Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Stop Learning One Does Not


Well… Monday didn’t quite go as I originally planned. I came up with so many things to make the lesson interesting all of which I never got to. I’ve taught before but something about being timed threw me off my game. This ended up being one of my worst teaching performances. Have you ever practiced for something and your keep repeating to yourself “whatever you do don’t…” and you practice so you won’t do whatever you said you weren’t gonna do but as soon as you go to do it for real you do it anyways. That’s exactly what happened to me on Monday. I had made the lesson out to be discussion based teaching which worked out a little bit until half way through. About half way through you look at the clock and realize that, according to your original plan, you’re way behind and you don’t do it on purpose but you switch to autopilot mode. You get so consumed with covering everything in the lesson plan that you don’t stop to make sure the students understand any of what you’re saying. There’s a saying “everyone has a plan until they get hit” well I guess to an extent that can be applied to teaching as well. I had a plan until I got in front of the class and all my plans went out the window. There is something I learned from all of this though: it’s not the end of the world if you don’t finish your lesson plan, it’s more important that the students understand the material.

            Today I learned something interesting, well interesting to me anyways, about planning a class lesson. I’ve never wanted to cover just the basics of American history; skimming over it to make sure I cover all U.S. history at the expense of going more in-depth with my students. I learned about something called a flipped classroom where part of the learning happens outside of the classroom. Where you can post videos about the lesson for the next day online, the lesson on the video covers the next day’s lesson broadly. This allows for the teacher to go more in-depth over the topics covered in the video. This allows the class to spend more time in discussion and more importantly make sure the student’s understand. A high school in Michigan was in the 5% worst schools in the state but when they switched it over to a flipped classroom it became one of the best in the state. It allows teachers more time to help students understand the material and to have discussion, in class activities, or time to do homework with the teacher there for help.

5 comments:

  1. Dalton, I don't think that your lesson plan was bad at all. If you thought it was bad, you are just being hard on yourself. However it is good that you are noticing the things you need to change for next time. That sounds like a really cool plan and sounds like you will have a lot of success in your classroom using this method IF the students actually put the time in outside of class to watch the videos. How would you make sure they are actually watching the videos?

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    1. Dr. Parker showed me an interesting website that does just that. You can post questions at any point in the video; in order to continue on with the video, students must answer the question. It records the answers and it tells the teach how much time each student spent watching the video.

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  2. Don't underestimate yourself man! I enjoyed your class a lot! But, I do understand what you're saying about being stressed. It seems we can work smoothly when we are stress free but it's not as excited as it could be when we have a lot of things going on.

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  3. I agree with Angelique you are underestimating yourself! Don't be that hard. I love the way you enjoy history and believe me, you are going to engaged many students just with the enthusiasm you have with your subject. Think that you have to pay attention in the fact that you are being observed and graded for what you are doing, so this is more than you will have when you will be a teacher. You will have one objective: yogur sude tus. Nothing more will be important. Also, think that in the real life, students are not going to be leaving class one by one in the middle of the lesson. This not help of course and I'm so sad to had to go to my next class.

    You are going to be a great teacher, I'm sure ;)

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  4. Dalton,
    It was obvious you had prepared for your lesson! It is always a good idea to plan too much vs. too little. Time management will come with time. In the mean time, keep research the flipped learning model. A lot of social studies teachers are embracing this concept.

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