Showing posts with label classroom management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classroom management. Show all posts

2007-10-13

Living in the "What If..."

Some experts say teaching is the hardest job there is. To be a truly effective teacher you have to get ALL students to produce HIGH QUALITY work.

(I'm just watching Taylor work to pick up clues as to how she thinks and what she really understands.)


Unlike doctors, our "patients" usually aren't as cooperative in our attempt to "treat", or educate, them. Nor do we have the high-quality work environment and support doctors do.

(Now knowing where she is, I have a better idea how to take her to the next level of higher thinking.)


To make it worse, our effectiveness isn't measured by how well we teach them. It is assessed by how well our students do on a state test, one that is incapable of measuring real problem solving and high levels of thinking.

(It's impossible to analyze and diagnose each student one-on-one without great classroom management. For the ones not yet internally motivated, I tell them their grade depends on the person they're working with, and that I'll throw the ball at them if I catch them goofing off.)

Therefore, we are pressured to cover as many basic facts as we can with little to no understanding. It's no wonder our country is testing in the bottom half on international problem-solving tests. And we really only have to "teach" the students who will most affect the school's grade.

(Taylor is not one of these students, so technically I am wasting my time. Well, the system as it is can technically kiss my behind, because I refuse to waste this person's time, and everything she can become. That would be like a doctor or hospital refusing to treat a patient who doesn't have insurance. Whoever heard of that?)

I think we as teachers have to become tougher, stronger, and smarter than the problems facing us today. We have to live in the "What If": What if we could give them enough of our time? What if we could really teach them? What if we could really get to know each student? What if we could really make EVERY student feel and become unstoppable?

(After enough days of believing in the "what if's", the effects will show on their faces. You can see them believing in themselves more than ever before, beginning to truly dream big.

My professor jokes that so many of my students will become leaders in their field that they will take over the world. Education goes beyond books, and we also develop intra- and interpersonal intelligence; If you are bigger than another, you protect. If you are smarter, you enlighten. And if you are more powerful, you empower.)


Most importantly, we have to make the "What If?" work, even if that means developing separate lesson plans for each child. The classroom can become a place of real learning and be really fun at the same time. Every student CAN be reached and the state test can become so easy that it's an insult to their new greater intelligence.

(By having Shawn help another student, it required him to more fully understand what the tests says he "knows". I had worked with him the day before on this. )

~ Everybody grows, every day! ~
~ Together, we WILL find a way! ~

2007-03-28

Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?

This is a post I did today for my students over on their "Stuart's Spectacular Students" site. There is an amazing amount of learning we can do as adults by watching children who haven't been taught to be limited by their fears. What is the "Big Bad Wolf" we're allowing us to stop us as adults?

Thank you Bridget, and to each and every one of my students who remind me to Live Out Loud (click to read). My own children are depending on me to show them that IT CAN BE DONE, in "real life". That it's not just another line in a childrens' fairy tale rhyme. (Bella made these clay dolls of me and her. We were "dancing")


WHO'S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WOLF?


IT'S NOT BRIDGET! When the school news asked for applicants for the TV show, I asked you all to raise your hands if you were afraid of applying; either because you were afraid you wouldn't be chosen, or you were afraid you would be.

When the ones who did raised your hands, I suggested you apply anyway. If you didn't "FACE YOUR FEARS" now, it would only get harder to do it as you grew up. I passed along learning I've gained from great people like Plato and Eleanor Roosevelt, and passed it along to you all in hopes of helping you become the greatness I see inside of you. Bridget, you said you would, but only wanted to work behind the camera.

You were chosen, and for the past three mornings have been ON the news, IN FRONT of the camera. I don't know where you got your courage from, but I'm glad you chose to focus on your courage versus fear.

Not only are you becoming more each day by doing this, you are HAVING FUN doing it. You can see it in your smile and your energy literally comes through the camera to everyone watching, making us want to hear what you have to say.


You reminded me of the importance of choosing to be happy, to just "go with it", even when you might be scared to death of what you are doing. Now I think of Plato, Roosevelt, and Frost when speaking on having courage.

Why do I get the strong feeling that Robert Frost, the poet and writer, won't be the only Frost people remember?

And that goes for ALL of you. You can't control your life if you don't control your thoughts.


Remember what the structure was that we came up with together this morning: In your comments include:

1. What you INTENDED to learn.
2. THE WAY you intended to learn it.
3. Have you constructed new learning because of this day and can honestly say, I AM MORE than when the day began? (some may even feel like half the globe is in, or on, their head)

Don't forget to include the resources you used throughout the day. Here Sandeep's Hammer and The Mighty Malcom have to move beyond the limits of their textbook and access resources outside the classroom via the internet. This is also reading, and expanding your mind.

"The size of your world is the size of your heart and mind." - Me. I said that! Yes. Me! (imitating King Julian from Madagascar)

Boys, and you know who you are, I want to know how you felt about me "barking" at you when I caught you playing but not learning. Work hard. Play Hard. There's time for both. There's a way to combine both. But you gotta be strong, man. You gotta be strong to do this, man! (I think I see why my mother said I should be training marines and not kids)

Now everybody be quiet. Shhhh! Who keeps making that noise? Oh, it's me again.






Copyright © 2007 by Adam Stuart
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