Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Learning and Understanding


I thought my reflection should be over what I have learned and seen my CT’s do this semester that will help me transition in my own classroom. How a teacher procedures work for their classroom set the environment for teaching.

 My CT hands out bell work at the door while greeting students. She told them at the beginning of the semester that every day they will start with bell work and once it is in their hand, they need to sit down and get started. I understand the importance of doing this for my student. It gives them something to focus on and keeps behavior where it should be. The students respond well to this and it becomes routine so they know what to expect. I use to think bell work was busy work but the way my CT uses bell work; it actually builds on writing skills. I am using it now that I have taken over all classes. I have also seen if a student misses class they have in their personal folders the makeup work The student will know where to achieve the missing work. This avoids that question, “Did I miss anything important?” This question makes me crazy as I am sure it does ever teacher. The students also use the same folder to see what the assignments are beforehand. As a student, I like to have the assignments before I know what I am going to learn. That way I can prepare myself for ideas on writing assignments. For a lot of student they may like knowing what the plain is so they can be organized, just as the teacher is.

Now…

 I still find some things difficult and am still cooping. One is the level students are expected to be at and where they actually are, and second getting responses in class discussion out of my shy kids. When I present a lesson I expect the students to be at level with things I believe they have practiced since middle school and they are not.  It concerns me that seniors are graduating not know basic language art skills. I will, however, retrace my steps, backup and model what the students need to know to understand the curriculum for that day. My second concern deals with classroom, discussion. I call on random students for response to class discussion so all students will respond at least once a week but my shy students will say one sentence and be done. I’ve tried rewards and everything but classroom discussion is not their thing. I am at the acceptance phase were I realize not everyone likes to talk and that why journals were invented. If anyone has any ideas to get more students involved in class room discussion I am all ears?

2 comments:

  1. I had a similiar problem at the beginning of this semester with students. There are a few modifications I have made to create better student discussions and lessens the work load for me. The first thing I did was to put them into small groups and discuss that way first. There are three to four kids per group which causes them to speak up and feel a bit more comfortable in sharing their opinion in a smaller group setting. The second thing I did was to tape number on their spots. Each table is numbered 1-4. This helps me because when we come back together as a whole class to discuss, I ask only the number fours to share, or possible number ones. It depends on what number you want that day. This also forces all students to take accountability and they know that they need to be able to answer whatever we are discussing because they wont know what number I will. (I don't tell them until we come back together for the class discussion.) It gets more students involved and take less time for them to decide who is going to speak. I hope this helps!

    Lauren

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  2. Encouraging student engagement and involvement, especially as a student teacher, can and is oftentimes a difficult issue, particularly when attempting to do so at the high school level. Something you can do, and which generally proves to be effective, is to assign student a grade based on whether or not they volunteer information during classroom discussion. Begin by having a class roster available, and as the kids volunteer information during open discussion, check their name off the roster. Students may not always respond well to verbal reprimands, but in most cases they will be extrinsically motivated by grades. But whatever you do end up doing, be sure to remind the students of your expectations at the start of each class. Better yet, present your expectations to the students both verbally and visually via a PowerPoint presentation. I hope this helps!

    Later!

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