Sunday, April 28, 2013


Willett/ Smith

Thinking Routine:   Headlines

Connect:  Headlines is a thinking routine that can be used to help students focus on the big ideas or important themes in what you have been learning.   Headline routines call for synthesis of all the learning that took place.  It can be useful at the end of a unit of study or after a single activity such as a field trip, reading a book, or watching a movie.   To set up the routine after a learning experience, the teacher asks the students to write a short headline for the study that captures important ideas and summarizes the learning that took place.   Ask students to think about the core, central ideas that are at the heart of the learning.   We successfully used this routine after a Field Trip to the Botanic Gardens on Plant Day.

What I did:

Each year the Botanic Gardens present a series of plant day exploration field trips for students from schools around the metro area.  The staff at the Gardens set up 11 different learning stations where students get to try hands-on activities.   As the study of plants is one of the 2nd grade Tracks Science Units of Study and this activity aligns perfectly with our standards, we try to participate every year.  It is only available a few days a year and we have to sign up for it well in advance.   This year we were scheduled to attend on April 18th, the day after one of our big April snowstorms.  It turned out to be an amazing day!  The information stations were relocated inside the Mitchell Building so we did not have to contend with the snow and cold temperatures that were outside.   By mid- morning most small groups had completed their rounds at the stations and the temperatures outside had warmed up to tolerable levels.  We were able to walk around the mostly snow covered grounds.   The sun and snow created a beautiful, picture postcard Colorado scene with glistening white snow blanketing the plants that were just peeking their heads out of the ground, ice covered ponds and snowy puffs perched on the tree branches.    

When we returned from the Field Trip, we were looking for a way to sum up the experiences of the day.    We gathered students on the rug for a de-briefing.   They were all feeling very excited about what they had learned at the informative stations.  Each person got a chance to talk about what they learned and which stations they enjoyed the most.   Most students agreed that the treasure hunt for food items in the conservatory, the interactive biosphere exhibit, seed sorting and of course, the pea seed planting station made a lasting impression.  After everyone got a turn to share, I reminded the students of the Headlines Routine that we had used before and instructed them that we were going to use this routine to summarize and record our thinking about the big ideas and important learning that had happened during our field trip.  Because we had done this routine before, I had to give a just a quick model and explanation of what a headline is and how it is used as a text feature.   The students were given a rough draft paper and a piece of sentence strip for the final version.   They were able to share and try out their ideas with their teammates at their table.   When they were satisfied with their idea, they wrote and illustrated it on a sentence strip.  We collected and assembled their headlines to create a giant poster.   All together it shows a complete picture of the day, including poisonous dart frogs.  The posters record the students thinking and will help to remind them of what we learned.


Extend:

This routine worked beautifully as a way to synthesize all the learning that took place on our field trip to the Botanic Gardens.  Some students addressed small moments of the day and others capsulized the whole event in their headline.   The combination of all the Headlines truly gives a complete picture of the field trip.   It helped us to see and record the in depth learning that took place.    I will definitely use this routine over and over to capture the essences of learning events such as field trips, Junior Achievement, assemblies…

Challenge:

I originally tried this routine in October as a way to synthesis information gleaned from Scholastic News.    I was looking for a routine that we could use on a regular basis to get students to read, analyze and make connections to the information in our Weekly Scholastic News Articles.   The October issue was all about Christopher Columbus as an explorer.  The students enjoyed the routine and came up with a variety of thoughtful, clever and summarizing ideas.  It served as an introduction to the routine, but did not fully address what I was trying to accomplish with the Scholastic News Articles.   I decided use this routine could be used again, but for different purposes. 

1 comment:

  1. What a good idea to summarize their thinking from a field trip. I liked how you had a class conference before students created their own headlines. It looks like a great way to determine what was most important to them.

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