- You can post these in your real or virtual classroom
- You can put the on a jamboard and have people circle what they feel like
- You can put it into a google form and ask kids to say how they're doing so you can share results anonymously and show them that everyone is somewhere different each day, but you can capture what they say in case you need to follow up
- You can have kids discuss in small groups
- You can use it with each other in staff meetings!
- etc. etc.
Thursday, September 24, 2020
SEL Checkin Slides
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
Apps in Self Service

We will probably have other ways to organize or communicate this info as the year goes on, and this list is in the process of being updated, but I wanted to get this to you now so that you have something to refer to easily. I know it's confusing to scan the list of apps without a little more info about some of them!
2020 Doodle For Google Winner
| 2020 Winning Doodle |
BPL Teen Book Club

Beverly Public Library's Teen Book Club: A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro
Join us for a discussion of A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro.
A Study in Charlotte is available as an eBook on hoopla– no wait!
Participants must register with their school email address. An invitation will be sent to participants the morning of the event.
Google Meet & Classroom Updates
- Blur or replace backgrounds so everyone feels more comfortable during distance-learning classes. Note: Admins can disable custom backgrounds as needed.
- Attendance tracking to see and track which students attended virtual class (G Suite Enterprise for Education)
- Breakout rooms so educators can split classes into simultaneous small group discussions (G Suite Enterprise for Education)
- Hand-raising to help you identify students who may need help or have a question
- Q&A features to provide a way for students to ask questions without disrupting the flow of the class discussion or lesson, and polling to engage students to share their voice (G Suite Enterprise for Education)
Monday, September 21, 2020
Letters About Literature
Letters are read in three grade-level categories:
Level II: Grades 7 and 8
Level III: Grades 9 through 12
One “top honor” writer and up to nine additional honors writers (depending on the number of submissions per category) are named in each level. The top honor writer receives a $200 cash award. All honors writers receive $25 book gift cards.
More details and eligibility is here.
The entry form will be available here Oct. 1 - submissions close January 15, 2021.
Letters About Literature Open Oct 1-Jan 15
Letters are read in three grade-level categories:
- Level I: Grades 4 through 6
- Level II: Grades 7 and 8
- Level III: Grades 9 through 12
More details and eligibility is here.
The entry form will be available here Oct. 1 - submissions close January 15, 2021.
Managing Google Classroom Notifications
In case you are baffled or overwhelmed by Google Classroom notifications, I have a couple of resources I made last spring about them, with info for parents, students, and for teachers. The options and interfaces are different for each. There may have been some slight updates to the options but it should be pretty much the same.
Sunday, September 20, 2020
RBG for BMS
Friday, September 18, 2020
Why you should read this out loud
MacLeod has named this phenomenon the “production effect”. It means that producing written words – that’s to say, reading them out loud – improves our memory of them.
Read this article in BBC Future: Why you should read this out loud
Denise Lydon also recommends: Slides and ladders: The importance of fluency with older readers during COVID-19
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
BrainPOP
In the meantime, you can email me to ask for the username and password. You can post it in a Google Classroom but make sure it doesn't get posted on any publicly available pages because that's a violation of our terms of service.
I'll give you some more information about ways you can use BrainPOP beside just having the kids watch the movies and access the quizzes, but in the meantime, those are pretty useful by themselves.
Monday, September 14, 2020
Kamilah Drummond and Summer Stories
I just want to highlight this because it's substantially different from past "Summer Reading." It's not just a renaming; Barb Fecteau (BHS librarian) and I conceived of Summer Stories as substantial re-branding and a new direction.
Students were asked to engage in different types of stories this summer, making at least one selection from each of two choice boards. One board is about consuming story (reading, watching, listening) and one is about connecting with others about story through sharing and creating. Students could do the first part by reading a chapter book, but there were many other choices, and the most important part, to me, was about the connecting -- connecting with one's own stories and knowledge, and connecting with other people, both in and outside our community. Just one way some people did this was by sharing stories they'd discovered on this padlet.
