Thursday, August 27, 2015

Day 9: Things to Think About

As I was at school today I was thinking of some things that I want in my classroom that I have never thought about.

  • When do I want to make copies?
  • What do I want to do for birthdays? Summer birthdays?
  • How do I want to hand back work that needs to be corrected?
  • How do I want to communicated with parents?
  • How will I create and keep relationships with other teachers.
  • When and how will I reteach things that I didn't teach well, or the students didn't grasp well the first time?
These are some of the things that I have seen or not seen my teacher do that I have been thinking about.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Day 8: The Next Three Years

Well, today I experience what I have been told will be my life for the first three years I teach. I went through school sick. I was fine this morning, got to school, and then BAM! It hit like a wall. My nose went runny, my throat hurt, my head hurt, my body was tired. But I still smiled and did everything I needed to do. That is going to be so great!

We also had our first inside recess today, and I realized I never thought of what we would do during inside recess. So my teacher said she has procedures for inside recess, and they followed them very well.  But what am I going to do for inside recess? She has board games, VHS and puzzles. They are not allowed to do electronics (though VHS is too old school to be electronic) and can't be super loud while they are inside. Inside recess does happen often, so it is good to know what I want to do.

In the morning all of the students have morning work, and they have to check in with Mrs. Burton. This takes a long time, and if they don't do their morning work in line, then they don't get it done. But today she explained to me why she does it in the first place. She loves to get to talk with each student every morning. Some students can slip under your radar just because they are so quiet. Doing it this way she makes sure that she speaks with everyone. I don't know if that system would work for me, but I do want to find a way to speak with every student every day.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Day Seven: Little Piece of Heaven?

It is amazing the spectrum of emotion that a 10 year old can show in the space of 5 hours. The students start off the day one way, and five minutes later they are something totally different. It is amazing.

My teacher runs a very tight schedule. At the end of the day the students have 4 minutes to clean up their desks, do a job, get their backpacks ready and then be ready on the carpet for a read aloud. So far today was the first day they made it, but I can see the improvement.

There is also a nearly no-talking policy. During most of the day they are not allowed to speak at all. I am not sure how I feel about it, but it does make the transitions easier. And faster. I wonder how I will do the transitions in my classroom. But I guess if I have as much to do in a day as she does... I would probably do the same thing.

At the end of the day there was a boy who had been having trouble getting things done all day and he didn't want to wait to see what he was missing at the end of the day. He was starting to have a tantrum and it was looking to be a big one. But my teacher didn't drop her smile, she told him to take a deep breath. He wouldn't do it, and was doing this crazy angry thing. "You keep breathing and I'll help these two then we can talk" she told him. She helped the last two students, and while she did that he started taking deep breaths. When she came back to him he was able to have a pretty decent conversation. They resolved the problem, made a plan for tomorrow, and he was on his way with a high five. It was impressive.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Day 6: Just Another Manic Monday

Wow. Mondays are tough! I am going to be observing her classroom this week so that I can know how all of the procedures and such go before I start doing some lessons next week (on heredity.) Observing today was not that hard, but I can tell my teacher has been teaching for a while. Even while she was saying she was so scatterbrained, her classroom ran smoothly. The children knew where they were supposed to be and when they were supposed to be there. They always knew what they should be working on, and they knew what they should have turned in already. I was so impressed by everyone! When you give the students those high expectations, they will exceed them!

There are two students who have had some trouble staying focused in the past. Their additional teacher came in at the end of the day. "Wow! You are such a good teacher! Those two were both doing their work!" And I think part of it is because she expects them to do their work. I will need to remember this for when I am teaching, have high expectations (that are also realistic) and the students will reach them.

There is so much paper work to do! Whether that be grading papers, cutting papers out, gluing papers, laminating papers, or just filing papers. There is always paper! Which is a great thing for a classroom. Thankfully all of the students in my classroom have their own computer so we are able to do quite a bit of learning with those. But there is a healthy balance between paper and computer work.

At the end of the day, I could tell those kids were ready to go home. An hour before school got out, at least 5 reminders were needed to tell them to stay on task. These kids work so well in the morning, but I think they should have some unstructured breaks in addition to their afternoon recess.

