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21 Weeks To Go

Wow!  Another week of certification classes is behind me.  I can scarcely believe it.

Last week was a lot more stressful than the week before, believe it or not.  Though the assignments were not quite as difficult, having the holiday the week before had spoiled me.

Last week, I felt the pressure of balancing my teaching with my own education.

To make sure I had time to complete everything, I did not attend a big soccer game for my high school girls (Chicky’s teammates from last year).  I did get a play-by-play via 60+ text messages from one of the player’s sisters, so I worked on my assignments while periodically throwing out “Crap” and “Woo Hoo” according to how the game was proceeding.

The team won, by the way, and will face a big rivalry on Tuesday night for the Regional Semi-Finals.  I am still debating if I will go.

So, what did I learn about last week?

For my Teaching Profession class, I had to write a small report about one of the social issues facing education.  I selected childhood homelessness and poverty.

Oh.

My.

Gosh.

My research was very sad.  I learned a lot, let me tell you.

In my Reading class, I learned about fluency.  I am finding my reading class fascinating!  Perhaps this is because I have always been a great reader, as have my children, and it has sometimes been difficult for me to comprehend how other people struggle.  Now I am beginning to realize that there are many components to reading, and teaching it is a very specialized skill that must take into account every single component.  No wonder reading teachers like my friend, Barb, are so incredible!

I am also realizing how important it is for every teacher, regardless of the subjects they teach, to spend time on reading skills and to watch for possible warning signals that could serve as indications that students might need some help in this area.

For my Instructional Strategies class, I had to create a performance-based assessment and a formative assessment for the unit plan I have been creating (which, by the way, I got great feedback on regarding last week’s 16 student learning outcome assignment).  I decided to use an essay as my performance assessment, and my teacher required that students create multiple-choice formative quizzes.  Although I have created numerous exams this year, I found this assignment a lot more difficult than I anticipated.  Perhaps this was because I was also looking at a rubric, which I am both grateful for and freaked over every time I work on an assignment.

I continue to be amazed at how much I am learning each week.  Quite honestly, after what I’ve been taught in such a short time, I must say that I don’t think non-education, bachelor-degree holding people should be allowed to have their own classrooms of students until they have gone through these classes.  While they (and I include myself in that grouping) might have real-world experience, teaching is so much more than knowing a subject.  There is a lot of “teaching” terminology that you have to understand.  There are also a lot of “teacher” how-to’s that you must practice.  Sure, the work is a huge pain to complete, but the exercises are practical and very necessary to understanding exactly why and how teachers need to do things to help their students be successful.

I also think these classes are good for helping people figure out if this is a profession they want to participate in.  The work load is incredibly heavy…a small taste, as I already know, of the commitment and sacrifice that teaching requires.  I don’t think that most people really understand what being a teacher encompasses.

This program probably comes as a huge shock and a reality check for the naive people who first walk through the program’s doors.

I continue to take things day by day and remain ever grateful for the daily presence of God.  I could not do any of this without His help, for without Him, my brains would be mush.  Heck, they are mush, but He restores me every night and allows me to wake up, refreshed (unless I’ve been up until 12:30am) and ready to face a new day.

Week 4 promises to be interesting.  I’ll share details next week.

If you’re interested in what I wrote for my paper on childhood homelessness, I’ve provided the text below…

When people dream of becoming teachers, they sometimes envision utopic classrooms where students sit in rapt attention eagerly awaiting the lessons about to be imparted upon them.  These imaginary students are dressed impeccably and hail from ideal families.  Reality, however, proves to be a stark contrast from such lofty dreams.  The students who file into today’s classrooms often carry with them the burdens of various social problems – issues that do not have easy solutions.  Childhood poverty and homelessness are two closely-related issues that have left educators scratching their heads as they try to overcome the effects these issues on the children who have been charged to their care.  Children are the innocent victims of poverty and homelessness, having little choice but to deal with circumstances that are completely out of their control. Karen M. Pellino’s article, The Effects of Poverty on Teaching and Learning, provides a comprehensive assessment of the challenges of teaching impoverished children and suggests several pragmatic ways that educators can address the challenges through teaching methodologies and curriculum.

