This
week in class has been interesting to say the least with almost everyone presenting
their lesson to the class. I can’t lie, getting to act like little kids to
create a more realistic representation of what these future teachers will be
dealing with has been a hoot. It’s fun to sometimes annoy our fellow classmates
by acting like five year olds, as long as it doesn’t get out of hand or create
too much of a distraction, under the guise of presenting them with what to
expect when they actually start teaching. But I know this is a doubled edged
sword and that whatever I dished out on them I will get back in return on
Monday. But this is a good exercise on how to deal with the age group of students
we’ll be teaching. Brittany went all the way with her representation of the age
groups of students. Working with kids from ages five to sixteen I know what
they will say, how they will act, and generally what kind of questions they
will ask. And Brittany hit the nail on the head with her “act.” Makes me a bit
paranoid of what she’ll try when I have to present but I’m sure it will be
interesting to say the least.
Planning
the actual lesson took me about five hours, most of it reading my old notes, and
trying to make history interesting, not an easy feat. I’m still not sure
whether it’s good enough for Monday. Trying to incorporate many of the
different things that we’re gone over in class has been difficult. History has
typically and for some good reasons been a mostly lecture style class. It’s
hard to come up with more discussion based teaching since the topic I’m teaching
requires some knowledge of prior lessons and events most of which the “students”
I’ll be teaching won’t know. Because of this it might kill the discussion based
idea, at least the main part of it, but I was able to come up with something
that would include some discussion so it’s not a boring lecture. Plus the
lesson will only be thirty minutes max which kills my in class project idea.
Since all the projects require knowledge from the lesson which takes up most of
my time and I won’t have time to do the project. So my lesson is just a little too
short to meet the minimum requirement and too long to have an in class project.
This dilemma had me doing a couple hours of research for creative ideas to fill
the gap and make the class more interesting. I believe I found it after about
two hours of searching, I think it might just work. What is it exactly? Well I
can’t say right now for obvious reasons of course. But I’m glad that we got to observe
the high school a few weeks ago. I took some of what I saw in that class and
implemented it into my own lesson; I’ll talk a little bit more about it on Wednesday.
But I did learn something from this that is time management. It took five hours
to create my lesson and to verify my info plus research to add some more
interesting aspects of the lesson. When I finally get out of here and start
teaching for real I’m gonna have to take into account how long it takes to make
a lesson, grade papers and tests and all that, and deal with the school and
angry parents. I also need to create a flexible enough lesson plan to take into
account setbacks and allow for student interaction. But I am glad I’m learning
it here and now instead of later and when I’m out there teaching for real.
Dalton, Yes, it is important to get beyond the traditional lecture style when teaching social studies. I am glad you are already exploring the flipped learning method.
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