This week on Monday we finished up all the student lesson plans. Everyone has got a chance to teach the class so we have got to watch about twelve other classmates teach. Through this process I have observed ways of teaching that I will bring into my future classroom and also some things I saw that were ineffective and I will not bring into my future classroom. From gym class to high school math, there is always something to take away from the lesson plans.
Today we had the opportunity to get taught by Sarah. This was the best experience I have had so far in Education 250. I am very happy that Sarah was able to come in and present a lesson plan to our class. I learned a lot from her teaching. She was very calm, confident, fluid and know her content. I loved that she started her lesson out with a video. This was a way to grab our attention and get us focused and interested in her lesson. She did a great job of explaining her lesson and getting the students involved. She called on students to answer questions, which kept us all involved and paying attention so if she called on us we knew what she was talking about. When a student asked a question she did not get nervous and not know what to say, but she immediately came up with an example and a way to explain the answer to her student. When her students were talking during her lesson, she didn't yell at them or stop what she was doing. She simply either just said "I don't talk when y'all are talking" or "please pay attention" and continued with her lesson.
From watching Sarah present, I know that in my future classroom I want to be as calm and fluid in teaching as she was. I want to start my lesson off everyday with a hook that will grab my students attention like presenting a video off of youtube everyday that relates to my lesson. I also plan to start each lesson with "today I am....So I can.." which she did in her lesson as well.
As time goes on and we write more and more lesson plans, they will become better each time. Watching peoples' lessons plans and writing our own will make us experts by the time we have to actually write them for our classes. I plan to work hard and improve each of my lesson plans so I can have the best plans possible so my students will enjoy learning and want to be in my classroom!
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Lesson plans round two
This week on Monday we finished up with lesson plans. This was a great opportunity and experience to be able to present our own, but also listen to our other classmates present. You can learn something different from each classmate, whether it is something that you want to do in your future plans or something that you do not want to do.
I am so glad that we got to hear a lesson plan today from a student that is getting ready to be a teacher. She has had lots of experience with lesson plans so that gave us a better idea of how it will get easier and what our lessons should look like in a couple years from now. Maddie used all of the stuff that we have learned so far in Education 250. She did a great job of using TPACK. She used her content knowledge, pedagogy, which is teaching in great ways and technology. She did not use technology to teach her whole lesson, she just used it to help her teach with the content knowledge she already had. This is something I need to work on because as we all know, I am not the brightest when it comes to technology. However it is the 21st century so I do need to learn how to incorporate technology into my lesson plans.
To incorporate technology in my lesson plans, I can use games as some of my other classmates have done in their lesson plans or I can also just use the smart board to write on and have my students get involved as Maddie did today as a good visual.
I am also very happy that we got to read and watch a personal philosophy from a future student who is now a teacher. This helped me out with my philosophy a lot because I had a lot of corrections to make and wasn't sure exactly how it was supposed to be written.
Hearing from older education students and seeing their work really helps out a lot and gives me a better perspective on what teaching is going to look like for me!
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Teacher or student?
Today I got my first experience actually teaching a lesson plan to the class. Although it wasn't actual second graders, Brittany did a GREAT job acting like one haha! Writing the lesson plan, rewriting the lesson plan, rewriting it again and preparing for it was definitely stressful. I was really nervous about teaching the class until I actually got in front of them, and then it wasn't too bad.
I do think that I was prepared for my lesson and planned my time well. However next time after I read the story out loud, instead of having the students read the story again, I will just have them get in groups and talk about it and answer the questions to save time and to not put students that are not good readers on the spot. I thought it was great that Brittany acted as a child that didn't understand anything because it made me have to think about it and explain it in more details like I will eventually have to do with my real class some day.
I am glad that we get to watch other classmates lessons because I think it will help us out and give us ideas for future lesson plans. I really liked Colleen's lesson plan and thought she made it very easy for students to understand. She was talking about rounding and used a hill with 0-4 on one side and 5-9 on the other. If I ever have to teach rounding to my students, I will most likely use her example because I think the students will really understand how to round being taught that way.
Today we also talked about relevancy and how we need to make our lessons, topics, and materials relevant so they students will be more interested and want to learn. For me what I will have to do is be more caught up on world events and what is happening around me, especially within education. If students ask me questions, I want to be able to relate to them and be able to help them understand how the world events relate to what they are being taught so they have a purpose for learning.
