Sunday, August 5, 2012

Blog 6



1) First 7 things to be changed in Education:
  • Pay Teachers MORE:  For the amount of countless hours teachers spend each day preparing, teaching, taking care of students and parents, we are very much underpaid and overworked!
  • Get rid of NCLB completely:  NCLB was set up to punish those schools that did not raise student test scores.  It blamed teachers and principals and it assumed that they were lazy and not doing their jobs as educators.  It believed if we only concentrate on math and reading and raising those scores, we are providing students with a good education.  NCLB came up with unrealistic goals that all children would be proficient in reading and math by 2014.  Testing cannot replace curriculum and quality instruction. (Ravitch, 111)     
  • Change tenure and how teachers get evaluated:  Good performance should get rewarded and poor performance should get penalized.  Principals should have the power to hire and fire teachers who are not effective teachers.  Unions should not protect BAD teachers; instead great teachers should be rewarded for providing quality instruction and their students mastering the standards.  Teachers should only receive tenure status if they have proven themselves to be highly qualified and highly effective.  Teachers should be evaluated every year and their evaluations should be based on their performance not based on their students’ standardized test scores.
  • Make sure that the schools that are attended by the neediest students have well-educated teachers, small classes, beautiful facilities, and curriculum rich in the arts and sciences (Ravitch, 229)
  • Change school accountability (schools should be graded not just on test scores, but on quality instruction and teaching the standards), tests do not measure what matters most in education such as reasoning, raising questions, finding alternative solutions to problems (Ravitch, 226)
  • Hazard pay for teachers that work in inner city schools:  In order to make sure the low performing schools have the best teachers, there needs to be an incentive to keep highly qualified teachers at these schools.  Schools that are in the poorest of neighborhoods and serve the neediest students, have a very high turnover rate of teachers.  It’s very hard to keep teachers there and not lose them to other schools in better areas.  In order to retain great teachers at these schools, something needs to be done to keep them there.   
  • Make sure that all Principals of schools have had experience as a classroom teacher, then as an assistant principal and finally as principal.  Principals who have not spent time as teachers, they are not qualified to judge others’ teaching nor can they assist new teachers. (Ravitch, 228)
2) What has been meaningful about Ravitch?
            Ravitch has opened my eyes to the ills that plague our nation’s education system and there is not one solution that will fix our failing system.  Every president in the last couple of decades have all promised to come up with a solution to fix our education system, but not one has been successful.  Ravitch believes that many things need to happen in order to provide the quality education that our nation’s children deserve. 
            On page 225 Ravitch states, “The most durable way to improve schools is to improve curriculum and instruction and to improve the conditions in which teachers work and children learn, rather than endlessly squabbling over how school systems should be organized, managed, and controlled.”  She goes on to say that, “Congress and state legislatures should not tell teachers how to teach, any more than they should tell surgeons how to perform operations.”  As educators, we need to provide a quality education that educates the whole person not just in the areas of math and language arts.  Students should receive a liberal arts education that prepares them for college, the workplace, to take on the responsibilities of being a citizen in a democratic society.  Schools are to “educate children to become responsible people with well-developed minds and good character” (228).     

3) Given the current state of American education, what can you do as a teacher and as a citizen?
            As a teacher, I can do my best to provide the quality education that my students need and deserve.  I need to provide quality instruction, enriched curriculum and teach interdisciplinary lessons.  As a teacher I need to provide a liberal arts classroom, where students are exposed to all subjects not just focused on math and reading.  I need to provide a learning environment that educates the whole child and teaches children to be responsible individuals with good character.  It is my responsibility to instill in my students that education is important and to teach them the life skills that they will use for the rest of their lives.  
            As a citizen, I need to be an active voter and take an active role in contacting my local legislature and state senators to make sure that Education is there top priority.  I need to write letters voicing my concerns and ideas about what needs to be done to help education.  As a citizen, I need to make sure that my voice is heard and to represent those that think there concerns and opinions don’t matter.   