ELA teachers will be developing their own activities and/or assignments this fall to leverage Summer Stories. There will not be one day when this all happens, and the assignments will not be given to me to grade this year, although I am more than happy to collaborate with teachers as it works for them and their classes.
If anyone has any questions, please check the Summer Stories website or ask me.
Friday, September 11, 2020
eBook Options for This Year
- Commonwealth ebooks through Sora
- All Access eBooks
- Public Library CONNECT
- Hoopla through BPL
- Epic!
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Mask Info for Families
Jodi Elder and the Health Office shared this with me today to post online as well - some of you may want to include it with info going home.
A Family's Guide to Safely Wearing Masks at SchoolGetting iPads Ready for the School Year
You can walk through the step-by-step presentation, or access the information in a 2-page checklist, whichever works best for you!
We strongly recommend that you have your 6th to 8th grader do these steps soon so you know that they are ready to get online the first day of school.
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
The weird physics of upside down buoyancy
Discover article a about it:
These Tiny Boats Can Float Upside Down on Levitating Liquid
It might look like a magic trick, or an optical illusion of sorts. But no, your eyes don’t deceive you — that little boat you see above does, indeed, float upside down.
A good magician doesn’t reveal their tricks. Scientists, however, do the exact opposite. A team of researchers in France detail this phenomenon in a new study published today in Nature, showing how vigorously shaking a container full of silicone oil or glycerol can create a levitating pocket of liquid that allows these small boats to float upside down.
“These phenomena are so counter-intuitive,” says Emmanuel Fort, a coauthor on the study. “People who came to see the experiment in the lab thought it was a trick or thought it was science fiction,” like the levitating pools in the movie Tomorrowland. And the researchers themselves were also taken aback by the sheer strangeness of it all. Fort, a professor at ESPCI Paris and a researcher at the Langevin Institute, describes the research as “a succession of surprises and astonishment.”
Tuesday, September 8, 2020
Postcard Day & Postcrossing
Find out more about it here https://worldpostcardday.com/
Would you like your students to write and send postcards for World Postcard Day? I would like to help:
- Provide a lesson plan & resources (see attached from World Postcard Day website)
- Provide customized materials, screencasts, or come visit your class to show my postcard collection, etc. - just ask!
- Put out a call to families to ask them to donate postcards they may have around the house
- Order some of this year's World Postcard Day postcard to be custom printed (see design below) - cost is about 50 cents/card for small numbers (upt to 250) and less per unit for more cards.
Monday, August 31, 2020
The BMS Library is Here for You!
If you have any trouble viewing this graphic, I've also attached it as a PDF.
Thursday, August 13, 2020
COVID-19 Healing Library for Youth
Hi all, I just wanted to highlight a resource we have on our Coronvirus/Youth Guide called The Healing Library. There are several kits on different difficult topics and I just looked at the COVID-19 kit and was really impressed. While intended to be distributed by public libraries I think this would be a valuable tool for schools as well, and an excellent way to collaborate as schools and public libraries navigate reopening. You can read more about the kits and download the materials here: https://www.thehealinglibraryus.com/
The kit is incredibly comprehensive and includes just about everything you need to share comfort and guidance with your community. You can go directly to the COVID kit here.
Monday, June 1, 2020
National Geographic Kahoots & Challenges
Explore the Kahoot! collection curated by the National Geographic Resource Library
For grades 5-12+, on subjects including Biology, Conservation, Earth Science, Geography, Social Studies, Ancient Civilizations
National Geographic has many more classroom resources: lesson plans, maps, and reference resources.
25 Modern French Text Slang and Chat Abbreviations
Maybe you speak French but don't know what "mdr", "stp", "askip" mean - here you go! 25 Modern French Tex...
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Listen to Five of the World’s Newest, Wildest Instruments - NY Times A Lego guitar and a “war tuba” are among the highlights of this year’s...
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Believe it or not, the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) has released a collection of songs aimed at youth 13-24 about safety that ...
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Free resources from the FDA for teachers, students, and parents to learn more about the dangers of vaping nicotine. Includes For teachers: ...

