Last week we hit the mother load of lesson planning. My co-teaching partner and I planned and co-taught three lessons in one day. Planning and teaching three lessons may have been difficult a week prior, but we were ready to tackle the challenge.
We ended up teaching a writing lesson first. The fourth graders in our class are gearing up for the Florida Writes Exam and are frequently practicing expository and narrative writing. We edit several stories of theirs a week and noticed that some of their stories were missing a certain sparkle. The need to fulfill the minimum number of paragraph and sentence requirements was overshadowing their ability to add detail to their stories. In response to this, we taught the students a mini lesson on the importance of adding detail to your writing along with some helpful pointers and examples. We explained that detail helps the reader visualize their stories more clearly. My co-teaching partner thought of a great method to explain how to add detail to the students. She wrote a very basic sentence on a poster board and asked the students who, what, where, when, and how questions in order for them to help her add information to the sentence. I followed her lead with another sentence. I also told the students to utilize the many vocabulary words that are posted throughout the room. The words are excellent resources to spice up their writing. After the demonstration, the students worked with a partner, then independently, to fix sentences in stories that they had written previously. The students seemed very engaged throughout the lesson, and hopefully their writing this week will reflect that.
Following the writing lesson we taught a review lesson in social studies. This lesson was also taught to the fourth graders. It was more of a game format. The students were in three teams and were asked questions that related to the chapter they were going to be tested on. If they answered correctly, their team was able to role dice to determine the number of spots their team would move on a giant chutes and ladders board. This lesson made me wonder how effective playing review games is. Is it more effective than having the students look over a study guide? Furthermore, can you teach students study skills or are study habits innate qualities?
Lastly, my co-teaching partner and I taught our pathwise lesson to the fifth graders in our class. We chose to teach a math lesson, so our teacher asked us to teach the students a lesson on prime and composite numbers. The textbook version of the lesson was very confusing even for us. So, we decided to start from scratch. We used some of the information in the textbook lesson as a resource, but we created our own powerpoint lesson. We taught the students the key vocabulary and concepts and had the students gradually participate more (I Do, You Do, We Do approach). We assessed the students with independent worksheets at the end of the lesson. The main portion of the lesson was a group activity in which the students had to sort prime and composite numbers. They had to work together. Some of them assigned certain numbers to each other and checked them over together once all of the numbers were sorted. I thought it was a very useful activity that helped solidify the material. It made me wonder about the pros and cons of group work in the classroom.
Ultimately, last week was filled with several exciting moments, wonderings, and one particularly busy day.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
A Week of Chemistry, Class Community, and Comprehension
Several exciting moments happened this week in class. At the beginning of the week, a chemistry professor performed different experiments for the fifth graders. For instance, he demonstrated the reaction between potassium and other elements with fire. He turned on a blow torch, sprayed potassium on it, and the fire turned bright purple. This was an excellent example of how to engage students in a lesson. Rather than solely reading from a textbook, or watching a video, it was captivating for both the children and adults to see an expert perform these experiments in person.
In addition to the exciting experiments, our class participated in another unity day on Thursday. Since our class is a combination of both fourth and fifth graders, our mentor teacher tries to do several things to try to build a class community. A couple of weeks ago, she had all of the students wear red shirts. This week, each of the students wore blue shirts. Despite the fact that there are two different grade levels in the class, they are ONE class. I thought it was a great idea for the students to feel proud of their class and a part of a community. Our teacher also had someone at the school take a class picture of them to remember the event. This class activity reminded me of a wondering that I read this week from the book, Leading and Managing a Differentiated Classroom by Carol Ann Tomlinson. The wondering was, "How do I contribute to my students' awareness of their core similarities and their individuality?" This unity building activity helped the students see that they are all unique individuals that share the same space.
Another wondering from the reading that was reflected in my class this week was, "How do students come to encourage, support, and celebrate one another's growth?" Our mentor teacher had her fourth graders participate in an author's chair exercise. The fourth graders are working on improving their expository and narrative writing. She had each of the students sit in a tall computer chair and read one of their stories to their peers. The peers clapped for each of the students after they finished reading. I thought this exercise was an excellent way for students to showcase their writing and get a positive response and support from their peers.
Lastly, I taught my first lesson on my own this week. The fifth graders read aloud and answered comprehension questions from the short story, Goin' Somplace Special, in their reading textbooks. Overall, I thought it went well and received positive feedback from my teacher. I was able to improve my time management from our first reading lesson. I will work on circulating the room more during future reading lessons to ensure that the students are paying attention to the story.
In addition to the exciting experiments, our class participated in another unity day on Thursday. Since our class is a combination of both fourth and fifth graders, our mentor teacher tries to do several things to try to build a class community. A couple of weeks ago, she had all of the students wear red shirts. This week, each of the students wore blue shirts. Despite the fact that there are two different grade levels in the class, they are ONE class. I thought it was a great idea for the students to feel proud of their class and a part of a community. Our teacher also had someone at the school take a class picture of them to remember the event. This class activity reminded me of a wondering that I read this week from the book, Leading and Managing a Differentiated Classroom by Carol Ann Tomlinson. The wondering was, "How do I contribute to my students' awareness of their core similarities and their individuality?" This unity building activity helped the students see that they are all unique individuals that share the same space.