Lastly, we learned about the four C's of common core. Creativity, Collaboration, Communication, and Critical thinking. We need to structure our lesson around these four words. We need to be able to let our students communicate with one another so they can use critical thinking and collaborate their ideas to come up with a final product or end results that is creative. If all of these are used in a lesson, it will most likely turn out to be a successful lesson that they students enjoy.
I do think that I was prepared for my lesson and planned my time well. However next time after I read the story out loud, instead of having the students read the story again, I will just have them get in groups and talk about it and answer the questions to save time and to not put students that are not good readers on the spot. I thought it was great that Brittany acted as a child that didn't understand anything because it made me have to think about it and explain it in more details like I will eventually have to do with my real class some day.
I am glad that we get to watch other classmates lessons because I think it will help us out and give us ideas for future lesson plans. I really liked Colleen's lesson plan and thought she made it very easy for students to understand. She was talking about rounding and used a hill with 0-4 on one side and 5-9 on the other. If I ever have to teach rounding to my students, I will most likely use her example because I think the students will really understand how to round being taught that way.
Today we also talked about relevancy and how we need to make our lessons, topics, and materials relevant so they students will be more interested and want to learn. For me what I will have to do is be more caught up on world events and what is happening around me, especially within education. If students ask me questions, I want to be able to relate to them and be able to help them understand how the world events relate to what they are being taught so they have a purpose for learning.
Lastly, we learned about the four C's of common core. Creativity, Collaboration, Communication, and Critical thinking. We need to structure our lesson around these four words. We need to be able to let our students communicate with one another so they can use critical thinking and collaborate their ideas to come up with a final product or end results that is creative. If all of these are used in a lesson, it will most likely turn out to be a successful lesson that they students enjoy.
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
"The average child no longer exists"
"The average child no longer exists" was the phrase that stuck with me from today's class. Today reality of 2015 definitely set in and opened my eyes a lot. To be honest, when I think of diversity I usually just think of race and culture. Today we dug in deep and listed about twenty different things that represented diversity. In today's age there are a lot more factors that you have to think about and that will effect the way a child learns.
After watching the video of a cop taking down a student in high school and hearing stories from Dr. Parker about what he has had to do to restrain his students, made me a little bit nervous. However I am glad I am hearing about this ahead of time before I actually become a teacher. I will not be teaching middle or high school, but with technology, elementary aged kids are starting to grow up and become more mature earlier on so I do need to be prepared for anything.
The discussion we had in class really made me think about what I need to do in my future classes. I am going to make sure I fully understand my students, their learning styles, social status, home life, learning or emotional disabilities and everything else I need to know to make sure they have a positive, uplifting and stable learning environment to work in and do not feel like they are not wanted or that they are not able to learn in my classroom. I understand that I will not be able to treat all my students the same way or give them all the same assignments because of the very reason of diversity.
Although this seems like it will be a lot of work to have to make different lesson plans and teach differently to each student, this is what teaching looks like in todays day and age. I am nervous but definitely excited to become a teacher and have my own classroom!
After watching the video of a cop taking down a student in high school and hearing stories from Dr. Parker about what he has had to do to restrain his students, made me a little bit nervous. However I am glad I am hearing about this ahead of time before I actually become a teacher. I will not be teaching middle or high school, but with technology, elementary aged kids are starting to grow up and become more mature earlier on so I do need to be prepared for anything.
The discussion we had in class really made me think about what I need to do in my future classes. I am going to make sure I fully understand my students, their learning styles, social status, home life, learning or emotional disabilities and everything else I need to know to make sure they have a positive, uplifting and stable learning environment to work in and do not feel like they are not wanted or that they are not able to learn in my classroom. I understand that I will not be able to treat all my students the same way or give them all the same assignments because of the very reason of diversity.
Although this seems like it will be a lot of work to have to make different lesson plans and teach differently to each student, this is what teaching looks like in todays day and age. I am nervous but definitely excited to become a teacher and have my own classroom!
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
5 weeks left....
Wow, it seems like it was just the first day of class, and now we only have 5 more weeks left in the semester, which is about 10 more classes. That does not seem possible! I actually feel more overwhelmed now than I have ever felt before. With the amount of projects we are working on in this class, on top of all of our other classes work and tests to study for, on top of lacrosse and on top of my job, I am at my max capacity. Like I have said before, I will say it again, this is just preparing us for what teaching is going to be like.
