Sunday, April 22, 2012

Blog #10

Rationale/purpose for giving homework and independent work. Meaningful? Objectives? Specific feedback? Role of technology in communication process? 
  I have a hard time coming up with a rational for homework. On a philosophical level, I think Americans need to refocus on balance in their lives. As a society, I think we push ourselves too hard and don't take the time to just enjoy our lives with sports, crafts, or just being with our families.
  I don't see the need for homework in my particular teaching situation. I teach within a block schedule which provides more instructional time and less transitions anyway. Teaching language arts, I see my students for 80 minutes every day. We do that to include a 20 minute independent and/or guided reading time during the day. I have always covered my state and district mandates curriculum in a deep way, so it is not like I need my students to do work at home to gain ground.
  My understanding of homework is that it's purpose is for students to practice skills at an independent level, or to move their information from short term to long term memory. I believe that if you structure your lessons correctly, you release responsibility within each lesson allowing for independent practice before they even leave your room. If a student can already do a skill independently without help, how is doing it over and over more beneficial than doing anything else more meaningful. If a student leaves school and immediately does their homework will that help their long term and short term memory more than if they do their homework at the end of the day before bed? I don't understand that aspect. If you spiral through your curriculum, I believe you can continually work the short term and long term memory the same way.
   The only time I could see the need for homework is for students trying to catch up. If you start a race behind everyone else and run at the same pace as they are are during the race, you will never catch up. However, I wouldn't call it homework. I would prefer to see it as tutoring. A student lacking in skills will probably not be successful at acquiring skills on their own at home. They will need guidance and direct instruction. They will need to put in double time to keep up and catch up unfortunately.
  I will address the ideas of meaningful, objective, reflective, and technologically based instruction within the classroom. Out of those four things, I find meaningful lessons the most important. If a student is not engaged, you will not get any where near 100% effort. Plus, I believe a meaningful lesson teaches students the purpose of objectives by attaching them to real life. I believe that every lesson should tap into specific objectives with assessments that make sure they are targeting the skill you are striving toward. The assessment should utilize teacher, peer and self reflection, so that it is meaningful and accurate. Technology is a huge en-gager and support. Fear of technology and its use can hold a teacher back in allowing their students to grow beyond what you as a teacher and textbook can give and do for them.

Blog #9

Differences in fiction vs. non fiction. Easier vs. harder for ELL
Both would be overwhelming for an ELL student.

Non fiction has pictures to support the vocabulary words and concepts. It would be used as a reference which is structurally good, because it has bolded titles and the vocabulary is highlighted. It has a glossary for definitions. At this point there is not pictoral support, but it was present in the chapter itself where realia was used for explanation. Structurally, it is good, because it has checkpoints, reviews and experiments. Non-fiction can be used for literary processes like inferencing, connection, predictions, etc. Also, it breaks down steps for experiments concretely.

Fiction would definitely be more challenging. My fiction has no pictures. It is good for developing engaging questions and real life emotional processing. It would be used for literary processes of inference, prediction, plot charts, character development, etc. If a student comes from a background similar to and they are familiar with these aspects, it would be easier. In this particular book, vocabulary is not tough, but the structure of chapter to chapter with setting (time and place)changing with each chapter is challenging. Therefore, I would make sure that it was a book that is fairly linear in plot as it is structured. Plus much scaffolding and many visual supports would be needed to insure success.

You would have to teach text structure in both and support them at their level  cognitive and in a literary way. However, overall, I think non-fiction would be easier.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Blog #8

Reflect on what the teacher did to promote comprehension. Teacher do? Students do? Reflect on readings. List essential components.
     In this video, I saw all of the aspects of a SIOP lesson plan. The teacher set up the behavior expectations with rules that were posted, stated out loud and shared kinesthetically with the class. To scaffold learning, she used realia with the spoon and manipulatives when applicable. She also, did motions when she talked to help develop vocabulary acquisition.She allowed for students to use their background knowledge of their native culture and their neighborhood connections to help them collaborate on their learning.  She pushed students to answer with higher level resoning. She tapped into high interest topics and encouraged the playing of games where they could apply their learning.
    Throughout the lesson, students were seen in various group settings: whole class, individual, and collaborative groups. The students had jobs and were aware of their responsibilities in the classroom and with their learning. They kinesthetically engaged by lifting their hands, standing up, and repeating rules and information. They knew that it was beneficial to follow along with the text while listening to the reading. They were taking two column notes.
   There was nonlinguistic representation in the realia objects, the student use of two column notes was a graphic organizer appropriate for their task, and verbally she did the topic-restriction-illustration frame when discussing with the students the names of their streets, and how they come from Span to Mexico to California.
   