Speaking of recess. I have been thinking about Finland. For every hour of instruction time they have 15 minutes of unstructured recess for their students. (Or something similar to that, so I have heard) Yet their children are doing so well in school and their test scores (Which cannot show everything a child knows) are very high. They also don't start formally teaching their students to read until they reach the age of 7. How can those students keep up with our guys? Or rather how can our guys keep up with them? We are struggling to fit so much into a set amount of time, and each year we just have to put more into it. Our students need to learn one more thing, when we didn't have time to teaching the original 27 things.I read this article about the education system in Finland compared to Canada, and found it very interesting. It doesn't talk about recess but about how students and teachers are valued. My favorite quote from it was "I always say you can't take one element out and transfer it to your own country. Education is the result of culture, history, and the society of a nation." What does that say about our nation?

Friday, August 21, 2015

Day 5: First Friday of the School Year

Even though yesterday was the first day of school, you could tell today was Friday. Everyone, including myself and Mrs. Burton, were ready for the week to be done. However we did still do some amazing things, and I learned a ton!
First: ALWAYS put a section for Name ___________ on EVERYTHING. And always have a place for Student Name_______ on anything I want parents to bring back to me! Other wise I will have no idea which name goes with which child.
I learned that tests take FOREVER. Almost literally. Wow, I do not remember tests taking that long!

I was very impressed with how much forethought my teacher has put into everything. She keeps her plan books from previous years, and has been using them to plan for this year. She told me that she ALWAYS keeps them, especially when she did something really good that year.

The students all took a Personality quiz, but they didn't know what it was. Anyway later we grouped them according to their personalities and told them to make a skit of the Three Little Pigs and they had five minutes. Wow! You could tell they were all the same personality. The whites were whispering quietly, not making any decisions. The yellows immediately went into trying to build a house and were walking around on all fours. The reds were shouting out orders and the blues were all bunched together making sure everyone got a part. At the end of the 5 minutes we brought them back together and told them they would not be performing their skits, but this was an exercise. So we told them what personality color they got based on their test they had taken that morning. My teacher had the pros and cons of each personality listed and gave it to them. It was so cool to watch them recognize their strengths and weaknesses.

I need to figure out how I am going to keep track of the scores of students, assignments, missing work, and who needs to make stuff up. Do I want to use a computer program, paper and pencil, or some other way?

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Day 4: The First day of School

Yesterday my teacher asked me if I had read The First Days of School by Harry Wong. I know that I have heard that is is an excellent book, especially for first year teachers, but I haven't read it yet. But after seeing my teacher's classroom today... wow! I am going to read that book! She told me she got most of the stuff she did on the first day of school from that book.

She explicitly went through every procedure she wants her class to do, talked them through it before she let them even try. She did a lot of rewarding when people did what she wanted and a lot of warnings for when they didn't do what she wanted. The kids responded so well to the structure of her classroom. She also had the expectation that they knew what to do. And so they tried to live up to that expectation. It was beautifully done.

Also, I wanted to show you the bulletin boards we put up. This year her classroom theme is Jungle Safari. She rotates through a few different themes. Anyway, here are our boards.

I had to take a panoramic for this one so it is a little strange. And there is a monkey and a giraffe in the jeep.

These are the classroom rules. Self Starter. On Task. Active Listener. React. When ever we catch one of them doing one of these we give them a star and they put it on the letter of the one he did. 

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Day 3: Bulletin Boards, Bulletin Boards, and MORE Bulletin Boards!

Today was all about setting up the classroom. Starting early this morning I finished what I could of the bulletin board I was in charge of, and then helped my teacher with her other boards. The room is starting to come together, and that is a very good thing because school starts tomorrow!

As I walked around the school I asked teachers how it was going and they all gave me the same answer, "I can make it two days." Maybe the first days of school are always crazy, whether you are a first year teacher or a 20 year teacher.

After school tomorrow I am going to see if I can get together with my teacher so we can finally go over what it is that I need to do in her classroom. I also need to contact my adviser. I bet they didn't think they would need to be working before University even started!

