Blog 41: Comparison of two consecutive first years of school, examination of the reason for the improvement
The first week of school this year has been worlds better than that of last year. Last year I started on the wrong foot. I was ill prepared for what I was about to encounter. Growing up in the university bound advanced track of a nice suburb in Canada, my expectations were a little off. I assumed that the common courtesy that we gave our teachers would follow down here too. I was wrong. Last year I closed my door for the first period and was shocked that the students were not all doing what was written on the board. After a short talk they began working, but they all talked and would not stay focus. I was clueless on how to address the situation, unsure what power I had, timid to use the power I had and not sure what to do. The students realized this and, to put it kindly, they walked all over me. The first day of school I had the teacher next door give my students a harangue about how they should respect me. The second day I had the senior biology teacher come in to my room to ream out several of these students. This helped in the situation but it also lost credibility among the students. This they wielded into a semester of chaos. All this happened because I dropped the ball and did not hit the ground running.
This year was a different story. I was well equipped. I came into class ready to go. My confidence level was high and I believe that the students could perceive this. I have not had any difficulties yet with any of the classes. It is almost one month into the school year and still classes have all been going smoothly. I still teach in an inner-city school so I have had some students who did not want to conform, but holistically, not many, and virtually none compared to last year. Also, this year I am far better at dealing with these issues as they arise and they no longer faze me.
I have spent some time analyzing the reason for this change in my student's behavior from this year compared to last year. This year I had a better understanding of what I could expect of my students and what is beyond my student's abilities. I established my expectations early and have been consistent in enforcing these expectations. Finally, I have learned how to run a quiet class identified the steps required in lesson planning and understand what can be expected. These small changes have helped me to enhance my class efficiency.
This next semester I intend to be more on the ball. Last year I played a lotof catch up. Trying to finish grading, maintaining discipline, writing lesson plans. I never felt I had a grasp of anything and I was always behind the eight ball. This year I have been far more aggressive in getting all the loose ends tied up. It helps that I have a better understanding of what is important and what can wait. One goal that I have already implemented is to have the students do some labs and do a little more hands on work. Last year I did not have my students do any experiments. This bothered me but I was doing the best I could to keep things going. Now I will take it to the next level.
It's been three weeks since I left behind Mississippi, and my two years of teaching English in a rural Delta school district (and two partial summers of mentoring and coaching new teachers!). I've been meaning to sit down and give an "ending" to this blog, so to speak, and I think enough time now has passed that I feel like I can do that objectively.
Leaving Mississippi (or more specifically, education in Mississippi) was definitely bittersweet - certainly "relief" might be the first word that comes to mind. I am relieved to be back in an educated state, in a place I love, surrounded by family and old friends. I am relieved that I will never again have to face the pressure, stress, and heartbreak of teaching in the Delta.
But a part of me is distinctly frustrated at the thought of leaving the classroom, or the realm of education. I'd like to work a way back into the education sphere in some way - if not through a career, then peripherally as a volunteer, a board member, a community leader, or even as a participant in a sort of wider conversation about education reform. That was the root of much of my Mississippi woes - I would rather reform the way education happens (to avoid the huge gap in achievement for low-income students) than try to work within a broken system (as a teacher to those low-income students). That conclusion was reinforced as I crossed into Minnesota driving up 35N on my way home from Mississippi. Ironically enough, the first thing I hear over the radio in Minnesota was the last 30 minutes of the Minneapolis School Board Meeting (broadcast over public radio) -- I thought I was leaving education only to re-discover it in a whole new way as I arrived. Listening in on the meeting was fascinating. No board meeting in a Mississippi school district would sound like this. But they had their fair share of big problems, controversial issues and inside arguments, too. Made me want to hop on the bandwagon as soon as I can - and I still plan to.
And so ends this blog. I hope someday soon I will have the sort of incredible inspiration that teaching in the Mississippi Delta brought to me (with perhaps little more free time!), so that I might start a new blog, with new thoughts, on new experiences. I'll leave this blog up here -- partly because it serves as a easy way to remember my experiences, and partly because it might help future teachers cope with theirs. Feel free to read back, and back and back any time you wish!
For now, my time is devoted to writing for someone else's blog. And at the very least, I will still feel connected to the digital world on facebook, twitter and linkedin....
