Parvin Peivandi, IB reflection, Dec. 3rd

Parvin Peivandi , IB reflection, Dec 3rd, 2014

This IB seminar was about reporting in the IB, internal assessment and external assessment. The new assessment system that is employed in IB is cumulative and students have the whole year to continue working on meeting the same objectives. Also no averages are taken. I learned a lot about the things that IB teachers should avoid in the assessment: Teachers should avoid grading based on the proportion of scores for class work, homework and test. Teachers should not averaging summative performance score over the year and teachers should not determine the final grade by looking at one single piece.

All these criteria got me reflecting on my own education, old, traditional schooling which still exist in many educational system. In the old educational systems without all these assessment sheets, rubrics and disciplines, there was no respect for the students’ rights and grades are mostly affected by the personal preferences and judgments of the teachers. Students do not have chance to show their progress and be assessed over the year and any fail is counted in their final grade. There is no need to say how much frustration the old traditional system would bring for the students and how it can influence the students’ motivation for learning and growth. In comparison, the IB education lets the student to achieve the educational objectives and goals over the year and feel responsible always to correct their mistakes and progress. IB education motivates the students to learn and think profoundly rather than performing just for the time of final exams.

 

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, Nov, 27th, 2014

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, Nov. 27th, 2014

Learning about the ATL skills in IB education, got me reflecting on my own practice and how much did I considered these skills in designing my unit plans before? I think the most remarkable aspect of the IB education is its systematic approach and in developing the important skills that students need to function well in society. IB education emphasizes both on self-reflection as well as the teachers’ reflection. Some of the great ATL skills that I like to consider in my unit plans are self-reflection skills, organization skills, collaboration skills, creative thinking skills, critical thinking skills and Affective kills.

Affective skills seem more challenging for me as I ask myself how can I design a unit plan in which this ATL skill is considered: How can students manage their own state of mind? This is the area that I feel I need to do research more and studies in order to help my students better to improve themselves.

I think considering all the ATL skills as approaches to learning and also Approaches to teaching (ATT) in IB education makes the IB education distinct and separate from the non-IB education, the education that makes the future generation more responsible and risk takers to solve the problems of the world. This got me reflecting on my huge responsibility as well to make my skills and knowledge in a great level to satisfy my student’s needs.

Parvin Peivandi, IB reflection, Nov. 20th, 2014

Parvin Peivandi, IB reflection, Nov. 20th, 2014

Introduction of the summative assessment in IB was the goal of this IB seminar. I learned how this systematic approach of IB assessment for the art is more efficient than assessment in non-IB setting. When I design my summative assessment in this format, I write a background info that has the IB objectives in it; it is like starting the road with the map in hand. The assessment task sheets are also useful and I found them really useful in assessing the student’s works without the interference of personal preferences or biased opinions.

What I observed in my short practicum was that the Art teacher was really fair and had a very similar task sheet that he had mentioned the criteria before. I am asking myself what should I consider in the summative assessment of my unit plan to judge the students’ works fairly? How can I deal with those students who are not satisfied with their grades? What are the solutions?

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, Nov 12th, 2014

Parvin Peivandi, IB reflection, Nov. 12th, 2014

This seminar was devoted mostly to sharing the experiences of short practicum and it was great to hear what other teachers have done and have learned in their practicum. It was interesting to see what the other peers felt or observed was some how similar to my own observation.

Definitely short practicum was a very useful experience for all of us to be prepared for the long practicum, but it also was disappointing for some of the student teachers. Definitely all we read in theories do not come into real practice at schools, but I believe the real pedagogy has stemmed from those fixed theories. Contrary to some of my peers who felt upset about the difference between theories and practice, I felt there was a very natural and reasonable adjustment of the pedagogy at school. Rules are there that we learn, but there are not written on stones and we can modify our pedagogy based on the classrooms’ climate. I ask myself what I am learning as an educator for myself? How can I improve myself at first place? As educators, I believe we should learn to be flexible and tolerant and adjusting ourselves to the new situations and contexts is a great skill that we should all practice.

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, October 23rd, 2014

Parvin Peivandi, IB reflection, Oct 26th, 2014

This week, the IB seminar was very useful for preparing us for the short practicum. I planned what should I observe, ask, or do in short practicum. I intended to observe the international minded education in the classroom, the way teacher teaches based on the multi cultural nature of the school and the way he designs his lesson plans with globally minded education and up to date Information. I picked two goals of the education in the IB seminar as the areas of my interest:

The goal of education is preparing children for citizenship and also to teach them cultural literacy. I found the base and the most important of all of the educational goals is critical thinking. If we teach students to think critically, they stay away from the biased information, judgments and assumptions. If students learn to think profoundly about every thing they see or receive, they will be open-minded and can function or compete in international settings more successfully.

I reflect on my visit of ST. John’s IB school and how the art teacher designed her lesson plan to improve the critical thinking of her students. She taught perspective successfully by creating many analytical questions before project and after project that made students really engaged in the subject matter, the challenge and problem solving solutions for fixing the perspective drawings.

I am asking myself that how can I design my lesson plans to improve the critical thinking of the students? How can I teach them to be more innovative in 21st century? What should I bring from contemporary art to the class to give students recent information of the field?

