Hello World,
Long time no see friends, it has been a few weeks since my last blog so I thought it was in my best interest to share some of my experiences over the last few weeks. Where to begin?
I am now officially teaching the three sections of Agriscience and the one section of Animal Science. Monday I take over the Advanced Animal Science and in a few weeks I will start teaching my section of Biology. For those of you that dont know I decided that I wanted to observe and teach a section of Biology during my time at Southeast Polk in order to gain valuable experience and insight into this area (since i'll probably end up teaching it). I am starting to understand why teachers consider paperwork the enemy. Student papers litter my desk daily and I have to work diligently to keep the mountain from teetering over (this is one of my daily battles).
One thing that has kept me up the past two weeks is the concept of grading and late work. I have discussed the topic with several different teachers in varying departments and have come to one conclusion. NO ONE has the same grading policy. So how does a new teacher and a student teacher for that matter develop their own working philosophy on grading? Trial and error my friends, trial and error. I have tried two late assignent policies now and am on my way to a third. What does this do to my students? Well confuses them, they have been used to grading and late work one way and here I come saying this is the way it is. I am trying my best to smooth the transition by ensuring that students have all their late work in prior to my implementation of my new policy. This will leave no questions as to how I am going to grade an assignment from that point on. The final goal would be a fair, working representation of a late work/ grading policy that is not only beneficial to the students, but to my administrative work as well.
Another thing that haunts my dreams at night is the concept of a inquiry based classroom and ensuring the involvment of each and every student. My supervising teacher passed along a great article via twitter a few days ago and it has got me thinking and changing some of my strategies. Management of classroom behaviors during projects or activities has been an interesting struggle that I spend much of my time dwelling over. Curbing unwanted behavior without destroying one the teacher-student relationship and two without changing the working environment for other students. I find that when I give students a problem with instructions to complete a project to investigate that problem there is always a set of students that grasp the "challenge" and run with it and there are also almost always another set of students that show little to no interest. This division in interest and activity is the hardest problem I have faced so far during my student teaching and probably in my life. I want to invlove each and every student. I want to inspire them to learn not because I told them to, but because they want to. Some of you reading this may think "O look at this young idealist, wait until you get a few years down the road, your thoughts will change." Why should they? This should be the challenge every teacher battles. For those of you teaching. Look around your classroom the next time you give students an assignment or project to work on, why are they doing it? Because you gave them the assignment and you will give them a bad grade if they dont do it? Or are they working on it because they are truely interested in the content?
I said today to my supervising teacher that I wish I could go back to the start of my student teaching experience and approach a few matters in a different manner. My grading, classroom management, organization, etc.. have all changed over the past few months due to my experiences. This change is hard not only on me, but also my students. I've got a long two months left where I am sure I will learn much more about this profession, my students, and myself. Will I make mistakes, "ummm yea", but I plan on learning from those and moving forward. Do I wish I could go back to the start, sometimes yes, but if I went back and did everything correct how would I learn?
Thanks for listening.
I totally get where your coming from. When I got to Columbus, Katie said she had a no late work policy. If you are excused absent, you have before or after school to come in and make up the work. At first I thought this was harsh, but after having a few students try to take advantage of my lenience, I quickly adopted it. It was a tough lesson for me to learn.
ReplyDeleteWow Brandon, You said it best in this blog! I struggle with a late work policy as well, but unfortunately the school has a policy that says we have to take late work!
ReplyDeleteAlso the last part about student learning-I struggle with this as well! I want each and every student to do the work because they want to learn and what more information about the subject not just because Miss Louwsma assigned it! So hard to conquer this as a teacher!
Keep pushing forward!