4) Find two national or state associations from your subject area and describe what you find from each website.
·   California Reading Association- www.californiareads.org
This is a non-profit professional organization of educators who are actively involved in all aspects of reading and language arts education in K-12 classrooms.  This website has a publication for educators called “The California Reader” and it also provides Awards and Scholarship opportunities for educators.
·   International Reading Association- www.reading.org
This association provides lesson plans for teaching ELA, provides Common Core standards resources, and provides strategies to teach ELA.  This website also provides Grants for research and Awards for achievement in promoting literacy for educators.  This association partners up with the organization called ReadWriteThink.org. 
·   National Council of Teachers of English- www.ncte.org
This council provides teachers with the ELA standards, lesson plans for ELA, list of books and resources to support the implementation of the Common Core Standards and resources to support teaching English Language Learners (ELL). 

5) 
a) Here is the list of my top 8 places that I would like to experience and visit in the Bay Area:
1)  California Academy of Science
2)  Alcatraz
3)  Exploratorium
4)  The De Young Museum
5)  Bay Area Discovery Museum
6)  Lawrence Hall of Science- Berkeley
7)  Legion of Honor
8)  San Francisco Modern Art Museum
9)  Attend a Literacy Conference or Workshop
b) Here are 5 books I would like to read in my subject area of Language Arts:
2)    Reading with Meaning by Debbie Miller
3)    The CafĂ© Book:  Engaging all Students in Daily Literacy Assessment and Instruction by Gail Boushey and Joan Moser
4)    Strategies that Work:  Teaching Comprehension for Understanding and Engagement by Stephanie Harvey and Anne Goudvis
c) Journals I would still like to investigate in Language Arts and teaching English Language Learners:
1)    Barone, D. (2011). Welcoming Families: A Parent Literacy Project in a Linguistically Rich, High-Poverty School. Early Childhood Education Journal, 38(5), 377-384.
2)    Linan-Thompson, S., Vaughn, S., Hickman-Davis, P., & Kouzekanani, K. (2003). Effectiveness of Supplemental Reading Instruction for Second-Grade English Language Learners with Reading Difficulties. Elementary School Journal, 103(3), 221-38.
d) Here are some conferences I would still like to attend in Language Arts:
1)    Bay Area Writing Project
2)    Asilomar (Fall, CA Association of Teachers of English)
3)    West Ed workshops
4)    Contra Costa County Office of Education- free workshops in Fall
e) Places I would like to see and visit in the world connected to Language Arts:
1)    DeYoung Museum (San Francisco)
2)    The Palace of the Legion of Honor (San Francisco)
3)    The Huntington Library (Los Angeles)
4)    Bancroft Library (Walnut Creek)
5)    The National Library of England (London)
6)    Oakland Museum

Blogs I commented on:
Emy Zettner
Heather Richey

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Blog 5: Technology


1.  Dr. Robert's presentation on children's use of technology was very interesting.  I really was frightened by hearing about the idea of "multitasking."  I was shocked to see how much exposure children get to all forms of technology/media through multitasking.  Children today are exposed to too much stimulus and so many are being diagnosed with ADD.  I am wondering if this multitasking is causing this rise.  What happened to children going outside playing or riding their bikes, or reading a book.  I think there needs to be stronger guidelines set by parents and educators to the exposure of so much media.  I know many educators promote the use of media and technology in the classroom.  I am one of them.  Everyday in my lessons I use some form of technology, whether it be using my LCD projector, my laptop, the TV, my ELMO (document camera), ipod, etc.  My students are more engaged in my lessons if I use some form of technology.  However, where I teach there are many families that do not have computers, internet or TVs at their house because they cannot afford it.  I have to bring technology into my classroom so my students learn how to use a computer or a laptop.  This is a lifeskill to help them learn early on how to use technology and not to be afraid of it.  I agree though that their needs to be limits of exposure time both in the classroom and outside of the classroom.  Parents definitely need to be involved and not let their children spend their lives hiding behind a computer screen or TV screen.

