Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Learning from PACT

Think about the teaching strengths and weaknesses that you would like to highlight or receive feedback on for your PACT videotaped lesson. How could you capture those aspects of your teaching on video in a meaningful way that would demonstrate your teaching philosophy for your portfolio?

My next unit, which I will start teaching on Monday April 27th, 2009, will be focusing on the book Bronx Masquerade by Nikki Grimes. This work of fiction gives voice to archetypal urban adolescents who are coming of age and grappling toward a sense of identity, each in his or her own way. Through her characterizations Grimes brings to life a classroom of students whose preconceptions, misconceptions, stereotypes or internalized myths are shattered as each of these archetypal teenagers reads his or her poems revealing their pain, scars, innermost fears, hopes, goals and family issues.

Since Bronx Masquerade's overarching theme is identity and self-perception versus the perception (internalized gaze) of others, and since Grimes sheds light on these challenges that adolescents face through poetry, I will be teaching and scaffolding the major components of poetry, focusing on symbol and theme. Thus in terms of strengths and weaknesses (or areas where I have a greater learning curve) I would like to focus and receive feedback on how well I scaffold instruction of poetry. I will be asking my students to identify symbol and theme in poems written by well known authors as well as their peers so as to model for them how to write their own poems. The poems they will be asked to write will be thematically (identity and challenging misconceptions and stereotypes) inspired by the poems written by the fictional high school students in Bronx Masquerade, and will also incorporate symbolism.

One of the strengths that I would like to highlight is my ability to prepare and ask questions that will engage the students and encourage critical thinking and analysis or unpacking of poetry and literary texts. I hope this strength will come across on the video when I work with my students as they are working in groups to analyze poetry with a focus on identifying symbol and theme.

An area where I anticipate will present a challenge for me might be classroom/behavior management. My students are generally very vivacious and lively. They are at times verbally impulsive and disrespectful toward me as well as their peers. Although I have made strides and improved tremendously in the area of classroom/behavior management, it remains extremely challenging
to keep many of my students focused and on task.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Using Multimedia in the Classroom


The entry that follows is in response to the below prompt:

How might you apply the ideas summarized by Karppinen when using videos in your teaching? Describe (or provide a link to) an example of a videoclip that you might incorporate into a lesson, or a video-production project that you might ask your students to complete, and explain how you would use this videoclip/project to achieve a particular learning objective.

The article, Karppinen, P. (2005). Meaningful learning with digital and online videos: Theoretical perspectives. AACE Journal, 13(3), 233-250 focused on using multimedia as a teaching tool. The article emphasized the point that these multimedia technologies give students multiple entry points into a curriculum and ultimately appeal to differing learning styles among students. My experience with using multimedia in planning curriculum has been at times frustrating as there was a learning curve, but the results in general were almost always very rewarding and served their purpose in the sense that using multimedia not only gave students with differing learning styles multiple entry points into a text, but the students found it to be engaging and enhanced their experience with the text when it was used as a supplement to more traditional forms of instruction, such as quick-writes, classroom discussions or group work.

I also found that clips were most effective and powerful as compared to showing a whole movie. Instead of showing a feature length film showing only clips which were the most relevant to the text helped the students stay more focused. I also found that students were much more focused on the clips I presented in class when I required the students to answer questions related to the clip while watching or right after watching the clip. These questions also asked students to connect the clip to the text and encouraged them to think critically about the text in some way.

Now that I have worked with Ethan on our Multimedia and Teaching project (presented on Thursday April 16th, 2009) where we used http://www.googlelittrips.org/ to create engaging multimedia literary journey to Verona, Italy, the home of Romeo and Juliet. I am looking forward to creating lesson plans with the objective of engaging students in a study of literary settings (landscape, geography, architecture) and particular historical events relevant to the text we will be reading. I am especially interested in using Google Lit Trips as a multimedia tool in my classroom as it will invite students to think critically about the significance between setting and historical events by allowing me (or students) to incorporate quotes and questions, pictures, video clips, links to other sites relevant to the text. And in the process of achieving this objective of encouraging students to think critically about literary settings and historical events, the students and I will have become more technologically savvy by using this multimedia too.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

goodreads.com

I recently joined an online community called goodreads.com, where you can post books (and reviews, recommendations to friends, students or colleagues) you are currently reading or have already read.

As soon as you sign up goodreads.com prompts you to invite friends it searches your address book in your email. It then lets you know all the people you know who are already members of the online community and then recommends friends, students or colleagues you might want to invite to join the online community of readers.

Once you have connected with goodreads.com you will be alerted through your email whenever one of your friends has posted a review or recommendation of a book.

goodreads.com is an especially relevant online community for me to have joined this semester as I am student teaching in an Accelerated Reading class, where our goal is to motivate and encourage students to become avid readers. In doing so, we are confident that our students will raise their reading comprehension and fluency levels.