Tuesday, 2 August 2011

On Vacation

It has been quite some time since I last posted anything. I am on vacation in the States now and it has been a good one. All of my life vacation was connected to school with me as a student. I had vacations in Korea but they were so short and the work wasn't nearly as hard. This year, this year was such a challenging year that for the first time in my life I feel like a totally deserved this break. I earned it in so many ways and I remind myself of it sometimes when I am starting to feel bad about insisting on certain food or visiting certain people. I earned this vacation. My brain needed a real rest and respite from the mental overload of the past 10 months.

All of that being said, I can really look back on this past year teaching with a new appreciation. I see now how it served to strengthen my character and open my eyes to some unhealthy habits and thought processes. I have had to remind myself that the career path I have chosen is intimately entwined with service to humanity. Being of service to others means to adopt a position of humble learning, willingness to change, work generated by love with focus on the higher reason for the work I do.

Second and Third semesters flew by. I didn't start doing centers again until Third semester. I think I got too wrapped up in the small parts that the bigger picture escaped my vision. I was not able to divide student work into leveled folders, although I have prepared leveled work. I still struggle with instructional time management and I was not as creative as I wanted to be.

The last 3 weeks after the students stopped coming, I did a lot of prep work for Fall semester. I was able to streamline somethings and prepare some new activities for centers and for Fast Finishers.

Although I am excited about the up coming school year, this vacation has opened up many possibilities. My husband was not able to find work while we were there and this was a real hardship for him. We are looking at him coming back early and as a result, I have re-activated my profile on some job sites for SC and NC. I have spent hours in a coffee shop here in Boone where we are visiting his brother and wife, working on populating these websites. I have to remind myself that I have a job and if I don't get an offer before I leave or before school starts, that is fine. I will just keep them updated as the year progresses. So there is a definite possibility that I will be alone in Abu Dhabi for some time.

I am excited by what the future holds for me. I will write in a separate post about what I am working towards in me head that I think will begin to really come out into the world this year.

Back to VACATION!!!!

Friday, 11 February 2011

Read When I Have Time

No Child Left Behind Act and Race to the Top

* original NCLB act
* The Obama administrations' revision of NCLB
* information regarding Race to the Top
* criticism regarding Race to the Top (RTTT)
* article which compares NCLB and RTTT


Diane Ravitch

Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of Education at New York University and a historian of education. In addition, she is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. From 1991 to 1993, she was Assistant Secretary of Education and Counselor to Secretary of Education Lamar Alexander in the administration of President George H.W. Bush. From 1997 to 2004, she was a member of the National Assessment Governing Board, which oversees the National Assessment of Educational Progress, the federal testing program.

* In this article she responds to PISA
* letter to Florida lawmakers as they geared up to vote in 2010 on merit pay for teachers based on testing scores of their students
* criticism against Ravitch's views, though I was confused as the blogger first accuses Ravitch of neoliberalism and then a few paragraphs down accuses her of neoconservatism.

Michelle Rhee

* Students First page about her
* from a Teach for America alumn (one of the programs that Rhee supports for reforming education)
* criticism against Rhee's position as DC chancellor of schools

Waiting for Superman and Race to Nowhere

* map showing connections between big money and education reform
* critique of Waiting for Superman
* regarding the involvement of private investors in education
* more about the involvement of big business
* Race to Nowhere - interview with Abeles


Today's Education Reform Movement and Teachers

* link to my FB note "Response to education article in Newsweek"
* link to article by a teacher ed professor addressing school leaders and policy makers regarding new teachers
* "When Did Teachers Become Bums?"
* "We're living in the darkest times for teachers that I've ever seen in my life."
* Marion Brady on teacher accountability

Repercussions of the Education Reform Movement and our Children

* link to my FB note "The Travesty We Call Public Education"
* repercussions of today's public education system's "movements"
* what this is doing to our children
* a short video about and by students
* on creativity
* the story behind Chinese students' outstanding test scores

Sir Ken Robinson


follow this link and there are other videos by this engaging speaker

Henry Giroux

Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department. He has taught at Boston University, Miami University of Ohio, and Penn State University. Routledge named Giroux as one of the top fifty educational thinkers of the modern period in 2002.

