Monthly Archives: October 2010

EAL Learners, EDUC 315 Review, Microteaching Set-Up & Magic Lesson Designing: Update for Monday, 25 October 2010

EAL Learners Presentation

Thank for Sylvia Helmer, a fellow EDUC 310/316 instructor, for her presentation on teaching English as an Additional Language.  Here’s a PDF of the PowerPoint presentation she used in her lecture:

As a follow up, Sylvia’s asked me to make these two articles that she referenced available to you in PDF form:

Thanks for your feedback on her talk.  I’ll be sure to pass the sheets along to Sylvia.

Post-Day 1 of Practicum Thoughts

I asked you to fill out a PMIQ (Plus, Minus, interesting, Questions) Chart with your thoughts after your first day in your placement.  After that, we did a Four Corners activity that had people choose a the item on their list to them most and go to the corner associated with the category – P, M, I, or Q – that the chosen item fit into.  Each person shared their thinking and we had a go at answering the questions that came up.

Enjoy Day 2 of prac tomorrow and be sure to email Bob or I if anything urgent comes up.

Microteaching Organization

Using the RROT cards, we chose the speaking order for the Microteaching Lesson Presentations and received topic confirmation.  Here’s that info (thanks to Ian for copying it from the board for me):

I’ll set aside some time in one of next week’s classes for groups to plan and prepare their microteaching lessons.  Also, I’ll be sure to review the rubric for this task and highlight a few things that make for a successful presentation.

Using Lesson Design to Create a Lesson on a Magic Trick

Time was a bit tight at this point so we move pretty quickly through this part of the lesson.  We started by reviewing the 7 components of Lesson Design on a sheet of paper folded thrice using “Hamburger Style”, like this:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMpfPHsEnSY[/youtube]

Then, you worked with your partner to develop a lesson around the magic trick you learned last class, either Cups & Balls or Spell-A-Card.  To help you out, I noted that the objective of the lesson is to teach another partnership your card trick (so the learners can perform the trick to at least a competent level). I also mentioned that you will have 12-15 minutes in which to deliver the lesson.  You will present your lesson to another partnership in Monday’s class.

To get you in magic frame of mind, check out this trick from David Copperfield.  It’s interactive so you can play along on your computer, if you’re interested.  By the way, bonus points to anyone who sports a Copperfield-esque mullet next class!

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZIc-CRcVvo[/youtube]

The reason I chose to have you use magic tricks as content for the guided practice piece of this introduction to Lesson Design is that a little magic can come in very handy when you’re teaching, especially when you’re working as a TOC.  For instance, the promised completion of a magic trick can serve as a carrot that might help the students work more productively on their assigned tasks.

That’s all for now.  Take care ’til Monday.

– Lawrence

PRO-D Ideas, POT Reading, & Lesson Design: Update for Monday, 18 October 2010

After fielding a few questions about the first day of the Tuesdays Practicum we got down to new business.  Here’s what happened;

PRO-D Day on Friday, 22 October

This provincial PRO-D day is a great opportunity for you to participate in some outstanding professional learning conferences. Most Provincial Specialist Associations (PSAs) organize a conference on this day and they offer reduced rates for teacher candidates.

You can access a list of PSAs and their websites (with conference info and registration) here.  Please note that there are general-subject conferences that may be of wider interest at the middle years level. PITA puts on one:

The advantage of attending a PSA day, apart from lots of learning, access to resources and networking, is the annual membership that is included, thus opening up many other professional learning opportunities during the year and beyond.

EDUC 310 Reading Schedule

We are transitioning from EDUC 316 – Communications to EDUC 310 – Principles of Teaching in our sessions.  As such, we will begin a series of POT-related readings and discussions.  Full details on the readings and the reading schedule can be found in the EDUC 310 Course Outline.  This was handed out earlier in the term but I’ve re-posted it here for easy reference:

For class on Monday, 25 October please read the following pieces from the EDUC 310 Reading Package (available for purchase at the bookstore):

  • Friere, P. (1998). Teachers as Cultural Workers: Letters To Those Who Dare Teach. Westview Press, pp. 39-46.
  • Danylewycz, M. & Prentice, A. (1991). Teachers’ work: Changing patterns and perceptions in the emerging school systems of 19th– and early 20th-century central Canada.  In Prentice, A. & Theobald, M. R. (Eds.). Women Who Taught. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 136-159.

