class: 39% to 76%
  • Third class: 31% to 66%
  • Fourth class: 43% to 74%

So, what did I learn? Well, honestly, it’s hard to draw any clear conclusions. There were so many variables at play—behaviors, levels of engagement, and just plain old classroom dynamics. In the last bell, where I tried the Sketch and Tell-o, I had a couple of my usual top scorers out of the room during the second Gimkit round. They usually rank in the top 5, so there’s no doubt their absence impacted the final percentage. That 74% could’ve easily pushed up closer to 80% if they’d been there.

Final Thoughts

Was it the guided notes or the Sketch and Tell-o that made the difference? I don’t have a definitive answer yet. What I do know is that mixing things up and testing out different methods helps me see where my students are at and what they respond to. Sometimes, it’s not about the perfect strategy; it’s about being willing to pivot and try new things, even if the results aren’t crystal clear. At the end of the day, any progress—whether it’s small jumps in Gimkit scores or students making connections to content—means we’re moving in the right direction.

The PBIS bathroom hook will definitely make a return in future lessons—it’s the kind of realistic hook that gets them thinking and feeling like they’re in the colonists’ shoes. And I’ll keep experimenting with different approaches to see what sticks and what doesn’t. It’s all part of the process, and every day, we’re building something better.

Friday

Lesson Link

Taxes and “No Taxation Without Representation”

I kicked off the class with a quick overview of why we have taxes in the first place—what they pay for and why they’re necessary. This laid the groundwork for our discussion about taxation without representation, so the students could start seeing things from the colonists’ perspective. I used a map to show the distance between England and the colonies, highlighting how disconnected the colonists felt from the laws being imposed on them.

I didn’t want to overwhelm the kids with too much information at once, so I decided to focus on just three key acts: the Stamp Act, the Sugar Act, and the Quartering Act. Breaking it down into manageable chunks felt like the right move, especially for a Friday when everyone’s attention span is hanging by a thread!

Iron Chef on Padlet: Act by Act

Once I set the stage, I gave each student a half-page of reading about one of the acts. They had 10 minutes to read and then jump into an Iron Chef activity on Padlet. The goal was to share key facts from their reading and use Padlet’s “I Can’t Draw” feature to create an AI-generated image that visually represented the act they were assigned. It was fun watching them explore the AI tool, and it definitely kept the energy up in the room.

Sketch and Tell with Emoji Kitchen

After we built out the Padlet, students reviewed each other’s work. Their task was to choose an act they didn’t study initially and create a Sketch and Tell using the Emoji Kitchen. They had 10 minutes to pair an emoji with a visual representation of the act and explain its significance. This approach was all about helping them synthesize information from their peers and think critically about how to represent historical concepts visually. The Emoji Kitchen adds a playful twist that keeps them engaged—some of the creations were spot-on and hilarious!

Wrapping Up with a Thick Slide

To pull everything together, we moved into a Thick Slide activity. I asked the students to create a slide that included the following:

  • A title and subtitle for context
  • Four key facts about the acts they learned
  • A comparison between the Stamp Act and the Sugar Act
  • An image that tied their points together

The Thick Slide gave them a chance to consolidate their knowledge and show what they’d absorbed in a structured way. It also allowed me to assess their understanding at a glance. I love how Thick Slides force students to think critically about what they’ve learned and distill it into a concise, visual summary.

Ending Strong with Gimkit

We wrapped up class with a Gimkit session to reinforce what we covered. The students always get competitive with Gimkit, and it’s the perfect way to review and end the week on a high note. I could see that focusing on just three acts kept things clear and manageable for them, and the structured activities made it easier for them to retain and recall information.

Final Thoughts

Friday felt like a win. By focusing on a few key acts and using a variety of EduProtocols like Iron Chef, Sketch and Tell, and Thick Slides, the lesson flowed smoothly. The balance of reading, visual work, and interactive review hit all the right notes. It’s all about finding ways to keep the students engaged while ensuring they walk away with a solid grasp of the content.

I’m looking forward to building on this foundation next week as we dive into more of the acts and continue exploring the buildup to the Revolution. The goal is to keep it fresh and interactive so that the students stay invested in the story of how these events shaped America.

The Week That Was in 234

This week was all about leveraging EduProtocols to simplify learning, foster creativity, and reinforce key concepts. From using Thin Slides and Cybersandwich to explore complex topics like Bacon’s Rebellion and race-based slavery, to engaging students with retrieval-based activities like Graph and Tell and Thick Slides, the focus was on making learning more accessible and engaging. Whether students were interacting with AI chatbots or diving into historical data, these protocols helped break down challenging content into manageable, meaningful tasks. Here’s a breakdown of how we used EduProtocols to keep the momentum going this week:

Monday

Lesson Link

On Monday, I decided to try out something new and set up a free trial with Magic School. In the past, it seemed like a promising one-stop shop for classroom tools, though my previous experiences were inconsistent. But with a new school email, I created a fresh account and set up a chatbot for the 13 colonies.

My vision was to have a chatbot that would take on the persona of one of the founders of the 13 colonies. All students had to do was type, “Who founded <enter colony name>?” A few people have already asked how I set up the chatbot, so here’s how I did it: Instead of app smashing, I was AI smashing. I went to Claude AI and asked for a set of instructions for a chatbot that would take on the persona of one of the founders of the 13 colonies—geared for 8th graders. It even provided a knowledge base for each founder!

For this lesson, I didn’t think it was important for students to memorize every detail about every colony. Instead, I wanted them to understand the colony’s region, its geography, and its economy.

Starting with Gimkit: Colonial Regions Review
We kicked off with a quick Gimkit on colonial regions, a review of Friday’s lesson. The class averages ranged from 82% to 90%—pretty solid, especially for a Monday.

Frayer Model Activity
Next, I handed out paper Frayer models where students wrote a colony name in the middle and added information about its government, geography, economy, and religion. Looking back, I should’ve just aligned it with the PEGS acronym we used on Friday, but live and learn.

Introducing Magic School
I showed students how to use Magic School, where I had set up a classroom that allowed me to add AI tools. I added both the chatbot and an image generator, then shared the Magic School link with the students—super easy!

I loved this activity because it got kids asking good questions, which is such an important life skill. They could ask the chatbot about their colony and get personalized answers. For example, they could ask the founder to use simpler language or even to relate the colony’s geography to basketball! It was cool, and the students were hooked—many didn’t know AI could do this kind of stuff.

Students wrote down notes from the chatbot on their Frayer models.

Airbnb Advertisement Activity
The next step was to use those notes to create an Airbnb advertisement for their colony. I got this idea from Ditch That Textbook, and it was super easy to adapt. However, the students struggled a bit with this task. Getting them to think creatively and step outside the box is still a work in progress, but I see improvement.

Takeaway
The chatbot was a win—it allowed students to engage in inquiry-based learning and step away from the textbook. The creative thinking piece is still a challenge, but I’m confident that with practice, we’ll get there. The biggest takeaway? Learning how to ask good questions and use AI to personalize that learning was a game changer for my students.

Tuesday

Lesson Link

Tuesday, I needed a bit of an easy day, but still wanted to create a meaningful learning experience. We started the lesson by emphasizing the importance of using person-first language when discussing slavery. Instead of using terms like “slave,” we replaced them with “enslaved person,” and “master” or “owner” with “enslaver.” It’s a small shift but a crucial one, and I’ve learned it requires explicit teaching for students to fully grasp its significance.

Station Rotation Activity: The Triangular Trade and Middle Passage
The core of today’s lesson was a station rotation activity centered on the essential question: “How did Europeans exploring North America for trade, religious reasons, and competition with each other affect the history of the continent and the people who lived there?” This question has been guiding our exploration of European colonization’s impact on North America.

Students rotated through four stations, each engaging with a different aspect of the Triangular Trade and the Middle Passage:

Station 1: EdPuzzle Video
We kicked off with a 5-minute EdPuzzle video—a Ted-Ed lesson on the Middle Passage. The video was followed by questions to ensure comprehension and introduce students to the topic. The video laid the foundation for the rest of the activity.

Station 2: SlaveVoyages.org Interactive Map
At this station, students used the SlaveVoyages.org database, an incredible resource featuring a timelapse map of ships departing West Africa for the New World. The interactive map allowed students to explore individual ships, their cargo, and survival rates. It was a powerful, visual way to understand the horrific journeys endured by enslaved people. The database, built through collaborative efforts, was an invaluable resource for our class.

Station 3: Slavery Statistics
In this station, we focused on statistics related to slavery. Tying back to our previous Number Mania lesson, students saw how statistics have real historical context. They used data from the Slave Voyages database and connected it to the numbers we’ve been exploring.

Station 4: Slavery in the Northern and Southern Colonies
At the final station, students read about slavery’s presence in both the Northern and Southern colonies and how enslaved people managed to build their own culture despite their circumstances. A map illustrating the Triangular Trade routes accompanied the reading, helping students visualize the geographic connections.

Students worked in pairs at each station, discussing and answering questions. The stations ended up taking longer than expected, but seeing the students engaged and actively learning was more important than sticking to a rigid timeline.

Thick Slide Assessment
To wrap up the lesson, I posted a Thick Slide task. Students condensed the information from their station rotations into essential facts, answering the question, “How did the triangular trade and the Middle Passage transform North America?” They also used the Slave Voyages database to find a ship that traveled to North America and gather relevant statistics. As a final touch, they included a quote from Olaudah Equiano and an image with a caption.

Takeaway
This was a more laid-back day, but it was packed with meaningful content and reflection. The stations allowed for deep engagement, and the students rose to the challenge of condensing complex ideas into manageable pieces of information. Even though we didn’t stick to the exact schedule, the engagement and learning made it all worth it.

Wednesday

Lesson Link

On Wednesday, I wanted to introduce how race-based slavery came to be in North America. I started with a picture of Anthony Johnson on the board. Johnson was a Black man and former indentured servant in Jamestown who earned his freedom, owned land, and even enslaved people to work on his tobacco farm. This example illustrated that slavery wasn’t originally race-based in the colonies. But then came Bacon’s Rebellion, and things began to shift.

Graph and Tell: Analyzing Slavery Census Data
We began with a Graph and Tell activity where students analyzed census data about slavery. They made inferences based on the data, which served as a review of the colonial regions and their economies. This exercise helped students make connections between the regions and how slavery impacted their development.

Introducing Bacon’s Rebellion
Next, I introduced Bacon’s Rebellion. The textbook mentioned that the rebellion showed how the Virginia government couldn’t ignore its citizens, but I thought, “Bacon’s Rebellion goes way beyond that!” To help students understand, I used a Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then activity, giving them more practice with sequencing and comprehension. This scaffolded their understanding of the rebellion’s role in the shift toward race-based slavery.

Cybersandwich: The Start of Race-Based Slavery
After introducing Bacon’s Rebellion, we read about how race-based slavery began in Virginia as a consequence of the rebellion. I had students work through a Cybersandwich activity for this reading. They wrote down five important facts, condensed their notes, and then compared and discussed with a partner. This paired learning helped students process the material more deeply.