Today in class we worked on how to prepare, and what steps need to be taken in order to effectively plan a lesson. Although it took us about the full two hours to get it down, I think it is important that we did spend that much time on it. If we can understand what it takes to have our students be successful, we will be great teachers. Like Dr. Clark said today, too many teachers today do not take the right, effective steps to plan a lesson and that is why we have such a huge gap with student learning today.
What I learned today is that it is better to take a longer time to go over the information students are not learning, and break into small groups, instead of just moving on with the next part of the lesson if students still do not get the first part. This step happens in the teacher input. The teacher needs to give a formative assessment and evaluate what each students knows then move on from there. One of two directions will take place. Either the teacher can continue with the lesson if each student understands, or the teacher may need to review in a different way than they did before if the students are still not understanding the information. A lot of the times I like to be on a schedule and make sure I get things done in order and on time, so this is something I will need to work on. I need to realize that what I plan is not always going to happen, or happen on time and I have to learn to accept that.
Another thing that shocked me today was when we took a calculator and found out that if you procrastinate or waste even just 5 minutes in the beginning or end of class, if you multiply that by the number of school days there are that means you are loosing 16 days. 16 days is a lot and a whole lot can be taught in that wasted time. In my future class, in order to prevent that wasted time, I think it would be effective if I set the standard of as soon as my students walk into the classroom, they have that 5 minutes of usually wasted time to complete the problems or review that is on the board in their notebooks. This will allow me to diagnose the students knowledge, give them review and to re-jog their memory from the day before, and prevent that wasted time. If I do this I think it will give the students less time to procrastinate and more time to learn!
Today in class we worked on how to prepare, and what steps need to be taken in order to effectively plan a lesson. Although it took us about the full two hours to get it down, I think it is important that we did spend that much time on it. If we can understand what it takes to have our students be successful, we will be great teachers. Like Dr. Clark said today, too many teachers today do not take the right, effective steps to plan a lesson and that is why we have such a huge gap with student learning today.
What I learned today is that it is better to take a longer time to go over the information students are not learning, and break into small groups, instead of just moving on with the next part of the lesson if students still do not get the first part. This step happens in the teacher input. The teacher needs to give a formative assessment and evaluate what each students knows then move on from there. One of two directions will take place. Either the teacher can continue with the lesson if each student understands, or the teacher may need to review in a different way than they did before if the students are still not understanding the information. A lot of the times I like to be on a schedule and make sure I get things done in order and on time, so this is something I will need to work on. I need to realize that what I plan is not always going to happen, or happen on time and I have to learn to accept that.
Another thing that shocked me today was when we took a calculator and found out that if you procrastinate or waste even just 5 minutes in the beginning or end of class, if you multiply that by the number of school days there are that means you are loosing 16 days. 16 days is a lot and a whole lot can be taught in that wasted time. In my future class, in order to prevent that wasted time, I think it would be effective if I set the standard of as soon as my students walk into the classroom, they have that 5 minutes of usually wasted time to complete the problems or review that is on the board in their notebooks. This will allow me to diagnose the students knowledge, give them review and to re-jog their memory from the day before, and prevent that wasted time. If I do this I think it will give the students less time to procrastinate and more time to learn!
Monday, October 12, 2015
Reassurance that I do not want to teach high school
Today we went to Crest High School, and lets just say it was interesting. I was in a 9th grade math class and the students definitely still acted like they were in middle school. There was one girl in particular that kept talking back to the teacher and giving attitude, but the teacher was also giving it right back to her. The students in 9th grade are at an awkward stage in their life. They do not need to be babied but they also do not act like adults. There were some students who were completely fine but then some who were acting up.
One thing I noticed that was on the board was for each day of the week the teacher had goals set out for each lesson. It said I CAN.... then whatever they were supposed to learn for that day and if they could do whatever the teacher had on the board, that means they understood the lesson. I thought that was really cool so the students knew what the goal of each lesson was. This is definitely something that I am going to do when I am a teacher because I think it is helpful for both the teacher and the students. The teacher writes out what they want the students to understand and then they will know if each student understands the lesson if they are able to do what is on the board. It also shows the students what they need to get out of each lesson, which is very helpful.
