When I was in high school, the majority of my teachers used
lectures to take up the majority of the class. I spent these 90 minute periods
fighting my drooping eyelids to stay awake.
It has been more than refreshing to work with a teacher who
can use interactive learning to get students excited. She begins class with a
short introductory activity. Usually as a class, they analyze the title of the
work they will be studying. I have seen that this helps them begin thinking
about main ideas and themes that they will be looking at.
I have always been afraid of giving students too much time
in class to work on assignments. Based upon my high school education, I was
under the perception that this was lazy teaching. But Bomer's book and
observing my CT have shown me the light! My CT uses all different types of
classroom organization. Like I said before, she begins all classes
incorporating all the students in the class. She then usually has the students
work in small groups or partners to analyze the text or discuss a specific
topic. Near the end of class, the students are usually given time to work
independently on a project or assignment. I have learned to appreciate and
value this independent work time. At this time, we're able to see if the
students have actually grasped the concepts taught in the class. It also gives
them the opportunity to ask any questions they might possibly have.
My teacher does a great job at managing her class, but they
are also college prep seniors. How well would independent work time do with a
CWC class of freshmen? My biggest concern would be behavior management and
ensuring everyone is on task. In an ideal world, all students would use their
time wisely and be on task. In a class where there is only one instructor to 35
students, what could I do to implement independent and group work successfully?
This first week of school has also stressed the importance
of communication. My CT and I were talking and she told me about her first year
experience. She told me that she didn’t necessarily have every novel read
before she taught it. More oft than not she would read the book as her students
were reading them as well. She told me that the most important thing was being
able to communicate, to ask the right questions. It might not necessarily be having
all the right answers at all times, but being able to ask the right questions
to get students thinking critically. The students know we have a degree. But vomiting
the knowledge we have all over them is not teaching them the skills they will
need down the line. I have realized how important it is for me to do my best
not to answer every question right away, but instead to ask addition questions
that may help them find the answer on their own. My hope is to cultivate a
classroom similar to my CT’s, where learning is a group experience and novel ideas
are cherished.
Giving work-time in class has thrown me for a loop throughout my co-op/observation experience as well; you make a strong point! On one hand, I've had teachers tell me to plan from the minute the late bell rings to the next late bell (allowing for supplemental work if you get done early). While other teachers told me, "If you don't give them time in class (especially for big projects), the majority of your remedial students won't follow through." So what do you do? Teachers make a strong case that having work-time allotted in-class allows for the teacher to track whether students are grasping concepts; I never thought of it that way. Maybe, at the beginning of the year, teachers allot time in class for projects/essays and slowly wean students off of teacher dependency (if you will) as the end of the year nears... Maybe that's a little much... I'm not sure.
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts. :)
-Ms. I