Struggling with Summary Writing
To wrap up, I wanted students to write a quick summary of what they had learned about the shift to race-based slavery. Oh boy—the summary writing was a struggle. I’m not sure if it was the content itself or just the act of writing, but many students found it challenging to condense their thoughts into a clear, concise summary.

Takeaway
Wednesday’s lesson introduced some complex ideas, and while the Cybersandwich activity helped students grasp the content, the summary writing showed me that we still have some work to do. I’ll need to continue working on breaking down writing skills and building confidence in expressing complex ideas in shorter formats.

Thursday

Lesson Link

Thursday was a special reward day for the students since it was the end of the quarter. With limited time and a more relaxed atmosphere, I decided to do something simple but beneficial: a Retrieval Practice Grid activity that doubled as an opportunity for extra credit.

The Retrieval Practice Grid
I created a grid of questions that covered topics from 7th grade, Unit 1, Unit 2, and our current unit. Each question on the grid was worth a different amount of points based on its difficulty. Students could work through the questions, and depending on how many points they earned, they could unlock different levels of extra credit.

To ensure this was true retrieval practice, I didn’t allow Chromebooks—it was all about what they could recall from memory. The goal was to reward students for what they’ve learned over time, and it was a great way to wrap up the quarter while still reinforcing key content.

Takeaway
This activity worked perfectly for the day’s time constraints while still keeping students engaged and focused. It also showed me how much they’ve retained from not just this year, but even last year’s content. A win for both students and teacher!

As the week comes to a close, I’m impressed with how the EduProtocols have streamlined our lessons while keeping students engaged and thinking critically. The combination of Thin Slides, Cybersandwich, and Graph and Tell not only made complex topics like race-based slavery more approachable, but also fostered deeper understanding and retention. The students are gradually getting more comfortable with creative tasks, and I can see their confidence growing as they interact with both the content and each other. Moving forward, I’m excited to keep building on this momentum with even more dynamic and student-centered activities.

The Week That Was In 234

This week, my focus was all about scaling back and simplifying. I realized I’ve been expecting too much from my students in a short amount of time. Instead of overwhelming them, I shifted to teaching them how to work efficiently, meet deadlines, and build confidence with every task. EduProtocols like Thin Slides, Iron Chef, and Sketch and Tell-O became the foundation for helping students succeed. The goal wasn’t just to cover content, but to teach them how to learn and apply skills independently. Small wins are adding up, and I’m already seeing the results in their engagement and confidence.

Monday

Lesson Link

I came into class on Monday knowing I needed to simplify and keep things engaging. I leaned into some tried-and-true strategies to break down the lesson, making it easier for students to digest.

Starting with Gimkit: Fast and Curious
We began the day with a quick 4-minute Gimkit focusing on 8 questions about Jamestown. This activity—Fast and Curious—is all about rapid retrieval and feedback. The class averages ranged between 57% and 70%, but more importantly, it set the tone for the lesson. Fast and Curious is an excellent way to boost content retention while adding a layer of competition. It was a simple but effective way to kick things off.

Breaking It Down with Thin Slides
Next, we used Justin Unruh’s Thin Slide template to chunk the reading. Jamestown can be dry, and our textbook doesn’t do it any favors. I used AI to extract the key parts of the reading and then chunked it into manageable sections. Each Thin Slide had one word and one picture, and I modeled how to provide an explanation using the keywords provided. Each slide took about 5 minutes, which kept the class moving while giving students time to process the content.

Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then Sketch and Tell
After completing the Thin Slides, I had the students combine their work into a Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then Sketch and Tell comic. This is basic reading comprehension but framed in a way that’s simple enough for everyone to grasp. The students created a visual summary of Jamestown, which reinforced the lesson’s main points while keeping it creative and interactive.

Breaking the “Right Answer” Mindset
A lot of students were still raising their hands, hoping for the “right” answer, but I’m working hard to break them out of the mindset that social studies is just about filling in blanks. I want them to engage with the content and think critically—there are no simple answers here!

Wrapping Up with Gimkit
To close out the class, we ran the same Gimkit again, and the improvement was clear. Class averages shot up to 85%-94%. This repeated retrieval practice solidified their learning, and the jump in scores showed they were starting to internalize the material.

By keeping things simple and focusing on strategies that chunked the content, I was able to make this lesson engaging and accessible. The results? The students worked through the material effectively, and I didn’t feel like I was overwhelming them. It’s a win-win.

Tuesday

Lesson Link

Tuesday’s lesson followed the same structure as Monday, and the results continued to impress. Keeping it simple, consistent, and achievable is key to building student confidence and engagement.

Starting with Gimkit: Fast and Curious on Plymouth
We kicked off the day with a custom Wordle. I made the Wordle “Religion” and asked the kids to figure it out because the word related to Plym outh. Next we did a Fast and Curious Gimkit, this time focusing solely on Plymouth. The quiz was 9 questions, and the class averages ranged from 52% to 65%. It was a great way to gauge what the students already knew and give immediate feedback.

Thin Slide: Chunking the Reading
Just like Monday, we used the Thin Slide template. The readings were chunked into smaller sections, with each slide featuring a keyword and a picture. The students had 5 minutes per slide to process the information and build their slides, using the provided keywords as a guide. The familiarity of the Thin Slide made it an achievable task for the students. There was no need to introduce new techniques or overwhelm them with too much at once.

Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then Sketch and Tell
Once the Thin Slides were complete, we wrapped up the reading with another Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then Sketch and Tell comic. This is such a simple yet effective way to summarize content. It allows the students to visually capture the key points of the lesson in a creative format, reinforcing comprehension in a way that feels both achievable and rewarding.

Ending with Gimkit: Building Confidence
We ended the class with the same Gimkit as the beginning. This time, the class averages soared to 86%-94%. The consistency in approach, combined with the immediate feedback and the opportunity to retry, boosted the students’ confidence. And despite the repetition of Monday’s format, there were no complaints. In fact, 90% of the students finished the task, which is a win in itself.

Why I’m Sticking with Thin Slides
The Thin Slide strategy is becoming a staple in my classroom for a reason: it’s simple, familiar, and helps students feel like they can finish something. Pairing that with Gimkit, which builds their confidence through repeated practice, is setting the foundation for a stronger work ethic. These small wins will add up over time, and I’m seeing the early signs of engagement taking root.

Wednesday

Inquiry Lesson Link, Questions, Funko Pop, Gimkit

On Wednesday, we switched gears and used paper for an inquiry-based lesson straight from the textbook. The lesson focused on the hardships and survival stories of colonists in Jamestown and Plymouth, but let’s be real—the textbook readings were way too much. The language was jargon-filled, dry, and not exactly something an 8th grader doesn’t give a damn about.

Simplifying Primary Sources with AI
My goal was to simplify the lesson while still helping students build confidence and learn. To do that, I took the primary sources straight out of the textbook and ran them through Claude AI with a simple prompt: “Keep the primary sourceness of these documents but make them so 8th graders can understand them.” I also had Claude add author names and context since the textbook didn’t bother to provide that crucial information.

The revised documents were a mix of Jamestown and Plymouth hardships and survival stories. With the language made accessible, the students were much more engaged. They worked in pairs, reading the sources and answering questions. This took about 35 minutes and gave them a deeper understanding without the confusion of outdated jargon.

Funko Pop Character Creation
For the final part of the lesson, I wanted to tap into their creativity, so I had them create a Funko Pop character who had journeyed to either Jamestown or Plymouth. The biography for the Funko Pop had to include why their character went to the colony (reviewing the content from Monday and Tuesday), the hardships they faced, and whether they survived—or not. This activity took 25 minutes, and it allowed the students to synthesize what they had learned in a fun, engaging way.

Combining Jamestown and Plymouth in Gimkit
We ended the day with a combined Jamestown and Plymouth Gimkit. This was a great way to reinforce everything from the week so far. The class averages ranged from 86% to 92%, showing solid retention of the material.

Takeaway
The key here was breaking down the overwhelming textbook content, making it relatable, and allowing students to demonstrate their understanding through a creative, personalized project. By the end of the day, they had a solid grasp on both the hardships of colonial life and the survival strategies of early settlers.

Thursday

Thursday was all about pivoting and simplifying—sometimes less is more. I had originally planned to pack the lesson with multiple activities, but it quickly became clear that was overambitious.

Finishing the Funko Pop Characters
We kicked off class by wrapping up the Funko Pop characters from Wednesday. The students had 15 minutes to finalize their creations, adding in the last details about their colonial hardships and survival stories. Once that was done, we shifted focus to something new.

Colonial Regions Mapping
The natural next step was to move into the colonial regions. This is where I initially tried to cram in too much. My original plan was an Iron Chef, followed by a Sketch and Tell, followed by a mapping activity—but it became obvious after the first bell that this was a disaster in the making. I scrapped the Iron Chef and Sketch and Tell, deciding to focus solely on the map and some Wordwall practice.

Using a Mnemonic Device
The map we used came from Howson History, and it featured a helpful mnemonic device for remembering the colonial regions. I explained what a mnemonic device was using examples like ROY G. BIV and DeSSert means strawberry shortcake (never miss that double ‘S’ in dessert!). After that, the students created their own mnemonic device for the colonial regions.

Mapping the Colonies
Once the mnemonic was sorted, we got down to the mapping activity. The students looked up the colonies and labeled them on the map. It was simple but effective, reinforcing both geography and historical knowledge.

Wordwall Practice and Rolling Recap
To reinforce the mapping, I had the students practice using a drag-and-drop map on Wordwall. It gave them some hands-on repetition, which helps with retention. After finishing the Wordwall, we still had some time left, so I pulled out a Rolling Recap. This is a fun retrieval practice where I roll a 20-sided dice and give the kids a prompt. They have to respond to the prompt in exactly the number of words rolled. The questions focused on Jamestown and Plymouth, and it was a creative way to review key content while keeping things engaging.

Takeaway
Thursday reminded me that sometimes, simplicity wins. The mapping activity and mnemonic device were more than enough to carry the lesson. And, as always, building in some creative retrieval like Rolling Recap kept the students engaged while reinforcing their learning.

Friday

Iron Chef with Sketch and Tell-o, Thick slide

On Friday, we continued working on our colonial regions, focusing on reinforcing knowledge and boosting confidence. Here’s how the day went.

Starting with Gimkit: Colonial Regions
We began with a quick 4-minute Gimkit on the colonial regions, which featured 12 questions. The class averages were 68% to 73%. After running the game, I gave feedback, and we quickly moved on to the next activity.

Colonial Regions Iron Chef on Padlet
For the main part of the lesson, we did an Iron Chef on Padlet. Each student received a half-page of reading about a different colonial region. They logged onto Padlet and shared four facts related to their region using the PEGS format—political, economic, geography, and social. Once their notes were posted, they used the “I can’t draw” feature on Padlet to create a picture representing their region. This visual aspect gave them a creative outlet to express their understanding.

Experimenting with Thick Slide vs. Sketch and Tell-O
After the Iron Chef, I decided to try an experiment. In two classes, I had students create a Thick Slide using the shared information from Padlet. In the other two classes, I used a Sketch and Tell-O activity instead. The results were interesting—classes that made Thick Slides had second Gimkit scores of 85% and 87%, while the Sketch and Tell-O classes scored slightly higher at 88% and 89%. While the difference wasn’t huge, it was enough to show me that both methods can be effective, depending on the class dynamic.

