During my 75 Hour Clinical I was to interview a student after teaching a lesson. I chose to interview a struggling student and ask them several questions.
What helps you learn?
She stated that teachers help on challenging material and revisiting information more then once. For her just going over the material is not enough. She feels that she needs to have the information presented to her in more then one way helps her to understand and retain the information taught.
What do you have a hard time with?
She expressed to me that for her in History/Geography map reading is difficult for her. That just being given a map to label is not enough for her. She would like to go over the map in a classroom setting and not just in the textbook. She would like to have a better visual to give her a better understanding of location and spacial understanding.
What would you like to do in the classroom?
She stated that she does not like doing just worksheets. That they are boring and she feels she is not learning anything from them just in her words "copy and pasting" the information with no real connection to the information on the page.
She also stated that she loves to do group work and projects. She loves history and would like it feel more personal to her, for her to get involved in the learning and being an active participant then a "copy and paster". She wants to discover history for herself in her own way. .
This student may be struggling but feels that if the lessons were more exciting and personal that she would be more interested in the learning process. She also feels that more teacher/student involvement would help her as well and that she is more then a worksheet but a member of a learning community.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Where I'm From Poem
I am from the Valley and the Fog , and the Mountains and Hills.
I am from the Ocean tides, and River beds.
From clam chowder at Splash and Taco Trucks to homegrown gardens and Pepperoni rolls.
I am from Disneyland and The Game Farm
I am from Yorkshire England to Litchfield CT
I am from Lea and Charles and Harris and Messanger
I am from my sister and my sister from me.
I am from Sunday Morning Church and Lazy Sunday Naps.
I am from the bookworms and musicians and the ones who love to laugh.
I am from full contact egg hunts, and pumpkin carving, to outdoor activities I’d never thought of.
I am from tragedies to the new beginnings,
I am from where my heart is.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Think Quest Library
Excavating the unforgettable
http://library.thinkquest.org/08aug/01025/
I chose this site because when people think of cave drawings they do not think of India, the first thought for many (myself included) are Native Americans. This site gives another example of why, when and how another culture used cave drawings.
http://library.thinkquest.org/08aug/01025/
I chose this site because when people think of cave drawings they do not think of India, the first thought for many (myself included) are Native Americans. This site gives another example of why, when and how another culture used cave drawings.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Culturally Responsive Teaching
http://elschools.org/best-practices/moving-conflict-peace-0
Restorative Justice Practices in an EL Classroom is about how students can in a History class can be out raged by the injustice of Slavery, the Holocaust and Apartheid but turn around and be just as intolerant and cruel to fellow students. The teacher wanted to find a way to show them that what they are doing outside of the classroom is no different then what happened in history. She started RJ, Restorative Justice. She introduced the guiding principles of RJ the her class by brainstorming and taking a Perspective Taking role to address the conflict being studied and how to resolve in peacefully. They think about how to approach the conflict, placing blame, dealing out punishment and then addressing needs and accountability for the actions. By allowing the students to work in small groups to discuss the issues they are able to learn to listen to each other's ideas, perspectives and thoughts.
Works Cited
Felton, T. (1922, August 12). Moving From Conflict to Peace | Expeditionary Learning. Expeditionary Learning | Engaging Students, Transforming Schools. Retrieved February 21, 2013, from http://elschools.org/best-practices/moving-conflict-peace-0
Restorative Justice Practices in an EL Classroom is about how students can in a History class can be out raged by the injustice of Slavery, the Holocaust and Apartheid but turn around and be just as intolerant and cruel to fellow students. The teacher wanted to find a way to show them that what they are doing outside of the classroom is no different then what happened in history. She started RJ, Restorative Justice. She introduced the guiding principles of RJ the her class by brainstorming and taking a Perspective Taking role to address the conflict being studied and how to resolve in peacefully. They think about how to approach the conflict, placing blame, dealing out punishment and then addressing needs and accountability for the actions. By allowing the students to work in small groups to discuss the issues they are able to learn to listen to each other's ideas, perspectives and thoughts.
"Students reported that they listened more deeply and focused on the needs and wants of others more than the arguments and positions they were originally itching to present. Those on the receiving end felt acknowledged and respected. In addition, the step of identifying common interests caused a perceptible shift in perspectives. Students discovered that it was easier, and more important, to address common interests than to stay stuck in the conflict; they now recognized their former opponent as another individual with needs similar to their own" (Felton 2012).
