Showing posts with label InTASC 7. Show all posts
Showing posts with label InTASC 7. Show all posts

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Teaching Philosophy


Throughout my master's program, I had to write and alter my teaching philosophy. I am ashamed to admit that, previous to be required to write a teaching philosophy, I never had one written. The overall idea and foundation were in my head, but as I have shared multiple times in this blog, I am learning that writing and reflecting on happenings in my career is essential to growing as an educator. Writing down my teaching philosophy and having someone else read it, forces me to live out my philosophy. Below is my final teaching philosophy I turned in for my master's program.

I believe a teacher’s role in the classroom is to act as an advisor and guide the students through the learning process. A teacher should deliver lessons that contain state standards while teaching students how those standards apply to their daily lives and their future. Teachers must center their lessons around student achievement and provide classrooms that are safe and allow for personal development.  
At Mount Olive Lutheran School, I have the privilege to serve students in those realms, but I also have the responsibility and blessing of doing so in a family setting where God’s love and forgiveness are taught each day. Within the congregation I get to serve in a variety of ways such as VBS or children’s messages and as a role model for the students. Another key role of a teacher or administrator is community building.  Building a positive rapport with the surrounding community is vital to growth in a school. Without support from the community, a school will surely die. The ability to market a school depends on the reputation within the surrounding community, and the reputation of the school stems from the word of mouth of current and past families. A school must also serve the community. If the school was gone tomorrow, it should leave some void in the community as the school is serving that community. An educator must be in the community building those relationships consistently to know the clientele of the school district and to promote the school in a personal way.

As an educator, I assess my student's ability and learning styles, to analyze their findings, and to teach to each individual’s needs.  I believe in an approach where teachers focus on students as individuals and strive to create more one-on-one, or small group opportunities give teachers the ability to get to know their students.  I believe that an effective teacher must be able to diagnose the student's ability, differentiate to teach them at their level, and continuously challenge and support them throughout the learning process.  While I agree that everyone should be given the opportunity to learn the same information, I believe teachers need to recognize that not everyone takes in the information in the same manner, which is why using multiple teaching methods and differentiating is so important. To do this, a teacher must use a variety of delivery methods for their lessons to account for the students who learn auditorily, visually, and kinesthetically while incorporating technology to enhance lessons. Teachers must recognize that we live in a world that is constantly changing, and new technology is being developed daily.  Teachers need to provide opportunities for students to experience and work with the subject matter.

I believe teachers need to teach to the whole child, ensuring every child is provided with a safe, effective, and challenging learning environment.  As a Lutheran educator, I am not bound to as strict of guidelines and can provide each student with meeting them where they are academically, socially, emotionally and spiritually.  Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs states that biological and physiological needs come first. As an educator, I need to provide these basic needs for those students who do not receive them at home. I have to bond with my students so that I know exactly what needs I need to provide for my students so that they are all ready to effectively learn.

       Working in a Lutheran School makes creating our long-term vision easier because we believe not only in education but also in Jesus Christ as our Savior and his command to “Go and make disciples”  (Matthew 28:19). In creating a Christ-centered classroom, the focus on of my classroom management system is respect, respect for the teacher and peers. My classrooms rules and consequences reflect this respect relationship between teacher and student. Helping students develop respect for themselves as learners, fosters a safe and positive learning environment within the classroom.  

As a teacher, I motivate students by creating a learning environment that is positive and safe while creating bonds with the students by showing them respect and interest in their activities. This type of environment should be evident in every classroom.  I believe teacher’s job to continually build students up and provide that positive reinforcement. As a junior high teacher, I believe it is my role to begin to show students the importance of education, to help develop their intrinsic motivation and desire to achieve, which will serve them for a lifetime.

Students are the driving force behind all of the aspects of education and every decision that is made. Educators want the students to feel safe and cared about each day they walk in the door, making them ready to learn. Once they are ready to learn, the educator attempts to put the best curriculum, lessons, classroom environment,  technology, and other resources to best increase student achievement. This love for education, but more important, the love of children is the driving force behind my hard work and dedication to my calling as an educator.

Tona

HE>I

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Giving up control...

I recently had a conversation with a college friend (who is also a middle school teacher).  Our conversation eventually led to what learning looks like in each of our classrooms.  I shared with her that our school went one-to-one with Chromebooks about 5 years ago and since then I have changed my role in the classroom.  Instead of being the teacher that lectures to students for their learning, I am the teacher that facilitates their learning.  Her first question to me was, "How can you give that much control to your students?"  Well, it wasn't easy, especially for this type A personality teacher.  I like to have a plan and I like things to go according to plan but when you hand over the reins to your students and let them lead the learning, well, things don't always go according to your plan.  