Finishing with Wordwall
We wrapped up with the same Wordwall practice from Thursday, this time with a twist. I challenged the students to complete the activity without any map help. Many of them surprised themselves by getting 100% on their own! It was great to see that kind of confidence and self-assurance building as we closed out the week.

Takeaway
Friday showed me that the methods we’ve been using—whether it’s Padlet, Gimkit, Thick Slides, or Sketch and Tell-O—are all helping to build both knowledge and confidence. The slight variation in results also confirmed that students respond differently to various activities, but the key is keeping things engaging and accessible.

Experimental Idea

I created a Colony Founder GPT. This GPT is designed to let students immerse themselves in history by interviewing the founders of the original 13 American colonies. Instead of reading static facts, students can interact with historical figures like William Penn, John Winthrop, or Roger Williams and ask them questions directly. It’s an engaging way to explore the personal motivations behind each colony’s founding, the challenges they faced, and their unique perspectives. Whether you’re learning about religious freedom in Rhode Island or the tobacco economy in Virginia, this tool offers a conversational approach to make research more dynamic and memorable.

Here is the link – try it out!

The Week That Was In 234

This week, I took a hard look at my teaching approach and realized I had been falling into a pattern of overloading my lessons with too much traditional content. After reflecting and talking with Jon Corippo, I refocused my energy on using student-centered protocols that would both engage my 8th graders and keep the content academically rich yet accessible. We used a variety of strategies—starting with Fast and Curious to boost content retention, Graffiti Walls for movement and exploration, and Thick Slides for quick, meaningful summaries. By Friday, I brought everything together with a headline-driven lesson on Jamestown that sparked curiosity and used a mix of Google Maps, Wicked Hydra, and Wordwall. The result? A week that was fast-paced and engaging.

Monday

Lesson Link

Coming into class on Monday, I was tired, and I knew I needed to pull out a creative, high-engagement lesson to get both myself and my students through the day. I decided to lean into interactive strategies that would keep everyone on their toes.

Starting with Gimkit: Fast and Curious

I started the day with a Fast and Curious session on Gimkit, which is an effective way to review material and build momentum. If you’re not familiar, Fast and Curious is a quick, repeated review activity that leverages competition. I uploaded questions about Spanish explorers that we had already covered, making it a review while subtly gauging where students stood on key facts and concepts. The class average ranged from 65% to 77%, but the real value wasn’t just in the scores—it was the immediate feedback and the students’ drive to improve. For anyone trying to build retrieval practice into lessons, Gimkit makes it fun and competitive, and you can track student progress instantly.

Explorer Scavenger Hunt: Moving Around the Room

Next, I had the students participate in an explorer scavenger hunt. This wasn’t just a passive worksheet activity—students were up, moving around the room, searching for answers about different explorers posted at stations. I tweaked the scavenger hunt by dividing the questions into Part A and Part B. I assigned each student to an explorer marked with either an A or B next to their name. This meant that students weren’t overwhelmed with all the questions at once; they could focus on smaller chunks of information, which worked well for those needing more structured guidance.

For setup, I stapled the explorer profiles and questions together and posted them around the room. Each station had information about a different explorer, like Christopher Columbus, Vasco da Gama, Ferdinand Magellan, and more. This tactile, physical movement not only keeps students engaged, but it also serves as a way to differentiate the activity. I find that students who struggle with longer reading passages or sitting still benefit from the opportunity to physically move around while learning.

A Layered Learning Approach

This lesson wasn’t just a one-off on explorers. It was part review and part preview. Monday’s scavenger hunt focused primarily on explorers that we had already covered, like the Spanish explorers, but I also introduced a few new explorers they would be learning about in more depth in Tuesday’s lesson. This gave the students some curiosity and set the stage for the rest of the week’s lessons.

By layering content this way, I’m not just throwing new information at them; instead, students have a chance to review and master familiar material while also preparing their minds for what’s coming next. This approach helps scaffold learning and ensures students are more comfortable when we dive deeper into the new material later on.

Wrapping it Up with Thick Slides

We ended the lesson with a Thick Slide activity. For those unfamiliar, this is a powerful summarization tool that asks students to process their learning on one slide. Here’s what I had them do:

  • Share three or four important facts they learned during the scavenger hunt.
  • Compare two explorers they read about (e.g., Cabot vs. De Leon).
  • Add a picture related to exploration.

This structure hits several skills at once: content recall, comparison and contrast, and creative expression through visuals. The slides serve as a formative assessment, letting me see what they’ve internalized. It’s a great visual tool for students too because they synthesize what they’ve learned into something concise but meaningful.

Tuesday

Lesson Link

After a successful Monday, I kicked off Tuesday with a map activity that set the tone for another full day of exploration. The goal was to help students understand the colonies in the New World set up by Spain, Portugal, France, and the Netherlands, and how these countries played a role in shaping early America.

Map and Tell: Analyzing the New World Colonies

We began the lesson with a Map and Tell activity focused on the colonies created by Spain, Portugal, France, and the Netherlands. The students worked in pairs to analyze a map that outlined where these European powers had established their territories. Here are the questions they worked through:

  1. Which two European countries created colonies in the New World?
  2. What geographic trait did these colonies have in common?
  3. Why do you think European countries created colonies?

This analysis helped students build context and draw connections between geography and colonization strategies. The discussions around why these countries set up colonies set the stage for the next part of the lesson: Mercantilism.

Frayer Model: Understanding Mercantilism

We then transitioned to a Frayer Model on Mercantilism, a concept that was new to most of my students. I asked them to first write down what they thought mercantilism meant—just their best guess. Once they were done, I had them angle their Chromebook screens.

Next, I showed a short video from Disney’s Pocahontas called “Mine, Mine, Mine.” It’s a 4-minute video that captures the essence of European greed and exploitation during colonization, which ties perfectly into mercantilism. After the video, I asked the students to revisit their definitions of mercantilism. Some students added new insights, while others completely redefined their initial thoughts, which was exactly what I was hoping for.

Sourcing Parts: Breaking Down Mercantilism Through a Cartoon

With a better understanding of mercantilism, we moved on to analyze the classic mercantilism cartoon. Using the Sourcing Parts EduProtocol, we broke the cartoon down by focusing on the following:

  • Sourcing: Who created this cartoon? When and why was it made? What type of source is this?
  • Summarize: What do you see or read in the cartoon?
  • Contextualize: What was happening during the time this cartoon was created?
  • Communicate: What is the purpose of this cartoon, and who was its intended audience?

The students dove deep into analyzing how the cartoon depicted European countries’ relentless pursuit of wealth through colonies and trade. It was great to see them apply their critical thinking skills to a visual source, reinforcing the concept of mercantilism and its connection to colonization.

Frayer Model Revisited

After the cartoon analysis, we returned to our Frayer Models to once again refine and add to our definitions of mercantilism. At this point, students had developed a far more comprehensive understanding, and their definitions were rich with historical context. The progression from initial guesses to a more nuanced definition was evident.

Socrative: Putting It All Together

To wrap it all up, I had the students share their final definitions of mercantilism on Socrative. This was a quick way for me to check for understanding and see who was still struggling with the concept. Overall, most students showed a strong grasp of how mercantilism shaped European colonization strategies in the New World.

Sketch and Tell: Essential Questions

We finished the day with a Sketch and Tell activity. The students were tasked with answering the following essential questions:

  1. How does mercantilism relate to European colonization of the Americas?
  2. Why did the French explore and colonize the Americas?
  3. Why did the Dutch explore and colonize the Americas?

For each question, the students created a sketch to visually represent their answer and added a short caption. This activity gave them a creative outlet while reinforcing their learning. It also allowed me to gauge their understanding in a more visual and reflective way.

Looking back, I had originally planned to include a CER (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning) activity as the final part of the lesson, but I quickly realized it was a bit too ambitious for the time we had. The students were already processing a lot of new information, and adding a CER would have pushed us over the edge. Instead, we focused on sketching and summarizing, which worked out well for the time we had.


Wednesday

Lesson Link, Gimkit

Wednesday was all about assessing what my students had learned throughout our unit on European exploration, but I wanted to ensure that they could see the purpose behind each activity we had done leading up to this point. The assessment was split into two parts: a Gimkit challenge and an annotated map, both designed to help students make connections between last week’s lessons and the material we had covered this week.

Part 1: Gimkit Challenge

We started the day with a Gimkit challenge, where I encouraged the students to push themselves to raise the class averages to 90% or higher. When we first began using this Gimkit last week, the class averages were sitting at 52%, 54%, 62%, and 58%. After practicing with it throughout the unit, the students were determined to hit the target.

By the end of Wednesday’s class, the final averages were 87%, 90%, 92%, and 89%. The improvement was incredible and showed how much they had retained through consistent practice and spaced repetition. More importantly, the students could see the direct results of their hard work, which motivated them to push even further.

Part 2: Annotated Map Assessment

For the second part of the assessment, I had the students work on an annotated map that pulled together everything we had studied. Each student received a large 11×17 piece of paper with a blank map of North and South America in the center. The map required them to apply their knowledge of European exploration and colonization by completing a set of detailed tasks.

Here were the instructions they followed:

  1. Label and color the map for the territories claimed by different European countries using five different colors. They labeled both North America and South America.
  2. Add a title to the top of the map.
  3. Answer the following questions, referencing lessons from last week and this week:
    • Question 1: What motivated Spain and France to explore and colonize the Americas? For this question, students cut out and glued three Sketch and Tell-o circles from Tuesday’s lesson. This connected the current task to earlier work, helping them see the purpose behind the activities we do.
    • Question 2: What factors led to exploration? They identified and listed two factors, referring back to lessons from the previous week.
    • Question 3: What were the effects of exploration and colonization? They had to identify and describe three examples, using information gathered from multiple lessons.
    • Question 4: Define mercantilism. This was a concept they had explored thoroughly on Tuesday, so they returned to their Frayer models to inform their responses.

Using the Sketch and Tell-o circles from Tuesday was particularly important because it helped the students see continuity and purpose in the activities we’ve been doing. It wasn’t just a random task—it all tied together to help them form a bigger picture of the Age of Exploration.

The annotated map provided an opportunity for students to synthesize all of the information they had learned, while also allowing for creative expression. I was especially pleased with how the students used their previous lessons as a reference, connecting the dots between Spain and France’s motivations, the factors behind exploration, and the broader effects of colonization.

By having them revisit earlier lessons, they could clearly see the purpose behind the different activities we did throughout the unit. It helped them understand that each task—whether it was a Gimkit challenge, a Sketch and Tell-o, or a map activity—contributed to a deeper understanding of exploration and colonization. The process of going back to those lessons also gave them a sense of how much they’ve grown academically since the start of the unit.

Thursday

On Thursday, we dove into a brand-new unit on The English Colonies, and I knew I had to find a way to engage the students from the start. To get them moving and thinking about the topic, I started with a Graffiti Wall activity that had just the right mix of physical movement and competition.

