Sunday, November 28, 2010

Last few weeks of the semester.

Boy, that snuck up on me in a hurry!

I'm trying to make a mad dash to get as much of my portfolio finished as I can before class on Tuesday.  It has quite literally gone untouched for several weeks leading up until today.  I have been so overwhelmingly busy with everything else that it felt nice to just relax and be lazy over the long weekend.  Getting back into gear today was quite the battle of wills.  I actually cleaned my room as a form of prolonging the inevitable.

Regardless, I got 5 portions of my portfolio finished tonight, and it feels pretty damn good.  If only there weren't a significant chunk to go!  I'm not looking forward to doing the Outside Resources or Equity Project portion, so I'll just put those off a little longer... :)

As for teaching in the classroom, I feel like my role has been significantly diminished.  It sounds like I will go back to doing the opening questions like I did for the first half of the semester, which seems so long ago!  I still have two tests to grade tomorrow in class, but after that, my unit is completely finished.  It feels so weird to not have to lesson plan or stress out about grading tests anymore.  Weird, but good!

I honestly don't know if there is something else I need to be doing in the classroom.  I suppose I will wander around and help out where I'm needed.  I now know how Mr. Martin must've felt during my unit - and it makes sense that he was always looking for something to do.  I feel like the last few weeks is going to be boring!

As for my unit as a whole, I feel like it went pretty well.  If I'm considering how my students did, their test scores indicate that my feelings are accurate.  There were a few young ladies who completely bombed both tests, but I have a hard time feeling bad for them.  I approached each of them to see if I could offer additional help, and gave them opportunities to earn back some points on their tests, but neither of them took me up on either offer.  You can only lead a horse to water, right?

In other news, I hope to be hearing from Allendale about my student teaching placement for next semester this week.  Just to have official word will be nice.

:)

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Last Week of my Unit

Wow, that went by very quickly!

Tomorrow and Tuesday are my last two days of the unit, and it feels very good to know that I won't have to do any more planning or stressing out about my students and I can focus on the other stuff I need to finish for the COE.  I still need to grade the test that I gave out on Friday, so that is my plan for Monday night.

Frankly, it seems that there isn't anything else exciting going on.  I got my classroom management plan done, so that's one less thing to stress out about.  The only two things left on my plate are the Multi-Genre project for my literacy class and the Placement Portfolio.  That one will actually take a bit of stress yet... Thanksgiving break should give me the time I need.

In other news, it sounds like there might be a secondary teaching placement opening in my old high school.  I have quite a few friends in the right places that it could work out nicely.  I'm going to do a bit of probing to see what I need to do to initiate the right 'first contact' and so that I can express interest before the position is filled.

Hm... what else is going on?  Well, I ran into an issue with the test that I gave on Friday.  There was nothing wrong with the test, per se, but there were a few people who needed the whole hour to take the test.  This is not unexpected, but what was unexpected was the inability of the rest of the students to refrain from talking so as to not distract those still taking the test.  It was downright disrespectful, and I'm disappointed that even with a very explicit reasoning that students are still testing, they could muster no sympathy.  It's partially my fault for not having something specific for them to work on, but I did give options for those who finished early, and they refused them.

Ugh, it was frustrating.  If my unit wasn't concluding, I would definitely make it a point that such actions would not be tolerated.

Well, I guess this is a short blog post this week.  Not much else to share.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Busiest Week so Far!

The week started off with a bang - I gave students my first ever assigned tests on Monday.  I was pretty nervous to see how they'd do, which I figured would reflect on how well I'd taught.  I know that there are so many other factors that this would be an invalid assertion, but it's tough to avoid thinking that way.

So, I spent a lot of my downtime throughout the week slowly hacking away at grading their tests, which was quite a novel experience.  I've heard quite a few strategies for grading tests, but I opted to just grade a page at a time in an attempt to maximize consistency.  I hit a snag on page 2 when I noticed that everyone was struggling with one question.  It was a pretty difficult question, so I gave them the benefit of the doubt and made the question extra credit, so as to not factor into the total number of points possible.  Interestingly, nobody got the question correct.  The right call I'd say, and an indication to do a bit of reteaching.  More on this later.