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, October 16th , 2014

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, October 16th, 2014

In the IB seminar this week, I had chance to show my IB journals to one of my classmates: Rachael. I asked her to write some notes for me about the IB reflections that she reads and her feedback was really helpful. She highlighted the strengths of my IB reflections such as: great questions, use of IB vocabulary, thoughtful observations, great connections to other courses and my real experiences. She noted also few grammar mistakes.

Reflecting on this experience in our IB seminar,I found peer feedback assessment as a strong educational tool that I can use more in my future classes. As I have learned in human development and psychology course, Scaffolding is a technique that I can use to empower the students in need by the help of their peers. Now, peer feedback is another scaffolding technique that I can use in my IB pedagogy. Due to the challenging and rigorous nature of IB education, I believe more assistance and modification strategies should be considered in unit lesson plans such as peer feedback, formative assessment in the form of teacher’s feedback and also rubrics with student friendly language.

The idea of making the language of our education student friendly was amazing too. Few years ago, I have experienced a hard time as a student in some of my classes in which the teacher was teaching with a complicated language and challenging vocabularies. Also the speed of the presentation is an important factor that has a huge impact on the student’s learning. Also, I remember in our teaching methodology class at UBC, how one of the previous graduates of UBC talked about her mistake in delivering materials fast and in a complicated language that made her class fell behind the curriculum.

With all of these useful hints, there are some great questions here: How long should be devoted to peer feedback in each unit plan? What should be the criteria of successful, unbiased peer feedback? How should I make as a rubric for peer feedback to guide the students? What should be concluded, what not? And why student friendly language is so important in teaching technical vocabularies in art classes? What visual elements should be added to rubrics for the ESL students?

Second Week of Short Practicum, Nov. 5th, 2014. Parvin Peivandi

Nov. 5th 2014   Parvin Peivandi

Second week of short practicum

Second week of my practicum went well. I have observed 7 other classes, I have taught and received feedback and I could know my students. I enjoy my time at school while some students say hi to me in the hallways and I see how are relations is growing. My next inquiry will be how can we improve the motivation in both students and teachers? Observing the other classes, I could see the challenges in teaching, learning process in the classrooms and how different teachers approach their students. Now, I can see the difference between art class and other classes, which make me, feel that I am in the right track.

I am full of curiosity, excitement and eagerness to learn and to develop my ideas in the form of lesson plans for my students. My SA’s support and respect, has made me more confident in my presentation. This week, we had useful conversations about contemporary arts and teaching new media in the classroom. I make a conclusion that as artists and teachers, we have this opportunity to fuel our energy and creativity by doing research and demos. At the end of this week, I have a better perspective about teaching art in public high schools and I feel more pleasure to work with the students. I look forward for the long practicum to tailor my lesson plans for these students and experience joy and excitement with them.

first week of short practicum, Oct 29th

Oct 29th, first week of practicum, Parvin Peivandi

This week, I learned a lot by observing my teacher’s methodology and also observing the students in different art classes. Observation for me was not only practice of looking, but also listening to my inner voice, finding the passion which was silently there and waiting to emerge.

I feel art classroom has a lot for me to reflect, to inquire and apply what I have learned as an artist and teacher in my life and art class is a place in which I can find a meeting point between my curiosity for learning and my compassion toward others. I was melting in the art class in a way that I did not want to visit other classes; moments were frozen for me that even I had forgotten my inquiry question about multiculturalism for a while. I realized that great teachers like my SA, have a huge impact on the students. They can improve the students’ motivation toward learning and increase the sense of respect and understanding amongst them. I got the answer to my inquiry question when I saw my SA one time was wearing a t-shirt with calligraphy of a specific culture. That was the meaning of international mindedness for me, bringing the sense of respect and understanding for all. That was the reason why the students and I were feeling great in the class. Mr. Sinclair respected all the people in the class equally and supported our learning in different ways. I am eager to learn more from him.

Parvin Peivandi, IB Reflection, Oct 9,2014

Parvin Peivandi

October 9th, 2014, IB reflection

In this IB seminar, I find the connection between BC’s art PLOs and the IB’s learning objectives. It was an interesting journey to find out these connections between the BC art curriculum and MYP objectives. Although the class activity provided an opportunity to learn these connections, I explored these connections further in an actual IB classroom setting in St Johns MYP art class. In this class, the art teacher : Sandra Hall handed in her lesson plan with detailed descriptions of the PLOs and IB’s objectives. Her teaching demonstrated the high level of proficiency in IB MYP education with regards to the key concepts and learning objectives in the lesson plan. I observed how IB’s theories and practice came together in her practice to form a uniformed IB teaching experience. At the end of the class, she encouraged students to develop the concept further by inquiry and writing reflective paper about their works.

Parvin Peivandi, Oct 2nd, 2014

Parvin Peivandi

October 2nd, 2014, IB reflection

In this IB seminar, I thought more profoundly about my statement of inquiry and the level that this question occupies in the world. I asked myself Is this a factual question or conceptual question?. Definitely my question is not from a debatable or provocative nature as I have always been interested in self-expression and concepts in my art practice or teaching. I start my inquiry question with how and I ask myself another question in relation to my inquiry question, ”how my inquiry question scaffold objectives that students should strive to achieve?” My original inquiry question is about the identity and relationships and analyzes the big idea of how students understand and engage with the identity in different contexts. I consider this inquiry question as a great question to start with and I aim to develop it further in my lesson plans and practice.