Works Cited
Felton, T. (1922, August 12). Moving From Conflict to Peace | Expeditionary Learning. Expeditionary Learning | Engaging Students, Transforming Schools. Retrieved February 21, 2013, from http://elschools.org/best-practices/moving-conflict-peace-0
Thursday, February 14, 2013
WVPTS Wordle
WVPTS 3
Jesslayn Gower
Raphael Snell
Tyler Chadock
Deidra Loudin
WVPTS 3
- Function 3A: Importance of content, the teacher was very knowledgeable of “power point” content with the intent of a meaningful interaction.
- Function 3B: Communication with students, teacher walked around the room making positive comments to selected students as she checked progress and enforced the no talking or collaboration.
- Function 3D: Student engagement, detailed instructions were made available to the students in a written format with varying fonts, styles, and grammar usage.
- Function 3E: Use of assessment in instruction, the activity was submitted for a grade regardless of completion and added a follow-up quiz on general “power point” knowledge.
- Function 3F: Flexibility and Responsiveness, the teacher at no time offered any flexibility to the task / activity
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Culturally Responsive Teaching Reflection
While doing my Where I am From, I remembered how culturally diverse the area I grew up in was. Living in Southern California you are exposed, most especially to the Latin/Hispanic culture. It is everywhere you go, from the language to the music and especially the food. In these areas language can be a real barrier to the learning process when most of the parents are immigrants with no or almost no English skills and Spanish is their first language. In this sense being able to bring that language into the classroom allows the ability to break that barrier and bring a connection to the two languages. The same can be said about Appalachian English and "Standard" English. They need to be taught that their speech is not wrong but show them the connection between the two and how to code switch when needed.
"The researchers in Moll's study urged participating teachers to abandon the standard, drill-based approach so often used with working-class and poor students. In its place, Moll urged them to help students find meaning rather than learn isolated facts and rules. He also advised them to use activities that "involve students as thoughtful learners in socially meaningful tasks" (Gonzalez, Greenberg & Velex, 1994).Many time teachers do use a cultural deficit view when it comes to teaching in areas they are not from or unfamiliar with. Upon moving to West Virginia I was at a disadvantage having never experience the Appalachian culture and knew little to almost nothing about it. For some people coming into a new culture especially one with the stigma of poverty and backwoods they would look automatically at the language as ignorant and wrong and bring that into the classroom and try to teach them "right". Instead they need to look at the situation as a cultural difference view; not that how they speak is wrong but showing them another way to speak they may have not been exposed to.
"Most teachers believe students need to learn SAE so that they will have the communication skills which will enable them more opportunities in the future, and there are numerous studies that support this position... who found that speakers with a heavy, non-standard English were less likely to be hired. It is from this belief that many teachers have developed a negative attitude toward minority dialects as forms of incorrect English. According to Wheeler and Swords, “[i]t is clearly the case that when an urban teacher tells minority-language students that their language is wrong and error-filled, she creates a seriously deleterious effect in the classroom"(Rowland & Marrow, 2010).
Teachers can overcome this Cultural Deficit View by becoming familiar with the student, their culture community and families. Knowledge is the best key to any situation and fixing said situation in a proper manner.
The teaching of non-traditional English speakers needs to be taken upon a teacher like teaching any child. Make the material relateable and a student will take more of an interest and comprehend better. You have a first grader read Dr Seuss to help show the relationship of rhyming, not Shakespearean prose. I have been in situations were bilingual or ESL children have been the majority of the students in the classroom and during those situations I was familiar with the culture and the language and was able to bring those aspects in to the classroom. By bringing their language and culture into their lessons in the form of books, words used to help explain something, students took more of an interest in that lesson and were able to make a connection. While in my 30 hour clinical I had to teach vocabulary to 8th grade students in West Virginia History, by using examples of local flora and fauna the student was able to understand the difference between the two words. Explaining a deer is fauna (baby deer-faun) and ramps as flora (it grows in the floor of the woods) he was able to distinct the difference between the two.