This teacher taught the lesson and they did practice problems as a class in the beginning. She had different students answering each question and telling how they did each problem. Once they spent some time on the lesson, the teacher gave them the last thirty minutes of class to do an in-class assignment that was going to be turned in and graded. I think this is a great way to see if the students understand the lesson because they just had practice then they had about 10 problems to do individually and hand in. I am also going to use this method because I think it is an effective way of both teaching and learning. It gives the students an opportunity to first learn and review the lesson, then to show what they know individually. It is also beneficial for the teacher because they get a chance to evaluate how each student is doing personally.
One thing that I did not like that the teacher did was when she was teaching the lesson she was sitting in the back of the room at her desk writing out the problems that they projected to the front of the classroom. I did not like that the teacher was in the back of the classroom because from personal experience I learn better when the teacher is up front so I can watch exactly what she is doing and it keeps me more focused. Students were dozing off and closing their eyes but the teacher couldn't tell because she was in the back of the classroom. When I am a teacher I will definitely be teaching from the front of the classroom.
I am glad that we got to experience all three levels of education. This last trip has definitely reassured me that I do not want to teach high school. I think K-6 will be the best fit for me because I love working with younger kids!
One thing I noticed that was on the board was for each day of the week the teacher had goals set out for each lesson. It said I CAN.... then whatever they were supposed to learn for that day and if they could do whatever the teacher had on the board, that means they understood the lesson. I thought that was really cool so the students knew what the goal of each lesson was. This is definitely something that I am going to do when I am a teacher because I think it is helpful for both the teacher and the students. The teacher writes out what they want the students to understand and then they will know if each student understands the lesson if they are able to do what is on the board. It also shows the students what they need to get out of each lesson, which is very helpful.
This teacher taught the lesson and they did practice problems as a class in the beginning. She had different students answering each question and telling how they did each problem. Once they spent some time on the lesson, the teacher gave them the last thirty minutes of class to do an in-class assignment that was going to be turned in and graded. I think this is a great way to see if the students understand the lesson because they just had practice then they had about 10 problems to do individually and hand in. I am also going to use this method because I think it is an effective way of both teaching and learning. It gives the students an opportunity to first learn and review the lesson, then to show what they know individually. It is also beneficial for the teacher because they get a chance to evaluate how each student is doing personally.
One thing that I did not like that the teacher did was when she was teaching the lesson she was sitting in the back of the room at her desk writing out the problems that they projected to the front of the classroom. I did not like that the teacher was in the back of the classroom because from personal experience I learn better when the teacher is up front so I can watch exactly what she is doing and it keeps me more focused. Students were dozing off and closing their eyes but the teacher couldn't tell because she was in the back of the classroom. When I am a teacher I will definitely be teaching from the front of the classroom.
I am glad that we got to experience all three levels of education. This last trip has definitely reassured me that I do not want to teach high school. I think K-6 will be the best fit for me because I love working with younger kids!
Monday, October 5, 2015
Middle School Observation
Today we were able to go to Crest Middle School and observe a sixth grade classroom. I have always had my mind set on teaching grades K-2, but today made me realize maybe 4th or 5th or 6th grade would not be so bad. I would definitely not want to go any older than 6th grade though.
There were a couple things that shocked me while observing. First, in our education class we talk so much about how all these schools are up with their technology and have laptops, smart boards and all the latest technology. However, this was not the case. This classroom did not even have a smart board. They only had an overhead projector. I talked to an assistant that was in the classroom and asked about it and she said that only 2 classrooms in the building have smart boards and that the technology is too expensive and their budget doesn't cover it. I was also surprised that in 6th grade they were not doing the common core math. They were still doing the standard algorithm method. The second grade classroom I observed last week was even doing the new common core ways of adding and subtracting but the 6th graders were not, so I was a little confused by that.
I was happy to see that the teacher really got her students involved. While they were doing their math warm-up she was walking around the classroom observing what the students were doing so she could get a better understanding if they were understanding how to do the problems or not. Then when they were reviewing the problems she called on the students to answer them and explain how they got their answer. There was a certain few students that were always raising their hands, but she did a good job on calling on the students who did not have their hands raised so she could see if they knew how to do it as well. After this the students broke up into partners and did a scavenger hunt around the classroom. I though this was a great idea because the kids had just got back from lunch and it was their last academic block of the day so they did not want to just sit there and do work out of the book. They had to go around the room and solve each problem on the cards around the room. During this time the students were able to ask the teacher questions about the problems or if they did not understand something she was explaining it to them.