Graffiti Wall: Gamifying Exploration of Textbooks

I placed textbooks on their desks, and right away, the students weren’t too excited. It’s a common reaction, but I was ready for it. I told them to look through pages 64-94 and find important words that could help them understand English colonization. Once they found a word, they had to raise their hand, and I called on them to come up to the whiteboard and write the word.

Here’s the catch: once a word was written on the board, it couldn’t be used again. This kept them on their toes, trying to find words that hadn’t already been claimed. The energy in the room picked up as they scrambled through the pages. And I had a “secret” word that added an extra layer of excitement. The secret word was Jamestown, and whoever wrote it down earned PBIS points. It was fun to watch as they eagerly searched for words that might give them an edge.

After about 10 minutes, the board was covered with key terms like charter, Plymouth, and middle colonies. I took a moment to give a brief summary of the upcoming unit, tying in all the words they had written on the board to help them see how these terms would fit into the bigger picture of English colonization.

The Great American Race: Teamwork and Discovery

Next, we shifted gears into a Great American Race activity, which was another chance for them to apply what they were starting to learn. I created 20 cards, each with a secret word like Jamestown, Plymouth, charter, or middle colonies. I handed out a card to each student, and their task was to create a Google Slide with four clues and one picture related to their word.

As they worked on their slides, I compiled them into a complete slide deck in order, giving feedback along the way. This allowed me to see how well they were connecting with the material and to guide them if they needed clarification on their clues or picture choices.

Once the slides were ready, I collected the cards and shared the completed slide deck with the class. The students then partnered up for the final part of the activity. Using their prior knowledge, the Graffiti Wall as a word bank, and some quick Googling, they worked together to figure out the answers to each slide. It was harder than they expected—many of the clues were tricky, and they had to really dig into their critical thinking skills to figure them out. But that was the point: this activity pushed them to apply what they had learned while collaborating and problem-solving.

It was a great day of active learning. The Graffiti Wall got them up and moving while building curiosity around the key terms for the unit. Gamifying it by making certain words off-limits and adding a secret word kept the energy high. The Great American Race followed that up by challenging their research and teamwork skills, while still keeping the fun element of discovery and competition.

The connection between the two activities—using the Graffiti Wall as a word bank for the race—reinforced the idea that everything we do in class has a purpose and that knowledge builds on itself. By the end of class, they had a strong foundation to start digging deeper into the history of the English colonies.

Friday

Lesson Link

Friday was a day of reflection and adjustment for me. Being at a new school, I’ve been feeling like I’ve fallen into a bit of a rut—relying too much on traditional methods and dry content that just wasn’t resonating with my 8th graders. After talking with Jon Corippo, I realized I had been trying to do too much, often using material that lacked the punch needed to grab the attention of middle school students. I needed something quicker, more engaging, and with just enough academic rigor to feel worthwhile but still fun. And that’s when I came across an article that completely changed my approach to Jamestown.

Hooking Them with a Shocking Headline

The headline I found was: “Jamestown Settlers Ate 14-Year-Old Girl.” I knew this would instantly grab their attention. When they walked into class, that headline was already on the board. I also had it printed on 11×17 paper at their desks, ready to go. You could feel the curiosity and the slight shock as they sat down and read it.

We began with a Wicked Hydra activity—an approach my students were already familiar with, where they had the chance to ask as many questions as they wanted about the headline. It sparked a lot of discussion right from the start, and students were eager to dive deeper. This was exactly the kind of engagement I had been missing.

Walking Through Jamestown with Google Maps

After the Wicked Hydra, we moved on to Google Maps. I had the students use Street View to explore the Jamestown site as if they were walking through it themselves. This added a layer of real-world connection to what they were reading, helping them visualize the setting where these historical events took place. They were completely absorbed in their virtual walk around Jamestown, and it set the tone for the rest of the lesson.

Exploring the Dark Side of Jamestown: Quick and Punchy Reading

Next, we dove into the one-page newspaper article that accompanied the headline. This reading was quick—just one page—but packed with bizarre details about Jamestown’s Starving Time and the unsettling choices the settlers had to make. The students were tasked with highlighting three weird facts and one crazy quote from the article. The headline had already captured their attention, and now they were digging into the details with enthusiasm.

Thick Slide: Summarizing the Starving Time

After reading, we shifted gears to a Thick Slide activity. In just 10 minutes, students had to create a summary slide that included:

  • Three important facts about the Starving Time
  • One surprising quote
  • A relevant image

This quick-paced summary helped them process what they had just learned while keeping the focus on critical information. The format gave them enough structure to succeed while leaving room for creativity in how they presented their findings.

Wrapping Up with Wordwall and Gimkit

To finish off the class, we switched to Wordwall, where students did a drag-and-drop activity with the 13 colonies. I timed this for 8 minutes, and the students raced against the clock to correctly place the colonies in their respective spots. It was a fun, fast-paced way to reinforce geography while still keeping the focus on the day’s theme of colonization.

If we had any time left, we reviewed vocabulary on Gimkit to round out the lesson. This gave students one last chance to test their knowledge in a competitive, interactive format, keeping the energy high right up until the end of class.

Friday’s lesson was a turning point for me. The shocking headline, quick reading, virtual exploration, and fast-paced activities all combined to create a lesson that felt engaging and easy to complete while still being academically rigorous. The Jamestown article worked wonders in sparking interest, and using Google Maps and the Thick Slide brought the lesson full circle, helping students understand the reality of life in the early colonies. By simplifying my approach and focusing on keeping things interactive and relevant, I finally felt like I was hitting the mark with my 8th graders.

The Week That Was In 234

I’ve been slammed lately with so much going on—coaching tennis, adjusting to a new school, juggling presentations, and life in general. Honestly, I’ve been feeling like a first-year teacher again! Between managing the chaos of lesson planning, keeping up with my students, and coaching, it’s been a whirlwind. With everything happening, I decided to take my weekly activities, add a quick description, and let AI handle the blog writing. It’s been a huge time saver, especially since it allowed me to focus more on the classroom and less on the stress of documenting every detail.

Throughout the week, we’ve been using a mix of Thin Slides, Thick Slides, and even Sketch and Tell-o activities to keep things engaging and varied. These methods helped students break down complex historical concepts into simple, creative outputs. Whether they were creating Thin Slides with a single word and image or developing more in-depth Thick Slides, I saw them make great progress in expressing their understanding. The Sketch and Tell-o added a fun, visual element, allowing them to sketch key ideas and present them to the class.

Also, if you’re interested in how AI can be used effectively in education, check out an article I contributed to in EdWeek: Can AI Be Used Effectively in Class?. It’s been exciting to see how tools like this can support both students and teachers in new ways!

Tuesday – Factors of Exploration

Wednesday – Motivations for Exploration

Thursday – Columbus

Friday – Effects of Exploration

Tuesday: Factors Leading to European Exploration

In Tuesday’s class, we dedicated time to various engaging activities that built up to a comprehensive understanding of the factors leading to European exploration. Here’s a detailed breakdown:

Thin Slide (3 minutes): We started with a quick Thin Slide activity where students selected a word and an image to represent a factor that motivated European exploration. The speed of this activity pushed students to think quickly and make instinctive connections between visual elements and key ideas, such as “spices” or “trade routes.” This set the tone for deeper exploration of the topic.

Frayer Model and Reading (20 minutes): After the Thin Slide, we shifted into a Frayer Model combined with a reading session. Students read about the key historical factors behind the exploration era—like Marco Polo’s influence, advancements in navigation, and the rise of trade. As they read, they filled out their Frayer Models, identifying four main factors (such as the Renaissance, the desire for wealth, better ships, and the spice trade). This process helped them structure their knowledge and highlight the key points in a logical manner. The Frayer Model worked especially well for students to internalize the information and make it more manageable.

Annotate and Tell (8 minutes): The next phase involved an Annotate and Tell activity, focusing on a passage from Marco Polo’s writings. Students spent time annotating the text, underlining or highlighting key sections that illustrated how Polo’s stories inspired European curiosity and exploration. They then shared these annotations with the class, fostering discussion about how historical narratives shaped exploration. This part helped students connect primary source analysis to the broader motivations for European exploration, further deepening their historical thinking skills.

8Parts (12 minutes): We then moved on to an 8Parts activity where students analyzed a historical map. This exercise required them to break down the map by identifying key nouns, adjectives, and verbs. They discovered how geography—land and sea routes—was integral to understanding exploration. This helped students think critically about the relationship between European nations and the wider world. By dissecting the map in a structured way, they learned how to interpret visual resources as historical evidence.

Thick Slide (Remaining class time): The final part of the class was dedicated to the Thick Slide activity. Here, students were asked to create a detailed slide that combined the insights they had gathered throughout the lesson. They selected a key factor from their earlier work—whether it was technology, trade, or influence of explorers—and developed a visual and textual presentation around it. Additionally, they wrote a strong topic sentence that summarized the main idea of the lesson, drawing together everything they had learned. This required students to synthesize the various elements they had explored, from their initial Thin Slide idea to the more detailed knowledge gained through reading, annotating, and map analysis.

The Thick Slide provided a perfect opportunity for students to creatively showcase their understanding and articulate the big picture of why exploration was such a significant period in European history. This extended time allowed for in-depth thinking, while also reinforcing writing skills through the construction of clear, concise topic sentences that encapsulated the lesson’s core ideas.

Wednesday: Refining Work and Exploring Motivations

In Wednesday’s class, we started with an innovative approach to refine the students’ work from the previous day. I gave students 15 minutes to finish their Thick Slide, focusing on crafting strong topic sentences that summarized the main idea of European exploration. To enhance their writing, we utilized AI feedback through Claude Artifact, allowing students to receive targeted suggestions on how to improve their topic sentences. This provided an interactive and reflective start to the lesson, encouraging students to refine their thinking and writing.

After this, we transitioned into a Sketch and Tell-o activity, where students read about the motivations for Spanish and Portuguese exploration. Using the information from the reading, students sketched six key details, each accompanied by a caption explaining the motivation behind it. For example, students captured aspects like Portugal’s quest for new trade routes and Spain’s competition with Portugal, visually representing each with simple but meaningful drawings. This activity helped reinforce the motivations behind exploration in a creative and engaging way, encouraging students to visualize what they had learned about the explorers’ economic, religious, and competitive motivations.

We wrapped up the class with a Random Emoji Paragraph activity, where I introduced random emojis as part of a “mystery bag” concept to encourage creative thinking. For instance, when a bouquet of flowers appeared, I suggested students think about how the flowers could represent something “bunched together.” One student cleverly made a connection, saying, “The Spanish and Portuguese explorers wanted to claim a bunch of land,” showing how the emojis could inspire creative associations with historical content. This activity added a fun and imaginative twist to the lesson, pushing students to think outside the box while still connecting back to the day’s theme.

Overall, the class blended technology, creativity, and critical thinking to help students deepen their understanding of exploration. The use of AI feedback, visual storytelling through sketches, and creative connections with emojis made for a dynamic and engaging lesson.

Thursday: Christopher Columbus

In Thursday’s class, we explored the question: “Should Christopher Columbus be considered a hero or a villain?” This sparked an in-depth analysis of various perspectives on Columbus’s legacy.

We started by watching an 8-minute EdPuzzle video that provided background on Columbus and the Taino people. The video helped set the stage for understanding the complexities of Columbus’s actions and provided a foundation for the primary source activity.