2 & 3.  As an elementary school teacher, the prospect of turning over my core subject matter to computer based classes frightens me to the core.  This is not what education is all about.  I am frightened about the development of my students and their ability to relate to things and their social development.  This past year I had a first grade student who was Web-based home schooled.  He was taking first grade on the computer.  He was not at grade level and lacked social skills.  He had no concept of how to learn from a teacher and being surrounded by other students learning.  He did not progress this year so he is being retained in first grade again next year.
     For young children, learning must incorporate an environment in which the child can experience hands-on learning; writing, reading, playing, moving and touching.  They need to be exposed to all of the senses in order to be successful learners. It is very dangerous to me, to require children at such young ages to take courses online. I understand the implications for wanting online courses.  Online courses can provide more options for students, remediation courses for failing students and lowering education costs per child. If this method filters down to elementary schools where all or some courses are taken online, I can only imagine the limitations that children will face. Students need in order to learn need to have social skills, the ability to take part in a discussion and have reasoning skills. I strongly oppose this new found education online, especially at the elementary level where learning is not just reading a text on a computer screen or emailing their online teacher to discuss the reading, it is all about a multifaceted learning experience where children use all of their senses to learn about a subject.  I do not see children doing this if they are staring at a computer screen all day.    

4. Here are some of the websites or links that I was unfamiliar with and will definitely use in my classroom this year and in the future.
www.dropbox.com/ I thought this was a great tool to use. Instead of having to email documents to myself, or save it onto a flash drive which I could lose or get damaged, this will be much easier to drop documents, files, pictures etc. into a folder and have it when I get to the classroom. I think it will also be useful when I want to collaborate and share ideas with fellow teachers. This is a resource I will definitely use this year.
www.prezi.com I thought that this website is a great way to create your own power point as an online presentation tool saved on the internet.  I have been impressed with how my fellow teachers have used this website to create great presentations.  I like how you can access it online and share it with colleagues.
www.quizlet.com I enjoyed learning about this website and the ability to create vocabulary flashcards for my ELL students that struggle with learning vocabulary words in math, science and Language Arts.  I am going to use this website for sure in my classroom.
www.rubistar.4teachers.org/ I thought that this is a great tool to use to create rubrics for my classroom to grade students on projects and presentations.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Interdisciplinary Teaching and Learning

As a multiple subjects teacher required to teach all subjects each day, it is very necessary to have an interdisciplinary classroom.  There is not enough time in the day to teach each subject separately.  Teaching and integrating all subjects is a great way to keep students interests high and keep them motivated to learn.  I always have to teach Language Arts and I try to incorporate Science and math into whatever we are learning or reading in ELA.  For example, this past year my first graders read the story "The Hat"- a story that is part of the Frog and Toad series.  To accompany the story I brought in non-fiction books on Frogs and Toads to help my students learn more about the differences and similarities between frogs and toads.  This is how I brought in Science into Language Arts.  We also talked about our schema about what they already knew, we researched different types of frogs and toads and then as a closing project my students wrote two five sentence paragraphs on frogs and toads.

I also integrated math into learning and reading about Frogs and Toads.  I had my students create frog number stories and for math centers had a hands-on activity where my students had to work out number story problems on paper lily pads with plastic frogs.  My students loved learning about frogs and toads in Science but also loved reading the Frog and Toad stories in Language Arts.

I have found many great ideas from other teachers on Pinterest.  Here is the link to a great Frog and Toad comparison chart  http://pinterest.com/pin/256986722456329658/ and the link to a Frog and Toad pattern to write facts about Frogs and Toads http://pinterest.com/pin/256986722456932543/.   Here is the link to the math center that I did with my class http://pinterest.com/pin/225461525065396688/.

Here is a great website for kids to learn more about frogs and toads:  http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/kids/animals/.  On this website you can research any type of animal.  My students love this website.