I thought it was a great experience to be able to go to a middle school classroom. I am excited to observe the high school classroom next week!
There were a couple things that shocked me while observing. First, in our education class we talk so much about how all these schools are up with their technology and have laptops, smart boards and all the latest technology. However, this was not the case. This classroom did not even have a smart board. They only had an overhead projector. I talked to an assistant that was in the classroom and asked about it and she said that only 2 classrooms in the building have smart boards and that the technology is too expensive and their budget doesn't cover it. I was also surprised that in 6th grade they were not doing the common core math. They were still doing the standard algorithm method. The second grade classroom I observed last week was even doing the new common core ways of adding and subtracting but the 6th graders were not, so I was a little confused by that.
I was happy to see that the teacher really got her students involved. While they were doing their math warm-up she was walking around the classroom observing what the students were doing so she could get a better understanding if they were understanding how to do the problems or not. Then when they were reviewing the problems she called on the students to answer them and explain how they got their answer. There was a certain few students that were always raising their hands, but she did a good job on calling on the students who did not have their hands raised so she could see if they knew how to do it as well. After this the students broke up into partners and did a scavenger hunt around the classroom. I though this was a great idea because the kids had just got back from lunch and it was their last academic block of the day so they did not want to just sit there and do work out of the book. They had to go around the room and solve each problem on the cards around the room. During this time the students were able to ask the teacher questions about the problems or if they did not understand something she was explaining it to them.
I thought it was a great experience to be able to go to a middle school classroom. I am excited to observe the high school classroom next week!
Monday, September 28, 2015
First taste of the real thing
Today we went to Boiling Springs Elementary School to observe a second grade classroom for the first time. We have spent the past month talking about and hearing about what our lives are going to be like as teachers and what we are going to have to do. Today we got to see a glimpse of what we will actually be doing and what it looks like to be a teacher in a classroom.
When we first got into the classroom the kids were just switching classes and getting ready for math. As the students were coming in and getting settled, I noticed that some kids were fooling around, taking a long time to get ready for class and didn't have all their materials out that they needed. One girl was in her seat, had her note book and pencil out and was ready to go. I liked how the teacher noticed it and said "kaylen (not really her name) thank you for being prepared and ready to go, you can go get a piece of candy out of the bin; guys you do this every day, you know what you need out on your desk, why can't you all be like kaylen." The teacher had a bin of candy that was sitting on her desk that she gave to kids when they did something good. I think this is a great way to reward a student. This will motivate the students to work hard, pay attention, and cooperate. This was also praising the student who was ready to go and instead of yelling at the kids that were not prepared, she just asked why can't you all be like kaylen who is prepared and ready to go.
When the teacher was teaching the math lesson, she first did review problems and everyone was just answering out loud. Next she would write down a problem and say okay now you solve this on your own and then she would walk around the class to see how the students were doing. Next she would go back to her desk and call on people to help explain how they got the answer. I really liked how she did this and it really showed how she is applying the common core because not only is she teaching her students but she's reviewing so it re-jogs their memory and then she gives them problems to do alone and walks around the classroom so she can see how each of them are doing, not just as a class, but how they are personally doing.
The last thing they did was split into three groups. One group was playing math games on the iPods, one was playing a card game, and the other was working in a group with her. She had a small group setting so she could really see who was understanding it and who wasn't. This gives her more time to work individually with each student and allows her to help the students who need more work than others.
I was really surprised by how they actually used the iPods to play math games on them and they knew exactly what they were doing. Maybe all this talk about technology is actually real :/ Another thing I found crazy is that the math the students are learning now, is what we are learning in our math class right now. It confuses me so I can't imagine how confused the second graders must be especially since they learned a whole different way of adding and subtracting last year.
This was a really good experience and I am glad we got to see how a teacher runs her classroom with the common core. I am really excited to see how the middle school and high schools visits go!
When we first got into the classroom the kids were just switching classes and getting ready for math. As the students were coming in and getting settled, I noticed that some kids were fooling around, taking a long time to get ready for class and didn't have all their materials out that they needed. One girl was in her seat, had her note book and pencil out and was ready to go. I liked how the teacher noticed it and said "kaylen (not really her name) thank you for being prepared and ready to go, you can go get a piece of candy out of the bin; guys you do this every day, you know what you need out on your desk, why can't you all be like kaylen." The teacher had a bin of candy that was sitting on her desk that she gave to kids when they did something good. I think this is a great way to reward a student. This will motivate the students to work hard, pay attention, and cooperate. This was also praising the student who was ready to go and instead of yelling at the kids that were not prepared, she just asked why can't you all be like kaylen who is prepared and ready to go.