* Henry Giroux writes about Freire and the education plutocracy

Paulo Freire

I have no links, though be sure to check out Wikipedia's information on this towering figure in education. Books that are on the shelves of the responsible teacher are:


  • Pedagogy of the Oppressed

  • Pedagogy of the Heart

  • Pedagogy of Hope

  • We Make the Road By Walking

  • Teachers as Cultural Workers: Letters to Those Who Dare to Teach


Other texts for the responsible teacher

The Moral Dimensions of Teaching, editors Goodlad, Soder, Sirotnik

The Manufactured Crisis: Myths, Fraud, and the Attack on America's Public Schools by Berliner and Biddle - a response to A Nation at Risk, a document prepared by a committee under the direction of Reagan's secretary of education

Friday, 31 December 2010

Procrastination Bites Me in the A..again!

I learned the word procrastination in seventh grade English class and it is the one word that I seem to live out constantly. I start second trimester tomorrow and I had two weeks of vacation to prepare. BUT I was on VACATION and I must say that even the work I have done has been a little grudgingly...although I am excited to get going. I want my next vacation to really be a vacation.

So anyways, what did I leave to the day before class? I kept putting off making a poster with the calendar on it so that I could get it laminated today. Well, today is January 1st, and unbeknownst to me, it is a holiday worthy of closing business in a Muslim country. So, the calendar is ready to be laminated and there is no where to take it. Oh well!!!

Procrastination is not a teacher's friend.

Monday, 27 December 2010

Preparing for Trimester 2-Math

11 weeks January 2-March 17 / Week 12 - Assessment March 20-24 / Spring Break

This is an ESL classroom in a Muslim country. I teach English, Math, Science. The students are all girls. They live in a town outside of the city. The school and the surroundings have far less resources than those in the city. It seems that most of the girls did not come to my class with enough prior knowledge from 1st grade so I am needing to start there.

The instructional base I will start at is First grade. For differentiation I will give some students 2nd to 3rd grade level activities and for some I will give Kindergarten activities. There are skills that all of the students need to learn regardless of current levels so I will focus on 1st grade material to introduce those skills.

Resources Needed that I Don't Already Have:
1. Projector!!!!
2. Large Dice
3. Rulers
4. Number Strips

Target Learning Objectives:
1. Counting 1's to 100
2. Number recognition to 100
3. Counting by 2's, 5's, and 10's
4. Addition up to 20
5. Subtraction up to 20
6. Measuring time, length, weight
7. Problem Solving
8. Word Problems
9. Money
10. Colors
11. Shapes
12. Weather
13. Ordinal Numbers
14. Patterns

Sunday, 26 December 2010

Preparing for Trimester 2-English

11 weeks from January 2-March 17 / Week 12 - Assessment March 20-24 / Spring Break

This is an ESL classroom in a Muslim country. I teach English, Math, Science. The students are all girls. They live in a town outside of the city. The school and the surroundings have far less resources than those in the city. It seems that most of the girls did not come to my class with enough prior knowledge from 1st grade so I am needing to start there.

The instructional base I will start at is First grade. For differentiation I will give some students 2nd to 3rd grade level activities and for some I will give Kindergarten activities. There are skills that all of the students need to learn regardless of current levels so I will focus on 1st grade material to introduce those skills.


Materials Needed That I Don't Already have:
Headphones
Tape Decks
Clothes Pins
Folders of Different Colors
Projector!!!!!

Letters for Each Week:
T, V, Q, Y, Z, W, X, B, P, C, S, K -
Weekly Letters to Correspond With Alphabet Resource Pack:
Vocabulary Linked to Letter, Sight Words in Readers, Sentence Building in Readers, Drawing and Writing Exercise in Pack



Centers for Grade Level K-1, 2-3:

Phenomic Awareness: (K-1, 2-3)
(K-1)
1. Rhyming Words
2. Alliteration
3. Sentence Segmentation
4. Syllables
5.Onset and Rhyme
6. Phoneme Matching
7. Phoneme Isolating
8. Phoneme Segmenting
9. Phoneme Segmenting and Blending
10. Phoneme Manipulating

(2-3)
1. Initial Sound: Focus on matching words/pictures with same initial sound.
2. Ending Sound: Focus on matching words/pictures with same ending sound.
3. Medial Sound: Focus on matching words/pictures with same middle sound.
4. Vowel: Focus on differentiating between the vowel sounds and matching words/pictures.