Image taken from His Work In Progress


What Giving Up Control Looked Like For Me

Three years ago I flipped my math classroom... meaning my students have homework every night that consists of watching a video on the concept that they are going to practice in class the next day. At first, this brought on a lot of anxiety because I felt like I was losing control of my classroom.  I didn’t know what each day would look like because I didn’t know how much help each of my students would need. After a few short weeks, I saw that the environment that I had created was much more student centered. Students could watch and rewatch the video as many times as they need to to grasp the concept being presented.  They are also given the opportunity to show me how they can apply the concept to the real world instead of always doing practice problems on a worksheet.


Blended Learning

Flipping my classroom wasn't just about giving up control and allowing my students to lead the learning, but it also meant that students were often times learning from more than just me. In my flipped classroom, sometimes I would make a video for my students to watch, but often times I would look for a video online that they could watch. When my students are working on practice problems for math or science and they don't understand, I often ask them if they have used all their resources before coming to me to ask the question. Those resources being: their textbook, their classmate, and their computer. Students today have everything they have every wanted to know right at their fingertips! Often times, I think they forget that. As a teacher in the 21st century, I believe it is my job to teach students how to use the resources they have available to them. Don't get me wrong, I also believe in knowing the process behind how to solve for x and y and understanding the stages of mitosis, but I also believe in teaching students how to advocate for themselves in their learning. Educators and parents need to understand that classrooms today look much different with the focus being the use of technology and the individual needs of each student. This is a mind shift for many teachers. Change can be difficult for anyone, but I think we stop making education about us and start making it about the kids.

Tona

HE>I

Reference
M. (2014). Your Plan vs Your Reality. Retrieved from http://hisworkinprogress2.com/plan-vs-reality/



Monday, July 16, 2018

Differentiated Instruction in Tweens

Differentiation is a topic that is thrown around in education on a daily basis.  It is something that crosses mind every time I plan a lesson. My teaching philosophy is:

"TO MEET EACH CHILD WHERE THEY ARE IN THEIR LEARNING AND HELP THEM GROW FROM THERE" 

As a middle school teacher, I know that this age is known for forgetting their brain sometimes most of the time!

Image take from Make A Meme

Even though there are trying days (as there are with all levels of teaching) this is the age that I love, but it also the age where I feel like differentiation is very important.  In the elementary years, children enjoy coming to school.  They love their teachers and playing with their friends and academics to them is still considered to be fun.  Then they hit middle school and, along with all those hormones running all over their body, there is also a lot of confusion and frustration.  This is the age (I feel) that we loose a lot of children and their fondness of school, and I think this is because their brains are developing at such different rates during the tween years, yet many educators are teaching as if the curriculum is one size fits all.   School gets more difficult each year, but when we just keep trudging through with a child that is physically not ready to trudge, we loose them...and they end up hating school and possibly becoming those that drop out in high school.  One of my favorite things I have ever read about this age come from Rick Wormeli.  He writes, "“of all the states of matter in the known universe, tweens most closely resemble liquid. Students at this age have a defined volume, but not a defined shape. They are ever ready to flow, and they are rarely compressible. Although they can spill, freeze, and boil, they can also lift others, do impressive work, take the shape of their environment, and carry multiple ideas within themselves.”


Image take from Facevertizing

Each day when my students walk in the room, I don't know what shape they will take on for the day, and that's what makes teaching this age so challenging exciting! Every day I have lesson plans written and how I want the lesson to go and many times how I want it to go gets thrown out the window, and that's okay! I am thankful I teach at a school where I don't have administration breathing down my throat to be on a certain lesson on a certain day. I truly don't know if I could be a teacher if I did. I feel like that would be going against my own teaching philosophy and what is the point in teaching if you can't demonstrate what you believe education should be?


Thanks for letting me reflect!


Tona Speltz


HE>I


If you haven't had the opportunity to read any of Rick Wormeli's books, I highly recommend checking him out! He has a way of writing that is easy and inspiring to read. Two of my favorites by him are Meet Me in the Middle and Fair Isn't Always Equal: Assessing & Grading in the Differentiated Classroom.


Reference

Image. (n.d). Retrieved from http://makeameme.org

Nailed-It-Baby-Meme-06 – Facevertizing. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.facevertizing.com/er-success/nailed-it-baby-meme-06/
Wormeli, R. (2006, April). Differentiating for Tweens. Retrieved from http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/apr06/vol63/num07/Differentiating-for-Tweens.aspx