The Class from Hell
I'm sure that I've had issues with a class period in the past, but none of that matters when I feel the frustration that I do towards my 6th period SOPH LA class. This class has a variety of age groups in it (one of the poor souls is a very mature senior), but the majority of the students are new sophomores. Until recently, they were rambunctious freshman who ran their teachers ragged with all of their energy and lack of focus. I am definitely not used to dealing with such immaturity and expect my students to conduct themselves like young adults. So, I've been trying to figure out what to do about this particular class that doesn't seem to know how to stay on topic, focused, or quiet.
Today, I'm rearranging their seats for the 2nd time to see if that will help. I've made notes about which students seem to get off task and talk to each other. Those students will be separated. I've also put out a stack of detention forms, ready to fill out if I have to speak to any one student more than once. Since they seem to have difficulty staying on task during our daily grammar warm-ups, I'm going to tell them that if they don't stay quiet and get it done, I'm just going to count that day wrong on their weekly grade.
This class has made me so upset that I don't even want to talk about school when people ask me how it's going. When my 7th period class arrives at the end of the day, they look at me and ask things like, "Miss, what's wrong? Is it your 6th period again?" I am visibly worn out and upset to my 7th period students! That is not acceptable, and I need to change it.
Other Things...Happier Topics
Some thoughts I had last week:
1. I need to stop lying to myself when I think I'll do grading or planning over the weekend. It's just not going to happen, so I need to be sure to get all of this done by Friday before I leave for the weekend.
2. Dr. Scholl's inserts are a miracle. For the first time in 2 weeks, my feet aren't killing me; and I can move my toes without my foot going into a cramp! Thank you, Dr. Scholl!
3. I must make all of my copies for the following week by Friday before I leave for the weekend. Oftentimes, I'll leave them until Monday morning thinking, "No one else will be at the copy machine." Inevitably, there is always something to do at the last minute on Monday morning, so I need to limit the number of factors as much as possible.
4. Now that I am only teaching ESOL classes, I can move at a little slower pace. I used to have to rush my ESOL students to somewhat keep up with my regular students (for my own sanity). I need to remember things like: don't try to give verbal information while they are copying notes--they can't process both at once; and stop more frequently while reading text out loud in class to assess comprehension and ensure understanding.
Individual Class Activities
SOPH LA: This week, the students were introduced to Ancient Middle Eastern Literature. They did comprehension questions for the unit introduction, looked at some picture books for ancient Mesopotamia and Sumeria, and viewed a Ms. Greene original PPT that introduced the Epic of Gilgamesh. I feel like I rushed through my beautiful PPT, though. I must remember to take it a bit slower. Maybe next year, I'll have the students read the slides aloud before I embelish.
JR LA: We read all 4 of the Native American origin myths in the text and had some great conversation about them. To help them pay attention to the details of the Navajo Origin Myth (see a similar version here), the students worked for 2 days on storyboards of the myth. It was pretty difficult for many of them because of the specific colors, directions, and movements. In the end, though, I think they saw how important it is to focus on the details. Some of them have some great artistic ability, too!
LDC III: For speaking day this week, we played Talking Cards. The students loved the game, and I learned a lot about each of them through it. They asked if we could play again sometime, and I promised that if we had free time one day, we'd play it again. This class also went to the Media Center to choose their silent reading books. To my surprise, many of the students were excited about picking their own books! A couple had never checked books out from a library before, and that's always a special experience to witness. :) On Friday, we started reading the parallel text of Romeo & Juliet. Some of them had already read it last year (and were bored), but each of them had a part to read aloud, and we made it through Act I, Scene i.
LA II: This class is pretty easy because I just follow the schedule laid out by Visions. This week, we read a story about a journey through Antarctica. We've been learning new vocab words, practicing grammar, learning writing skills, and pronouncing words aloud. This group seems especially interested in improving their English, so I think I'm going to have to veer off from the Visions curriculum sometimes and do more verbal activities. I picked up some flashcards from the $1 section at Target. They are for phonics, sight words, and rhyming. I gave each of the students 2 phonics cards each and they had to pronounce all of the words on each card. They did this with very little effort. So, I'm going to have to kick it up a notch somehow.
Update: Today, I started the week doing exactly what I said I was going to do for my 6th period. It worked beautifully! :) We had a great class session, we accomplished our objectives, and even had a few minutes to spare for people to make up some work. I'm hoping that they now know what I expect. Just in case, though, I'll keep those detention slips close by.
ReplyDelete