Posts Tagged ‘Student’

The Importance of the Right Classroom Layout

Friday, August 13th, 2010

It is almost the start of a new school year and for the eighth time in seven years I will be setting up a new classroom. I wish I were one of those lucky teachers who use the same room every year and only need to tweak it from time to time. Imagining what my classroom should look like is not easy for me. Here are some of the things I have to think about when trying to put my room together:

I start by thinking about my students and how they learn. I will be teaching four different groups of students. Three of the groups I have already had, so I know how they like to work. One class is self-contained special education where they all like to work as individuals. The second is also special education, but this one half the kids like to work as individuals, and the other half want to be in bigger groups. The room needs to accommodate both. The third class is general education with 30-student class of generally high achieving 7th graders, half boys and half girls. The girls work in three or four groups. Most of the boys like to work independently, but there are three pairs of boys who like to work only in those pairs.

Then there is the fourth class. This class is considered a VERY difficult to teach. There are six or eight motivated students, but there are also several VERY disruptive students among the 30 in the class. I don’t know their learning styles or how they like to work. I just know that after trying several different arrangements, all their teachers arranged the desks in a giant U-shape when teaching them.

Of course, in laying out the desks, I need to make sure to position the laptop and desktop computers so that their screens are shielded from the sun, so they are near the few electric outlets, and also in a way that I can readily monitor what the students are doing.

This used to be a science room so there is an immovable eight-foot-long marble-topped demo-table, complete with a sink that serves as teacher desk and obstacle to desk layout.  There is an interactive white board in the room and I need a table stacked with a stable pile of books on which to put the projector. My nemesis will be the cables that will need to run around and across the floor to connect everything that needs power or communication.

But there are still more things to consider! Student work will need display places, as will the various fire escape paths and other required signage. I’ll also need to find prominent places for the class rules and procedures. Oh. Procedures. I’ll have to figure out how to collect homework (not that I give much) and forms, where to put textbooks (not that I use them much) and the class library. I also have to make the classroom work for me. I like to move around a lot when I teach. I like to be able to whisper a word of praise, encouragement or reprimand in each student’s ear should I want to. And I also want it to look warm, inspiring, interesting and inviting, not to mention organized and easy to clean.

Sounds easy, doesn’t it?

On August 30th I can get into the room and start trying to put it together. I’ll try to post pictures of what it looks like then, how it changes before the start of school on Sept. 8th, and how it continues to change throughout the year. I’m interested in hearing your ideas, criticisms, compliments and concerns. I need all the help I can get.

My Dream Report Card

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010
Image Courtesy of Sean Dreilinger

Last week April gave a parent’s perspective on report cards. I had a little chuckle when I read that ‘her head might explode’ when she tried to understand the 43 categories. April, I am sure that the teacher’s head was just as volcanic when writing the report card.

I have been writing report cards for 13 years and they have changed so much since I first starting teaching. The grading scale has changed; the criteria to which I report has become longer and the comments have also become generic. When I first started teaching the comments were personal, and related to the child. Now we get a comment bank where a B grade in a certain subject means the “B” comment. There are now style guides for report card writing as schools have come under fire from parents about comments.

And I wonder who these types of report cards are benefiting. I don’t believe they help me as a teacher. They are definitely not helpful to parents if parents cannot even understand them. And they have little value to students.

Parents are right to complain about the difficulty in reading them. Teachers are frustrated because the job of reporting has become larger. And both would agree that the reports have little to do with the child at all. I think report cards have become a reflection on the education system and the curriculum.

As a teacher I also see parent teacher interviews more beneficial than report cards. In an interview I can discuss strengths and weaknesses and together the parents and I can create a future plan for the child.

If I could, I would…report on the child.

I have a vision of a dream report card because I do believe that they have a place in education. My dream report card:

  • Celebrate the child’s strengths
  • Comment on areas of difficulties plus offer suggestions
  • Promote book learning as well as social learning
  • Jargon Free
  • Student Centred

The report card would include data, and comparison to the rest of the cohort. But the personal comments would complement the data and be specific to the child.

