Sunday, January 30, 2011
Week 4
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Week 2: LA in Our Classrooms
This week’s readings hit a note with me, especially in terms of last week’s post. In a way I think I wouldn’t want to teach in an urban school because I would have such a hard time relating to the kids there. At the same time I foresee myself having difficulties in a rural school when I need to teach about social issues. This is once again because I have a hard time feeling like I have any kind of authority with issues like race. It was nice then to read the article from Leland that showed how texts could be used to help address these issues. I can actually see me learning as much as the kids using some of these methods.
At this time, I am still trying to get a grip on the language arts curriculum in my 5th grade classroom. The first half of the day is devoted to language arts and the second half is devoted to everything else. Last semester I went for the everything else half of the day and this year I’m going for the first half. I’ve only seen one language arts period because of this. (We went to a play on my first day.) What I’ve learned is interesting to me. When I was observing science and social studies I saw that the school didn’t have a set curriculum they had to follow. There was just a set of guidelines and the teachers were allowed to use whatever sources they wanted to reach them. Language arts seems to be drastically different. I’ve been told that they are held to very high standards and accountability for teaching out of a curriculum called Reading Street. I’ve explored it a little and it seems to be a textbook that is full of stories. The teachers guide is specifically laid out for the State of Michigan and explicitly states which GLCE’s are covered in each section and what the teacher should do in order to achieve each expectation.
I find this approach odd when I consider our readings. In one sense it says that language arts is more important and teachers need to make sure they are covering each expectation. When the readings are considered it says that we may be taking away the critical thinking aspect of literacy. I didn’t see evidence of multi-media being explored like Hassett or Tompkins recommend. I didn’t see social issues either. These are things I want to look for when I go in next week.
I’ve been in the class at all times of the day now too. One thing I’ve never observed is the teacher reading to the students. I have done it and they have a procedure for it, so she must read occasionally, but it is definitely not regularly. I wonder if it is because they are too old for picture books, if there just isn’t enough time in the day, or if there may be some other reason. This is something else I intend to discuss with my CT.
I’m looking forward to hearing the other perspectives you guys might have. Is my classroom missing something or is this just the way it is now?
Saturday, January 15, 2011
The First Readings
I think our teacher education program is a very good one, but there are still a lot of important things we are not taught in the classroom. Our placements can?t fully prepare us for all of the situations we will find ourselves in either once we are in charge, so a lot of our profession is left up to our judgment. Kind of a scary thought at this point in our education!
The University of Chicago has realized those types of issues and is specifically providing curriculum and instruction to better prepare their teacher education students for those types of situations. Even if you don?t plan on teaching in urban areas, it is always helpful to have at least some point of reference to look back on if you do find yourself in a situation where you are dealing with irate or hard to deal with parents, a very strong-willed child, or anyone having a problem with you as a teacher in general. You can never be too prepared when you are a teacher and dealing with all sorts of people from all kinds of backgrounds.