Thursday, December 29, 2011

Part 2: Semester At "C"

In the first installment of "Semester At "C", I lamented about some of my frustrations with the past semester be it with providing feedback for what felt like an avalanche of formative assignments, pushing students to strive for more then the minimum, or teaching an overload schedule.  This time I want to focus on what I saw as positives last semester:

  1. Engagement - In revamping the the curriculum for Humanities (English/Social Studies, co-taught), we found that overall many students were on task more often with the learning that was put into the hands.  The classroom is now active, no longer are students passively taking in some of the information, rather they are in control and able to work with one another is small group settings that hopefully will give them ownership for the learning and skill development.  One challenge of this though is getting students to break out of their small comfortable peer groups to work with others who may push them as students.
  2. Communication - Making the classroom learning increasingly student-driven has allowed us to have more meaningful conversations with small groups of students each day in class, versus having a dialogue during a direct lecture time period with the other fifty students staring off into space.  This environment has allowed us to connect with those students who would be staring off into space and put responsibility on them for their learning.  Talking with each student at least once a day, though it might not seem like much in a fifty student plus environment it can be easy for students to "hide or blend in".  Small group learning has been an added benefit, instead of whole class lectures, we are working (and improving) on small group "lectures".  The only drawback is repeating it upwards of six times in one day!
  3. Collaborators - Having a handful of colleagues that are attempting similar styles within their classrooms and having a chance to discuss the ups and downs has been important.  Being able to expand our class content by incorporating information from other content areas such as science is appreciated.  Connecting content areas together and having students begin to see the relationships between them and how one class can serve another is only in its infancy, but having others willing to work has been rewarding.
Though this post is "Semester at "C"", I can look back and say that it wasn't necessarily an "average" semester.  The work that has been done initially has been tough, time consuming, and definitely not average (from my perspective).  As Winter Break draws to a close, I am feeling refreshed about getting back into the classroom and continuing to refine what has been started this year.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Semester at "C" Part 1:

Having had the past couple of days away from the classroom, I have finally started to catch my breath and reflect upon the whirlwind that has been the first semester of this school year.  Granted there are a myriad of issues going on in the district that I teach coupled with the issues that educators that across the country face, so I won't really delve into that.  Rather focusing on what I can control has been main area that I have a waded into.  Changing the mindset of our students to understand that meeting the expectation that has been set in my class doesn't equal an "A" is challenging.  Rather pushing students to strive for more beyond what is expected has been the push.  Though the final grades may not reflect it the title of this post, it felt like many students spent the "Semester at "C""!

Negatives:

  1. In changing the way that we teach in our class, @schneidermf (aka The Grateful Educator...coming soon to a blog near you...I hope) and I have been frustrated at times by the general lack of motivation or willingness to work beyond what would be considered grade level expectation.  In forming the various sections of each unit that we have taught with an end date for students to complete the outlined activities and assignments, there continues to be too much wasted time and last minute "slapping together" of work.  As we have worked to in the words of @elcoopacabra "embrace the ambiguity" and relent the chalk dust covered, iron fisted control that teachers demand, a portion of students continue to do nothing.  That being said, we have been forced to remind ourselves that there is a certain percent of the population in a class that would do nothing regardless.  
  2. Formative assessment of skills and knowledge has been part of this reformation of curriculum in the past eight months.  Prior to starting school this year, I read this post from Andrew Miller that discussed the challenge of providing formative feedback.  After a full semester of this, I can relate, the challenge of being able to provide timely and constructive feedback for all my classes has been a tough mountain to climb.  Hopefully some of the ideas that @schneidermf and I are floating to implement will help to alleviate this ongoing battle.
  3. Teaching an overload of classes, with an increased enrollment our school needed to offer an additional class of government which I was asked to cover.  Teaching four out of a possible four class periods a day was taxing and something that I do not recommend or would do again.  The amount of time it takes to plan, prep, implement, and assess for an extra class of 35 students was a challenge.  Part of the problem might have been that many of students were only in that class since it is needed to graduate.  Again many students simply went through the motions and didn't really care about the course material with the exception of getting the credit needed for graduation.