We had a bit of a wild week, thanks to a professional development day on Wednesday, my absence from class on Tuesday for seminar, and our CT being out to take care of a sick kid on Thursday.

On Thursday, we continued learning about writing rules, and then equations, for simple linear relationships between two variables.  I was pleasantly surprised to see the students behave as well as they did, considering the presence of a substitute teacher in the room, but there seemed to be mass confusion on the topic discussed.  We didn't get through much after a long list of housekeeping things, so I decided to rethink and stretch the lesson for another day.

That night, I created handouts for the students which could be used a reference to look back on writing rules and equations, as well as provide an opportunity to practice writing their own rules.  Having finished grading their tests as well, I created a re-test of sorts, which I dubbed the Test 2 Recovery, since I intended it to be completed at home and not in class.

Friday went better than Thursday, but was still not great.  One student had one of those educational baby dolls that liked to cry at random intervals.  Fun!  Ignoring this the best we could, I let the class try to come up with their own rules and equations on the worksheet I gave them.  They were all over writing equations, but the rules (with words) were tough for them - I'm thinking it's more of a writing issue than an understanding issue.  But we must push on... we are going to be writing more complex equations this coming week.

I concluded the day on Friday by giving them their tests back.  We spent a bit of time reviewing the questions that they most struggled with, but they were being a bit rowdy.  I used the line, "I would love to continue going over this as soon as the volume level gets back under control. I'm reviewing this stuff for you all - I already know it.  I just assumed you'd want to know how to do this for the Test 2 Recovery which I'll be giving you to do over the weekend."

That seemed to work.  And now I just need to see how many people actually turn them in, and I get to have fun grading stuff again.  Interesting side note - I was pleasantly surprised to see one of the quiet, blend-in kids get a 96% for the class high.  Go him.

---

Other than that, this past week/end has been obnoxiously busy.  I haven't left my house since Friday, and I've been writing at my computer for most of it.

Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Week... Err... I don't even know anymore

I'm so far into the semester that I have no idea how many weeks we've been going for, and I'm not terribly looking forward to the next few of them.  In the next 3 weeks, I have to write my classroom management plan, my placement field folio, and a teaching literacy philosophy, while make progress on my placement portfolio and completing a working prototype of my super secret project.

I hope my hair can handle all of pulling it will be asked to endure...

My teaching placement has been going well, for the most part.  Aside from them going much slower than I'd like, and having to teach a level of mathematics that is not my preference, I think I have been learning a ton about myself as a teacher.  For one, I don't do enough (in my inexperienced opinion) collecting of their work for a grade.  I will be giving a text/quiz on Monday, and I realize that I haven't yet graded them on anything I've given them for this investigation.

It's not as if I haven't been giving them assignments, but in this school, homework completion rates are significantly lower than ideal.  It sounds terrible to sell them short, but from experience, only about 10% of my students will actually do any homework assigned to them.  At one point, I had a plan to check over their homework from the previous day using our CPS remote system, but we only got one question in before class ended.  My plan was to hold them accountable the following day, but my cooperating teacher suggested that I just push on to the next section.

I need to get better at that... I think.  Right?

I had them turn in some 'Exit Slips' to gauge their understanding, which I intended to give a participation score to, which I still may do yet, but I have been told that grading exit slips should be avoided.  Gah!

---

Otherwise, last week I had one day where I fell flat on my face, followed the next day by one of the better lessons given in that classroom this year.  My cooperating teacher said that he was actually pretty engaged in the lesson, having distracted him from the work that he was trying to do off in the corner.  If I can just get rid of the bad days, then we're in business!

This week should go by pretty quickly... We have a test tomorrow, professional development for the College of Ed on Tuesday, and our school has no students on Wednesday (the jury is still out on whether I need to drive in that day).

I think I'm going to spend the next 30 minutes or so depressingly writing down everything I need to get done in the next few weeks.  Ugh.