When the teacher was teaching the math lesson, she first did review problems and everyone was just answering out loud. Next she would write down a problem and say okay now you solve this on your own and then she would walk around the class to see how the students were doing. Next she would go back to her desk and call on people to help explain how they got the answer. I really liked how she did this and it really showed how she is applying the common core because not only is she teaching her students but she's reviewing so it re-jogs their memory and then she gives them problems to do alone and walks around the classroom so she can see how each of them are doing, not just as a class, but how they are personally doing.
The last thing they did was split into three groups. One group was playing math games on the iPods, one was playing a card game, and the other was working in a group with her. She had a small group setting so she could really see who was understanding it and who wasn't. This gives her more time to work individually with each student and allows her to help the students who need more work than others.
I was really surprised by how they actually used the iPods to play math games on them and they knew exactly what they were doing. Maybe all this talk about technology is actually real :/ Another thing I found crazy is that the math the students are learning now, is what we are learning in our math class right now. It confuses me so I can't imagine how confused the second graders must be especially since they learned a whole different way of adding and subtracting last year.
This was a really good experience and I am glad we got to see how a teacher runs her classroom with the common core. I am really excited to see how the middle school and high schools visits go!
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Jumping In
This week we have been talking about and getting prepared to go into the school districts and talking about what student teaching looks like. When Dr. Clark was telling us about her student teaching schedule, not going to lie I was a little overwhelmed trying to take in all of this information. When she told us her work days were from 6-5 then had to grade papers and plan lessons for the rest of the night, reality set in really fast. As I was sitting in class trying to take it in I was starting to stress out.
After class I started to process the information we had just been told and realized that this is what my teaching career will look like in the future. I am going to have to keep track of about 25 students, grade all their work, attend to each of their needs, and give them each the individual teaching they need. Although it is a lot of work and very overwhelming since we do have other classes and work to get done, it is just preparing us for the future.
I am very interested in and excited to go to the schools for the next three weeks to observe different classes. I am excited to see how different teachers teach and their styles of teaching. Hopefully after observing different teachers, I can get a better idea of the ways I want to teach and run my classroom. I can pull different ideas from each teacher that I like and use them for when I am a teacher. I think this will be very beneficial and look forward to the next couple weeks of class!
After class I started to process the information we had just been told and realized that this is what my teaching career will look like in the future. I am going to have to keep track of about 25 students, grade all their work, attend to each of their needs, and give them each the individual teaching they need. Although it is a lot of work and very overwhelming since we do have other classes and work to get done, it is just preparing us for the future.
I am very interested in and excited to go to the schools for the next three weeks to observe different classes. I am excited to see how different teachers teach and their styles of teaching. Hopefully after observing different teachers, I can get a better idea of the ways I want to teach and run my classroom. I can pull different ideas from each teacher that I like and use them for when I am a teacher. I think this will be very beneficial and look forward to the next couple weeks of class!
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Grades
The past two classes we have had some very deep conversations. Conversations that get you thinking what have you actually learned the past 15 years in school? To be honest there is not much I can say I have truly learned from school. As we talked about in class today, in today's society people are more concerned about grades than about actually learning the information and it is actually sad. I am 100 percent guilty of it too because that is what we have been taught our whole lives. Learn a unit get tested on it, learn another unit get tested on it. See how many facts you can cram into your brain for that one hour you have the test, then forget everything you learned as soon as you walk out of the room. If you didn't get a "good grade" you're "not smart or you didn't try hard enough" according to society. In reality that is not the case at all.
I believe that everyone learns differently and just because you didn't get an A on a test does not by any means mean that you are dumb or not smart. Tests aren't for everybody and that is not the way students should be getting assessed on and decided if they are smart or not. Also in class today Dr. Parker gave a very good example about homework. His students one year made A's on their homework assignments but then all made around the C range for in-class assignments. That right there is a perfect example. Just because you made an A on your homework does not mean you understand the material because you could be getting help from a parent, friend, or the internet. In order to truly test a student I believe you have to observe them, understand them, question them and make them explain to you how and why they came to the conclusions they came to.
