The North Star Musical Journey Website

Posted October 22nd, 2007 by Maribeth Bush

Hello, North Star friends!

I’ve heard that some of you are planning to produce a North Star Musical Journey performance at your school this year, so I want to make sure you’re aware of FableVision’s little “North Star Musical Journey” website, which you can find at http://www.fablevision.com/northstar/musical .

If you go to that website, click on the “Performances” button, and you’ll find an interactive map of many North Star Musical Performances that have taken place across the country, and even around the world.  There’s a little write-up about each performance (including two performances that took place at my school in Falmouth, Maine!).  I find it helpful to read about other peformances because it illustrates how simple, or how elaborate, a North Star Musical production can be, not to mention you might find some helpful ideas.  However, you’ll also see that each performance, from school to school, and from state to state, is very different and unique too - which is, of course, very “North Star!”

One final note: the map and list of performances you find on the “Performances” page doesn’t include ALL the North Star Musical Journey performances that have taken place to date.  If your school or community has performed a production of The North Star Musical Journey performance and it’s not listed on the NSMJ website, please post about it here in the “comments”, and FableVision will add it to the map!  I think the more we share, the more we inspire others… and it really is a wonderfully inspiring musical, regardless of how big or small your production.

Maribeth

Our North Star Wiki

Posted October 21st, 2007 by Kevin

Fellow Voyagers,

This is my first blog entry as a “writer” and an invitation to visit and post comments on my students’ wiki at http://navigation.pbwiki.com/ .

For several years, my students and I created and regularly updated a North Star themed website using Netscape Navigator that was effective…Yet certainly dated and time consuming. Each year, I spent a great deal of time teaching students how to understand HTML and where to save information on the computer used to publish the page.
Last year, a colleague shared the website Peanut Butter Wiki with me and helped set up my classroom site. Ever since, it has become integral aspect of my home-school communication and a great way to share my students’ work with the entire world.

Wiki is a Pacific Islander term meaning “quick” and setting up a classroom wiki can be as quick as making a peanut butter sandwich. Hence the name Peanut Butter Wiki (PB Wiki). What’s great about PB Wiki is that updates to the site can be made at any computer by anyone who has password privileges. My students and I now update the page at school and at home nearly every day, and parents see and read about our classroom’s journey whenever they wish.

Check out navigation.pbwiki.com or go to the site http://pbwiki.com and start your classroom site today.
Cheers,
Kevin

On the Journey

Posted October 21st, 2007 by TerryS

I was reading the North Star book to my fifth and sixth graders to prepare them for the production of “The North Star Musical” in December. After I finished the book, I said, “What kind of book ends with ‘The Beginning?” I was amazed that most of the kids really ‘got it.’ They talked about how the boy had just begun a journey and so it was better to say “The Beginning.”

I have read the book many times, this time I was struck by a thought…so I asked the kids, “If you thought of your life as a journey, with an important destination, would you do things differently?” Again, I was amazed by their thoughtful responses. Every kid said, “yes.” I could tell that a few of the kids were really struck by this thought. It was a wonderful teaching moment.

North Star Book - New Edition

Posted October 17th, 2007 by Paul Reynolds

FYI - Peter H. Reynolds is doing the final pass of the new art and text for the 10th anniversary edition of The North Star.  Stay tuned for more information - but we can promise you that this new printing is going to be spectacular.

Boston Globe is also doing a feature on Peter - and, we think, highlighting The North Star.  We’ll share when it comes out.

Cheers,

Paul

Bringing the world into the classroom

Posted September 25th, 2007 by Marli

I’ve heard a lot of teachers talk about how important “authentic tasks” are to real learning.  This is often lumped in with project-based learning, but this morning an article in the New York Times drove home for me the difference between the two.

Project-based learning, a beautiful thing in its own respect, requires active participation on the part of the learner, challenges the learner in new ways, often requires teamwork and outside materials, and generally evaluates student learning in a more complete way than the more traditional, multiple choice exams.

Authentic tasks can be the same, but not necessarily.  Cornelia Dean writes about “When Science Suddenly Mattered,” the time when America entered the space race and, consequently, educators began treating science as relevant and engaging.  No one made it a law, no one set down the rule, but the teachers knew this was suddenly important, they brought in the news, and the students jumped onboard.

Amazing what students can learn when we let them!