After the video, I introduced six primary sources that had been simplified using AI, maintaining a primary source tone with added sourcing and context information. These sources included journal entries from Columbus, accounts by Bartolome de las Casas, and perspectives from modern historians. Each source offered a unique take on Columbus, allowing students to engage with both positive and negative portrayals.

Students then used a graphic organizer to analyze the sources, answering premade questions to determine if each source presented Columbus in a positive or negative light. This helped students gather evidence for the claim they would later make about Columbus’s legacy.

To wrap up, students completed a 1xCER activity, where they wrote a claim about whether Columbus should be considered a hero or villain, supporting their claim with evidence from two different sources and providing reasoning. Many students struggled with the reasoning portion, so I had AI generate a reasoning example, which I shared with the class. This example helped clarify how to link evidence to the claim more effectively.

Looking ahead to next year, I plan to revise the question to “Should Columbus be celebrated?” This approach feels more appropriate and encourages a more nuanced discussion about Columbus’s legacy, moving beyond the simplistic hero-villain framework.

Friday: Effects of Exploration

In Friday’s class, we started with an 8Parts activity using a painting depicting Columbus’s arrival in the Americas. Students are improving in their ability to break down images, and this activity took about 10 minutes. The goal was to tie the visual representation of Columbus’s arrival to Thursday’s lesson, where we analyzed whether Columbus should be considered a hero or villain. The 8Parts activity helped students focus on key aspects of the image, such as nouns, verbs, and adjectives that related to exploration, discovery, and interaction with indigenous peoples.

Next, we moved on to a Thin Story activity where students read about the effects of exploration from the text. They were asked to select one picture and one word to represent a key effect of exploration and explain their choices. I pushed them to use more specific details from the reading rather than general statements, encouraging them to dig into the information they learned. This exercise emphasized the consequences of exploration for both Native Americans and Europeans, helping students engage with the more detailed aspects of how exploration shaped history.

Afterward, students completed a 2xPOV activity, where they considered the perspectives of both Native Americans and European explorers. I incorporated elements from an empathy map, asking students to think about what these groups might be feeling, seeing, doing, and gaining or losing. This helped students develop a more empathetic understanding of how exploration impacted both groups, while also drawing connections to the motivations and consequences discussed in the previous activities.

We finished class with a Fast and Curious Gimkit activity, which provided a fun and interactive way for students to review key concepts from the week. The rapid-fire questions helped reinforce their understanding of the effects of exploration while keeping the energy up as we wrapped up the lesson.

By the end of class, students had a stronger grasp of how the arrival of Columbus and subsequent exploration impacted different groups, and the activities throughout the week helped them think critically about these historical events.

The Week That Was In 234

Introduction

This week in the classroom was packed with diverse activities and learning experiences. Here’s a quick overview of what we covered:

  • Concluded our unit on Native Americans in Ohio
  • Held a commemorative lesson on 9/11
  • Began a new unit on European exploration
  • Utilized various EduProtocols and tech tools including Gimkit, Blooket, and Storyfile

Each day brought its own set of challenges and opportunities as we worked through these topics and experimented with different teaching methods. The following daily breakdowns detail our activities, student responses, and the ongoing process of adapting lessons to meet learning objectives.

Monday – Resistance and Resilience, Stories

Tuesday – Assessment

Wednesday – Storyfile

Thursday – Blooket – Exploration Vocab

Friday – Before 1492 Exploration, Gimkit Countries/Continents

Monday

On Monday, we continued our unit on Native Americans within Clermont County and around Ohio. I started off with a Gimkit Fast and Furious as a review of the content from last week. I ran the Gimkit for about 5 minutes, challenging the students to achieve a higher class average than we did on Friday. Most classes were at or slightly below where we finished on Friday, which is normal.

Next, we finished the Thin Story from Friday’s lesson. The Gimkit served as a review before completing the Thin Story on the effects of colonization on Native Americans within Ohio. I simply wanted the students to include one picture, one word, and explain why they chose that picture and word to represent how natives were affected by Europeans. It was a quick and easy wrap-up of that lesson.

With marginalized groups, I think one thing that often gets overlooked is the resistance and resilience these groups displayed against their oppressors. So, I always try to focus on resistance and resilience when I can. For this lesson, I put together some Justin Unruh templates. I began with a Sketch and Tell as a preview activity, asking the students, “Think of a time you were resilient – create a picture to represent that time.” I wanted the kids to connect resilience from their lives to what we were studying.

To prepare for the lesson, I had ChatGPT create 14 different stories of Native American resilience and resistance, pulled from a 38-page document on Native Americans of Ohio. I had ChatGPT adjust the stories to a 7th-grade level and provide context for each one. I then numbered the stories one through seven, cut them up, and placed them in envelopes around my classroom.

Students walked around the classroom, finding four different stories of resilience and resistance. They filled out a Frayer Model where they had to list three to four details from each story. At the conclusion of this activity, students completed an empathy map with details from their stories, putting themselves in the shoes of the Native Americans to understand what was causing them pain, what they were trying to gain, and what they were seeing, thinking, and feeling. Overall, I liked how this lesson shaped up, especially with the empathy map at the end.

Tuesday

On Tuesday, we reached the final portion of our unit on Native Americans from Ohio. So far this school year, I’ve been dealing with many student absences and trying to figure out how to work around that. It’s challenging when I’m still teaching students how to use some of the EduProtocols and they miss days.

I needed to create an assessment that would allow all students to demonstrate what they learned, whether they were present in school or not. I settled on doing a Sketch and Tell where students would share six images and captions of anything they learned in this unit. In the middle of the paper, I wanted them to list out the main idea of the entire unit as well.

To make the assessment more comprehensive, I added a 2xSummary on the back of the Sketch and Tell. This graphic organizer had students think about a topic sentence that addressed our compelling question for the unit. Then, they had to include two details to support their topic sentence and write a concluding sentence twice.

Part of this assessment also included doing the Gimkit Fast and Curious that we had been doing since last week. I offered a deal to all my classes: if everyone answered 18 or more questions individually and the class average rose above 90%, I would give everyone a 100%. Out of my four Social Studies classes, two classes were able to meet that expectation.

Wednesday

On Wednesday, we needed 15 minutes to finish up the assessment from Tuesday, which was the Sketch and Tell and the 2xSummary. Considering this day was 9/11, I had a 9/11 lesson planned using Storyfile.

To begin my lesson on 9/11, I showed a news clip about a survivor from that day. I prefaced it by asking students to think about the survivor and consider what questions they could ask if they had the chance. The news clip was about 2 minutes long.

Following the news clip, we did a Wicked Hydra activity. I had the students pair up in groups of three to four people and write “9/11 Survivor” in the middle of a big piece of paper. From there, I wanted the students to start writing questions they would ask a survivor from 9/11. I gave them 8 minutes to come up with questions as a group, then had them pass the papers around the room to new groups who added more questions after 3 minutes. This process was repeated once more before the papers returned to the original group.

Next, I gave them a Frayer Model and asked them to choose the four best questions from their paper. Each quadrant of the Frayer Model contained one chosen question. Then, I had the students access Storyfile, a website where historical figures, famous people, and everyday individuals can be recorded giving responses to different questions. It’s a way to preserve history and create an interactive experience with historical figures.

In this case, Storyfile featured a 9/11 survivor, and the students could now ask their questions, to which the survivor may or may not respond. I explained to the students that an important life skill is being able to ask good questions, and if the survivor wasn’t responding to their question, it might not have been a good one.

At first, the students were a little freaked out because it seemed like the person was live on video. However, I explained that it’s just a collection of recorded videos spliced together, using AI to identify keywords from their questions and determine whether to answer or not. This was an engaging lesson and a way for students to understand the impact of 9/11 on those who lived through it.

Thursday

On Thursday, I started a new unit on exploration. I’m approaching it differently this year, focusing solely on Spain, France, the Netherlands, and Portugal, and how these countries explored around the world and eventually into the Americas. There’s also an emphasis on the things students learned in 7th grade and how they impacted European exploration, such as the Renaissance, the Crusades, Muslim explorers, and Rome.

I began the unit with vocabulary words such as Renaissance, caravel, astrolabe, colony, and mercantilism. I wanted to focus on students using context clues to create definitions for these words. To achieve this, I had ChatGPT use every vocabulary word in a sentence so students could use context clues to create their own definitions.

I printed all of these sentences, numbered them, and put them in envelopes around my room. Students worked together to fill out an organizer where they wrote down the word, read the sentence, came up with their own definition, and drew a symbol for the definition and word. When they finished each word, they would bring it to me for feedback. If it was good, they rolled a 20-sided die to determine how much that envelope was worth. At the end of the lesson, the group with the highest point total got to pick from my unimpressive prize box.

Following this game, we played two rounds of Fast and Curious on Blooket. This activity completed the class, and I really enjoyed the idea of students using context clues to create their own definitions.

Friday

On Friday, we did one quick round of Fast and Curious on Blooket with our vocabulary words from the previous day. We immediately followed this up with Gimkit, where I had 10 questions on continents and countries related to all the continents and countries we would be discussing with exploration. We did a quick 4-minute round on Gimkit, I gave some quick feedback, and then we did a quick 3-minute round just to become familiar with our continents and countries. The Gimkit included topics like Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, France, Spain, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Portugal.

Following this, I put together some Justin Unruh templates, and we started off with a Frayer Model with the term “CE” or Common Era. Students wrote a definition, used examples, non-examples, and used Common Era within a sentence. I started this lesson by building geographical knowledge of continents and countries, and I included CE because these concepts were used heavily in the reading we would be using for the Iron Chef activity.

Next, we did a Map and Tell where I had a map of the Crusades. We talked about sourcing the map, and I had a few questions such as “How do the routes on the map differ?” and “Here is a statement: ‘The Crusades stimulated European exploration.’ How does the map prove this statement true?” I also wanted the students to move stars to label Spain, France, and the United Kingdom as they looked at the map on a more global scale.

Next, I handed out the reading from our textbook. I’ve been doing a lot of reading aloud to the students because that’s what’s necessary right now in my classroom. It’s been a lot of hand-holding and walking them through it, but I’ve got to do what’s necessary at this point. The reading focused on Rome trading with China, Muslim explorers, and the Crusades.

For the reading on the Iron Chef, I asked the question, “What are some ways the world was connected before 1492?” As I read, I had the students think about highlighting four ways the world was connected. At the conclusion of the reading, they had to transfer their information to the Iron Chef template. They also had to change the title to fit the main idea (as we’re still focused on that skill), add a picture, and include two emojis to show things that were traded in the world at this time.

Here’s the twist: I rolled dice to determine how many words they had to use when transferring and typing their highlighted information. One particular class had to choose the most important information because the dice roll came up as two. Another class had a dice roll of three, so they had to choose important words. I love this because they have to determine what’s important and paraphrase.