The blog I commented on:
Carolyn Cadle carriecadleMAIT.blogspot.com

Friday, July 6, 2012

Mind the Gap: Session 2

1.  Page 12, "Testing, I realized with dismay, had become a central preoccupation in the schools and was not just a measure but an end in itself.  I came to believe that accountability, as written into federal law, was not raising standards but dumbing down the schools as states and districts strived to meet unrealistic targets."
     Testing has become such a huge part in my classroom.  Teaching at a Title I school, I feel like I am teaching always to the test.  My success as a teacher is measured by how well my students perform on our district's Common Assessment tests.  If my students do not perform well, I am criticized and reprimanded for not having higher test scores.  I have to agree with Ravitch, testing is an end in itself.  However, the results of the testing drives my teaching. My planning is based upon my student's performance on the Pre-tests.  If my students show strength in a standard then I only have to review that standard before my actual test.  If my students do not perform well in a specific standard, I concentrate my next couple weeks of my teaching cycle focused on having my students master that standard.  Teaching to the TEST!  Additionally, I believe testing is necessary to show what knowledge and content student's have retained.  Students will retain more knowledge when they are interested in the content.    

Page 13, "It is time, I think, for those who want to improve our schools to focus on the essentials of education.  We must make sure that our schools have a strong, coherent, explicit curriculum that is grounded in the liberal arts and sciences, with plenty of opportunity for children to engage in activities and projects that make learning lively."
     What are the essentials of Education?  Schools need to have programs that teach to the whole child.  Students should be provided with knowledge that makes them well-rounded and well-educated.  It is very difficult to teach when your curriculum is lacking in certain areas and you need to supplement and find other sources that support your standards. Students need to gain knowledge that they will need to understand the world that they live in and to be successful in their life.  Teachers need to provide instruction that is engaging to all students. Students will enjoy learning, if the teacher makes it fun and interesting.  If a student is not interested in the content, then they will not show motivation to learn.  As a teacher, you need to find out the interests of your students.  Learning should be FUN!

2.  How would you characterize a well-educated person?
        Ravitch explains, "A well educated person has a well-furnished mind, shaped by reading and thinking about history , science, literature, the arts, and politics,  The well-educated person has learned how to explain ideas and listen respectfully to others."
     A well educated person is dedicated to spending time to making themselves better and learning their knowledge from others.  They are always striving to keep learning to further their knowledge in their area of interest.  They have an open-mind to learn new things and open to new ideas.  An individual that is well educated thinks outside the box and is not stuck in their ways.  They are life-long learners!  We learn from our experience and our education.  With education, we acquire WISDOM!

3.  On page 25, "What was truly at risk, it said, was the promise that 'all, regardless of race or class or economic status, are entitled to a fair chance and to the tools of developing their individual powers of mind and spirit to the utmost.'  As a teacher, I believe that all students should be entitled to an equal education no matter what race or economic status they are.

4.  I will be teaching 2nd grade next year and the one gap from my subject area is in ELA and the standard that contains Syllabication.   The standard states:  Decoding and Word Recognition:  1.2 Apply Knowledge of basic Syllabication rules when reading (e.g., vowel-consonant-vowel, vowel-consonant/consonant-vowel).  I have such a hard time knowing all these rules of Syllabication.  I wish there was some easier way to learn and teach this standard to my students.

Here are some useful resources that I might be able to use:

  • One website that will be beneficial is www.edhelper.com.  This website provides worksheets and activities that will support my teaching how to teach syllabication to my 2nd graders.  
  • Another great website is www.edutopia.org. 
  • A great book to help me with teaching Syllabication is, "Literacy for the 21st Century:  A Balanced Approach, by Gail E. Tompkins.  This books provides strategies to use in the classroom to develop successful readers and writers.  It helps to integrate the best of what we know about teaching reading and writing.  
  • Another great book is, "When Readers Struggle:  Teaching That Works,"  by Gay Su Pinnell.  This book provides guidance of how to teach reading and writing to struggling readers.  
  • A great research article based on teaching syllabication is, "Syllabication and the Teaching of Reading," by Marlow Ediger in the source, "Reading Improvement, v30 n3 pgs. 186-188, Fall 1993.  In this article, he elaborates on the use of syllabication in teaching students to recognize unknown words.  He also discusses specific methodologies in teaching syllabication.