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Day 2: Poco A Poco Se Anda Mucho

First faculty meeting of the year! The school police officer spoke to us about what we can call him for as well as when to report child abuse. (FYI: A teacher must report child abuse if their is physical evidence AND a statement from the child. If you have reasonable suspicion... that works too. DCFS for Logan, UT: 855-323-3237) That was very good information for me to have as well as all of the teachers there. 
The principal had us all meet with the different faculty which was very fun to meet so many different people! She also made us a little treat with the faculty theme for the year:


She also compared the school to mountain climbing. All mountain climbers have certain things to keep them safe. A harness, carabiners, shoes, and a belayer. Each one of these is similar to a person who helps the students learn and grow. The harness is like the specialists at the school who work with your students trying to make sure no one falls behind. The carabieners are the curriculum specialists who teach you how to use the different materials you are given so you can better give that information to your students. Climbing shoes are the resources available to the students like the library, other teachers, parents, friends. And last is the belayer who is the teacher. A belayer guides a climber up a rock face and holds their rope so they don't fall. The belayer can see paths that the rock climber cannot see and will shout it up to them. This is what a teacher does. 

What a wonderful analogy! I loved listening to that! On a sillier note, we were required to read through some updated district material, and we needed to read every slide. Each teacher took turns reading a slide. About half way through, and half the teachers were asleep, one decided to sing her entire slide to the tune of "Climb Every Mountain!" from the The Sound of Music. That woke everyone up pretty quickly. After that several other teachers either sang their parts or spoke with an accent. When it came to my turn, the accent I had wanted to do was already taken, so I spoke with a Russian accent. The entire room was rolling on the ground laughing. I was glad we had a way to make it interesting 

Monday, August 17, 2015

Day 1: Preparing for School

I went to school today, not really knowing what I was getting into. I knew that I was going to meet my teacher but I didn't know if I would be staying or what. She said we would go over my student teaching requirements for her classroom. Or maybe we would just meet and she would send me home.

Neither assumption was correct. I went to find a classroom and a teacher who was not what I expected, but a happy surprise. As soon as she got there she put me to work. I started copying pages and cutting them out, picking out paper to put them on and so forth. At first I was frustrated  that I was just copying stuff, but the more I thought about it... That is what a teacher does on the first work day of the school year. Copying, cutting, pasting, hole punching, laminating that is all part of what a teacher does. So I stopped my pessimistic thoughts and happily finished my job, greeting all of the teachers that came in.

I should mention, I am starting my student teaching this week instead of in two weeks when the rest of the student teachers are because the second half of my student teaching is in Norway. I have to leave two weeks early for that and so here I am! Thankfully I get to see all of the before the start of school procedures and how my teacher sets up for her class. This is something I have been wanting to discover how to do, and now I have an opportunity to see how it works!

My teacher, Mrs. Burton, was working with another teacher in the 5th grade on what they were going to do this week. They had matching plan books ( that were gorgeous! Take a look!) and they were planning what to do on Thursday and Friday. They obviously knew what they were doing since they were using phrases and words I didn't understand. But they were also looking at the lesson plan book they had made the previous year, which was just as detailed and well designed as the one they were making for this year. I was very impressed with it. Especially since the last teacher I was with said she did not use lesson planers anymore. When I am in my own classroom, I will be sure to have a good lesson plan book, and keep careful notes of what I am doing so that I can do it again or not, next year.

1st Meeting with Cooperating Teacher

Good morning!

This week, I start my student teaching and I have to say, I am nervous. Perhaps it is because I have not been in a classroom all summer, or maybe because after this I will be a full on teacher with 20-30 kid's learning in my hands. Maybe it is both.

Either way, I am going to do it, and I am going to do it well.

I went through my student teaching packet thoroughly today. I wrote down all of the expectations that I need to meet as well as when I need to get things done. Thank goodness the University is so organized!

I expect this meeting with my cooperating teacher to go well. From the e-mails we have exchanged she seems like a wonderful person, and hopefully one that will help me to grow and become better. We will discuss where I will teach my lessons, and plan some together. I am very excited for the cooperative teaching that is required by the University. I think that it will help me to be better at self-evaluation.

I have been looking up things on Pinterest to help me with my student teaching. So far one of the most helpful articles I have found was 8 Things I Wish I Knew as a Student Teacher. I loved the advise it gave, as well as the insight into something I have not yet done, and am slightly terrified to do.

Alright, I am not as terrified as I was a few weeks ago, now I am more excited to start this last part of my pre-teaching journey.