CFE Musings 2 – On being a chameleon

Madagascar Chameleon – By Jean-Louis Vandevivère (originally posted to Flickr as cameleon madagascar) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Week 2 at my CFE in an IB school was a worthwhile experience.  It has been interesting to see how beginning with the question ‘what can I do to be useful’ has led me to being defined by the teachers at the school.  How so?  Well, I came in and found the grade 6 classes preparing for a play and a musical.  So I offered to help prep them.

It was a great chance to teach drama, which I hadn’t done in a deep way in my practicum.  I’ve spent enough time in high school drama classes, performing in musicals, choral concerts and doing public speaking that I could quickly and easy reflect those experiences to the kids and coach them on finding their voices.  It was a great way to be useful to the kids and support the life of the school.  As I helped students with their blocking, projection, emphasis, characters, backstage management, etc., I found I soon became known as someone who was particularly experienced as a drama teacher.  I’m flattered, but until now, I hadn’t even thought of including this on my resume as an area of strength.

To me, that is the magic of teaching elementary school and the reason I am so glad to come to teaching with a varied set of experiences.  As elementary teachers, we need to move from being able to support a school play, to teaching kids to be numerate and literate, to exploring science, to making meaning out of current events and history, to helping to explore visual arts.  All the while while building student buy-in for the idea that building the community up is the preferably path to getting a cheap laugh by tearing the community down.

And so, to me, good teachers are clearly chameleons.  They make themselves appear to be native to any subject under the sun, often simply by knowing how to formulate the right questions.

So this week, I’m the drama specialist.  Next week, who knows?  This experience has led to what is perhaps my new definition of what it means to be a great elementary teacher: A great elementary teacher is a chameleon; someone who makes it seem as though whatever they are needed for is what they are meant for.

Level Crossing

Photo: By MdE (page at dewiki | page at commons) – own photo, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1134659

This week, I was asked to be more mindful about the level of language in the material I’m using with my learners. Admittedly, this is not the first time I’ve been asked this. I’m getting better, but finding the right level of sophistication for my students is obviously important, and it’s something that I particularly need to focus on as someone who sees complexity everywhere and who likes the full range of texture proffered by the English language. I’ve had to really work to tune my assignments and expectations to the level of the class and really be mindful of my language when I need meaning to be totally clear. I think I’ve been successful in tuning my expectations and language in these contexts, at least for the most part.

I would never assess students on things that are obviously beyond their level. But the context of this advice was a classroom management technique I’ve been trying out. Instead of asking for attention, I’ve simply been launching into reciting poetry. Within 2-3 lines, they are paying attention to the poetry. I’m not sure if this class is unique, but it works far better than the standard ways of getting attention – bells, counts, etc. To the point where I’ve been pondering using the approach outside of just poetry classes.

Through this technique, I’ve been trying to read a wide variety of poetry. My big objective for the unit is to have them come to a really expanded understanding of what the definition of poetry is. I’ve also been playing with ideas of authorship – who is privileged and who is not as an author. I’ve been diverse in what I read – everything from Edward Lear to Shel Silverstein to contemporary Canadian poets to student work, to my own poems to, this week, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. I try to balance between accessible and inaccessible with mostly accessible works. There is no test on these poems, and we don’t attempt heavy analysis. In this case, I chose Coleridge’s Kubla Khan because it had a rhyme scheme similar to one I wanted them to use in a quick write. I knew they could hear the rhyme scheme even if the subtlety of the meaning was beyond them.

But the question is, should I have used something more accessible? Would it have been better to use something written more explicitly for children?

One question that I’ve thought of is this: Does the beauty and intrigue of the rather foreign language of a great Romantic like Coleridge have the potential to engage in a way that something with easier meaning does not? Is it like listening to a song in a language you haven’t mastered – you don’t get all the words and that focuses you on other aspects than what the words mean. Aspects like ‘how do they sound?’ ‘what’s the rhythm?’ etc. All of these are aspects that can be hard to understand as a learning poet.

Earlier this year, I read a book by Rafe Esquith, a grade 5 teacher who became famous for putting on full productions of Shakespeare in his inner city classes in Los Angeles. They were fearless – Lear, Hamlet, the whole Shakespearean cannon was open to them. The classes were diverse – ELLs, kids with parents who have low incomes and little education, etc. If he can do it with those students…

And so can I stitch in some similarly difficult texts for my grade 5s? Or do I need to always think of the lowest common denominator? In a Montessori school, I will often have 3 grade splits. Just as we need to differentiate for the lowest capacity learners, we also need to differentiate and provide a rich and stimulating environment for the high fliers. This enrichment can come from those bits of lessons that you know are not central to the objective and that you know you won’t evaluate. I spend a lot of my time prioritizing the learners who need a hand up. This is an opportunity to shift the priority for a few minutes to those who enjoy enrichment.

And so, I would say that yes, it is okay to use high literature in class, but I have the following criteria for when I do it:

-A students’ ability to understand and dive into the meaning is not being assessed,

-The meaning of the poem is not the focus or even a major feature of the lesson.

-It is in a context where a variety of levels can be presented over time.

Ultimately, I will respond to the students in front of me. At present, the engagement level spikes when I read poetry. I will use that and test where the boundaries of that engagement are. I’m curious to see just what the boundaries are for the learners, but I’ll never find the boundary if I don’t push it. If I see the engagement level deflating when I open a book, then I know its time to adjust and pull out Shel Silverstein and Kenn Nesbitt once more.