Another wondering from the reading that was reflected in my class this week was, "How do students come to encourage, support, and celebrate one another's growth?" Our mentor teacher had her fourth graders participate in an author's chair exercise. The fourth graders are working on improving their expository and narrative writing. She had each of the students sit in a tall computer chair and read one of their stories to their peers. The peers clapped for each of the students after they finished reading. I thought this exercise was an excellent way for students to showcase their writing and get a positive response and support from their peers.
Lastly, I taught my first lesson on my own this week. The fifth graders read aloud and answered comprehension questions from the short story, Goin' Somplace Special, in their reading textbooks. Overall, I thought it went well and received positive feedback from my teacher. I was able to improve my time management from our first reading lesson. I will work on circulating the room more during future reading lessons to ensure that the students are paying attention to the story.
Friday, January 25, 2013
Week Two Wonderings
This
week in our pre-internship class my co-teaching partner and I led a small group
of fourth grade boys as they read aloud chapter three of their social studies
textbook. Our class is a fourth
and fifth grade combo class; therefore, our teacher asked us to work with the
fourth graders in order for her to teach the fifth graders a lesson without
distracting the fourth graders.
This made me wonder several things. Mainly, how effective are combo classrooms in which one
teacher is in charge of two separate grade levels? Why do schools use this
teaching approach?
My co-teaching partner and I instructed the fourth graders in a work area connected to the classrooms. In the beginning of the reading, the boys were a bit goofy. They were laughing while their peers were reading as well as interjecting. I think this was because they were not used to us teaching them. Maybe they were testing us? It did not take them long to settle down though. Overall, they are a great group of kids. The only other issue that we had was completing the review at the end of the chapter. The students were very loud/ rowdy for the space we were in, and I was concerned that it was disturbing the students in other classrooms. I learned from this small experience that I need to work on my class management skills without being too harsh on the students. There is no problem with the students talking and working together in my opinion as long as the work is being done. This made me wonder how you establish yourself as a warm demander with your students? What is the appropriate level of off-topic conversation/ “roudiness” before you say something to your students? How do you tell your students to behave in a way that gets your message across while also maintaining the students level of respect for you?
My co-teaching partner and I instructed the fourth graders in a work area connected to the classrooms. In the beginning of the reading, the boys were a bit goofy. They were laughing while their peers were reading as well as interjecting. I think this was because they were not used to us teaching them. Maybe they were testing us? It did not take them long to settle down though. Overall, they are a great group of kids. The only other issue that we had was completing the review at the end of the chapter. The students were very loud/ rowdy for the space we were in, and I was concerned that it was disturbing the students in other classrooms. I learned from this small experience that I need to work on my class management skills without being too harsh on the students. There is no problem with the students talking and working together in my opinion as long as the work is being done. This made me wonder how you establish yourself as a warm demander with your students? What is the appropriate level of off-topic conversation/ “roudiness” before you say something to your students? How do you tell your students to behave in a way that gets your message across while also maintaining the students level of respect for you?
In
addition to leading this small group, we also co-taught our second lesson. Instead of a reading lesson however, it
was a fifth grade math lesson. The
lesson was on explaining the relationship of the x and y axis on line
graphs. The line graphs were
titled and labeled, but there were no scales (numbers). The students had to explain what was
happening in the graphs based on what they saw. Overall the lesson went well. It was another successful week in the classroom.
Friday, January 18, 2013
Teaching our First Lesson
At the beginning of the week, my co-teaching partner and I
were asked to teach our first lesson. It
was a reading lesson. We read the story,
Zathura: A Space Adventure by Chris Van Allsburg with the fifth grade students in our four/five
combo class. Prior to reading the story,
we reviewed several vocabulary words that the students had previous exposure to
and that would be found again in the story we were reading. After reviewing the vocabulary and going over
some reading strategies, we pulled popscicle sticks with the students’ names
written on them from a basket to determine the order that the students would
read aloud. After each student had the
opportunity to read atleast half a page of text in the story, my co-teaching
partner and I read the rest of the story aloud to the students. We used different voices for different
characters, such as a robot. We also used intonation in our voices and gestures
and sounds that helped the story come alive a bit more for the students.
Throughout
the reading we stopped to ask the students comprehension questions about the
story as well as fill out a workbook page about using evidence from the story
to form conclusions. We had a handful of
the same students raising their hands to answer the questions and mostly called
on them. Our mentor teacher suggested
that we also call on students that were not raising their hands in order to
gauge their understanding and get them involved in the lesson. This was difficult to achieve at times. When I called on students to see if they had
anything to add to the discussion, they oftentimes did not have anything to say
and I did not know how to get them to answer.
I was worried about putting them on the spot or making them
uncomfortable. I did not want to make them
hate reading because I called them out in front of their peers. This made me think of Passion One from our
reading in The Reflective Educator’s Guide to Classroom Research by Dana and
Yendol-Hoppey. How do you help an
individual child participate in a lesson? The students lack of interaction also
made me wonder why they were not participating.
Did they not understand the questions? Did they depend on or assume one
of the students that frequently raised their hand would answer again? Did they
not like the story? How could we get them to participate? My co-teacher and I asked several questions throughout the story. Maybe too many. They were all great questions in my opinion, but it made us go over our allotted time. We were not able to start the last workbook page with the students that we were supposed to do with them during the reading block. This made me think of Passion Four from the reading: Improve or Experiment with Teaching Strategies or Techniques. Moreover, it made me wonder which questions would be most important to ask the students?
Overall, our first lesson went well. I hope to more effectively utilize questions as well as find ways to engage all students in future lessons.
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