A pretty diverse vocabulary is needed for these aims to be achieved. I will utilize the Alphabet Pack as much as possible at first and will need to introduce other words for the students to be able to do these activities. I will make the activity cards provided in the link given to me by Dr. Christy into flashcards initially to help the students to become aware of the words and sounds.

Phonics: (K-1, 2-3)
(K-1)
1. Letter Recognition
2. Letter Sound Correspondence
3. Onset and Rime
4. Encoding and Decoding
5. High Frequency Words
6. Variant Correspondences
7. Syllable Patterns
8. Morpheme Structures

(2-3)
1.Letter Sound Correspondence
2.High Frequency Words
3.Variant Correspondences
4.Syllable Patterns
5.Morpheme Structures

I will focus on the first two targets in this trimester. Many students are actually still at Kingergarten-Grade 1 level with vocabulary/high frequency words and Phenomic Awareness. Once again these activities are vocabulary based so I will use the activity illustrations to as flashcards first.

Vocabulary(K-1):

1.Word Match
2.Contractions
3.Synonyms
4.Antonyms
5.Homophones
6.Adjectives
7.Verbs
8.Compound Words
9.Prefixes
10.Multiple Meanings
11.Word Meanings
12.Word Analysis
13.Same and Different
14.Words in Context

If I can get the students through Grade 1 to the beginning of Grade 2 before they go to 3rd grade it will be a miracle. I am not sure if I will be able to get them through grade 2 so they are ready for grade 3. I am not sure how much time I will need to spend on each target. I am thinking at least 2 weeks for each one.

Fluency(K-1):
1. Letter Recognition
2. Letter Sound Correspondence
3. Words (Rime)
4. Connected Text
5. Readers Activities

Comprehension (K-1):
1. Sentence Meaning
2. Narrative Text Structure
3. Expository Text Structure
4. Text Analysis
5. Monitoring for Understanding

Spelling:
1. Sight Words
2. High Frequency words





Flash Back: The First 2 Months in Abu Dhabi

Monday, November 1, 2010 at 2:38pm:


My days at the Intercontinental Hotel feels like it happened a year ago. So much has happened in just 2 months that when my mind goes back to that month staying in a five star hotel I am almost convinced it was a dream. Although I am happy and at peace with being here I must say that I am also very aware of the less than wonderful aspects of my time here, especially as a teacher.

I guess I will begin with the weeks proceeding my first day of school. Between visits to the beach, spa, and spending time with new acquaintances we had professional development workshops. Some were very effective some were less than helpful. I enjoyed most of the activities that were planned for us. Underlying all of this was an air of restlessness amongst many of the teachers. We had been at the hotel for almost a month and people were running low on money. The hotel restaurants were very expensive and taxi rides to food places outside of the hotel was starting to add up in cost. When it came to the attention of the Abu Dhabi Education Council that many people were getting low on funds we were informed that everyone would receive a payment advance. This alleviated many people's money worries. I think this time was particularly worrisome for families. After not receiving the advance for another two weeks we were told at the close of one of the PD events that the bank was there with atm cards for everyone. People erupted in cheers. After waiting in line, some for nearly 3 hours, people began to receive news that there was no money in the accounts! Yep, no money. This went on for another week. Up until this point I had only seen what seemed to be a very organized ADEC. This was to be only my first taste of just how disorganized things can be.

The other big mystery was where people were going to be placed to teach. We had received our city placements and some people were really struggling with that issue. For me, I was happy. I was placed in Abu Dhabi but honestly had come here with very few expectations so I wasn't attached to being in one particular place. It was wonderful to be placed where I had already made contact with my religious community and with the Latin dance community. Things really came together for my life outside of work. At the same PD when we got the atm cards to empty bank accounts, we received our school placements and I found out I would be in a place called Al Shamkha at a girls primary school called Al Asalah. After looking on a map I found out that the town I was going to be in was a 40 minute drive from Abu Dhabi. I needed to find a carpool!

