Friday, August 13, 2010

The Beginning of a New Year

In General
This week has been a whirlwind of paperwork and getting the students on a routine. I know I've probably said this before, but when teachers complain about paperwork, we are NOT talking about grading papers. We are talking about other paperwork that would keep an assistant busy while we did all of the things that people normally associate with teacher work. Despite the chaos, I've had the best start to a new school year of my career!

World Lit
It's my goal to correlate my world lit class with the world history curriculum so my students have a better collective and individual store of prior knowledge of the cultures we study through the literature. My dept. chair, Ms. W, is the sheltered world hist teacher; she gave me a copy of that course's curriculum and a student copy of the textbook. As I started planning lessons for the class, I flipped through the first unit in the world hist book and saw that they learned about cave paintings as they began their study of the world's earliest civilizations. I thought: "What better way to start our unit on ancient literature than to have the students reenact the earliest form of story-telling!" So, I asked my students to think of a story that is passed down from parents to children in their culture, and to write down as much as they could remember of that story. I borrowed some transparencies of cave paintings from Ms. W--the same ones the students had seen in her class the day before--and we discussed what stories the pictures might be telling. I even mimicked some caveman grunting to illustrate for them that pictures were probably the most effective form of communication for these people. :) For the following 2 days, the students worked with acrylic paints, sponges, and paint brushes to recreate the message of the traditional story they chose. Next week, I'll post pics of some of their creations! They'll present their pictures to the class and tell the stories that go along with the pictures. After that, I'll use their stories to discuss oral tradition: stories that are passed through the generations by telling and retelling through spoken words.

So far for this course, my 1st period is doing well and are actually a lot of fun. They've been working hard, have cooperated, and have had a great sense of humor all week. My 6th period, though, saw Mean Ms. Greene today as I told them off for their immature behavior (a culmination of their misbehavior during the rest of the week. I actually had a student in that class come up to me and say, "Ms. Greene, you should do to these immature people what you did to me last year."
To which I jokingly asked, "What, A___, you mean take them outside and yell at them some more?"
"Yeah, Miss. Seriously. I'm glad I'm not like these kids anymore. When you explained what I was doing, I changed." I never gave him credit for it, but he did change. I guess it was a good lesson for him to learn.... (score 1 for discipline!) :)

LDC III
I've never taught this class before and am glad I'm not alone. Ms. W is teaching it also, and we've been collaborating on what to do. We've set up a schedule for each week: writing day, speaking day, vocab day, reading day, and Romeo & Juliet Friday. The LDC classes are meant as companion classes to the LA classes and LDC III goes with FR LA. However, the shelter teacher for that class found last year that she didn't have time to fit novels and plays into her schedule, so she asked us to pick up the slack. I can't teach these texts as I would for an LA class (frankly, that's not my responsibility), but this does give me the opportunity to make learning Shakespeare all about having fun. :)

This class has good kids in it. There is a nice mix of cultures, and it seems like everyone knows each other already and get along well. There's one boy who says he's probably the only Chinese student at our school. ...I'm pretty sure he might be right. LOL

LA II
This class is the 2nd level of English for our ESOL students. In the beginning, the most important thing I can do in these types of classes is assess the students' English ability. We've been working with simple past tense verbs, and I'm seeing that most of them are good with conjugating, but they are still having a bit of difficulty with sentence structure when it comes to making sentences negative past tense and asking questions in the past tense. So, we'll continue working on this next week before we move on to the next lessons. I was told that this class might be a handful because of a few particular students, but those students have been very sweet so far. A couple have actually been very helpful (collecting folders, putting books away...)!

American Lit
The curriculum for this class begins with Native American origin myths: stories that try to explain the how and why of natural phenomena. So, before we begin our study of these works, I had the students work in small groups to create their own origin myths for well-known natural occurrences like the Grand Canyon, Amazon River, and Sahara Desert. They worked on these for a couple of days.

One cool moment happened when I walked up to one group in the middle of what looked like a heated debate. I was worried that their creative differences would stall progress, so I went over to mediate. As I walked up, C____'s head whips around and she asks, "Miss! Wasn't it in Gilgamesh that the gods were so mad at humans that the sent a flood?!" (She studied Gilgamesh with me last year in World Lit.)
"Yes! It was!" I replied with a huge smile on my face.
"See, Miss! I remembered." Then she told her group, "We can't use that idea because someone already did." She was so proud of herself. This particular student has struggled with staying focussed in her classes and hasn't done as well as she could. I think this year will be different for her, though. :)

To start our study of Native American lit, I picked up a couple of illustrated books from the Media Center that show many aspects of N.A. life. I'm going to put together an activity this weekend so the students can use our textbook and these other books to become more familiar with the cultures from which these origin myths stem (a scavenger hunt or something similar). Then, they might appreciate the stories' themes and subjects a little better. I'm sure that they're learning about N.A.'s in American history, so this should build on that prior knowledge.

Final Thoughts
This first week has been tough: my feet are killing me, I am exhausted by 2:30PM, and I feel like there is only enough time in the day to move from one priority to the next before falling into bed at night. However, I know I am where I belong for now. When my students from last year and the year before (this is only my 3rd year at this school) come to visit me with smiles on their faces and ask if they can be in my class again, I know that everything I put them through while I have them (lectures about life, constant essay writing, taking tests that rival those given to honors students, and reading literature without giving in to complaints that it's just too hard or too stupid to read) is all for the best. They know I do it because I care.
This seems to be the secret ingredient to being a successful educator. Not only do you have to know what you are doing in your subject area. You have to care...with your whole heart. And, as stated above, sometimes you have to show that you care through stern words and a little harsh discipline. :)

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