Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Final Field Experience

June 10th



Final Summary of Field Experience

          My spring quarter field experience was full of learning experiences, opportunities, and pleasant surprises. I was fortunate enough to have a great cooperating teacher who gave me the tools and freedom to better myself as a teacher. Mr. Holbert had a very relaxed teaching style, but he was very clear in his expectations from his students. His teaching style definitely rubbed off on me and made me feel comfortable and relaxed with the students. I was nervous the first time I met with my cooperating teacher at the High School. He told me that he had a very special group of students who were often off task and disruptive at times. I think my cooperating teacher just wanted to make sure that I was up to the challenge ahead of me.
          I have learned how to be direct, clear, patient, and understanding with high school students. It was important to set clear expectations with lessons for students without being too constrictive. I learned that giving students a little le-way often leads to student creativity in learning. It was highly important that I made rubrics for all lessons taught to hold students accountable for learning. I quickly noticed that not all 150 students turned their work in on time, in fact 25% were often late turning in school assignments or projects. I was fine with students turning in late work as long as they did the work by the end of the semester. I learned to have a lot of patience and understanding with students in the classroom. There’s no telling what is going on with each individual student at any particular time in high school. Sometimes, students have behavior issues or cause class disruptions depending on what’s going on in their personal lives. I learned to stay patient during class disruptions or behavior distractions. I felt it was important to make sure that I breathe and speak with a good flow so students can follow my lectures and directions. I also felt that as long as I maintained a great lesson plan, there were little disruptions in class. I always stayed prepared with lessons that offered students an opportunity for input and discussion. My goal was to make learning fun and exciting for students. Sometimes, I was more excited about my lessons than the students. I have learned that teachers put in a lot of time and preparation into their lessons and teachings. I also learned that “You’re only as good as your lesson plan.” It is important to be prepared and knowledgeable on your curriculum topics. Teachers go through many transitions every day, each of which include many choices and split second decisions to benefit student learning. Each teacher has a different opinion or view on student learning, but each teacher cares for students and wants them to succeed. I learned about different classroom management procedures. High school management looks very different from elementary management. I had to allow myself to let students talk at various parts of the class period in order for them to be successful in learning. Cell phone usage by students was perhaps my biggest challenge with classroom management. Students find a way to conceal their phones and texting during class. I tried to pick and choose my battles with cell phone management. There were times when I let students use them for research, but overall I tried to keep an eye for inappropriate use of cell phones. I would have a no phone policy in my future classroom to eliminate a variety of management issues.
          I have learned that I am one teacher amongst many other teachers trying to make a positive impact in student’s lives. It might be History or English lessons that a student learns from. Or, maybe a life lesson that I teach them and they will remember for the rest of their lives. I learned that it is up to me to make a difference as a teacher every day. I am a role model that students look up to during the school year and perhaps longer. Evidence of this was clear one day when I was walking down the school hallway and students started to remember my name. I heard “Mr. Carlson!” from one student that I didn’t even know. That made me feel like I was being noticed and well received. I have learned that schools have an environment of learning and fun that makes teaching enjoyable. Teaching has a rigorous schedule, but very fulfilling with changing activities, assemblies, half-days, modified schedules, holiday breaks, and other changing scenarios. Schools have protocols that keep students knowing there are consequences for their actions or choices. That was very clear to me when I was teaching one day. A administrator walked into the classroom when I was teaching a lesson and emergency expelled a student for prior drug use. It takes a full body of administration, staff, faculty, custodians, volunteers, and other employees for a school to be successful and safe. Student learning can be achieved with everyone’s effort and attention to detail.
          The one lesson that I would want another ED 341 student to know or realize would be…”to roll with the flow.” You are a student teacher learning another teacher’s system. Allow yourself to make mistakes, but correct your mistakes by the next lesson. It is difficult to change the dynamics of a classroom, especially, being that you don’t know the students well enough to change classroom management from your cooperating teacher. Student’s aren’t used to you as a teacher in their classroom yet, so remind yourself that it takes trust and mutual respect to earn your place in their classroom as a guest teacher. You should try different teaching methods and lesson planning. Always adjust your schedule to your cooperating teacher’s schedule…after all; it is his/her classroom and not yours. Have a positive attitude and dress for success for all school days, even casual Friday! Stay consistent with teaching and don’t be afraid to take constructive advice from cooperating teacher. Be yourself and use what you have learned in education classes to apply to teaching as a real job scenario.
          I must tell myself that I will make a difference in teaching everyday. I must be myself and have a positive attitude towards students and learning. I must take all of my education and experience to apply it for everyday use as a teacher. Most importantly, I must remain true to myself and be able to handle adversity when it arises among administration, faculty, students, or parents. It will be important to think out decisions clearly before I act upon them.
          My education 341 experience was rewarding and fun. I actually spent a couple of days as a paid substitute for my cooperating teacher at Mt. Spokane. I was fully in charge of all class periods lessons and plans for the entire week of school. I believe that students really enjoyed having me as a substitute teacher because they were used to me being in the classroom already. It is important to remember that education is constantly evolving. You have to be ready for changes and adapt as soon as possible to keep up with the new methods and curriculum.


Monday, June 3, 2013

Weekly Post

June 3-June7

As I'm nearing my last week in the classroom, I can definitely tell that the students have decided to stop learning. it is obvious that students don't have the same learning retention or "want" to complete their work as they did in prior weeks. Having said that, we have 2 major projects worth 100 points each and 2 quizzes that still need to be complete on Tuesday. I plan on videotaping this lesson and somehow getting it ready for Wednesday. Students are slow to return permission slips for videotaping, so I'm just going ahead and filming anyway. I'm excited to see the end of group projects in Social Studies and English. I will be the teacher that grades the students on these projects also.

