Response and commentary on contemporary issues in education, English classroom, reading, and writing as well as personal reflection from the point of view of an aspiring English teacher.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Using Jing
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Integrated Lesson
Integrated Lesson
Description of the proposed learning activity: The class is learning about three different literary works and how they all collectively connect. The first is a short story by Kate Chopin, called “The Story of an Hour,” which the student will have read for class already. The class will summarize the story as a warm up. This will be done on their individual laptops. They will also be asked to find any photographs that they find helpful for the readings. For example, picture of the author often helps readers remember some of the background information. Next, in groups will go through guided reading questions. This can be done in groups or as a class. Then, we will be reading a poem by Langston Hues, entitled Dream Deferred. For this, we will be showing a Nike Commercial that dubs the poem in the background. Next, we will be listening to a song by Tracy Chapman, entitled, Fast Car. Students will have time for open discussion and questions. Last we will be creating our own Diamante poem as a class. A program on the Internet enables us to go through each individual step of the poem with the class. That will complete our lesson on expression and the many forms it comes in.
learning objectives: The purpose of this lesson is to introduce a small variety of literatures that show different forms of expression, while showing the connectivity between the works as a whole. The learning activities are geared to support individuality as well as the arts. The class also supports a cross connection of other subjects. For example, learning about Langston Hues involves history, while Tracy Chapman’s song touches on music, arts, and poetry. The activities in this class will involve students in collaborative learning. They must work in groups to complete the guided reading questions, then work all together for the diamante poem exercise. The use of technology is evident throughout the period, integrating technology as a main asset of learning in this lesson.
Specific curriculum objectives:
English Standard:
B. Writing as a Product (resulting in a formal product or publication)
3.2.12.B.1 Analyzing characteristics, structures, tone, and features of language of selected genres and apply this knowledge to own writing.
This standard is important to this lesson plan as the lesson applies complex concepts that go beyond literal meaning of work. This lesson also applies to different types of works that the students will need to recognize and conceptualize.
3.2.12.B.3 Draft a thesis statement and support/defend it through highly developed ideas and content, organization, and paragraph development.
This standard is also important for the lesson. The students will be asked to write in order to show what they have learned and that they can apply the concept of literature as a means of expression.
Technology Standard:
8.1 Educational Technology: All students will use digital tools to access, manage, evaluate, and synthesize information in order to solve problems individually and collaboratively and to create and communicate knowledge.
8.1.4.A.2 Create a document with text formatting and graphics using a word processing program.
This will be used when the students are free writing as well as a project for their final assessment.
8.1.8.A.4 Generate a spreadsheet to calculate, graph, and present information.
Students will use graphing skills on the computer to better understand the differences and similarities between each reading.
Technology to be used in this activity: In this lesson, we will be using technology in many forms. The students in this particular school have access to laptops in each classroom and for each individual. We will be using the laptop to free write about the homework reading. This free write will become a starting point to their essay at the end of the section. Next, we will be viewing a video that I will have posted on my blog. This video will show a commercial from Nike, that uses the Dreams Deferred poem as a narrative. We will consider the effect of technology as a commercially based media function as well of the connectivity with poetry. Lastly, we will be using an internet based function to create our own poem. Students will navigate through the web site to create this diamante poem step-by-step. Through these uses of technology, the students will be reestablishing their knowledge of computer and technology skills that they can use in college or work.
Activity timeline/procedures: In a school with block scheduling, the lesson should take no longer then one to two full class periods. I am setting up the lesson plan for one class but I am leaving room for two, as it is important to be flexible as a teacher. Students will be asked to free write about the reading on word processor. In these free writes, students are encouraged to write about any aspect of the story that intrigued them. This free write will be used as a building block for an essay we will create later in the section. Next, an overhead will show a guided reading question as we go through each question as a class. Some of the more in depth questions will be discussed with a partner.
We will then move on to the poem, Dreams Deferred. For this, students will be asked to make a Venn diagram on their computers to illustrate the differences between the two pieces as well as the similarities. This will also be an additional tool for them to hold on to for their essay.
The students will use an Internet website to guild them through a diamante poem. Here they will be exploring different English vocabulary while using an Internet based tool.
We will also be listening to a song by Tracy Chapman, called Fast Car. This song will be posted on my blog by use of an MP3 for students to listen to at home if need be. The song will wrap up our discussion by openly talking about how this song can be related to the poem and story. It will also provide an example for their homework, as they will have to bring in a song for next class that either related to them on a personal level or related to the story or poem from class.
