Friday, September 9, 2016

Becoming a Reflective Teacher

With the beginning of another school year comes an abundance of opportunity for teachers and any kind of educator. Opportunities to learn, to grow, to productively struggle, to learn from mistakes and failure, and to impact the lives of students only begin to name them. But with all this opportunity in our hands, we must be ready to seize them in order to become the best educator we can be. This means that we cannot become complacent with who we are as a teacher currently. We must be constantly critiquing and evaluating ourselves as teachers, our teaching strategies and how effective they are for students, if the needs of our students are being met, and much more. In essence, w must be cognitively aware of what impact each and every moment of our day has on us as an educator and be striving to change as necessary to become better each day. Thus, as I immerse myself into the realm of teaching, I will be trying my best to become a reflective teacher.

I have been challenged to be intentional about picking a few areas where I want to grow as teacher over the semester. Let's dive right in to see the areas I want to seize opportunity in!


Specifying and Reinforcing Productive Student Behavior
One of my biggest fear going into this semester--just like a lot of new and training teachers--is classroom management. That is why I am so glad I have a whole college class on the topic this semester. Having worked as a camp counselor for middle schoolers this past summer, I am super glad that I have been able to try various methods to see what works and does not work. I realize that each class will likely be different and that camp is different than the classroom, but I hope that I can use those experiences to have a healthy classroom environment that promotes and reinforces productive student behavior. Some of the specification of what the classroom norms are is out of my hands, since I am learning from my absolutely amazing cooperative teacher, but I look forward to contributing to further specifying them and reinforcing them with students this semester.

Learning about students' cultural, religious, family, intellectual, and personal experiences and resources for use in instruction
I recognize and can identify the power of a lesson striking home to something familiar in learning the content of a lesson. Thus, I want to be intentional about building genuine relationships with my students and be able to find ways to relate to them and ways to relate the content to their lives. One of the most common frustrations with students in a math class is identifying where the concepts can be realistically applied to their life or what life-skills they have gained through understanding the concepts. Therefore, I want to make it my mission to find creative ways to explain the concepts through relatable experiences for students. I would like for students to view math more like Stanley rather than how SpongeBob does, and it begins by getting to know students better.

"Oh, I see how math is useful now!"
"Math is so useless I don't even want to see it!"

Support Productive Struggle in Learning Mathematics
This one I feel as though is going to be an ongoing pursuit to find the sweet spot between giving a student too much assistance that we have done the thinking for the students and too little assistance that the students begins to flounder. In other words, I want to be able to rescue a students in an appropriate manner, or in one where both the students and I can feel confident that they can continue on and understand what is going on.


Thus, I will be working for students to not feel like a flopping fish


 and more like George Lopez.


Currently, I feel that I go back and forth between too much help and not enough, so I want to be intentional about finding the sweet spot in order for the student to have the most powerful learning opportunity they can have.

I know that there are many more ares to improve--and I hope that I can make strides there too--but I feel as though these are important to develop as I develop as a teacher through teacher assisting this semester. Check back with my weekly updates to see how I am doing in these areas!


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