My highlight of the week is using the I-Pads for technology and research. I've never used an I-pad before and they are almost like a mini-computer of a large version of a cell phone. Kinda Cool. The librarian at the school is very good about rotating the cart thru the school, so that all teachers can use the cart.

One thing that I'm puzzled by is the student's who chose the "easier" history topics for their group project...are the students who lack motivation to complete their research. It seems the more challenging topics went to those students with the best overall research and projects. We'll see how this plays out tomorrow afternoon for presentations.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Weekly Posting

Evaluation Week: May 28th-May 31st


Weeks of preparation came down to execution this week. I finally had my lessons observed by an EWU evaluator. I felt like I had a superb lesson plan for both periods of classes. On Tuesday morning, I began teaching my English class with an on-going unit/lesson on Biographies, auto biographies, and documentaries. I also included lecture, small group work, short video clip, and a formative quiz at the end of the period. Students really seemed to have enjoyed this lesson, and my evaluator was impressed with my teaching and the nice flow of the lesson. I also taught 3rd period Social Studies. This lesson was also evaluated the same day. We have been working with the Korean War and current North Korea events. This particular lesson focused on the United States military and the United Nations teaming up against communist North Korea, China, and the Soviets. Students also started their group work using I-Pads for researching their topics. The lesson really flowed well and seemed to have a great bonus with the use of I-pads.

It was definitely a great learning week for me. I always critique my lessons and wonder what are the things that I would do different next time. I've been fighting a real bad cold this week, and I tried real hard to hide my fatigue from the students and evaluator.

It seems like keeping student's attention is getting more difficult as school nears closer to an end. I usually need to ask repeatedly for students not to talk and stay on task.


One cool highlight: I got to substitute the class which i am currently doing my practicum in. Being that I am already K-8 certified, I've been employed in the Mead district as a sub for 4 years now...so it was easy to fill in for my cooperating teacher and get
paid for it! $$$

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Weekly Bulletin 5/20-5/24

This week was an incredible teaching week. I started my lessons and unit on the Korean War and North Korea specifically. I lectured during 3rd and 6th period social studies classes on the Korean War. First, I had to go over the tail end of WWII and the causes that led to the Korean War. The lecture went very well. i gave students key dates, places, and people to get started with the war.

Students were also able to select their own groups of 3-5 students per group. These groups will be assigned a topic on the Korean War and we will use the "jigsaw" method to teach the other students. Students were able to write down their top 3 choices of various topics that I selected to place in the "pool." Most students were interested on nuclear weapons and north Korea boarder. Some students were interested in Korea timeline and others interested in Korean military.

There were no disruptions in class this week...other than occasional high school student socializing with each other during the lecture portion. LOL. I really enjoy my cooperating teacher's collective approach to teaching. It reminds me that it is okay to slow down and breathe once in a while during my teachings.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

5/13- 5/17

I have spent the beginning portion of this week at another local school learning from another teacher to get another perspective on teaching. I learned how lesson plans are developed through collaboration with grade level team members. All department members strive to execute curriculum standards, but do so with their own approaches to learning.
I am getting ready to teach a biography lesson. There are different aspects of this lesson including what students know already, learning tools, and assessment strategies. Students will interview a family member or other person who they can tell a story of their life. The important pieces of this lesson is to get students to see that life has its challenges to go through in order to be successful...and everyone has a story to be told.
This lesson coincides with previous writing lessons and students ability to write an biography about a person of importance to them.
Highlights of this week included students ability to think critically about the person that they will write a biography on. Students are excited about the lesson and eager to share with the class.

Highlight 5/6-5/10

The highlight this week was getting together with my cooperating teacher and figuring out the exact day of my EWU observation lesson. I decided to check out the I-pad cart for these series of lessons later in May. The I-Pads will incorporate the use of technology and research. Students will research various parts of the Korean War and jigsaw different events and timelines to produce a final project presentation. I am excited to teach these history lesson to the students. The Korean War is the "Forgotten War" that offers key issues in American/Korean history. Especially, right now with the threats of North Korea and their nuclear weapons.
I believe I have my lesson narrowed down to May 28th- May 30th at the school. My evaluator will come into the classroom on May 28th to oversee my lesson.

Other classroom activities include a social media debate in 5th period. Students are currently debating the credibility/ lack of credibility of various news sources. Students tend to get carried away with one particular media outlet that reports the news poorly and everybody else in the class piles on. My goal was to explain that everyone has opinions of different sources, and you should be able to examine each with little biases.

Students are having fun with assignments, but seem to be getting restless as the end of the school year draws closer to an end.

No behavior problems to report this week. I enjoy my cooperating teachers relaxed approach to management.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Highlight

 

 

Week of April 29-May 3rd

This week at school was full of pleasant surprises. Students in my 2nd and 4th period english classes are doing a great job with their novel presentations. I've seen some creative work and detailed explanations of their projects. Most students have received full points on this assignment, some students have even scored bonus points for presenting their project on the very first day.Both English classes are also watching the film, "Schindler's List" This movie seems to reinforce the Holocaust and the novel, "Night" that students have been learning about for a better part of a month now. The highlight is definitely watching the students present their projects...and i got to grade them!!! After all....it was my lesson!!

I decided to ask my cooperating teacher for extra teaching opportunities in class. He is allowing me to teach a 4 day biography lesson. In this lesson, students will learn what a biography is and interview a family member on their past history. Then, students will write up a mini biography and type a 1 page report. Students will earn bonus points for presenting in class.

Cell phone usage still seems to be a minor problem in class. Students are always connected with their phones. it seems impossible to monitor usage...kinda feels like a broken record sometimes. One thing that I've learned is to not give students too many rules or guidelines for big projects. It's important for their imaginations to work and think freely to do a good job on their projects.