Getting time to spend with my CT
during plan has been an eye-opening experience. Before this semester, I never
got the chance to speak with a teacher about why certain texts or activities
were chosen. Everything I knew came from what I have seen teachers putting
together last minute or what I have read in education books, merely the
finished and polished product. But the experienced teacher I work with has
shown me the thought and consideration that should go into planning a lesson.
All of her
classes are supposed to prepare seniors for college. She invites me to ask
questions and make suggestions as well. This has encouraged me to think about
motives and objectives not only within her own lessons, but as I plan my
lessons as well.
She has
shown careful thought in her use of teaching literacies. All of the skills she
wants her students to be able to utilize are similar to that of Bomer’s. With
the most difficult texts she has had students read, such as “The Republic” by
Plate and “Leviathan” by Thomas Hobbes, she reads first aloud. This enables
them to pick up on certain things they wouldn’t have otherwise. Groups also
read together, while other times she has students read individually.
I have
learned that she chooses each reading skill meticulously. She makes conscious
decisions on which skill is paired with which reading. This goes along with
Smagorinski’s discussion of backward design and overarching concepts. Her use
of these really came in handy when I was discussing my lesson planning with
her. Nm,
Her
questions and criticisms helped me question the “why” of my lessons. Instead of
focusing what I was going to teach, she drove me to think about what I wanted
my students to get out of my lesson. I am teaching a culture unit to a college
prep senior class. I knew I wanted them to explore rites of passage, as they
were getting ready to embark on their own rite of passage entering college and
many of them leaving home for the first time. I thought about having them read
different articles and take notes, but my CT suggested I explore more
interactive activities to get them engaged, since this was the opening lesson
to the unit. After I picked my activities, my CT asked me blatantly what I
wanted the students to take from the lesson, what was my essential question.
This was not something I could just make up. I did want them to learn something
that would stick with them, especially throughout their college years. After
answering this question, I was able to think of the best ways to reach my
desired final product, the knowledge they would take with them. Although this
backward design was only in the context of one of my lessons, it helped me get
a better understanding of not only why I teach what I teach, but also why I
teach how I teach as well.
This showed me a new take on
creating lessons, which I believe will make my lesson more meaningful to the
students. Instead of merely preparing content, I had specifics in hand that I
wanted my students to understand. This also helped me create essential questions
that would be useful. My CT has these posted for every class and discusses them
to get students thinking throughout the activities. I have found the experience
of working with my CT thus far, an extremely enlightening one.
Tiffany -
ReplyDeleteDo you think you will use materials from this cooperate teacher in your own semester plan? Why or why not? How will you be able to use her advice for all levels of high school rather than just honors/senior prep classes? What was her best classroom management advice depending on the differences in her classes and their plans?
Thanks! :)
-Allie
It sounds like you have a great CT and the pointers given were great. It also looks like it gave you some insight into your own teaching, which is always good. Does she consciously break down lessons as she develops them or at this point do lesson plans just fall into place naturally?
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