Sunday, April 17, 2011

Recipes!

I am the type of person which needs recipes to cook. Without a recipe, I am at a utter loss of what to do. This could possibly be due to the fact that I just like lists and directions because then I can know exactly what I need to do or to the fact that I just have a really bad memory. Recently, I found this amazing website of recipes that are easy to follow as well as beautiful to look at: http://www.theydrawandcook.com/

So far I have already found a few recipes which I cannot wait to try out:
1. http://www.theydrawandcook.com/recipes/stuffed-portobellos-by-esther-loopstra
2. http://www.theydrawandcook.com/recipes/figs-cheese-crostini-by-anna-rodighiero
3. http://www.theydrawandcook.com/recipes/miso-ramen-by-kristen-uroda

I just wanted to share this site just in case there are others out there who need a recipe to cook just like me. This could also be used as a type of mentor text for teaching students about creative recipes. Happy browsing!

Bucket List Before Graduation

Athens Bucket List:

1. Walk through Founders Memorial Garden
2. Visit the State Botanical Garden of Georgia
3. Eat at Five and Ten
4. Eat at The Grit
5. Eat at Blind Pig Tavern
6. Eat at Clocked
7. Eat at Farm255
8. Eat at Speakeasy
9. Eat breakfast at Mama's Boy
10. Eat at Porterhouse Grill
11. Buy 5 items from one to five independently owned stores located downtown
12. Eat at a UGA dining hall one last time
13. Buy a plant from the UGA Horticulture Club's plant sale

I will add more to this list as I think of more ideas!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Swirling Thoughts

As the semester gradually comes to a close, I cannot help but come to the following realizations:

1. While there may have been times at which I have wondered whether or not being a teacher is what I really want to do with the rest of my life being that I love predictability and teaching is all about putting yourself in unpredictable situations, as I spend more and more time in the classroom, I realize that there is no other occupation that I would rather have. In the classroom and working with kids is where I want to be and is where my heart truly lies. I do not think I could attempt to do anything else and really feel as fulfilled as I know I will feel when I am a teacher. I know that the road will be difficult, painful, and sometimes heartbreaking. But, I also know that, ultimately, if I were to choose to NOT be a teacher, that choice would bring the type of regret which lasts a lifetime.

2. Though I am constantly looking forward to graduation and I cannot wait until I can have my very own classroom, as the days pass, I become more and more apprehensive about the thought of being the lead teacher in a classroom in which I am the one that plans everything, sets up everything, and am in control for the whole day. On one hand, I feel as if I am more than ready to have my own classroom. I know how to differentiate, I know how to write lesson plans and reflect on my lesson plans, I know how to build a classroom library, and I know how to encourage family involvement. However, on the other hand, I feel as if I do not know enough. As I think about it more, though, I become aware of the fact that maybe, just maybe, you can never really know enough. Teaching is a constant learning process and as such, you need to know that you do not know everything and you will make mistakes because there is so much to know that no one could ever know it all! With that epiphany, I can feel a little less anxious about the future and being the lead teacher in a classroom, although I feel that my anxiety can never totally be erased or assuaged by anything.

Next week will be my last week in the field before I enter the classroom once again as a student teacher in August and I just wanted to record the thoughts that have been swirling in my mind as of late. Maybe one day when I'm feeling particularly anxious or have had a bad day in the classroom, I can re-read this post and be uplifted and encouraged.

“Teachers who inspire know that teaching is like cultivating a garden, and those who would have nothing to do with thorns must never attempt to gather flowers." - Unknown

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Comments for Young Authors

Using the comments4kids search results on twitter, I found a good number of blogs which captured my interest. These three particularly stood out to me:

http://kidblog.org/MrsDurays1stGradeClass/gabeb4/my-spring-break/#comment-954

http://mentalweight.blogspot.com/2011/04/how-to-do-basic-animations.html?showComment=1302140879038#c4296773525128375013

http://kidblog.org/MrReutersClass/daniel135/symphony-4/#comment-19331

Monday, March 28, 2011

Never A Dull Day In The Elementary Classroom

One important lesson which I have learned from being in my field experience classroom every Thursday and Friday of this semester is that as a teacher, one should always be prepared to think on one's feet. This particular lesson was made clear to me this past Thursday when I was at J.J. Harris Elementary School with my first grade students.