Assessment Criteria: I will be assessing students on the amount of participation they contribute during class. Participation is expected to be intelligent and articulate. As I mentioned earlier, at the end of the session, we will be writing an essay on a work that the students have read. This will give me feedback as to their understanding of the literatures as a whole. I will also leave room for the students to make a rough draft so I have time to give feedback for then to correct errors.
Monday, March 29, 2010
Sexting Report
First, the schools should bring up the dangerous repercussions of sending sexual texts and possibly show the students the videos we were assigned to watch.
Other precautions could be taken such as taking zero tolerance measures with the students that were doing the bullying and harassment. Hope walked down the halls every day of school receiving verbal threats, calling her, "whore" and "slut".
Hope consequently began hurting herself as a member of the school faculty noticed cuts on her legs. She was asked to sign a document stating that she will no longer hurt herself, but the parents were not informed. The next day, hope committed suicide by brutally hanging herself by her bed post.
This tragedy could have also been absolved if the parents had more involvement in the school. Niel Howe talks about Generation X parents who are incorporating themselves into the school system, so much so that they are very involved in the child's life and school obligations. A generation X parent, would not have sat back while this tragedy took place. They would have taken the situation into their own hands, as generation X parents are natural skeptical towards school and other bodies of authority (Howe).
This is why it was not only the school's obligation to inform the students, but it was also their obligation to inform the parents of the seriousness of the situation with sexting.
Monday, March 22, 2010
Fair Use and Education
With all of this to remember, as a teacher, it may become tricky to use certain works rightfully. Nonetheless, it is still important to refer back to the Cornell Copyright Center, if you are unsure of the copyright law in a certain situation. This is because the Cornell Copyright Center "provides a useful chart that outlines the current copyright terms for various types of work" (Langran 3).
Sunday, March 7, 2010
NETS for Teachers
Monday, March 1, 2010
Podcast
I would use podcast for many different assignments. I think it's easy enough for students to use so that they can recite a poem of their choosing, or I can simple have my poems for class recorded. This way those who need the poem reread to them can easily do so. Also, I can use podcast if I'm absent and I want the class to listen to my verbal instruction. There are many uses to this easy to use technology.
The only part I did have trouble with is embedding the mp3 onto this blog. For now I'm just going to put the link in until I figure out how to embed the mp3.
http://michellehajjar.mypodcast.com/
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Schools Kill Creativity
Can we apply creativity to our curriculum with the recent state of our economy? Well, I'm not quite sure how creativity would jeopardize our economy. After watching the video, it sounds like more of a ideology then a cost issue to re-inspire creativity as an important asset for schools. I can see how some schools with low funds have a hard time keeping subjects like music or art when they have to choose between those subjects or English. Ken Robinson thinks, "creativity is as important as literacy." With that said, it makes it hard to take a childs creative outlets away because of fund. Although they may not have an art class, English teachers can still incorporate art into the classroom. My example in Kindergarten shows that something as simple as drawing words to help kids connect to the curriculum on the creative level they need, to find an outlet that is comfortable, while assists their learning experience rather then entrenching it in strict assessment.
Monday, February 22, 2010
21st Century Skills: Fad or Key?
Susan McLesters notes, "Now that the United States is facing an increasingly competitive world market driven by digital globalization, how is our education system stepping up to the demand for graduates skilled enough to keep our country on the cutting edge?" (The Workforce Readiness Crisis). Our country needs a change with the economy at a struggling point. While we still can, I think it is important to set high but achievable 21st century goals for our schools. Without teachers incorporating 21st century skills into every day classroom, the students will be at a loss when they leave for college. For those who can not afford college, the 21st century plan may be the only help they will get for preparing them for a contemporary job.
Maura Banta recognizes that, "Our role now as policy makers, educators, business leaders, and parents is to provide students with the best of both worlds: a strong and challenging academic curriculum, and a full infusion of the 21st-century skills students will need to succeed outside of high school. Denying students the right to learn what we recognize is required by today's employers goes against our goal of providing all students with all the tools they will need to succeed after high school, regardless of race, ethnicity or ZIP code"(The Value of Teaching 21 Century Skills).