One thing I have discovered that is a constant here is the eventuality of promises being kept or that sometimes what you are told initially will change at some point. I have learned it is best to wait a little and see what comes up in the following days. I will have to quote something one of my friends who has been here for many years said to me, "You know, when I interviewed for my job, on the application there was a place to rate yourself. One of the statements that I was asked to rate myself on was, 'Has a high tolerance for ambiguity' " HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!! NO JOKE!! I have experienced ambiguity so intimately now that I am pretty sure I am changing my entire thinking pattern.

So, back to the carpool. By this point I had moved into my apartment and Ryan was to arrive two weeks later. During a PD session when people began to bring up their concerns about the money and getting to work, the advice of the workshop leaders was that ADEC would eventually get everyone the money and to wait until we got to our schools to arrange carpools. Well, I didn't have to wait that long. Somehow, through word of mouth a woman in my building found out I would be at the same school as her and two other women in our building. I now have the BEST carpool group!!! Me and two of the women are teaching second grade so we plan together and share ideas. It has been wonderful to ride to and from work with these women. We have had some very deep conversations and sometimes I have laughed until tears have come out of my eyes.

My first day of school was September 14th. This was unlike ANY first day of school I have EVER experienced. Teachers, brace yourselves. As you probably have guessed, we did not have any pre-school prep time in our classrooms. On September 14th we thought we were seeing our school, our classroom and our students for the first time. We had no curriculum. On the first day of school the principal had not arrived yet. There were no students. The students had not been split into classes. We were not assigned classrooms. We were not assigned grade levels. We had no books. No internet. No computers. We talked and drank tea for 5 hours and then went home. We did not meet the principal. We returned the next day, the last day of the working were told what grade level we would be teaching and attended a meeting with the principal. When we left on that day we still did not know where our classrooms were and we had no books. Sunday was the first day of the working week and that Sunday one of my friends aptly called, "The 3rd first day of school."

On the "3rd first day of school" I found my classroom just before the students. It was mayhem. Parents were confused. Teachers had no information. The poor students were lugging these crazy heavy rolly backpacks up and down stairs. Lots of crying on this day.

I was assigned second grade, my favorite age and grade to teach. During our hours of down time I made a sign for my door and when I went home I got some crayons as well as alphabet and number flashcards. We found a print out in one of the teachers' things from last year that I copied and had ready for my students along with a letter of the alphabet to color. My first class. I can barely remember it well. It seems so long ago.

The students were so well behaved and seemed to enjoy their time in class. I am a staunch believer in the methods that Dr. Harry Wong has in his "First Days of School" book. That book SAVED me my first days, weeks, and month. I will be using it all the time.

One student really stands out in my mind. Her mother was in class with her. I started teaching and meeting the students. I noticed that this kid was looking really wary so I didn't bother her. Then all hell broke loose when her mother tried to leave. I had placed a letter to color on her daughter's desk but she refused to do it. Her mother tried to encourage her but she was defiant. Then, MAN, it got downright CRAZY!! The mother tries to leave and this kid is hanging onto her mother for dear life. I honestly have never seen anything like it. Then her mom calls me over gives me her daughter's hand as she dashes out of the room. Y'all, this kid went berserk! I had to let her go because she was throwing herself on the floor, hard. Meanwhile, I have this class of 20 something students staring in absolute shock...silent. Once I let her go she ran out of the room and you could hear her screaming for her mother all the way down the corridor. Me and my new students just looked at one another for a moment and went back to work. A few minutes later the social worker comes with the girl in tow and sits her in a desk. She isn't crying now but she is raging inside. Livid is the only word to describe her expression. I found that the desks were too close as students trickled in and when we tried to move her desk she refused to move so I moved her chair with her in it. She threw herself on the floor and sat there. I let her stay and kept working with the other students. As if that wasn't enough. Who should come through the door but Barney and one of his friends. This is a teacher's worst nightmare for the first day of school. Here I am trying to set the tone for the year and I have a mom in class, her daughter going crazy, and now BARNEY!!!! BUT, as I have found with being flexible, sometimes you get an unexpected outcome. Barney and the social worker got the girl off the floor, in her desk and SMILING!!!! Dude, it was weird. This kid went from livid to happy in a nano second and was all about participating in class afterwards. Believe it or not, this girl was in the wrong class the whole time. That was the first day.