The TPACK model is also another very great piece of information I learned in class today that I think will definitely help me in my future classrooms. This model consists of a teacher using technology, content, and pedagogy(which is knowing how to teach). These three aspects combined together will make a great teacher. Using just one or even two of these will not result in good, successful teaching, because you need all three to truly teach your students in a way that is helpful to them and in a way they can understand.
Lastly something that stuck with me and I think I will actually use in my future classrooms is the saying Dr. Parker shared with us today. "Today I am...So I can...I know I understand it when..." This is great and I definitely think it will help you to know what you as a teacher have to teach and what you want your students to get from the lesson and it will give the students a better understanding of what they are supposed to be learning from the lesson.
I believe that everyone learns differently and just because you didn't get an A on a test does not by any means mean that you are dumb or not smart. Tests aren't for everybody and that is not the way students should be getting assessed on and decided if they are smart or not. Also in class today Dr. Parker gave a very good example about homework. His students one year made A's on their homework assignments but then all made around the C range for in-class assignments. That right there is a perfect example. Just because you made an A on your homework does not mean you understand the material because you could be getting help from a parent, friend, or the internet. In order to truly test a student I believe you have to observe them, understand them, question them and make them explain to you how and why they came to the conclusions they came to.
The TPACK model is also another very great piece of information I learned in class today that I think will definitely help me in my future classrooms. This model consists of a teacher using technology, content, and pedagogy(which is knowing how to teach). These three aspects combined together will make a great teacher. Using just one or even two of these will not result in good, successful teaching, because you need all three to truly teach your students in a way that is helpful to them and in a way they can understand.
Lastly something that stuck with me and I think I will actually use in my future classrooms is the saying Dr. Parker shared with us today. "Today I am...So I can...I know I understand it when..." This is great and I definitely think it will help you to know what you as a teacher have to teach and what you want your students to get from the lesson and it will give the students a better understanding of what they are supposed to be learning from the lesson.
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Brain explosion
Well I think its pretty safe to say that I still have a headache and my head is still about to explode with all the information I learned today. Who knew that a kindergartener would know how to work an iPad, let alone own their own!! That is soooo crazy to me and I can not wrap my head around it. How about the fact that I was talking about having kids come up to the smart board and write out problems and Dr. Parker says "ohh no they all have their own iPads they can just write on them and click a button and have their work show up on the screen for everyone to see." Oh okay well theres that. I don't even know how to do that so it blows my mind that a 6 year old knows how to. Or how about that some middle schoolers aren't even going to school anymore, they are just doing all online work and online chats with their teachers. Now professors are having video chats instead of having actual meetings. PE can now be taken online??? Can it possibly get any worse?? CRAZY CRAZY CRAZY!!!!
Now to be realistic... I do understand why we are switching over to technology somewhat. I understand that our technology is updated and we are preparing our students for their future. However I very strongly disagree with how much it is being used and how it is taking over person to person interaction. If people are sitting behind computer screens and doing all work online, they are not going to know how to communicate with people or have people skills for when they need them for jobs and their future. Children are not going to be able to form the kind of relationships that we have got to form with people if they are just sitting home doing their work. School was so fun, it was a time to see your friends everyday, hang out and have fun. I have 5 girl friends that I have had since 6th grade and we are all still best friends and do everything together. If children are sitting home looking at a computer screen how are they going to form these kind of relationships? I may be very old school with my whole pen and paper situation, but I do not agree with not having students actually come to the classroom.
I can get used to students having iPads in class and being more technology orientated but I don't think I will ever agree with the fact that kids in middle school don't actually have to go to school. After high school then it is your choice if you want to go to college, not go to college, or take online courses, but I believe anytime before that students should get the experience of actually going to class.
Now to be realistic... I do understand why we are switching over to technology somewhat. I understand that our technology is updated and we are preparing our students for their future. However I very strongly disagree with how much it is being used and how it is taking over person to person interaction. If people are sitting behind computer screens and doing all work online, they are not going to know how to communicate with people or have people skills for when they need them for jobs and their future. Children are not going to be able to form the kind of relationships that we have got to form with people if they are just sitting home doing their work. School was so fun, it was a time to see your friends everyday, hang out and have fun. I have 5 girl friends that I have had since 6th grade and we are all still best friends and do everything together. If children are sitting home looking at a computer screen how are they going to form these kind of relationships? I may be very old school with my whole pen and paper situation, but I do not agree with not having students actually come to the classroom.
