8 weeks down... 28 to go... it amazes me how quickly the school year flies by. It seems like just yesterday I was opening the door to room 366 for the first time getting ready to embark and an adventure I had been tirelessly preparing for all summer. As I reflect back and consider how things went my first year, I realize that I wouldn't be there I am today without the mistakes I made before. That being said, I assumed my second year would be drastically easier, and in some aspects I was correct, in others, not so much.
Dr. K has talked to us about the importance of culture and connecting with our communities and really involving parents to be a part of that. These are things that although I thought I was doing as I reflect on my fist 8 weeks I realize I could be doing a much better job. Connecting with parents is more than just sending home a nightly email with the homework update, or calling to discuss either positive or negative behavior, it is truly getting to know the child, who they are, where they come from, what is important to them and why is it important to them. Without building a strong classroom culture, you aren't setting anyone up for ultimate success. Culture is everything. If I am able
to relate to my students and bring their culture and things that are meaningful
to them into the classroom then everything else will fall into place. A strong
classroom culture allows us to relate and understand one another as well as see
things from different perspectives that may help explain why something is the
way it is. Having a strong culture leads to understanding the students and what
really engages them or means something to them. There is nothing better than an
engaged student during a lesson. Engagement helps with behavior problems,
critical thinking, inquiry, involvement, connections, everything that I as a
teacher wan for my students. And all that needs to happen to get us there is a
strong classroom culture.
I realize that our good times are ones where
students are engaged and feel valued as a student in the classroom.
They are days that students are able to see themselves as a part of the group
and not just another name on the roster. They are able to make sense of what is
going on in the room around them because they have an understanding of what the
students in the room around them are like. They are making connections with science
experiments that go way further than filling in vocabulary words on a worksheet.
I knew that the first year would be one of
the hardest things I have ever done. And I was right. I also had high
hopes that the second year would be much easier in the sense of I to some
extent knew what to expect. I am lucky enough to be teaching the same grade and
same subjects with the same co-teacher so all of the hard work and keeping
track last year has paid off to some extent. I think what I realize more than
anything is that I am able to take what I learned from last year, both in
regards to academics and behavior, and apply it this year in an even more
strategic way. Last year was all about trying to stay afloat, and not that this
year isn’t either, but at least this year I am able to start with what I learned
from last year and work from there, I do not have to start from scratch. I am
also able to take the wonderful techniques I learned during Dr. Jarrett’s class
in regards to inquiry and really apply them in science. My students didn’t
learn science last year, they learned key vocabulary words and hypothetical
situations. This year my students have already had the opportunity to decompose
bananas in the classroom, create ecosystems for animals they discover on the
playground while exploring THEIR world, create and link the conceptual ideas
around food chains and food webs to their diet and create new humans with
animal like adaptations and discuss how their lives would change. They have
been able to think critically, use their world around them to make meaningful
connections and continue to inquire new ideas that arise as they think through
what is currently happening around them. They are being scientists!
I have learned a lot from
all of my classes throughout grad school but our numbers and operations class with
Dr. Smith has brought so many things to the forefront for me in regards to
mathematics. One of my goals for this year for my students was to make sure
they were able to see the connections between the real world and what we do
inside our classroom every day. The way she has helped me look at mathematics
and realize that every math problem is simply a story for a student to discover
has been amazing. Through the use of real world examples, story problems and a
classroom culture built around their interests I have been able to celebrate in
the success of strong math lessons this year. Ones that are not students
repeating the same type of standard algorithm over and over again but instead
ones that they can take outside the classroom and directly apply to their
knowledge of the real world. This has been a huge success and celebration
throughout the past 8 weeks.
Throughout the next 28 weeks I am going to continue to work on culture in
the classroom. A strong classroom culture does not appear overnight,
and it takes consistency from the teacher to help nurture a strong classroom
culture. I can be honest in saying that consistency is not always my strong
point when it comes to starting or trying new things. I realize though as I look
back over my highs and lows that my highs are because culture was evident and
my students knew it. On the other hand, my lows were because our classroom
culture was weak and I was being inconsistent with my nurturing of things. By
keeping on top of our classroom culture and by continuing to nurture it through
the next 28 weeks I am confident that everything else will fall into place. I
am lucky to have such wonderful, excited, amazing, intelligent students who
trust me to help them achieve the goals they have set their mind to, now it is
my turn to show them how it is possible.