Monday, April 26, 2010
The Power of Silence
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Free Write - Journal 11
Friday, April 9, 2010
Thoughts on Being a Substitute
I substitute regularly in Webster School District. While I have subbed at several schools, on several teams, and in several classes within that district, I usually sub at one particular school and for the same group of children thanks (truly many thanks) to classroom teachers continually relying on me while they’re absent. As a result, I have come to know the students as if I had my own class at the school. Being able to sub for the same students frequently makes my job as a substitute teacher easier, giving me the opportunity to know each student as an individual, understand his or her needs, understand where each student excels and where each student may need extra help, and know when a concept is just not “clicking,” giving me more options and different ways to present the materials of the lesson. Furthermore, students are more comfortable with me since they see me more frequently in various classes; they understand my classroom management style and they don’t lose out on learning when their teacher is unavailable. It’s a win-win situation for everyone involved.
At the same time, I would love my own classroom and would love to know I’d be seeing the same group of students each day, create my own lessons, and have a little more security.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
New and Exciting Changes
Earlier this evening, I was discussing with my friend Megan, an English teacher, her lesson plans for this week. She has decided to do an overview of Helen Keller since their school has recently performed the play The Miracle Worker. I let Megan know of a recent project I completed for one of my graduate classes, a virtual fieldtrip on genres, which included a section on nonfiction stories. One of those stories happened to be This is My Story by Helen Keller and with it I offered websites and videos to view.
Beyond wanting to discuss Helen Keller, Megan also wanted to bring to the attention of her students information “about people with disabilities and the timeline of treatment.” At this point, I mentioned another graduate class I am taking, Assistive Technology, and an article I happened to read earlier in the day. Welcome to Holland by Emily Perl Kingsley discusses a mother’s anticipation for the birth of her first child, equating it to her dream vacation to Italy. After months of preparation for her “dream vacation” the mother’s plans are changed as she ends up in Holland rather than Italy. Symbolizing a child with a disability, Holland offers a new, exciting, yet uncertain experience, and while it is no longer the mother’s dream vacation, she is ale to see hope and beauty is the place she has found herself.
After sharing the article with Megan, she decided she wants to share it with her students during the week. Her only concern is the position she is in as a pregnant teacher: will her students think she is trying to tell them she is having a child with a disability? We discussed this thoroughly, and I was able to remind Megan that she could use her position as an attention getting and as a learning experience. If her students do question Megan’s intentions, she should be honest by telling them she doesn’t know if her child will or won’t have a disability, however, that would not change her love for her child. She should then steer the discussion back to Helen Keller, whose family did abandon her, and who became a brilliant and intelligent woman in lieu of being a person who is deaf and blind. Overall, the article has been an eye-opening experience not only for me and my friend, but a possible learning experience for Megan’s students.