On Thursday, the day seemed to be proceeding rather normally until recess came around the corner. Because the school had been on a soft lock down since the beginning of the week, Thursday was the first day of the week that the students were actually allowed to have recess outside on the playground. While my mentor teacher went to retrieve her keys from the classroom which would allow us to re-enter the building from the playground area, my student teacher and I led the students out to recess. As my student teacher and I sat down on the bench and watched the children disperse in excitement at being able to play outside, nothing seemed to be out of the ordinary. Oh, how we had no idea of what was about to occur. Five minutes into recess, we saw about half of our students begin to make their way towards us in a type of huddle. While we initially could not see anything, as the students came closer and began to open up their huddle to form a line, we saw that the student which was in the middle of the line was leaning on two of his peers, blood dripping from his head. The student, whom I will refer to as Otto, had a deep gash on the side of his forehead and was bleeding rather consistently. Shocked, my student teacher and I immediately looked at each other in panic and quickly decided that she would take Otto to the clinic while I would supervise the rest of the class for the remainder of their recess. While I looked after the rest of the class, my student teacher escorted Otto to the clinic located in the front office as fast as she could before she ran to get a hold of my mentor teacher. I was informed later on that the bleeding had increased so much that the front office had to call the paramedics to come to the school. After I had taken the rest of the class to specials, I met my mentor teacher and student teacher in the front office right as the paramedics arrived at the school. After a quick look at Otto's head, the paramedics decided that he needed to be taken to the hospital for stitches. Due to the fact that the front office could not get a hold of Otto's parents, my mentor teacher and the principal decided to follow the ambulance to the hospital. Because of this sudden change in events, my student teacher, the paraprofessional, and I were left in charge of the remaining students. Once we picked up the students from specials and returned to our classroom, my student teacher decided that we would have the students write cards to Otto. I felt that this was an amazing decision being that it was obvious that Otto's incident was on the student's minds, as well as the minds of all the adults in the classroom, and attempting to continue previously planned lessons and ignore the fact that such a turn of events had occurred would have been futile and fruitless. Once the school bell had rung and the students had left to go home, my mentor teacher returned with news that Otto had gotten 11 stitches and had to undergo a CAT scan but had been laughing and smiling after everything had finished. As you can tell, to say that it was a day of surprises and chaos would be an understatement.

To conclude, the morale of the story which I learned from the situation which passed on Thursday is this: be flexible, be ready to adapt to new situations, and be prepared to think on your feet at all times. The fact is that there really never is a dull day in the elementary classroom.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Preparing for Writing Workshop and Having a Year-Long Plan

"Writing workshops need to be predictable places so that wonderful, unpredictable things can happen in them. Setting up the management structures and routines buys us quality teaching time for later" (Ray, 2001, p. 130).

I love the fact that the authors included this quote at the very beginning of this chapter because I feel that the word "classrooms" could be substituted in for the phrase "writing workshops" and the quote would still hold true. In order for amazing revelations and learning to occur, teachers need to invest time at the beginning of the year making the classroom and each period of the day (including the period for writing workshop) a predictable place through setting up routines. If teachers set up the management structures and routines early on in the year, before any type of academic instruction, less time will have to be spent on re-explaining directions and expectations later on when academic instruction should be taking precedence. In our EDEC 4030 class, we have also discussed that the teacher should expect to dedicate at least a week to teaching students rules, routines, and expectations so that they are aware of what they are expected to do during each period of the day with the materials provided them. While I feel that this is a great idea and could result in an enormous pay off, I have a hard time imagining having at least a whole week's worth of material relating to management structures and routines. However, I feel that maybe, when my first week as a teacher actually comes, I will find that I have more material in regards to rules and procedures than that which I am able to teach in just a week's worth of time.

I found it particularly interesting that some teachers are beginning to include a two-week genre study of testing in the upper grades to their year-long plans for writing workshop. I personally think that this is an ingenious idea because it allows students to understand how they are to deal with issues that result from having to take a writing test which may not regularly arise during the writing workshop. By spending some time conducting a genre study of testing, teachers will be able to adequately prepare their students for the test without having to teach to the test. However, my question is this: would younger grades benefit from such a genre study of testing as well or should such a genre study be saved for those grades in which standardized writing tests are usually administered?

Ray, K.W. with Laminack, L.L. (2001). The writing workshop: Working through the hard parts (and they’re all hard parts). Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.