Ryan arrived on the 15th of September. It has been wonderful having him here. He is over jet lag now, making new friends, and working on his resume. Most of the time he gets up early in the morning with me to make my breakfast and lunch. We are hoping that he finds a job soon.

The days following the "3rd first day" have gone MUCH smoother. I focused mostly on classroom management and routines the first few weeks. My students are really starting to respond well. I am ready to take them out of rows and put them in groups.

My most exceptional student was my biggest challenge at first. I think maybe a week or two into teaching one of my students arrives with another little girl. I realized right away that this new student was completely blind. I was not told that I would have a blind student and that she was sent with a student and not a teacher was unbelievable to me. I had nothing in my classroom for her. I had almost nothing for my sighted students. I was angry. Not at having a blind student but at the lack of consideration for her and for me. How was I supposed to teach her? Much later in class a special ed teacher shows up and starts asking me for things to use for the blind student. Pissed is what I was. She interrupted my class, wants my undivided attention, and was talking to me as if I had known all along and was prepared for Asma. Eventually one of my teacher friends gave me some cut outs of letters and numbers. I remembered the movie, "The Miracle Worker" and wrote letters in Asma's hand. When I think about it now she must have thought I was crazy.

I think I had Asma in my class for about three weeks before there was a meeting called for all of her teachers. I was sooooo happy after this meeting!!! I met her previous English teacher and she was AMAZING!!! A beautiful, high spirited soul with love oozing out of every pour. Asma came too and I watched in amazement and sadness as she typed on her braille machine in English and responded to her teacher's requests in English. I was amazed because this child was worlds ahead of my entire classes and I was close to tears, sad that I had not known it. I remembered the days when I was still establishing classroom management and rules, when the rest of the class had my entire attention, she sat quietly in her desk for hours doing nothing. I did not know what to do with her. I was so angry every time the special ed teachers would come because I would not know they were coming, they brought no resources, they were not helpful, it made it hard to manage my class, and they kept talking to me as if I was supposed to know what to do. Her previous teacher Suneeta is my angel. We work closely together. She typed up for me the braille alphabet and I was able to start Asma on practicing typing letters, words, reading, and spelling. I have found ways to include her in class but also let her do work independently so she can keep building on what she learned previously.

Now I have Asma working on something most days and I push her because I know that she is capable of more than the others at the moment. I now have a brailler in class. I send Suneeta the lesson plans a week in advance so she comes to class once a week with lessons typed up for Asma. It has been a wonderful process of learning and growing as a teacher.

So, how do I teach, you may ask. First, I greet my students at the door. I shake their hands, look in their eyes, and call them by name. I have some simple task ready on their desk. (Weeks of repeated practice to bring backpacks to the back of class, take out pencils and colors, sit at your desk...led up to this.) They know that this is a quiet activity. Then I use, "1, 2, 3 Eyes on me." and they reply, "1,2,3 Eyes on you" every time there is a transition. They know to put down their pencils and colors because they are going to get some directions. I have the class agenda on the board and when we move from one subject to the next I use something called Power Teaching...T: Class. S: Yes? T: Learning positions. S: OK! T: English time or Math time or Science time. Of course, all of this was practiced ad-infinitum for a couple of weeks as an intro, as a game, and a practice activity. As a teacher I know that I am teaching more than writing, reading, math, the five senses. The students have to feel that they know what is expected of them. They need this to feel at ease learning. Predictable routines and expectations are so important.

So, this has been my first couple of months teaching. The scheduled has changed so many times I have stopped counting. ADEC is loading us up with work that could have been done before school even started. Lots of ambiguity but at least in my class I see my students growing. I feel me growing and that is really all that matters. Everything else is superfluous.

I May Not Be Working But My Brain Sure Is...Overtime

I am in the second week of my winter break and I cannot sleep. I woke up around 5am, "I can ask friends from home to send me books for class" was the thought that brought my eyes open. I have been thinking ever since. First thing I did was to write to four people enlisting their assistance in helping me to create a class library. I have had many sudden wake ups in the past few months since I began teaching second grade in Al Shamkha. Usually they are ideas for improving my classroom or my teaching. To maintain my sanity I decided it was time for me to start keeping a teaching journal.

In the posts that follow I am hoping to keep track of my thoughts, their application in my classroom, basically a running record of reflection and learning.