Childhood poverty and homelessness pose several educational challenges including classroom diversity, student achievement gaps, and student motivation.  A diverse classroom is comprised of students from many different cultural, economic, and academic levels.  Children who are poverty-stricken live in the flux of constant change as they are forced to endure frequent moves from one residence to another.  As a result, these children change schools often.  Thus, school attendance is spotty, at best.  Many children do not have permanent homes and, as a result, lack proper paperwork, such as academic records, when they register at new schools.  This complicates educators’ jobs as they desperately attempt to place students in the classes that best meet their needs (3). To combat the effects of classroom diversity, Pellino suggests that teachers create age-appropriate lessons to help children understand the different cultures that surround them (3).  According to Pellino, constructivism is the key to providing children with the skills they need to “become active learners by questioning, hypothesizing and drawing conclusions based on their individual learning experiences” (4).  These are basic but critical skills that will remain with students long after they have changed to other schools.

Another challenging aspect presented by childhood poverty and homelessness is a varying achievement gap between students.  Pellino defines achievement gap as, “The difference in academic performance among children from different classes or groups (ethnic, racial, income)” (4).  Education has always been considered the key to escaping poverty.  People often rise to meet the challenges that are presented to them, and children are no different.  Often, schools will water down material with the misconception that impoverished children cannot handle a rigorous curriculum; however, the opposite is true.  According to Pellino, “Content should be of high quality and be culturally relevant” (5).  Teachers should utilize students’ backgrounds to formulate specialized lesson plans and teaching methodologies.  Only by doing so can achievement gaps be bridged.  Student motivation to learn is a third challenge and is closely related to the achievement gaps discussed previously.  Children of all cultural, economic, and academic realms should be motivated to learn.  Impoverished children have fragile psyches – products of the unstable lives they lead.  These students must be taught why education is important and how education will directly impact their lives.  Teachers face the task of fostering classrooms that build self-esteem and trust.  Additionally, “Educators also need to work to foster resilience in children, focusing on the traits, coping skills, and supports that help children survive in a changing environment” (5).

Utopian classrooms do not exist.  Childhood poverty and homelessness is a social issue that will never disappear.  There will always be the have’s and the have not’s.  Educators face the unique challenge of meeting the needs of all students, regardless of their stations in life.  Traditional teaching methodologies may need to be thrown out the window and replaced with more flexible ones that allow for specialized instruction that more readily molds itself around the unique backgrounds of the children who enter modern classrooms.  It will only be through diligent, focused efforts that children will be able to rise above their difficult circumstances and become confident participants of society.

Week 14 of Teaching

I cannot believe how fast this year is flying by!  It only seems like a day or two before it’s time for me to post another summary from my latest week!

Week 14 started off with a sweet surprise.  Tigger, MartytheSmarty, and BigTimeGleek bought me a surprise from last weekend’s Festival of Nations…

This is my first-ever teacher gift!!!  I was so touched that they would think of me!!  I just love these girls!

When my students entered my classroom, they were greeted with a different setup…

Because my largest class only has seven students, I decided to remove the two extra desks to allow everyone to have a bit more elbowroom.  It was interesting to watch everyone’s reactions when they realized that there was something different about the room.  This new setup is taking some getting used to, but we’re getting there.

Monday ushered in the beginning of new units in most of my classes.

My 11th and 12th graders began discussing The Scarlet Letter.  We studied chapters one through six this week.  I do not remember enjoying this book nearly so much when I was in high school, but my students seem to be enjoying it.  In fact, several keep asking me what is going to happen…who the father is…etc.

My sixth graders had to turn in the science fiction stories they had written over the weekend.  We had a good time listening as each story was read.  These kids are very creative, and their use of their classmates’ names (along with my own) kept us howling!

My ninth graders were in for a shock when we started a new unit on grammar.  Monday was one of those rough days in which we flew through the unit, and I assigned a lot of homework.  They groaned and even whispered, just loud enough for me to hear, “Well, that’s another zero.”  I was not amused.

Fortunately, my tenth graders were on their way in the door.  They were greeted with this board…

The week would be all about verbs.  Verbs are difficult, but we pushed through direct objects, indirect objects, and lots of other fun stuff.  Blech.

Tuesday…

My sixth graders began reading The Emperor’s Silent Army, which is about a terracotta army that was discovered by farmers in China.  I pulled their vocabulary words from this story.  The kids sat in fascination as we read.  I just love history, so it was the perfect opportunity to combine it with reading skills.

My ninth graders saw this when they entered class…

The day before, I had gotten the inkling that they did not understand how to find subjects and predicates, so I had prepared my board for when they entered.

Boy, was I ever glad too.

After the bell rang, my school’s education director walked in and had a seat.

“Don’t mind me,” he said.  “I’m just going to sit here for a while.”

Oh my word.  I was a nervous wreck.  I realize this is part of his job…observing and evaluating teachers, but it was my first time being observed.

God is merciful, let me tell you, for every one of my students had done all eleven exercises that I had assigned the day before.

This was the first time that all of my students in this class had done their homework…on the same day!