5.  My topic/question is "What are the effects of parent involvement and intervention in a student's ability to learn how to read?"  Here are some articles that I might find useful in furthering my research on this inquiry:

  • The first article is titled, "Early Literacy Interventions for English Language Learners:  Support for an RTI Model, by Healy, Krista; Vanderwood, Mike; Edelston, Danielle, from the journal California School Psychologist, v10 pg.55-63, 2005            

      In this research article, the research study used first graders that were screened with measures of phonological awareness and nonsense word fluency to determine those in need of reading intervention.  The 15 lowest performing English Language Learners (ELL) were also selected to participate.  Out of 15 students, 12 of the students were exited from the intervention program.  It was very interesting to read this article and to see their results.  My district also uses the RTI model to intervention to help those students who are struggling with reading.  I believe this type of intervention model works at underperforming schools.  It does not allow students to fall through the cracks and it provides intervention early on.  

  • The second article is titled, "A Sociocultural Perspective:  Language Arts Framework, Vocabulary Activities and English Language Learners in a 2nd grade Mixed Classroom, by Ajayi, Lasisi J., from the Journal of Instructional Psychology v32 n3 pg. 180-195 2005, 16pp. 
     In this research article, the study examined the language arts framework and how vocabulary acquisition seems to be more difficult for ELL (English Language Learner) to acquire but it's a huge component of academic language.

Blogs that I commented on:
Sasha Staking:  http://yvhsteachermat.blogspot.com
Debamitra Guha: http://rdguha.blogspot.com
Greg Brown-Davis:  http://gregbrown-davis.blogspot.com

Friday, June 29, 2012

The Importance of Reading

A quote to live by...........Spread the Joy of Reading to a Child!

Content Knowledge (MAIT 402): Session One

How outside-school experiences deepened my understanding of my subject area content knowledge?

  As an elementary school teacher and teaching multiple subjects, all of my experiences both in-school and outside of school have helped to expand and deepen my understanding about my subject area content knowledge.  I have constructed many understandings from my every day experiences.  I have learned by observing what my friend's kids do and how best they learn by helping them with their homework and tutoring a child who was struggling in 5th grade with math and reading comprehension.  My family has taught me many things about my content knowledge especially my mom who is a nurse has influenced the way I teach Science and Math in my classroom.  My mom has filled me with knowledge about Biology and teaching me that by using a Hands-on approach, Exploration and Questioning, children will grasp Science and Math content and be excited to learn about it.  By talking with my friends who are teachers too, we collaborate and discuss our understandings about teaching and what works in their classrooms. My friends have also contributed to my knowledge.  I have many friends who work in different fields that have all given me advice or made me reflect on what are the best ways to teach content to my students.  Taking a trip nine years ago to Europe to the countries of Italy, France and England, has also deepened my knowledge in knowing more about World History. It gave me a once in a lifetime experience that I still refer to when I am teaching my students about different cultures and places in our world.   Definitely my experiences of going to museums during my early years and now as an adult and teacher, have influenced the way I teach and how visiting these great places of learning can help you to understand and gain knowledge about any subject (art, science, math, reading).  I love teaching all subjects to my first graders because they love learning about everything.  They need to be exposed to all areas of knowledge early on in their education.          