I can get used to students having iPads in class and being more technology orientated but I don't think I will ever agree with the fact that kids in middle school don't actually have to go to school. After high school then it is your choice if you want to go to college, not go to college, or take online courses, but I believe anytime before that students should get the experience of actually going to class.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
5 Classes deep
Today we completed our fifth class of Education 250. Quite honestly it feels like we have just finished the fifth week of this class. We have taken in a ton of information and details and at points my brain feels like it is going to explode.
The amount of different websites we have to visit, tests we have to take to enroll in the program and blogs we have to post and respond to is a bit overwhelming. I am definitely not a technology person, so it may be a little more overwhelming for me than for others. I am an old style pen and paper note taker and do not enjoy signing papers and taking notes online and always being on the computer. But guess what... I'm going to have to get used to it because I am going to be using technology for the rest of my teaching career.
On the fifth day of class we are already studying, analyzing, and making infomercials on philosophies. That is something that is very advanced, however I do feel prepared and feel like we are ready to take on the task. Our professors have given us a lot of responsibilities, but in a good way. Once we become teachers in just a few years we will have even more tasks to preform and responsibilities to take on so they are just getting us prepared for the real world. Every day we get closer and closer to being in the real world which is exciting but also very scary in a way.
The amount of different websites we have to visit, tests we have to take to enroll in the program and blogs we have to post and respond to is a bit overwhelming. I am definitely not a technology person, so it may be a little more overwhelming for me than for others. I am an old style pen and paper note taker and do not enjoy signing papers and taking notes online and always being on the computer. But guess what... I'm going to have to get used to it because I am going to be using technology for the rest of my teaching career.
On the fifth day of class we are already studying, analyzing, and making infomercials on philosophies. That is something that is very advanced, however I do feel prepared and feel like we are ready to take on the task. Our professors have given us a lot of responsibilities, but in a good way. Once we become teachers in just a few years we will have even more tasks to preform and responsibilities to take on so they are just getting us prepared for the real world. Every day we get closer and closer to being in the real world which is exciting but also very scary in a way.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
First blog of the semester!!
It is only the third day of class and I have already learned so much. This class has already opened my eyes to give me a glimpse of what my future is going to look like and the steps I am going to have to take to get there. It is going to be a lot of time, work, and effort but it will be worth it in the end.
I have learned that is it very important to pay attention in class and not just go thought the motions, but actual learn and understand the content and skills I am going to need. If I do not get the basics in this class then I will be lost and confused for the next two years, and will have to do more work than necessary. Between Education 250 and Math 204, I have come to realize that understanding the information or memorizing information for a test will no longer work. No longer can I memorize the material and forget it as soon as the test is over. I have to not only understand the materials, but have to be able to explain to children someday how and why I came to the conclusion I did.
Something else I never thought about too much was every single move I make and action I take effects someone in someway. In a classroom I will have 25 pairs of eyes on me at all times which means they will act how I act and follow by example. If I am not setting a good example and giving the students a reason to trust and respect me in the classroom I should not expect them to behave the way I want them to. Public trust is also a huge factor that I never thought too deeply about. This will make me more aware of my behavior and actions I take outside the classroom so I do not ruin my future career over something that could be easily preventable.
I am so happy I decided to take this career path and this class at Gardner-Webb and am excited to learn more and to see what the future holds.
I have learned that is it very important to pay attention in class and not just go thought the motions, but actual learn and understand the content and skills I am going to need. If I do not get the basics in this class then I will be lost and confused for the next two years, and will have to do more work than necessary. Between Education 250 and Math 204, I have come to realize that understanding the information or memorizing information for a test will no longer work. No longer can I memorize the material and forget it as soon as the test is over. I have to not only understand the materials, but have to be able to explain to children someday how and why I came to the conclusion I did.
Something else I never thought about too much was every single move I make and action I take effects someone in someway. In a classroom I will have 25 pairs of eyes on me at all times which means they will act how I act and follow by example. If I am not setting a good example and giving the students a reason to trust and respect me in the classroom I should not expect them to behave the way I want them to. Public trust is also a huge factor that I never thought too deeply about. This will make me more aware of my behavior and actions I take outside the classroom so I do not ruin my future career over something that could be easily preventable.
I am so happy I decided to take this career path and this class at Gardner-Webb and am excited to learn more and to see what the future holds.
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