During- or post-reading, please complete an Entrance Slip that will serve as your “Ticket In The Door” to Monday’s class.  This response – that may be done in any format you wish (writing, drawing, collage, painting, interpretive dance, and the like), as long as it covers the content – is intended to help you to prepare for class discussion by focusing your attention on ideas, questions, and issues provoked by the readings.

The following questions may guide you as you prepare each week:

  • What does this text say that struck you?  Why?
  • What questions does the text provoke?  Why?
  • What ideas, events, or images does the text illuminate or challenge?
  • What dilemmas, tensions, or contradictions are evident?
  • How does the text intersect with (inform, challenge) your own understanding (of teaching, learning, knowing)?

Your Entrance Slip need not be lenghty.  For instance, if you choose to write your thoughts, a paragraph or so will suffice.

At the end of each class we will devote 5 to 10 minutes for writing Exit Slips.  These slips will allow you to return to your initial questions (in the Entrance Slip) and to reflect on them in light of class discussion.  Of course, something new may emerge in the context of class discussion and you may wish to focus your exit slip on that new idea.

Lesson Design: A Framework for Lesson Planning

In preparation for the lesson you’ll teach in your practicum classroom and for the microteaching task you’ll be completing as a part of this class, we turned our focus to Lesson Design, a model for planing instruction.  I followed this steps to introduce the topic:

  • Destinations Revisited (Sharing the Objective)

I showed a slide from the PPT presentation I used at the start of the year to set the context for the class.  I would be focusing on content today and weaving in teaching strategies and skills.

  • Introduction to Microteaching (Sharing the Objective)

I handed out the task sheet – Microteaching Task & Rubric 10-11 – and gave you time to find a group to work with.  In the end, we have 9 groups – 7 triads and 2 partnerships.  They are as follows:

  • Alice & Amber
  • Farisha, Kat K., & Sarah
  • Melanie, Tyrel, & Aaron
  • Amanda, Caitlin, & Kat M.
  • Sally, Ian, & Miguel
  • Jennifer & Lou
  • Lars, Jeremy, & Ross
  • Christian, Shaun, & Devin
  • Leanne, Jenna, & Maria

I asked you to consider topics of interest and noted that, seeing as you only have 20 minutes maximum in which to teach, you should keep your topic narrow; the (sexist, in hindsight) advice I give to my students when they are choosing a topic is as follows: Focus on a man, not man.  Teaching a simple skill works best, generally, although some TCs have had success with knowledge-centred presentations.  Here are few examples of presentations done in previous years:

  • How to perform the basic salsa step
  • How to perform CPR safely and effectively
  • How to make conversations work
  • How to make a drink tag
  • How to tie 4 knots: the bowline, the half hitch, loop knot, and the truckers hitch.
  • How to taste wine like a snob
  • 3 tips for taking better photographs

For next Monday’s class, please have your topic confirmed.  On that day we’ll pick the presentation order.  Lessons will be delivered in class on Monday, 15 November and Monday, 22 November.

  • Lesson Design – Anticipation Guide (Mental Set)

In preparation for our examination of the components of an effective lesson, I asked you to consider some statements related to lesson planning in an Anticipation Guide.  This is a very effecitve pre-reading strategy and it generated some interesing conversations in class.  Here are the statements you responded to:

Here are some details on one way to implement the Anticipation Guide strategy – Anticipation Guide Directions – and a link to a page on Anticipation Guides from the very good and very Canadian (it’s out of Saskatchewan) Instructional Strategies Online website.

  • Lesson Design Components Jigsaw (Input / Information & Check for Understanding)

I organized a Jigsaw as a means to process the content information related to the 7 components of Lesson Design.  You started in a home (or base) group, moved to an expert group to discuss one portion of the material, and then returned to home group to share your findings.  To aid info gathering process, I provided you with a graphic organizer designed around the organization of the reading from Bennett and Rolheiser’s Beyond Monet: The Artful Science of Instructional Ingegration. Here’s the chart:

After returning to home groups, each group member taught the others what they had learned.  In the end, all group members should know all of the content.  I tested this using a version of the Numbered Heads Together strategy to check for understanding.  NHT is a powerful strategy for building knowledge and randomizing participation.  The PDF below has details on how to use NHT in your classroom:

  • Lesson Plan Analysis (Modelling)

In an effort to model the LD process, I took a moment to break down my lesson plan into its component parts.  I aimed to include all 7 compoenents but, at this point had only done 5.  See the headings above for the breakdown.