Finally, I want the report card to reflect me as much as the child. I want it to show that the child and I were partners in learning and that together we achieved great things.

That is my dream report card. What would be yours?

Testing Our Community

Monday, November 9th, 2009
There was a celebration at my daughter’s elementary school today. They’d surpassed their standardized testing goals, and to celebrate, and to make good on a promise, the Curriculum Director let the kids shave his head! My daughter got to be one of those playing barber since she’d scored a perfect 600 on her Math score.
I’m not a fan of standardized testing, and in years past, I’d say I was quite their enemy! My older daughter had found them so stressful that when she was eight, I almost pulled her out of taking the test. We’ve been to many different schools in LAUSD, and in their own way, each one has put enormous pressure on kids – in elementary school – to perform well. But of course, the kids don’t actually benefit from these tests. The scores don’t even come in until they’ve advanced to the next grade level. The tests are there for the schools, not the students.
Yet, it’s up to the students to score well. And it’s up to the schools to get their students to score well. It’s put schools and students (and their parents) at odds with each other.This school is the first that I’ve seen actually pass on some of the benefits to the students. Their Curriculum Director, I’ll call him Mr. B, had my daughter pumped to do well. She was actually excited the week of testing, getting up early, ensuring she ate a good breakfast and going to bed early. She was eight at the time. She had no stress. Instead, Mr. B had positively motivated them to show off their stuff. And that’s what my daughter, and many of her schoolmates, did.
Today, not only were the students with perfect scores recognized, but every student that had moved up a category, even from Far Below Basic to Below Basic, and every student that had scored in the Proficient or Advanced category was recognized today. The entire community of school administrators, teachers, parents, and students had all came together during testing last year to help the kids do well (with the PTA providing snacks and water for test days), and today, we all celebrated a job well done.
Together, we passed the test of creating a successful learning community.
———————————-
April McAffery, single mom to 2 daughters, is an LA Single Parenting Examiner, an LA Moms contributor, and writes her personal blog, It’s All About Balance.
Enhanced by Zemanta

The Innovative Educator

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

We were featured on The Innovative Educator’s Blog.

http://theinnovativeeducator.blogspot.com/2009/09/innovative-site-for-connecting-with.html

Enhanced by Zemanta

The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

My grandfather was an English professor. He had 6 daughters and all of them have their Masters in English and also teachers. I spent my summer vacations learning rules of grammar from my grandfather. I sincerely hope that I do him justice and make him proud as I write this blog.

My mother was a teacher in my school in India. We got a tremendous education at my school and I loved my school and all my friends. Our fees was subsidized because my mother was a teacher at the school. Once we had a couple of years left to finish school, my mother quit her teaching job to start educational tours for school students. As a teenager, I was a tour guide on trips with school kids. I organized games, made sure food was on time, all the party games were on track, etc. It was a great experience for me as it taught me to be responsible and make sure that whatever was given to me, I did to the best of my ability. Of course, I got to travel all over India and to Nepal.

I have great admiration for the teaching profession. I saw my mother pour over her lesson plans and make sure the students got the most out of her class. Now in her tours, she carries over the same dedication in writing the questionnaires for children when they visit a historic city to make sure they learned about the history of a monument or city.

As a parent now, I know how important education is for my children and what an impact it will have on their lives. I am really happy to be involved in creating a digital village for parents to connect, share, learn, influence, and support each other. After all, it does take a village to raise children. Teachers are welcome. I personally am grateful for all the teachers who enrich our children’s lives. If we can be of any assistance, if you need any tools, please let us know.

While I may not be a teacher myself, I am really glad to be involved in helping bring educators and parents together. I think my grandfather will be proud. He loved idioms and proverbs. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree–is true of me.