documentation

  • How to Create a Documentation Panel Using Power Point

    I create all of my documentation panels using Microsoft Power Point, this might seem kind of strange, but I’ve found that it gives me the most freedom when moving and manipulating photos and text. I’m going to walk you through how I do it – and I don’t do tutorials because I always miss a photo or an important step, so it must be pretty easy if I’m doing the tutorial! I hope that my screenshots will make it easy for you to follow along, the first two steps are the most important, and the ones that I tend to forget, so if you can get these, the rest will…

  • Classroom Documentation – Know your audience

    I’ve spent the last couple of days talking about the basics of documentation; why it’s important, and different kinds of documentation.  Today I want to get a little deeper, so I’m going to talk about defining your audience and directing your documentation to the intended audience. When I post documentation I consider two distinct audiences; adults (parents, family members, lab students, school staff), and my students.  I do things very different for each audience, because they respond to different kinds of documentation. When I want to draw adults to documentation I place it at eye level for an adult.  I am more likely to create panels for adult viewing, because…

  • Types of Documentation

    Yesterday I talked about why documentation is so important in the classroom, so you know what it does, but it’s also important to get a grasp on what documentation is. The way that it has been best explained to me is that documentation tells the story of the children’s learning.  This means that anything that shows evidence of the learning process can be considered documentation. Documentation generally falls into two categories; Documentation Panels: These are professional works created by a teacher to showcase specific learning experiences.  They generally include photos taken by the teacher during the investigation and captions or a description of the experience.  Panels are created to be…

  • Documentation in the Preschool Classroom

    I love documentation! It’s kind of a silly thing to say, but as a teacher documentation is something that I will always and forever include in all of my classrooms.  There are a few different reasons for this; Documentation shares the story of the work that children are doing in the classroom. How often do you hear a parents remark that their children claim that they do nothing at school all day? The documentation that I have hanging in my classroom shows parents exactly what we’ve been working on, so that they can be sure that they’re children are doing a lot more than “nothing” all day.   Documentation gives…

  • Ideas for displaying children’s work

    It is pretty standard to display student work in the classroom, I could go on and on about the many different reasons that this is a great idea, but I think that we all get it, we want our students to be proud of the work that they do, and we want to show them that it has value. My goal has always been to display as much of my students’ work as possible, without wallpapering my walls in it. I want my classroom to look neat, and uncluttered, and I want displays to make sense and be aesthetically pleasing. Here are some examples of the ways that I have…