  • This Is Where the Magic Happens (Practice)

With a nod to the wonderfully funny animated film Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs, I introduced the magic tricks that would provide the content for the lesson’s guided practice piece.  Here’s the trailer for this little gem that was one of my favourite films of 2009:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OP9wtdwgeok&feature=&p=CE0999AA7FAD93C5&index=0&playnext=1[/youtube]

The goal was to work with a partner to learn one magic trick, either Cups and Balls or Spell-a-Card. In the end, you will work together to create a lesson using the 7 components of Lesson Design to teach your magic trick to a partnership that learned a different trick.  It was a bit confusing at first – my bad! – but, eventually, we got things sorted.

We’ll pick up the lesson planning piece in next Monday’s session.  Don’t worry, you’ll have time to review the tricks on the DVD and practice before you have to perform it for your audience.

Cheers,

– Lawrence


VERSION 2 Of The Altered EDUC 310/316 Schedule For The Next Two Weeks

Thanks for your feedback on my original plan for altering the POT/COM schedule over the next two weeks.  In light of the comments – mostly to do with conflicts around the late end time of class – I’ve made some revisions.  It’s not possible to start earlier in the day, but I’ve made some changes to achieve an earlier end to class on both days.

Here are some key points to the plan:

  1. We’ll continue to have no classes on Wednesday, 20 October or Wednesday, 27 October.
  2. Seeing as we’re moving from COM to POT (EDUC 310) and POT classes include 1 hour of self-directed reading time, we’re only required to have 3.5 hours together in class.
  3. I’ve slotted us in for an earlier EAL Presentation on Monday, 25 October
  4. I’ve shortened lunch from 1 hour to 1/2 hour to allow for an earlier dismissal.. but to still allow for eating and (some) digestion 🙂
  5. A 2:00 end of classes is consistent with the regular dismissal time for most of you on Mondays (are far as I can tell from the Standard MIddle Years Timetables I can access)

With that in mind, here’s the NEW schedule – Version 2:

Monday, 18 October 2010

– 10:00 to 12:30 in SC 204
– 12:30 to 1:00 = LUNCH
– 1:00 to 2:00 in SC 204

Monday, 25 October 2010

– 10:00 to 11:30 = Presentation on Teaching EAL (English as an Additional Language) Learners in Woodward IRA 5 (Here’s a map:http://www.maps.ubc.ca/PROD/index_detail.php?locat1=536)
– 11:30 to 12:00 = Lunch
– 12:00 to 2:00 in SC 204

It’s a challenge each year to make this work, and I hope Version 2 meets everyone’s needs.  Please advise me ASAP if this new schedule will not work for you.   Also, get in touch if you have any questions.

Thanks,
Lawrence

The BIG Reveal, I Used to Think, Curriki, and More: Update for Wednesday, 13 October 2010

With much fanfare – and a little stalling for dramatic effect on my part – the placements were revealed this morning.  Here they are along with maps of both the New West and Coquitlam districts:

Please get in contact with your SA soon, check out the school’s website, and do anything else that you need to do in order to get prepared for your first day with your sponsor – Tuesday, 19 October 2010.

I Used To Think…But Now I Think…Because…

The 2 middle school tours were designed to highlight the exciting happenings in middle schools around Coquitlam.  I was curious about how your thinking about middle level teaching and learning had transformed since before the tour so I had you complet the sentence stem “I Used To Think…But Now I Think…Because…” This is a useful way of processing any transformative experience.

Education: Evolving?

Next up was Devin’s presentation on Macrowikinomics and some ideas on what the future of education might hold. It was a timely and thought provoking presentation that presented an option – Curriki – to meet the need of the cohort to easily share lessons and teaching resources.

Here’s a link to Devin’s PreziMacrowikinomics – Education: Evolving?.  Also, here are the YouTube clips that accompany the presentation.

  • Wolfram Alpha

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WgdmNtUS2U[/youtube]

  • Curriki

Language Article Wrap Up… At Last!

As the concluding piece to our examination of the “Chapter 4: Language” article, I asked each of you to consider a language-based action that you can take on practicum that will have a positive impact on student learning in your classroom.  The information was shared as a verbal ticket out the door.  There were a wide variety of responses, including such things as:

  • smiling often
  • making eye contact with students
  • aranging the room to facilitate teacher movement
  • arranging the room to facilitate student interaction
  • eliminating filler words
  • harnessing the power of positive word choice.