I thought it was interesting that she lumped zip code in with race and ethnicity. I think it will be harder for districts with lower funds to meet these goal because they simply do not have enough money for the pricey technology, the training of teachers, and the time it takes to give students a chance to incorporate the technology to what they are learning. The argument the other side was making is, "How are millions of students still struggling to acuire 19th century skills in reading, writing, and math supposed to learn this stuff?" (Jay Mathews, The Latest Doomed Pedagogical Fad: 21st-Century Skills). To argue with this statement, I would have to know a little more about how a classroom with the 21st century skills will be running. I do not imagine that all other aspects of the curriculum will be dropped in order to face these skills. I think it will be a challenge for teachers and students, but simple measures can be taken in order to infuse the two aspects of this goal: keeping the students knowledge on the curriculum and doing so with a less antiquated, more 21 century induced regime.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Slidecast
Monday, February 15, 2010
Back to School Presentation
Monday, February 8, 2010
The Effect of Technology Standards
A school as a whole will have to support technology by having a up to date technology lab where students can practice things that were stated in the standards, such as learning power point, functioning on word processor, and even operating the internet for constructive and applicable use. There will also be the possibility that the teachers will need a lesson on the new technology a school has to offer. It may effect what schools look for when hiring a prospective teacher.
The teachers will also have to adapt to the continually changing technological advances. For example, referring to the necessity of learning technology as a teacher will make it hard for those who have already been teaching for a while, who have used the same old principals of teaching, which may not include the use of many technologies that will assist child learning.
My personal development as a teacher will also be effected by the standard. I will have to keep up with the times to be able to relay necessary technology skills to my students. I don't want to be the teacher who can barely operate a VCR. It will also be important for me to keep in touch with other faculty through the use of e-mail or other discussion friendly cites. This kind of contemporary socialization is something I will look for in a school when I job search.
8.1 Educational Technology
Grade 12 (8.1.12.F.2)
This strand describes the standard that says students should be able to use a computer and the internet to access informative databases. They should also be able to use these databases to obtain the information they need in correspondence to the class or world issue.
In high school classroom, I will have students use the internet to assist them with writing a paper and creating a thesis. Finding information on the internet is a learned skill as they will have to learn to siphon though the irrelevant or inaccurate information that can be found. I will show them how to obtain the proper information by going through the scholarly journal cites that are appropriate for the class. When doing this, tricks, such as how to enter the subject into the search engine can be helpful and efficient. Other skills are in the use of understanding the scholarly articles and applying them to the thesis of the paper. They will have to learn how to use their own ideas while incorporating them with the ideas of those who have published articles. When using other works to support your thesis, students must learn the rules of citation in order to avoid plagiarizing which is a very serious offense.
For example, students reading the novel, Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe, can read the novel, research different aspects of the Ibo culture in Africa, and comprise a essay, including a thesis, that is typed up in a formal paper.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Teacher Web Pages
The web site also has a calendar for days off and a board for other frequently asked questions. Some of the icons are for the flu shot, district policies, and how you can reach them by e mail. The school seems very proficient in technology which reestablishes the importance of this class.
http://www.fairviewps.com/ Here is a link to the cite
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Why I Want to Teach
I didn't know however that I wanted to pursue English. I knew I liked school and that I enjoyed teaching, but i wasn't confident in my mastery of any subject to consider myself eligible to teach it. I always considered myself a average student, so why would I be able to teach if I was just average? When I started school in Montclair, however, I realized I wasn't just average. I found more personality traits that can help me be a teacher, like ability to work well with other, or good leadership skills, I even learned not to procrastinate which to me is a great feat.
I knew I loved English because it was the one subject that came the most naturally to me. I was able to learn math, science, and history, but I usually had to try a little harder. What i like about reading and writing is the connections you make to everyday living quorums and hardships as well as beauty and symbolic aspects of life. When I started reading Shakespeare and actually understanding it without needing the help of cliffnotes, I thought, "Maybe I have a shot at this English stuff."
Monday, January 25, 2010
technology background
My thoughts on technology in school is that it is great for assisting your teaching but it may not be a good idea to rely heavily on it, for a few reasons. One, technology sometimes goes wrong. A computer wont start or you cant get the projector working...all kinds of various bumps in the road can occure so I was always taught to have a back-up plan. Two, teachers sometime become so focused on the technology, like the use of a slide show, that the screen is doing more of the teaching which becomes boring, as I'm sure most of you have experienced sitting with the lights off... pinching your leg in an effort not to fall asleep.
Besides those two reasons technology, I think it is an essential part of a students learning. By using technology, such as having students type up a blog each week, they begin to develop interactive skills that can become useful for finding a job. Other aspects also include the fact that technology is a source for vast knowledge and inquiry. With the right direction and teaching, students can learn to find information for essays, reports, or presentations.
Another important aspect is that it essential to stay current with the times. I have read about teachers involving students with twitter to get them to write precise notes about history. Using these contemporary facets gives students the ability to incorporate what they know in school with aspects of contemporary culture. This integration of new technologies goes along with our reading, "The World is Integrated," which talks about the use of incorporating different subjects into a students interests in order to broaden their knowledge and learning. Technology is a great way to provide this kind of learning for schools and classrooms.