Finding Light in Darkness

Posted September 11th, 2007 by Maribeth Bush

north star girlToday, like millions of others, I reflect on September 11, 2001 and the incredible loss out country suffered that day.  Loss of so many lives, and the loss of a feeling security that most of us took for granted.  Working in a K-2 school, September 12, 2001 was also a very important one for us, as staff – sorting out how to help guide our little ones through such a tragedy, while trying to take care of each other, and ourselves. 

We held an emergency staff meeting the morning of September 12th, as I’m sure was held in just about every school across the United States.  We talked about our own feelings around the events, but then quickly moved on to how the attacks should be addressed with our students.  With students as young as those in our school, the most important approach is to keep the daily routine as “normal” as possible… “business as usual”.  Teachers and staff were told to acknowledge the tragedy if a student were to bring it up, but we weren’t to dwell, or have lengthy conversations about the events.  

lantern boyOf course, the adults… the staff… had much more of a problem dealing with the events than the students, but educators are amazing in how they can pull themselves together to be there first and foremost for their students (compartmentalization can be a wonderful defense mechanism!).   And working with children the day after such a horrible event was an incredible blessing…. because the children were too young to fully comprehend what had happened… the losses suffered… the fear imposed.  Working in a school, especially with young children, was a wonderful, glorious distraction… yet with an important purpose.  It also reaffirmed my “north star” – my “knowing” that I was doing exactly what I was meant to do, and that I was in the place I was meant to be.

The most clear memory I have of that “day after” was of a second grade student I passed in the hallway that day.  His mouth was circled with white… it looked like frosting, so I asked him if his class was celebrating someone’s birthday… if he was eating a cupcake.  He responded, with the biggest, happiest, most excited grin, “No!  We’re doing science!”  Apparently his teacher was moving forward with her lesson plans – without skipping a beat - a wonderfully constructive science project involving cake frosting.      

That moment, with that student, was such a bright light during such a dark, gloomy, sad time – and it was a wonderful reminder that live goes on, that it was still okay to be excited about life and learning, and that there’s a lot of important work we all have to do as we help students learn, and grow, and “be” this world that is both wonderful, and often uncertain. 

Adding color to a black and white world

Posted September 5th, 2007 by Marli

It’s September!  Growing up in the Northeast, I associate September with autumn leaves, apple picking, and school starting.  And every year I think of this story:

 The little boy came into school, and the teacher showed him where to sit.  She taught him where to put his bag, and how to keep still when she spoke.  She reminded him that grass is always green, or maybe brown, but never pink or blue.  For five years he learned where to sit, how to listen, when to write, and what colors to use.  The little boy grew up.

One September the boy (who was no longer so little) walked into a new classroom.  The teacher, he had heard, was crazy.  He put his bag in the cubby space, sat down at his desk with his feet forward, and arranged his pencils in their box.  The teacher came into the room.

“Today we are drawing flowers,” she said.  The class got to work, taking out paper and crayons, each drawing a row of perfect flowers.  The teacher walked around, watching, encouraging.  She stopped by the boy’s desk - “you haven’t begun yet.  Are you still thinking about your flowers?”  The boy shook his head.

“I have a question,” he said softly.  The teacher nodded.  “What color should my flower be?”  The teacher smiled.  “Whatever color you want,” she said.  “But,” asked the boy, “which color is right?”

Today’s Theme: Your North Star Inspiration

Posted August 30th, 2007 by Marli

Every teacher I know has a reason for becoming a teacher, and it generally relates to an educator who made an impact on him or her.  (Sometimes positive, sometimes negative…)

Who was your North Star inspiration?  Who made an impact on your life, and helped you realize teaching was for you?

A community of learners, a love of learning

Posted August 23rd, 2007 by Marli

I know I post a lot of articles, but finding North Star Schools in the news (even when they don’t call themselves North Star Schools) brightens my day.  I hope it gives all of you a dose of daily joy too!

 Of note in this article, about a small learner-centered school, based on cultivating a love of learning and catering to the creative and intellectual needs of the students, is:

“The community aspect is a huge part of our program,” Esch said. “They strengthen each other in different ways … There are so many advantages to the small school setting.”

Question of the day: of course small school settings are preferable, but what are some ways a larger school (which is often unavoidable) can create that community aspect?  Succes stories, anyone?

Welcome back to school!

Posted August 20th, 2007 by Marli

It’s almost the end of August, and those of you who haven’t started school yet are probably preparing!

Are you using the North Star Approach this fall?  Now’s the time to share your plans, or other sites where you find resources.  How did you, or how will you start off the year?

(In related news, here’s an interesting suggestion for how to develop a better budget to support field trips for hands-on learning experiences!)