Next class – I swear – we’ll look at a lesson planning model that you can use to deliver a lesson on your Tuesdays Practicum.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

Pillars of Middle School & The Power of Language: Update for Wednesday, 6 October 2010

My Job, Your Job

To start, I showed you the MJ, YJ chart and asked if there was anything on it you couldn’t live with.  There wasn’t so these are the guidelines we’ll live with.  In an effort to ensure each of you are as focused as possible for the duration of each class, I did add an item about the use of electronic devices – phones, laptops, MP3 players, and what not – to the TC side of this chart.  Here’s what I added:

“Use laptops and other electronic devices only for class work related tasks (taking notes, for instance)”

The entire MJ, YJ chart is below for your reference:

The Pillars of Middle School

After one tour of a middle school I thought the time was right to have you examine the pillars of middle school.  After a brainstorm-walk-and-talk, we listed your best answers to the question “What are the 5 key components of an exemplary middle school?”  The list you developed was very close to the one agreed upon in the middle school literature – as noted in this NMSA (National Middle School Association) Research Summary from December 2007, “Characteristics of Exemplary Schools for Young Adolescents” –  and as highlighted in my brief PPT presentation:

Language Article Placemat

In an effort to wrap up our look at “Chapter 4: Language” from the Communication fort he Classroom Teacher text, I asked you – as a member of a triad – to complete a placemat to review your ideas on the piece, then to summarize the triad’s thinking using a 3-2-1 organizer:

  • 3 – Key ideas from the text
  • 2 – “Language-related” actions to take on practicum
  • 1 – Point to ponder/question

Here are the directions for Placemat and the 3-2-1:

Here’s a really cool, old school placemat:

I think that covers it.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

The Final (Practicum) Countdown & MIAB Speech Analysis Tasks Gallery Walk: Update for Monday, 4 October 2010

NOTE: You’ll get so much more enjoyment out of this post if you read it while the music from this video plays.  Trust me.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AyggY_R3jU8&p=61349DCC17CB1C98&playnext=1&index=55[/youtube]

Clock Partners

Clock Partners are a great way to set up partnerships in a classroom setting.  It gives students some choice over who they will speak/work with for a given activity while speeding up the partner finding process.  Here’s the Clock Parnters sheet I handed out for you to record your appointments.  There are instructions for the activity on the back of the page:

Weekend Rating

We found our 6 o’clock partner (I think) and rated our weekends… positively, on the whole.

Pre-Prac Prep Wrap Up

Improv

In a nod to my weekend – I went to see live Improv with Ryan Stiles and Greg Proops of Whose Line Is It Anyway? fame – we did some improv to get our brains working this morning.  We started with Hey, what are you doing?” and progressed to One Word Story.  Directions for these activities and many, many more can be found in the online Impvov Encyclopedia.

A video clip with hilarious highlights from one of Richard Simmons’ visits on WLIIA? is below.  Watch at your own risk!

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTxkxG3DF4k[/youtube]

Protocols

Please observe the following protocols when you arrive at the schools:

  • Arrive by 8:30 am
  • Check in at the office and meet the secretaries
  • Expect to wear a Visitor Badge to identify yourself as a guest in the building
  • Smile and make eye contact with students you meet
  • After OKing it with the classroom teacher, interact with students as they work
  • Use the Staff Washrooms
  • Bring a journal and take notes in it about what you see
  • Have fun!

SA Expectations

A lot is expected of you during practicum.  You can expect your SA to support you as you grow into a dynamic beginning teacher, mind you.  Below is a list of the type of assistance your School Advisor should be offering:

  • Get to know your teacher candidate. Endeavour to create a warm, friendly working relationship.
  • Learn specific strengths and needs of your teacher candidate. What does s/he need to know and understand about you and your classroom to help ensure a successful working partnership?
  • Be a listener: Be empathetic, patient, and encouraging. Provide opportunities for your teacher candidate to discuss what was learned in coursework on campus.
  • Introduce your teacher candidate to your class as a “teacher.”
  • Help your teacher candidate become a welcome and participating member of the school staff.
  • Maintain open communication and consultation with the faculty advisor.
  • Ensure that the match between your teacher candidate and yourself and your class is appropriate. Raise any concerns with the faculty advisor and/or school coordinator at the earliest opportunity.
  • Provide opportunities for your teacher candidate to become familiar with the school and district personnel.

If you feel your needs for support in the classroom aren’t being met, please advise me as soon as possible.