Before we started, I discussed the information on the board.  As we reviewed the answers from the homework, I repeatedly reminded them of the tips I had written on the board.

Over and over…round and round…the students took turns answering questions.

I could see the director taking notes.

I was so nervous.

Just before the bell rang, he left, and I mouthed the words, “Thank you,” to my students.

I was so proud of them.

Wednesday…Hump Day…

Wednesday was about the same as Tuesday.

Thursday arrived, and my juniors and seniors had a quiz on chapters 1-6.

My sixth graders took a vocabulary test…

I took my students to the book fair after they were done…

Book fair at a Muslim school is a little different…

Thursday was good.  I only had to teach three classes because my ninth and tenth graders were taking a standardized test.

A couple of my students came out of class and brought me the pencils they had borrowed.  They told me that they had seen some of their vocabulary words on the test.  In fact, “M,” one of my tenth graders, told me that because we had discussed synonyms for the week’s vocabulary words, he had learned a new word (the synonym), and this new word was on the test!  Talk about timing!  And, the lesson we had the week before on possessive nouns helped him in the many questions that involved apostrophes!

It excites me to see how some of the things that I’ve been doing instinctively truly are preparing my students in a very tangible way!

It was also a half-day, but my day wasn’t over when the kids left.  We had a monthly staff meeting, and we had all signed up to bring food…

Oh yeah.  I went home with a huge bellyache, but it was good going down!

An interesting thing that happened after the meeting was that the education director…the man who had sat in on my class a couple of days before…pulled me aside to tell me that something interesting had happened that day.  In the middle of him sitting there observing my class, he forgot that he was observing and instead became just like one of the students.  The notes I had seen him taking were not about how I was teaching but WHAT I was teaching.

Because he is originally from a country in the Middle East, he is a little unfamiliar with the English language.  Sure, he has a Ph.D., but he doesn’t know the in’s and out’s of sentences, subjects, and predicates.

He went on to tell me that the day after my class, his young son brought home English homework, and he was able to help his son with it because of the information he had learned during my class!

I was incredibly humbled and thankful that God had gone before me and prepared that lesson!

Finally…Friday!!

The day had turned cooler, so I donned my Kai Mei socks and chugged down a cup of hot chocolate before the bell rang…

This was vocabulary test day for all but one of my classes (the sixth graders), so the day was fairly quiet.

My younger students got to read a Time for Kids magazine.  We worked on a handout that I had made copies of…

We read a story about a proposed law to change lunches in public schools.  One student said, “Mrs. AuburnChick, so far this year, we’ve done every subject except for Arabic and Islamic Education in your class.”

I laughed because they are starting to understand how important reading skills are in every subject!

And so Week 14 ended.  I am worn out, again, but I continue to be thankful for a job in which I am challenged on a daily basis and for students who continue to inspire me.  I’m looking forward to a couple of slower weeks (you’ll be reading about them) in which I can hopefully catch my breath and take advantage of some time to get ahead.

Twas the Night Before the New School Year

…and all through school, teachers were preparing to make their rooms cool…

Mission accomplished.  I have a BIG day ahead of me!

Hyper-Organizational-Disorder

I am weird.

I know this.

Wanna know how I know this?

Because I really, really, REALLY like to shop in office supply stores.

For most of my employment life (which began when I was 13 or 14), I have been involved in some sort of office-type of work.

If you’ve ever done secretarial work, you will understand what I mean when I say that all pens are not created equal.

Nor are all highlighters, labels, or binders.

Or crayons, for that matter (my kids told me this when I tried to buy them a store brand).

So, you can see how this teaching thing that I am finally getting to do is the PERFECT justification for all of the shopping I’ve been doing at Office Depot…

Insert Tim the Toolman’s Happy Man Grunt

Because I am teaching five different grades during five different class periods, I thought the best way to keep myself organized would be to color coordinate everything.

Don’t you think the colors above fit into my room’s color scheme?

HGTV really should consider creating a show called “Design a Classroom.”  I could be its host and make the big bucks.

heehee

Now, I am an anal, and by that I do not mean a royal pain in someone else’s backside, unless it’s my friend, Barbara’s, who I’ve been hounding the last few weeks for teacherly advice.  Thank goodness I’m so lovable.

heehee

Because I like things just so, I created inserts for the covers and spines of my binders…

But, I took my organization up even one more level…

Oh yeah, baby.  The spines are now labeled!

How pathetic am I?

But look at how pretty everything is on my shelf…

Folks, I think there’s a name for what I have…

Hyper-Organizational-Disorder

Webster’s should totally add that to its dictionary.