As they were building their Iron Chef slides, which took 10 minutes, I copied and pasted their slides into one slide deck. What’s nice about Google Slides is that I can link the copied slide back to their original slide, and it updates on mine in real time. At the conclusion of 10 minutes, I put the new slide deck of their Iron Chef slides on the classroom screen. I had them close their Chromebooks, and right from their desks, they had four seconds to present one thing that connected the world that they learned about. I use the word “share” because it’s less threatening than “presentation,” and these kids did awesome. That’s how we ended class today – it was a great day!

The Week That Was In 234

Introduction

As a social studies teacher, I’m always looking for ways to make history relevant and engaging for my 8th-grade students. Recently, I leveraged AI to design a comprehensive lesson about Native Americans in Clermont County, Ohio. While our textbook covers Native Americans in North America broadly, I wanted to create a unit that would help students understand how their local area played a significant role in American history.

I began this process by uploading Ohio state standards and relevant textbook chapters to ChatGPT. After analyzing the standards related to Native Americans (or American Indians, as they’re sometimes referred to), ChatGPT helped determine what 8th-grade students should know about this topic. It then created and aligned questions for a 5 to 6-day unit, including a compelling question and supporting questions. This approach ensured that our lessons would meet state requirements while providing a localized, meaningful context for our students.

To maintain consistency with our existing curriculum, I had ChatGPT analyze the style and tone of the textbook readings. I then sourced local Native American history documents and had ChatGPT align them with the supporting questions, matching the textbook’s style. This step was crucial in creating a seamless integration between our standard materials and the new, localized content. ChatGPT also created a list of unit vocabulary words, ensuring we covered all necessary terminology.

With this solid framework in place, I selected EduProtocols based on data I had collected on my students’ needs and the specific literacy skills we needed to work on as a class. These protocols, developed by educators for educators, provide engaging, repeatable instructional strategies that can be used across various subjects and grade levels.

Finally, I used ChatGPT to create Gimkit multiple-choice questions aligned with the readings and standards. Gimkit, a gamified learning platform, would serve as both a formative assessment tool and an engaging way for students to interact with the material.

Throughout this process, I utilized EduProtocol templates created by Justin Unruh to plug into my unit framework. I tried to use EduProtocols we have been using to build in reps. I also tried to build in literacy skills my class needs to work on – identifying main idea, summarizing, and understanding perspectives.

Tuesday – EduProtocol Rack and Stack (Iron Chef, Frayer, Map and Tell), Gimkit Link

Wednesday – EduProtocols Rack and Stack (Frayer, CyberSandwich)

Thursday and Friday – EduProtocols Rack and Stack (Map and Tell, Iron Chef, Thin Story)

Tuesday

We kicked off the unit with our compelling question: “How did the Miami, Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee tribes adapt to their environment and respond to the challenges posed by European settlers in Clermont County?” This overarching question would guide our exploration throughout the week. Our supporting question for Tuesday was more specific: “How did the Miami, Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee tribes use their environment to meet their basic needs?”

I began class with a simple yet revealing question: “Who can name a Native American group that inhabited Clermont County?” Surprisingly, only three students across all my classes could name one – the Miami. This highlighted the importance of our upcoming lessons in building local historical knowledge.

We then moved to Gimkit, using the questions I had prepared. Initial class averages ranged between 59% and 68%, which was lower than I’d hoped. I quickly realized that students were often choosing the longest answers, assuming they were correct. This led me to refine the questions, ensuring all options were of similar length – a valuable lesson in question design!

Transitioning to our main activity, we engaged in a Map and Tell exercise exploring prehistoric migration to the Americas. We examined maps showing ancient land routes from Asia to North America, which sparked lively discussions. Students debated factors like climate change, food availability, and population pressures that might have influenced these epic journeys.

To connect this broader history to our local area, we located Ohio on the continental map and then zoomed in on a detailed, illustrated map of Clermont County. Students played detective, hypothesizing about Native American settlement locations based on geographical features like rivers, forests, and natural resources.

Following this, I implemented the Iron Chef EduProtocol, a strategy designed to help students engage deeply with content while practicing essential skills. Students created individual slides with a title (representing the main idea) and five facts about how specific Native American groups adapted to their environment. They had 15 minutes for this task, encouraging focused work.

Next, students reviewed each other’s slides, listing four key facts for each group in a Frayer model. This peer review process not only reinforced learning but also exposed students to multiple perspectives on the same information.

We concluded with the Emoji Kitchen concept, where students combined emojis to represent how Native Americans adapted to Ohio’s environment. This creative element allowed students to synthesize their learning visually, appealing to different learning styles and encouraging out-of-the-box thinking.

Wednesday

We continued our exploration of Native American tribes in Clermont County, shifting our focus to the supporting question: “How did the culture of the Miami, Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee tribes shape their daily lives and help them thrive?”

The class began with a rolling recap using a 20-sided die, a strategy that combines retrieval practice with an element of chance. I posed questions about the previous day’s material, and students had to craft responses using the exact number of words as their die roll. This exercise not only reviewed key concepts but also challenged students to be concise and precise in their communication – valuable skills for any subject.

Next, we delved into defining culture using a Frayer model. This visual organizer helped students break down the complex concept of culture into its definition, characteristics, examples, and non-examples. It was particularly effective in helping students understand the multifaceted nature of Native American cultures.

Building on this foundation, we transitioned into a CyberSandwich activity. This structured approach, another EduProtocol strategy, allowed students to engage deeply with the content while developing their writing skills. The activity consisted of three parts:

  1. A 10-minute reading and note-taking session, where students gathered information about how the tribes’ culture influenced their daily lives.
  2. A 5-minute discussion period, allowing students to share insights and clarify understanding with their peers.
  3. A 10-minute writing exercise, where students crafted a paragraph with a clear topic sentence, two supporting details, and a concluding sentence.

This writing sample gave me valuable insight into their comprehension and writing abilities, allowing me to identify areas for further instruction.

To round off the class, we revisited our Gimkit questions. I was pleased to see improvement, with class averages rising to 70-75%. This progress indicated that students were solidifying their understanding of the material and becoming more comfortable with the content.

Thursday

I began Thursday’s lesson by leveraging AI to enhance our writing process. I created a Claude AI artifact designed to provide feedback on students’ CyberSandwich paragraphs from the previous day. The artifact was primed with the article we had read and a custom rubric featuring potential topic sentences, supporting details, and concluding sentence keywords.

While the results were still somewhat variable, it was a noticeable improvement from the previous week’s thick slide link submissions. Students seemed to appreciate the AI-generated feedback and made substantial revisions based on the suggestions. They submitted their revised paragraphs through a Google Form for further assessment.

We then transitioned to our lesson on how European settlers disrupted the culture and way of life of Native American tribes in Ohio. I introduced an Iron Chef activity, challenging students to identify five ways Native Americans were affected by European arrival. To model effective main idea identification, I read an article aloud, deliberately connecting it to our previous lessons on Native American culture.

Students then had 10 minutes to create their Iron Chef slides, which included:

  1. A title representing the main idea
  2. A relevant picture
  3. Five key facts about European impact on Native Americans
  4. A “secret ingredient” section with an Emoji Kitchen creation to visually represent a perspective

Next, we engaged in a Map and Tell exercise, comparing two maps: one showing Native American territories throughout Ohio, and another illustrating the effects of the Treaty of Greenville. This visual comparison helped students grasp the dramatic shift in Native American land holdings and the profound impact of settlement.

We concluded the class with another round of Gimkit. I was pleased to see a significant improvement in performance, with class averages rising from 75% to 90%. This progress indicated that students were consolidating their understanding of the complex relationships between Native Americans and European settlers in Ohio.

Friday

On our final day of the unit, we began with an engaging activity called “Doubling Details.” The initial prompt was “How were natives in Ohio affected by Europeans?” Students had to respond in exactly 8 words, encouraging concise, focused thinking. Next, they paired up to combine their ideas into a 16-word response. Finally, groups of four created a 32-word summary. Each round lasted 3 minutes, keeping the energy high and ideas flowing.

To prepare for our deep dive into the Treaty of Greenville, I introduced key vocabulary through a Blooket game. We played two quick rounds with words like “boundary,” “hindrance,” and “cede” to ensure students were prepared for the treaty excerpts.

For the main activity, I employed an EMC2Learning content compactor to explore sections of the Treaty of Greenville. Here’s an example of one excerpt we examined:

“The general boundary line between the lands of the United States and the lands of the said Indian tribes, shall begin at the mouth of Cayahoga river… thence southwesterly in a direct line to the Ohio River….”

I modeled the process of analyzing these excerpts using an “I do, we do, you do” approach. We summarized each excerpt, distilled it to a single word, and then added a picture for dual coding. However, when it came time for independent work, many students struggled. I allowed this struggle to continue until it verged on chaos, as I’m committed to building their confidence and resilience. While progress feels slow, I’m confident we’ll get there.

We concluded the lesson with a Thin Story activity. Students created a single image and word to represent how Native Americans were affected by Europeans, synthesizing all we had learned throughout the week.

Reflection

Throughout the week, these lessons combined various skills including vocabulary building, historical analysis, summarization, and visual representation. By using a variety of EduProtocols and technology-enhanced strategies, we were able to engage students in deep, meaningful learning about a complex historical topic.

The use of AI in lesson planning and feedback proved to be a valuable tool, allowing for more personalized and efficient instruction. However, it’s clear that the human element – the ability to adapt in real-time, to push students just the right amount, and to create a supportive classroom environment – remains crucial.

As we move forward, I’m excited to continue refining these strategies, always with the goal of making history come alive for my students and helping them see their place in the ongoing story of our community and nation.

The Week That Was In 234

As educators, we are always seeking new ways to make learning meaningful and engaging for our students. This week, my social studies class embarked on a journey to explore the power of stories hidden within artifacts and primary sources. From deciphering the tales behind everyday objects to connecting local history with broader historical themes, our activities aimed to deepen students’ understanding and appreciation of the past. Through a combination of hands-on lessons, creative exercises, and critical thinking challenges, we explored how seemingly simple items can reveal complex narratives about our lives and the world around us. This blog post chronicles our week of discovery, highlighting the strategies, successes, and lessons learned along the way.

Monday – Sources

Tuesday – Sourcing Thick Slide Lesson

Wednesday – 5 Themes of Geography Thin Slide

Thursday – Resource Rumble

Friday – Thick Slide Assessment

Monday

This week, we continued our lesson from Dan Lewer on making sense of artifacts and primary sources, focusing on the stories these sources might tell us. It seemed like the perfect opportunity to begin class with the Town Dump Lesson. I asked the kids, “Does everything have a story?” Initially, they looked puzzled, unsure how to answer. To help them understand, I shared some examples of random objects that might seem meaningless to them but hold stories for me. For instance, I have a globe in my room. When I ask, “Why do I have this globe?” they typically respond, “Because you teach social studies.” While this is true, I explain that the story they don’t know is that it belonged to a colleague of mine who passed away during the middle of the school year. It reminds me of her, which is why I kept it. I then pointed to the student notes on my wall, explaining, “I have these notes because each one tells a story of an impact or time I had with those students.”