"The Subject Matter Preparation of Teachers" 

By Deborah Ball

When our class discussed Ball's article, "The Subject Matter Preparation of Teachers," I still have questions about how your journey through your education shapes the way you teach your students?  What happens if you experienced poor teachers in your schooling?  Do you learn about what not to do when you become a classroom teacher?  Who teaches you how to embed hidden curriculum in the Subject matter?  How can teachers and prospective teachers increase their knowledge of the subjects they teach?  How can experiences outside of teaching influence and make a difference in the teacher's subject knowledge?
     Some of my thoughts.......I feel that teachers develop a deeper knowledge of content by explaining it just as students learn by explaining their knowledge to others.  Students learn best by coming up with their own conclusions and understanding of the subject matter they are learning.  I think that you have better concept development when you are older and you can apply this to the skills you learned earlier in your education.  I also agree with Ball on how people construct understandings and obtain knowledge from their everyday experiences either from their activities in their environment, from what they see adults and children around them doing or from observing and talking to people in their communities.  We learn knowledge from many sources and experiences everywhere and from everyone we come in contact with.  It's not about what you learn; it's about how you learn it!

INQUIRY & RESEARCH 

I am still trying to figure out my topic of inquiry and what I would like to pursue in researching more about.  I am interested in student achievement at Title I schools, mainstreaming/inclusion, raising test scores at Title I schools, and how to keep great teachers at Title I schools (incentives program).  I am wanting to learn more about our state adoption of the new Common Core Standards and how to provide the proper training and resources to teachers on the new and improved Content Standards that we are implementing into our classrooms in 2013.  Being an elementary/multiple subjects school teacher, there are many areas of teaching that I am interested in.  I am trying to narrow my question down that incorporates my experience at working at a low performing/low socio-economic school.  Every day I face many challenges by working at such a challenging school.  

Here are the three questions that I have narrowed it down to:

  • How will the adaptation of the Common Core Standards affect student achievement?  Teacher accountability?
  • How do educators provide equal access to the curriculum when mainstreaming students?
  • How to raise student achievement at Title I schools?  How does the No Child Left Behind Act affect their achievement at Title I schools?  
Research on these questions of inquiry:
  • Common Core standards is too new of topic and there is not much research done on the implementation and new adoption by the state
  • I have found research on mainstreaming and inclusion and how to provide equal access to the content knowledge.  I am still struggling to find how to handle students who are emotionally disturbed, extreme behavior problem, or who is oppositional defiant.  
  • I have also found some research on the effects of NCLB on Title I schools and how this idea was to help those low-income and low performing students but really the act did the opposite.  I want to see if the research shows how NCLB effects Title I schools and how to change it so there is more achievement and success at these lower performing schools.  Want to further my research with Teacher Accountability, Teacher Incentives Program if their students perform well on State test, Student Motivation and Incentive program.  
My ideas for Experiential Learning Sources:
  • Visit a Title I school or visit several Title I schools and see what programs they have in place to help with servicing low income students and families
  • Interviews with teachers that work at Title I schools 
  • Interviews with Principals of Title I schools
  • Interviews with Community Outreach programs 
  • Visit a Community Outreach program
  • Visit a center for Emotionally disturbed students (Seneca Center, Tobin's World, etc.)

Quotations:

"It's not about what you learn; it's about how you learn it!"

"Understanding entails being able to use intellectual ideas and skills as tools to gain control over everyday, real-world problems." (Ball)

"Reasoning does not end when instruction begins." (Shulman)




The blogs that I responded to are:
Lloyd Schine
Emily Zettner
Katherine Asch



Friday, June 22, 2012

Guiding Questions

Guiding Questions (Content and Pedagogical Content Knowledge)
1.  How will the adaptation of the Common Core Standards affect student achievement?
2.  How do you raise achievement scores at Title 1 schools?
3.  How do educators provide equal access to the core curriculum when Mainstreaming students?
4.  How do you provide a successful learning environment that is enriched enough to support English Language Learners (ELL)?
5.  How does Explicit Direct Instruction teaching compare to Theme based teaching?
6.  How do we get away from teaching to the TEST?