A few items learned throughout the semester that I want to remember from this class now that it is over:
"I believe that there is no greater call in the church than to be an effective teacher." (not sure who said that)
Avoid using the phrase "Any Questions" - instead check for understanding as you teach so you don't get far into the lesson with the kids so confused they don't even know what question to ask.
When teaching a new concept have the students Hear it, See it and Do it.
Experiential learning is the process of enlightenment.
Use mixed methods.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Reflection 11
Our last class was interesting to me. We began by watching the videos of our teaching to the 6th graders. While watching, I noticed a few positive things that my classmates were doing that I need to work on. One is proximity. As Tahna was trying to teach the kids in one side of the room were chatting while another student was trying to speak so she just stepped over and said "shhh" without even taking her eyes off of the student talking and the noisy students quieted up real quick. Another was student participation. Braden had all the student chant "buoyancy." I usually like to have the kids involved but don't usually think about having them chant. I think it is a good idea especially when it is something that we want the students to remember. But there were also areas of needed improvement. One of which is to speak clearly and not stumble with my words. I need to know the material so I'm not butchering the information. I also need to be aware of the students. I thought that everyone was grasping the concept until I found out later that a classmate of mine said she had to help a student do the formula one on one and quite frankly, I never saw her doing that and had no idea that people were confused by my instruction in doing the formula. I think that sensing this will come with experience and simply getting comfortable with teaching in front of a class. Experience is the key to to greatest improvement I believe.
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Reflection 10
This last week we went and taught the 6th graders about bouancy and why things float. I have not had a chance yet to watch the video of myself but I loved it and think everything went well. We ran into a slight difficulty when, according to our formula, a block was supposed to sink when instead it was floating. This wouldn't have been much of a problem if I had planned and tried out all of the blocks beforehand but I didn't so I panicked. I was frantically looking at my teaching helpers for help but once I calmed down and thought about the situation (reflected while teaching in a way) I realized why the block way floating and then explained it to the class. I know that in my teaching future I am going to run into problems so I need to remember to calm down and think about the situation and maybe ask the class if they can figure it out - if neither of these things work then I will figure out the solution/reasoning and explain it the next time the class gathers.
Monday, November 3, 2008
Reflection 9
Good teaching includes reflecting while teaching. This means that I need to make sure I listen to the kids comments and use what they say to tie in to the lesson or go off onto a "tangent" to teach them other important things. Another reason why I need to reflect while teaching is so that I can take teaching opportunities that arise and run with um.
Clear board display is definitely something that I need to work on. But I think I will get better the more I write on it but I also need to plan ahead of time the general format I want it to be.
Try to remember to have everyone involved. If doing a hands on demo- have them all do it.
Clear board display is definitely something that I need to work on. But I think I will get better the more I write on it but I also need to plan ahead of time the general format I want it to be.
Try to remember to have everyone involved. If doing a hands on demo- have them all do it.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Reflection 8
More tidbits of things I have been learning and want to implement into my teaching style:
Rather than calling out names of random people for the fun of it I should have rationale such as: they have previous knowledge in the subject and could perhaps explain it in a different or better way, they are not paying attention and I want to get them involved into the discussion again, or if they happen to know the answer (raised their hand). There are all types of rationale but I also agree with Geoff that some type of rationale needs to be included when calling upon a student to answer a question (brings me back to a main emphasis of mine - justification)
Although Geoff probably doesn't agree, I believe that in order to excite the students and clearly display the objective - examples of assignments should be shown to the class before or as the assignment is being assigned. I think these can be assignments that other kids have done along with ones I have done to show a variety. I know that this doesn't need to be done with every activity though. I agree with Jason's method where he had us design a watch then he showed us his at the end. I think this is good for little activities and projects every once and awhile, but with big projects the kids need to know what they can and are trying to do and showing examples is a good way of doing this.
Junior High and High School students need lots of movement from the teacher - agreed.
Although it may appear difficult - It is a great idea to have the kids learn two things at once - just like we did in our summary/internet safety activity. It gives more purpose to assignments and the kids in turn learn more.
Rather than calling out names of random people for the fun of it I should have rationale such as: they have previous knowledge in the subject and could perhaps explain it in a different or better way, they are not paying attention and I want to get them involved into the discussion again, or if they happen to know the answer (raised their hand). There are all types of rationale but I also agree with Geoff that some type of rationale needs to be included when calling upon a student to answer a question (brings me back to a main emphasis of mine - justification)
Although Geoff probably doesn't agree, I believe that in order to excite the students and clearly display the objective - examples of assignments should be shown to the class before or as the assignment is being assigned. I think these can be assignments that other kids have done along with ones I have done to show a variety. I know that this doesn't need to be done with every activity though. I agree with Jason's method where he had us design a watch then he showed us his at the end. I think this is good for little activities and projects every once and awhile, but with big projects the kids need to know what they can and are trying to do and showing examples is a good way of doing this.
Junior High and High School students need lots of movement from the teacher - agreed.
Although it may appear difficult - It is a great idea to have the kids learn two things at once - just like we did in our summary/internet safety activity. It gives more purpose to assignments and the kids in turn learn more.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Reflection 7
Informative feedback and justification are very important. This became evident to me today while i observed one of the teachers at Wasatch High School. The class had just finished a set of commercials and so he had them up and playing on the projector for the kids to see. After each video he gave specific feedback on each commercial mainly pointing out the things they did wrong or didn't "look good". For one, I know that feedback is better if you tell only the individual or group alone rather than to the whole class unless there is something that you want to point that the whole class is struggling with or that they can all learn from. Secondly, he gave feedback such as: "choose a different song, someone else already used it." The kid responded "I know I had it on there first." Teacher said "yeah but that song doesn't fit your cross country movie, it fits the other one better" (That wasn't word for word but it was very similar). The teacher also gave feedback such as: "add a drop shadow on the text" and other almost rude comments. The positive feedback he gave included "that was good" and "that looked good." He never gave feedback on how well the angles were or any other film composition. If he thought it was "cool" then they got a good grade. I firmly believe that informative feedback is very important and should be detailed in that the teacher analyzes according to such things as: camera angles, types of shots, principles of design and other standards you are trying to effectively teach.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Reflection 6
While watching the recordings of myself teaching I am learning that teaching is indeed a mastered profession. Some may be given the talent to teach well but it still takes practice. It's interesting to hear both Geoff and Shummway speak of the mistakes they made during their first few years of teaching. Although we may have lots of practice and get pretty good at teaching in front of a room, it doesn't become reality until you are indeed the teacher who makes the decisions and in turn learns what you can and can't do- which depends on where, what, and who you teach. Although I feel like I have gotten a very little bit better at teaching, I know that it will be many years until I become a fantastic teacher. There are just certain things that you can't learn except by experience.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)