Next, I read the story The Town Dump and highlighted how objects in the dump tell the story of the town and its people, much like the artifacts from Dan Lewer’s primary source lesson tell a story about teenage life in 2024. I asked the students to think of an object or artifact they possess that tells a story about them, something they have held onto because it has meaning. After spending 15–20 minutes on this exercise, we finished the lesson on primary sources. I had the students use their descriptions, inferences, and questions to create two claims about teenage life in 2024. I included a 2xCER template on the paper I gave them because they were familiar with the format from the previous week. This was also an effort to incorporate general writing practice into my class. We concluded the class with a Gimkit about the states, where each question featured a picture of a state, and the students had to choose the correct answer. I noticed that our class average was stagnating at 65–70%, so I knew we needed to try something new.

Tuesday

On Tuesday, we started class with the same Gimkit from the previous day. This time, however, I gave the students a blank map of the United States. If they got a state wrong, I had them pause, locate the state on the map, and label it. I also mentioned that I expected a 90% class average by the end of the week, and I would be taking it for a score. Following the Gimkit, I introduced the concept of sourcing to the students. We began with a Frayer model for the word “sourcing.” I’ve been trying to incorporate the use of context clues to help create definitions for words, but the students are really struggling with this skill. I also included “two questions you would ask when sourcing” and examples of “good sources” and “bad sources.”

I took a screenshot of my Frayer, uploaded it to ChatGPT, and had it create a quick, one-paragraph reading to help the students fill in the Frayer boxes. I linked the reading to the Frayer. Afterward, I created an Annotate and Tell activity with some quick newspaper advertisement snippets and related questions. However, I soon realized that I was overwhelming the students with too much information. I wanted the focus to be on reading a secondary source newspaper article about the history of their community, Batavia, Ohio. So, during the second half of the day, I replaced the Annotate and Tell with an 8pArts sourcing template.

The main part of the lesson involved reading an article about the Batavia Bicentennial and creating a thick slide. I used the 8pArts template to guide students in practicing sourcing and breaking down a document. The template included a three-word title, content, contextualizing, sourcing, and communication (author’s purpose). I provided the Batavia Bicentennial article to the students and asked them to scan the article’s title and headings to predict its content by creating a three-word title. We then sourced the article, discussing who the author was and when it was written. We also contemplated why it was written—to celebrate the bicentennial of Batavia.

Once we completed these steps, it was time to read the article. I asked the students how long they thought it should take to read it. Answers varied from 10 minutes to as little as 2 to 3 minutes. I informed them that it should take about 3 minutes, which surprised some and relieved others. Many students tend to overestimate reading time and shut down before they even start. After reading, the students listed three interesting facts under the content/details section. Finally, we contextualized the information and determined it was about Batavia’s Bicentennial. I explained the term bicentennial, breaking down the word into “bi,” meaning two, and “centennial,” meaning 100, to help them understand.

In the middle of the 8Parts template was a space to summarize, but I instructed them to create a Thick Slide as their summary. On the Thick Slide, students included three interesting facts from the 8pArts template, a picture with a caption, and a title. We also reviewed the concept of continuity, a word we studied last week. I asked them to find and list an example of continuity from Batavia, and some identified that Batavia has been the county seat since 1824—great stuff! I also had them list two events that took place in Batavia in 1828 and 1877 and find two other events that occurred in the United States during the same years. Finally, they wrote a topic sentence that captured the main idea of their slide, reinforcing our focus on understanding the main idea.

Wednesday

On Wednesday, we focused on the Five Themes of Geography using a Thin Slide activity. Instead of reading about the Five Themes, I decided to use a simple Thin Slide format. Initially, I attempted this on Google Slides, but halfway through the day, I switched to Padlet. I originally created a five-slide deck for each student, but I wanted to switch to Padlet so they could see each other’s ideas.

On Padlet, I set up five columns, one for each theme of geography: location, movement, place, region, and human interaction. I had the students relate these themes to Cincinnati. For example, they shared a city or state near Cincinnati and explained its relative location. Another example was how people in Cincinnati have interacted with and adapted to the Ohio River. Students shared one picture and one word or phrase for each theme, with a time limit of three minutes per theme. After completing the Thin Slides, the students created a personalized geography page where they added their favorite climate, a country they always wanted to visit, their favorite geographical feature, and more. We wrapped up the class with another round of Gimkit on the states, and this time, we achieved over 80% in each class, showing marked improvement.

Thursday

We began Thursday’s class with students finishing their personalized geography pages from the previous day, using the first 15 minutes of class to do so. Next, we did a Resource Rumble, where I asked questions related to historical thinking skills (primary and secondary sources, sourcing, continuity, and the Five Themes of Geography). Students went to the envelopes I had taped around the walls, answered the questions, and had me check their answers. After receiving feedback, they could roll dice and collect Jenga blocks. The team with the tallest tower won a prize from the unimpressive prize box. I had the students keep their answer sheets because they would need them for tomorrow’s assessment. This activity was part of my effort to show students that everything we do serves a purpose. I want them to take ownership of their learning and place importance on every activity. We ended the class with another round of Gimkit for practice before our final attempt on Friday.

Friday

On Friday, we started with a final round of the Gimkit about the states. I reviewed the class averages from the beginning of the week—54%, 50%, 50%, and 59%. I set the Gimkit timer for eight minutes and made a deal with them: if everyone answered 32 or more questions and the class average was 90% or higher, everyone would receive a score of 100%. The results were promising—first bell met the challenge with a 92% average, second bell achieved 89%, fifth bell reached 86%, and sixth bell finished strong with 92%. I’ve always struggled to get other classes above 80%, but looking back, giving the students a blank map to label when they missed a state question made a significant difference.

The next part of our assessment was using a Thick Slide to demonstrate their historical thinking skills. On the Thick Slide, students created a title that encapsulated the main idea of the topic, listed two reasons why it’s important to study the history of Batavia, OH, found a historical image of Batavia and used the caption to source it (by asking questions about it), compared primary and secondary sources, and listed an example of continuity. The students could use their Resource Rumble paper from Thursday’s lesson to help them complete the slide. I gave the students 25 minutes to complete this assessment.

During this assessment, I incorporated a new feature I learned from Jake Carr about using Claude to create artifacts, such as multiple-choice quizzes, short answers, or essays, and to provide feedback. Jake showed me how Claude could generate a code to create an artifact that could be shared with others. This led me to wonder, “Can I create an artifact where students can paste a link to their Thick Slide, and Claude analyzes it and gives instant feedback?” I worked on and reworked a prompt to set this up.

Here is the prompt I created:

“Create an artifact that provides consistent, quality feedback for 7th-grade students’ Thick Slide submissions on historical thinking skills. The feedback should focus on the following areas:

  1. Reasons for Studying History:
    • Understanding the past to inform the future.
    • Learning from past mistakes and successes.
    • Building cultural awareness and empathy.
    • Developing critical thinking and analytical skills.
    • Preserving collective memory and identity.
  2. Sourcing Questions:
    • Who created this source?
    • When was it created?
    • Why was it created?
    • What is the creator’s perspective or bias?
    • Who is the intended audience?
  3. Definitions of Primary and Secondary Sources:
    • Analyze how accurately students define and differentiate between primary and secondary sources.

Rubric Development:

  • Design a rubric that includes criteria for evaluating each of the three focus areas (reasons for studying history, sourcing questions, and definitions of primary/secondary sources).
  • Ensure the rubric provides clear, 7th-grade-level descriptions for each criterion, allowing for objective and consistent grading.

Artifact Creation:

  • Use the rubric to generate an artifact (such as a feedback template) where students can copy and paste their Google Slide link.
  • The artifact should automatically provide quality, constructive feedback based on the rubric’s criteria.
  • Feedback should be designed to guide students in improving their understanding of historical thinking skills while being accessible at a 7th-grade reading level.

Consistency and Quality Control:

  • Implement measures within the artifact to ensure that feedback remains consistent across different student submissions.
  • Ensure that the artifact is free from errors and provides accurate, relevant feedback tailored to the student’s work.”

After the artifact was created, I shared the link with the students. It was easy to access and use, and while some students found it helpful, others noted that it inaccurately told them they hadn’t completed certain tasks that they actually had. The feedback was varied, and the Claude feedback was inconsistent, but it’s still a work in progress. There’s a lot of potential here for some cool developments.

The Week That Was In 234

Introduction

So far this school year is flying by. I’m really enjoying my new schedule. My day begins with teaching two 65-minute social studies periods, followed by a plan period, co-teaching a reading workshop with an ELA teacher, and ending the day with two more 65-minute social studies classes. It makes for a nice day, allowing for in-depth lessons and sufficient time to transition between subjects.

At the beginning of the year, the name of the game is teaching the process and procedures of EduProtocols. I like to begin the year smart by starting with the following EduProtocols: Wicked Hydra, Frayers, 3xCER, 8Parts, Thin Slides, and Sketch and Tell. These are pretty basic, and I use them throughout the entire school year. They provide a solid foundation for critical thinking and engagement. I will introduce more in-depth protocols as the year progresses, such as CyberSandwich and Thick Slides, which build upon these basic skills.

Monday – Resource Rumble

Tuesday – Fast and Curious on Gimkit

Wednesday – Practice, Sketch and Tell-o

Thursday – Why We Study History

Friday – Sources, Gimkit

Monday

We began the day with no Chromebooks, so I needed a new plan. I had to introduce the syllabus. Last year, I used an escape room, but without Chromebooks, I needed something different. Enter the Resource Rumble from EMC2Learning. I used AI to create some puzzles and questions based on my syllabus related to the rules and procedures. I took the questions created by AI and placed them in 8 “treasure chests” around the room. The students had 25 minutes to complete all the treasure chests and have me check their work. This activity not only introduced the syllabus content but also encouraged teamwork and problem-solving.

A true Resource Rumble involves Jenga blocks, but mine were on the Amazon truck. I switched to a new plan and used dice instead. I have several different styles of dice, including one that has numbers one through twelve. After each group brought up their answer, I had them roll the dice to determine how many points the chest was worth. At the end, I had them add up their points. The winning group got to choose from my Unimpressive Prize Box, which contains small, quirky items that surprisingly delight the students.

Following this activity, we did a quick overview of the syllabus, ensuring everyone understood the key points. We then moved on to some Frayer a Friend, to make more connections. By the end of the day, the students finally received their Chromebooks, setting us up for more tech-integrated lessons in the coming days.

Tuesday

Now that we had Chromebooks, it was great to finally introduce the Fast and Curious. I was surprised at the number of students who had never played Gimkit. Since so many students were unfamiliar with it, I found a 4th-grade trivia Gimkit to introduce the game. I set the time limit for 8 minutes to let them explore, but I didn’t tell them anything – I wanted them to figure it out on their own.

Next, I ran another 4th grade trivia Gimkit round with less time, but challenged them to answer more questions and raise the class average. Following this, we did another round where I introduced the states – 50 questions, 50 states. My goal is to have the students know their states with 90% accuracy. It’s a work in progress, but Gimkit’s game-like structure makes this typically dry subject more engaging.

For another round of Gimkit, I had half the class close their Chromebooks and partner up to work together to answer questions. This variation promotes collaboration and peer teaching. If we had any time left, I had students complete another Frayer a Friend continuing to make more connections and learn the process of using a Frayer model.