Works Cited
Committee, t. W., & 2004, N. (n.d.). NCTE Beliefs about the Teaching of Writing. National Council of Teachers of English - Homepage. Retrieved February 12, 2013, from http://www.ncte.org/positions/statements/writingbeliefs
Moll, L., Amanti, C., Neff, D., & Gonzalez, N. (1992). Funds of Knowledge for Teaching: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes and Classrooms. Theory Into Practice, 31(2), 132-141.
Rowland, J., & Marrow, D. (2010). Dialect Awareness Education: The Importance for Watching Our Words. UCS Undergrad Research Journal , 3, .
Some strategies to teach non-standard English speakers in a "Funds of Knowledge" approach would be to take what they do not understand and put it in a context they would understand. This type of strategy can be seen in some Language Arts classes where Old English Shakespeare is translated into a modern form of a language to be better understood and comparable. Another strategy would be using a Cultural Capital approach and putting in a culturally familiar aspect they can identify with. For many in the Appalachian culture bringing a subject to hunting, fishing, or camping may help put a subject into a familiar aspect of their life they can relate to and make a connection to a topic they may be unfamiliar with."In response to the research discoveries about her students, Hilda developed an instructional unit around a topic of interest to them: building and construction. She took a big risk, since construction was a topic she knew almost nothing about. Hilda did know, however, that her students, their families, and many other people in the community knew quite a bit about construction. (Gonzalez, Greenberg & Velex, 1994).
"Even as they move towards more widely-used English, it is not necessary to or desirable to wipe out the ways their families or neighborhood of origin use words. The teaching of excellence in writing means adding language to what already exists, not subtracting. The goal is to make more relationships available not fewer" (NCTE, 2008).The Where I Am From project allowed our fellow students a glimpse at who we are and why we are that way. It shows us how much we have in common and can connect us together in ways we never knew before, as well as showing us a way to know and listen to each other. It allowed us to see a culture we may not be familiar with and create another teaching tool to what is already taught in schools and bring it to a personal level; a level students may not have been on otherwise. It brings a face of a friend or fellow student to a culture they may be learning about or will be learning about, and allow them to ask questions or have questions answered.
The teaching of non-traditional English speakers needs to be taken upon a teacher like teaching any child. Make the material relateable and a student will take more of an interest and comprehend better. You have a first grader read Dr Seuss to help show the relationship of rhyming, not Shakespearean prose. I have been in situations were bilingual or ESL children have been the majority of the students in the classroom and during those situations I was familiar with the culture and the language and was able to bring those aspects in to the classroom. By bringing their language and culture into their lessons in the form of books, words used to help explain something, students took more of an interest in that lesson and were able to make a connection. While in my 30 hour clinical I had to teach vocabulary to 8th grade students in West Virginia History, by using examples of local flora and fauna the student was able to understand the difference between the two words. Explaining a deer is fauna (baby deer-faun) and ramps as flora (it grows in the floor of the woods) he was able to distinct the difference between the two.
Works Cited
Committee, t. W., & 2004, N. (n.d.). NCTE Beliefs about the Teaching of Writing. National Council of Teachers of English - Homepage. Retrieved February 12, 2013, from http://www.ncte.org/positions/statements/writingbeliefs
Moll, L., Amanti, C., Neff, D., & Gonzalez, N. (1992). Funds of Knowledge for Teaching: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes and Classrooms. Theory Into Practice, 31(2), 132-141.
Rowland, J., & Marrow, D. (2010). Dialect Awareness Education: The Importance for Watching Our Words. UCS Undergrad Research Journal , 3, .
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Cultural Difference/Deficit
While watching the videos I got a real sense of how I speak and how I also code switch at times. Also while watching them I got a good sense of Cultural Deficit and Difference. Though I thought that the Code Switching video hit upon both types, it focused more on how African American English is looked upon as a deficit in succeeding in a professional setting. Business English was a large topic and how speaking African American English would not get you a job defines Deficit. A Deficit is seen as lacking something a person needs to succeed or get a head in life.That you had to speak properly to get ahead. The Fox News video was more Difference and that the children explained that they did not know any better because that was all they heard, and once they learned the "proper" way to speak they knew better. This defines Difference as not knowing or lacking the experience with/of something and being able to learn the difference and adapting.
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