Teacher Presence – Introducing Yourself

As a dress rehearsal for tomorrow’s meetin’ and greetin’, I asked each TC to:

  • State the name they want to go by in the classroom
  • Give a brief introduction of themselves

EDUC 315 Task Expectations

Journal: Bob and I are asking you to keep a journal of your thoughts as you tour the school and, eventually, as you work with your SA on 6 consecutive Tuesdays starting on 19 October.  Here are some observation tips that will help you focus your classroom viewing:

Lesson: Also, at some point, you will need to teach (a minimum of) one lesson.  The what and when of this lesson will be worked out with your SA.  We’ll be covering a lesson planning format soon in class.  We ask that you please email a lesson plan to us 24 hours in advance of your teaching and that you send us a copy of your reflection on the lesson, too.

Me In A Bag Gallery Walk

There was great diversity in the post-speech analysis products on display in class this morning.  We viewed them with a Gallery Walk strategy and I collected all the pieces at the end.  It was a bit hard to hear the songs, so I’ll take time next class to play them for the whole group.  Also, next class we’ll consider the benefits and drawback of differentiating end products in your middle level teaching.

That’s a wrap.  I may bump into some of you in the morning as I visit various schools firming up the placements.  Of course, I’ll see all of you in the Montgomery Middle School Library at 1:30 for a debrief of the morning’s happenings.  (I promise to not make any mention of M. Night Shyamalan’s movie The Happening, if you don’t.  Here’s a way better Happening from The Pixies that I’d be more than happy to talk about:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWNm1ZF8wwg[/youtube]

Later alligators.

– Lawrence

How To Do EDUC 315: Update for Wednesday, 29 September 2010

Today was a follow up from yesterday’s goings on.  Here’s what shook down:

Me In A Bag Speech Analysis Task

I reviewed the expectations for the assignment and reminded you of the Monday, 4 October 2010 due date.

Ropes Course Debrief

I asked you to give me the following information:

  • List of activities you engaged in
  • Your favourite ropes course activity and why
  • A rating of the Ropes Course experience from 1 to 11 and your reasoning
  • A completion of this sentence stem… “I used to think… but NOW I think… because…”

(I’ve left your feedback slips at home but I’ll insert it into this post when I’ve put it together. -LH)

Professional Demeanour on Practicum

I asked you to consider the question “What will professionalism look like in a school setting?” and to create a role play around one professional behaviour.  The role play had to give a no example and a yes example.  After developing criteria for an effecitve role play, you took time to plan, rehearse and present.  The role plays were enlightening and humourous.

Of course, we can’t fully prepare you for the practicum through classroom work on campus.  You need to be in the schools and experience it for yourselves.  There is no “How To Do It” video for teaching like there is for these the skills covered in this clip:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNfGyIW7aHM[/youtube]

Cheers.

– Lawrence

Pre-Prac Prep & An Afternoon at the Ropes Course: Update for Tuesday, 28 September 2010

Here’s all the news that’s fit to print from today’s class:

Practicum Preferences Information Gathering

I used the questions in the PPT presentation linked below to determine your preferences with respect to a practicum placement.  Thanks for the information:

Organizing the Middle School Tours

You had about 15 minutes to look over the Middle School Tours schedule and develop a transportation plan with the other TCs in your group.  Here’s the list of groups…

and a map of the buildings you’ll need to find around SD #43 (Coquitlam):

Did someone say tour?  I thought so.  Here’s a clip of one of the lowest point from Spinal Tap’s 1980s era comeback tour.  It’s not quite as low as serving as the opening act for a puppet show, but I reckon it’s close!

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukuIwXwCyOI[/youtube]

Now where was I?  Oh, ya.  We’re visiting the four schools listed below.  Each name is linked to that school’s website:

EDUC 315: Pre-Practicum Experience Goals and Expectations

After a free write on what you expected to see, do, feel (emotions) and hear (but NOT touch or smell!), we went over the goals of EDUC 315.  Here’s the handout with those goals… and much more!

Bob Gilmour – the FA who will be supervising some of you during your practica – and I asked you to consider the following:  What EDUC 315-related goal are you:

  • Most looking forward to achieving?
  • Likely to find most challenging to accomplish?

We wrapped with a piece from Bob on “the spirit of inquiry” versus “the spirit of judgement”.  We urged you to use the former in lieu of the latter.  Asking questions about what you see provokes thinking about what is happening and what led to it.  Judgements tend to shut off analysis and critical thinking and are very often based on incomplete information.  In essence, keep your eyes, ears, and your mind open as you tour the middle schools over these next two Tuesdays.’

’til next time.

– Lawrence