Wednesday

We began class with a Dominic Helmstetter special – a great Smart Start for the Sketch and Tell-o with gold medals. I had students choose an Olympic event they would gold medal in and one non-Olympic event they would gold medal in. They had to draw a symbol and provide an explanation for why they would win a gold medal. This took about 20-25 minutes and served as a fun warm-up activity that also encouraged creativity and self-reflection. It also agve me a chance to understand the interests of the students.

We followed this up with another Gimkit on states, continuing to build their geography knowledge. I was ready to move into content and the question of “Why do we study history?” However, I realized I had a problem: we hadn’t really practiced much on Chromebooks. We had done Sketch and Tell and Thin Slides on paper, but not much with Chromebooks. This needed to change to ensure students were comfortable with the digital tools we’d be using throughout the year.

I stopped the lesson and created some practice slides using Justin Unruh templates. I put together a Thin Slide utilizing Google Slides, a Thin Slide utilizing Padlet, and two Sketch and Tells. I wanted to show how Padlet could be utilized for the “I can’t draw” feature, as it uses AI to generate images that can be used for Thin Slides. This introduction to various digital tools will prove valuable as we incorporate more tech-based activities.

For the Smart Start question, I asked, “What is a food no one should eat?” I gave students 3 minutes to create their responses. They put their name as the “subject” and wrote their one word or phrase in the body of the post. After 3 minutes, I selected “freeze Padlet” and then hit the play button, which turned it into a slide presentation. By using Padlet, students can’t mess with each other’s slides, ensuring a smooth presentation process.

Following our Thin Slides, we used a regular Sketch and Tell. The prompt was, “What is a food you can eat every day for the rest of your life?” It became apparent that I had to show them where Google Shapes was located on the toolbar and how to change colors and duplicate shapes. We clearly have some Google tech learning that needs to be done! I chose these specific EduProtocols because I would be using them in the near future, and this practice session helped identify areas where students needed more support.

Thursday

I began class with a Literacy Skills Entry exam from our McGraw Hill book. I noticed two exams – Historical Thinking Skills and a Literacy Skills exam. I decided the Literacy Skills entry exam was what I was going to use. I have every student with an IEP this year, and I wanted an idea of our ability to understand main ideas, inferences, context clues, and perspectives. This baseline assessment will help me tailor future lessons to meet the specific needs of this year’s class.

The original exam was 20 questions, which seemed like overkill. I had AI analyze the entire exam and every question for the skills being assessed. From there, I reduced the 20 questions to 8. This exam took 20 minutes. At the end of the day, I had AI create a rubric for the exam, and then I took all the students’ responses and correlated them with the rubric. The data I received provided good baseline information that will inform my teaching strategies moving forward.

For my original lesson on “Why do we study history?” I had a CyberSandwich ready to go. However, after some thought and knowing the students I had in front of me, I realized a new protocol would be too much. Instead, I put together a Thin Slide with the prompt, “What is an event that families would try to record and retell?” I gave them 3 minutes and stuck to my timer. This activity helped students connect historical thinking to their personal experiences.

Next, I included a Frayer with the word “continuity.” Under the “define” heading, I had AI create a sentence that could be used to help students use context clues to create a definition. The sentence was: “The movie series kept the same main character and story from one film to the next, providing continuity that helped viewers follow along easily.” For the other boxes, students had to find examples, non-examples, and a picture. I was hoping the Frayer would take 5 minutes, but it took about 8 to 10 minutes. This extra time was well-spent as students grappled with this important historical concept.

Following the Frayer, I had two Sketch and Tells ready to go. I linked the section from the textbook and asked, “Why do we study history?” The goal was to create a sketch with Google Shapes based on the reading and explain it with 2 to 3 sentences. Students had 10 minutes to complete both Sketch and Tells. That was a bit of a struggle, but I still had them turn it in. I’m learning I have my work cut out for me this year – I’m trying to help the students own their learning through protocols and timers. This process of productive struggle is essential for developing their historical thinking skills.

Friday

On Friday, I continued our historical thinking skills unit. This new book has a lot to it. It’s overwhelming and, like most textbooks, restricting, but I’m trying to analyze the teacher edition and think about which skills they’re trying to get the students to use. This helps direct my use of EduProtocols and ensures that I’m meeting curriculum standards while using engaging teaching methods.

The new topic today was, “How do historians use primary and secondary sources?” I felt like I had overwhelmed the students yesterday with too much, so I decided to simplify it and stick to a Frayer about primary and secondary sources. I provided a sentence created by AI to help them use context clues to create a definition. This approach allowed us to focus deeply on these fundamental concepts in historical research.

We began class with a Gimkit of 10 questions related to why we study history and primary and secondary sources. The class averages were between 72% and 79%, showing a decent grasp of the concepts but room for improvement. We followed this up with a Frayer on primary and secondary sources, reinforcing the ideas through a different learning modality.

Instead of using the textbook section on historians using various sources, I used a Dan Lewer “History for Humans” lesson. It provides a scenario set in the year 3240, where students are historians looking back on the lives of teenagers from 2024. I provided students with a graphic organizer, and they had to select artifacts or sources from their backpacks, write down observations, make inferences, and ask questions. Students used Chromebooks, phones, Stanley water bottles, pencils, and books as their artifacts. They did an excellent job with this activity, really getting into the role of future historians and understanding how everyday objects can become historical sources.

I also reminded them that they had started thinking like historians last week with a Wicked Hydra, asking questions about pictures related to me. They had also begun this process with the 8Parts activity, analyzing a historical photo. We didn’t finish this historical thinking activity and will continue on Monday, allowing for a deeper exploration of these skills.

We finished class with a Gimkit challenge: get above a 90% class average, and everyone receives 3 PBIS points. The class averages ranged from 82% to 92% – every class raised their average. This friendly competition helped reinforce the concepts we’d been learning all week while adding an element of fun to end the week.

Closing

As I reflect on this week, I’m pleased with the progress we’ve made in introducing various EduProtocols and historical thinking skills. The students are gradually adapting to the new technologies and methodologies, even if there’s still a learning curve. It’s clear that flexibility is key – whether it’s dealing with unexpected Chromebook delays or adjusting lesson plans on the fly. I’m particularly encouraged by the students’ engagement with activities like the Resource Rumble, Gimkit challenges, and the futuristic historian exercise. These activities not only make learning more interactive but also help develop critical thinking skills essential for studying history.

Looking ahead, I plan to continue refining my approach, balancing between introducing new concepts and reinforcing the basics. The baseline data from our literacy skills assessment will be invaluable in tailoring future lessons. As we delve deeper into our curriculum, I’m excited to see how the students will grow in their ability to analyze sources, make connections, and think like historians. It’s been a challenging but rewarding start to the year, and I’m looking forward to what the coming weeks will bring. Onward to another week of discovery in 8th grade social studies!

The Week That Was In 234

This week marked the start of a new chapter in my teaching career. I’ve transitioned to Batavia Middle School, where I’m now teaching 8th grade social studies in room 234. While the subject remains the same, I’m facing new procedures, new students, and a new textbook.

Thursday and Friday – Frayers, 3xCER

Adapting to Change

At my previous school, we used TCI History Alive, but now I’m working with McGraw Hill’s Voices of the Past. This change has presented some challenges. Previously, I could easily transfer TCI sections to a Google Doc and link it to activities (like EduProtocol), or directly link TCI sections to activities. However, with McGraw Hill, I can’t transfer content to Google Docs or create links in the same way.

This limitation is particularly frustrating because I prefer using Google Docs for its accessibility. It allows students to quickly access sources with a simple click, which streamlines the class and maintains a good tempo. I’m currently brainstorming ways to work around this issue.

Another adjustment I’m facing is the longer class periods. We now have 65-minute classes, compared to the 47-minute periods I was accustomed to. While this extended time offers more opportunities for activities (as they say in Step Brothers, “There’s so much room for activities”), it’s challenging from a timing perspective. On the bright side, I now only have four periods of Social Studies and co-teach one period of reading workshop with an ELA teacher.

Despite these changes, the first two days flew by.

Thursday: Building Connections

Thursday marked the first day back for everyone. As always, I began by emphasizing the core values of our classroom: respect, value, support, connection, challenge, and empowerment for everyone in room 234.

Although the students won’t receive their Chromebooks until next week, it wasn’t a problem. EduProtocols are versatile and can easily transfer to paper. To foster a sense of value, respect, and connection among the students, we started with a “Frayer a Friend” activity. This exercise included various prompts such as:

  • Their name and birthday
  • Four things they like
  • Four things they dislike
  • Three items they’d want on a deserted island
  • A sketch of their dream vacation

I initially set a six-minute timer for the first round, but many students couldn’t finish in time. That’s perfectly fine – it’s all part of the learning process. On the back of the Frayer, I incorporated an idea from Ariana Hernandez: Sketch, Tell, and Connect. Students sketched something they noticed during their interview, wrote a quick sentence about it, and then explained how it might connect to them personally.

We followed this with another round of Frayer a Friend, this time reducing the time to five minutes. Impressively, 90% of the class finished this round. I used this as an opportunity to reinforce our class goal: improvement with each repetition, doing a bit more each time.

Next, we moved on to a REPP (Random Emoji Power Paragraph) activity with their partners. This is always a hit, bringing great energy and laughter to the classroom. It’s one of my favorite EduProtocols.

To wrap up the day, since we didn’t have Chromebooks, I introduced the Marker Game. Students found a new partner, and each pair received a dry erase marker to stand up between them. I read True/False statements about the syllabus and my class. If they thought the statement was true, they grabbed the marker; if false, they left it alone. This game was a blast and a great way to review important class information.

Overall, it was a successful first day, though I’m eagerly anticipating the arrival of the Chromebooks.

Friday: Deepening Connections and Introducing Myself

On Friday, I wanted to maintain the momentum we’d built. We started with another Frayer a Friend activity, this time partnering students with someone from a different table. I set a four-minute timer, and everyone successfully completed the task.

Next, I introduced the Wicked Hydra activity. I had prepared five images related to me and my life, taping them to poster paper or whiteboards around the room. These images included:

  1. A picture of my family
  2. Me receiving the OCSS MS Social Studies Teacher of the Year award
  3. A photo from my NKU tennis days
  4. A Zach Bryan concert where Bruce Springsteen made a surprise appearance
  5. A picture of Dominic Helmstetter and me presenting at NCSS (interestingly, two classes thought Dominic was Ronaldo and were impressed that I had “met” him!)

The goal of this activity was to introduce myself through questioning strategies while simultaneously developing students’ historical thinking skills of observation and questioning. I rotated all groups through all pictures in 15 minutes.

Following this, I combined a 3xCER (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning) with the Wicked Hydra activity. I emphasized that everything we do in room 234 serves a purpose. In this case, their observations and questions would help them create claims about me. After explaining claims, evidence, and reasoning, I gave the students 10 minutes to come up with claims about me based on the images they had observed.

We concluded the activity by having students share their claims. I answered their questions and shared more about myself, creating a wonderful opportunity for connection and engagement.

This class period was a resounding success, and I’m definitely planning to use this activity again in the future.

In conclusion, despite the challenges of adapting to a new school environment, these first two days have been incredibly rewarding. I’m excited to continue building connections with my students and helping them develop crucial skills through engaging, purposeful activities.