EDIT: An interesting conversation went on re: this last entry over on Ephblog, the Williams alumni blog-meeting space. Read it here.
Summer school is only 4 hours long. Unfortunately it sucks. And is boring as hell.
Going to beale street tonight. Gonna get shitty.
Guns bonfire beer all on a farm. Amazing. Oh and some cunt cop pulled me over for no reason. And I got no fucking ticket.
June 2, 2009
The three teacher skills I want to practice and improve upon this summer at the MTC Summer School… and one strength I have and will employ
The three things I want to improve on for this summer school session are to improve questioning techniques, increase the diversity of teaching strategies and to avoid teaching for a test. The first goal should be easily attained. I just need to use appropriate wait times. Waite times from when I ask a question, to when I pick out a student and the time when I ask a student until I try another student. This should be easily accomplished. The second goal should also be easily accomplished. The size and structure of the summer school should easily allow for greater class activates. Summer school will also not have an administration that strongly encourages me to teach for the state tests therefore, my final goal should be simple to accomplish. I will be able to teach biology and should have some fun with this. As for my greatest strength, I believe that my greatest strength lies in my consistency. Students knew when they arrived into my class what to expect. I believe that by employing a similar style of consistency it should be possible to maintain my greatest strength with the addition of these new techniques.
For their final exam, I decided my students were simply tested-out from this spring of state-testing craziness. So I borrowed a unit from a great teacher-friend of mine, and used the final project in place of an exam. After reading and analyzing the Virginia Woolf story "Widow and the Parrot", groups created newscasts to present the events of the story and explore the motives of the characters in it.
Overall, the kids did a FANTASTIC job! I've uploaded a couple clips here, and hopefully will finish uploading more soon!
My Learning Strategies class is in the midst of reading A Raisin in the Sun. Like my previous classes, they are loving it. They love having their own parts to read, the incorrect grammar, the occasional swear word for emphasis. The opening act includes three confrontational arguments (including a mother slapping her daughter!) and they love to yell at one another with animation while reading.
Swine
Flu
The truth is the swine flu is here. Originating from
Mexico, the swine flu is spreading across the
country from tourists escaping the wet northern spring. Returning home, these unsuspecting vectors are spreading
the disease across the world. Currently there are cases of the flu in Canada,
USA and Europe as well as New Zealand. As of yet no one
knows how much damage this disease will cause. What is known is that this
disease originated in pigs and it may contain strains of the avian flue. It’s spreading and it’s
here.
So what does this have to do with education? The direct answer is nothing. However, indirectly there are several ways that the swine flu could have severe effects on schools. First of all, states with state tested classes could be troubled. Should this flu hit one part of a state during testing time some schools might have to be closed. This would compromise the integrity of the test. Unaffected areas would have already finished the test when affected areas would still be writing. This could result in some cheating.
More severely, yet within the distant realm of possibilities, should a contagious virulent strain of swine flue hit, it have catastrophic consequences. It could kill the entire population of students, or perhaps kill a significant number of them. Like the plagues in the fifteen and sixteen hundreds this plague could wipe out a lot of people. This would hurt schools because of teacher shortages and student shortages. Since a majority of teachers are older and consequently would have poorer immune systems, the teachers death toll would be higher than that of the students. This would further create a teacher shortage and cause class sizes to increase. Increased class sizes would result in more difficulties in classroom management and student learning. Not to mention the psychology effects of having so many parents die due to the disease.
Although this flu is less than ideal, I highly doubt the severe scenario listed above will happen in the near future. What I do see in the realm of possibilities is that this flu would cause a lot of students to become sick. With a high proportion of these students becoming sick it would create havoc for teachers trying to teach students who are coming sporadically. Many teachers would also be likely to come down with the disease as well. This would cause issues for administrators because they would be scrambling to find substitute teachers.
It furthers one to undertake something.
How is this to be carried out?
One may use small bowls for the sacrifice.
The bright path seems dim;
Going forward seems like retreat;
The easy way seems hard;
The highest Virtue seems empty;
Great purity seems sullied;
A wealth of Virtue seems inadequate;
The strength of Virtue seems frail;
Real Virtue seems unreal;
The perfect square has no corners;
Great talents ripen late;
The highest notes are hard to hear;
The greatest form has no shape;
The way is hidden and without name.