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Start of summer school = essentially CLUELESS on how to write a lesson plan, how to deliver a lesson plan, how to assess if the students understood the lesson at all... CLUELESS on everything that was TEACHING.
First, I would like to give a disclosure: The feelings expressed here are not representative of the beliefs of MTC, its administrators, or affiliates. These are my own thoughts, representative of my own beliefs and opinions, being expressed in the form of free (spirited) writing.
This summer, I worked as a summer school teacher for Holly Springs High School, teaching Biology I to five students. At first thought, I did not believe working with such a small classroom size during a two-month period (where the students & teachers are overwhelmed with work) would be representative of the regular school year. I did, however, believe that the experience would be a great precursor to the regular school year, giving myself and other teachers the opportunity to deal with classroom situations on a small scale, before having to deal with those same problems with a much larger classroom size. So, I believe that being a summer school teacher in itself was very helpful in ironing out those "wrinkles" before the Fall.
This summer, I worked as a summer school teacher for Holly Springs High School, teaching Biology I to five students. At first thought, I did not believe working with such a small classroom size during a two-month period (where the students & teachers are overwhelmed with work) would be representative of the regular school year. I did, however, believe that the experience would be a great precursor to the regular school year, giving myself and other teachers the opportunity to deal with classroom situations on a small scale, before having to deal with those same problems with a much larger classroom size. So, I believe that being a summer school teacher in itself was very helpful in ironing out those "wrinkles" before the Fall.
I will begin by saying that I feel like I have improved a lot over the summer as a teacher. I am a much more confident teacher than the bumbling, nervous teacher I was at the beginning of the summer. This was indicated in the video, as I seemed more sure of myself than before. I had more "presence" if that makes any sense.
One specific thing I noticed that I improved on was moving around the room. In the June video I noticed that I was pacing at the front of the room a lot, but there was very little movement around the entire room. I noticed that I did much better with this in the second video. By moving around the room I was able to make the lesson less about me and more about the students.
One specific thing I noticed that I did wrong was actually pointed out to me by another teacher who was watching the video with me. I thought little of completely turning my back to the entire room as I was writing the bellringer on the board since I was doing this before class had officially started. Carmen Jones pointed out to me that kids are going to be doing stuff behind my back even if it is before class. I definitely need to do better with writing on the board like that with my back completely turned.
I do feel that I was entertaining and made the lesson fun. I sounded enthusiastic and did a good job of getting all my students involved in the lesson. Once again, I have to do better with consistency in classroom discipline, but overall I feel like I did pretty well. We will see how things work out in the fall.
I watched myself teach today for the second time. I think it has been a large improvement over the first times I filmed myself. The most important change I have made is that I talk much less, move around the room much more, and I do not answer my own questions (i.e. so guys, what is the right formula? I now pause and wait until someone tries to answer it instead of telling them the right answer after a short pause). This said, I still need to work on some aspects of my teaching, such as giving clearer directions and grading rubrics.
One of the main things that I wanted to improve was pausing during the lesson to think of how to explain/phrase things. I think that I accomplished that over this past month. I was pleasantly surprised in how much I improved over this past month. Last month I gave myself an 88%. This month I gave myself a 92%.
Things I did well:
*The student was really into my set. In comparsion to June's lesson, my set even more engaging. My lesson was over globalization and we took an in depth look at Starbucks and McDonalds around the world. He loved it!!
*Even balance of lecture and independent work. I have defiantly gotten better at not talking as much and letting the student do most of the work. In June, I was doing too much talking and not enough "teaching." I tended to guide the student too much. I think that I have fixed that problem. In July, I did not talk that much and let the student discover most of the information. I only came back and clarified things for him.
Improvements:
*I am still having a time management problem. I tend to over plan my lessons, but everyone keeps telling me that it's better to do that than to under-plan a lesson. I think I had the same problem in June; but I am getting better at making adjustments throughout my lessons.
I was really pleased with my lesson and improvement since June. It is amazing how much you can improve as a teacher on such a short amount of time. I hope to only continue to grow.