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Blog #7

Running record on 2 ELL students, analyze miscues, features of errors, next teaching points, and possible strategies or assignments to address reading challenges.
   I was at the mercy of the ELL instructor as to which student I saw for the running record. I met with a Peruvian seventh grader in his second year of ELA. He has fluent literacy skills in his first language of Spanish. She wanted me to meet with him because he can read words or transfer knowledge from Spanish to English but has difficulty with comprehension. I also met with a seventh grader in his third year of ELA. He is from Taiwan and was fluent in Chinese. She wanted me to meet with him, because he can't pronounce a lot of words, but has very high comprehension of the meaning. She said both are excellent students.
   I found my running records matched her assessment of the students. The Spanish speaker read a page from a book that has a lexile range of 700. He only missed two words. He said gourd for guard and resume for resume. The first miscue was due to a visual cue. He read over it quickly and phonetically it is tricky to learn the double vowel blend rules. Resume (continue doing something) for resume (a paper application of your qualifications) is clearly understandable. He was following the typical English rule of the silent "e" at the end making the vowel say it's name. However, resume is a French word. For next steps, I would recommend doing a retell and analyzing where his comprehension is falling apart: predictions, sequence of events, characters and details, vocabulary, main idea or message, or events. From there I would isolate where exactly the intervention was needed. Finally, I would also analyze whether or not the comprehension had to do with a lack of cultural awareness.
   The Taiwanese student was reading the Hunger Games with a lexile range of 810. He had some phonetic miscues like "drugged" for "dragged" and trable for trouble. I think these more had to do with switching from Chinese to English and the sound differences that occur because the use of the tongue in pronunciation of sounds.  Another time he said, "weder" for "weather". This is a common phonetic mistake since the "d" and "th" sounds are produced in the same location in the mouth by the tongue. To correct this one could visually show and talk through the location of the tongue in the mouth and practice the difference.Other miscues were simple exchanging one participle for another like "a" for "the" which do not change the meaning of the text. One time, he completely missed the word "crevice" and said "crease." The sentence was, "It was in every crack and crevice." Therefore, crease still made contextual sense. I feel like with him that he was way more insecure about reading out loud, and if he just slowed down, he would not make those errors.
  

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Blog #6

Determine Learning vs. Acquisition and explain your answer.
     Overall, I would say the biggest difference that I see between learning and acuisition in the activities is who initiates the direction the process is taking and whether the acitivity is concrete or higher level thinking. One of the most solidly clear learning activities is directed by the teacher and is mostly drill and practice like when a teacher has a sturdent look up words in a dictionary and write the defiitions. A clear acquisition acitivy is when student chooses a book and does a picture walk of a new book. Some of the activities where it wasn't clear which type it was were when students were given perameters by the teacher but choice also within those guidelines like only reading books that are within their reading level.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Blog #2

Reflect on the writing instruction you have received.
   This is a really hard question for me to answer, because I don't remember much about learning how to write. Overall, the memories are do have are traditionalist in nature. My earliest memories come from 5th grade where I had to copy definitions. I remember the word "bust." I hated copying that definition. It had like three and was really long. I did learn the meaning of the word. However, I think I have said the word maybe once in my lifetime. One instructor used the traditional writing methods of drill and practice with worksheets showing us where to punctuate when we had a series of three things, or how to change the verb tense. I don't feel like this was bad, because as I help my own students punctuate their sentences the image of this process pops in my head. Therefore, it must have worked for me. There were other times when the teacher either skipped skills or assumed I had acquired them, because I don't remember being taught how to combine clauses. It wasn't until college when I had a teacher traditionally instruct me on how to fix a run on sentence or a fragment.
   In about seventh grade, I did have one teacher who made me keep a writer's journal, and I could write whatever I wanted in it. I wrote poems, drew pictures, complained, etc. She would read it and comment on the content, but she would not correct my grammar. She was the first teacher I had that was more of the process writing framework. I could guess that as I got older, the release of responsibility and movement from traditional to acquired probably grew. However, I don't remember well enough to say that for certain.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Blog #5

Review 2 children's books and determine what components in the book might affect comprehension because of cultural aspects.

          The first book I chose was I'll Teach My Dog 100 Words by Michael Frith, because it is very reflective of American society and culural values. First, it shows the concept of caring for pets like fish, cat, pig and dogs. It also has animals that are not pets like a moose, bear, mouse, and goose.Finally, it has animals in a zoo. You could teach the difference between wild and domestic animals with a picture sort. Once they understood the concept of a pet, you could teach the care of animal with a web. I invision putting a picture of the animal in the middle, and they cut out from magazines or newspapers, items and actions used to care for a pet. The glue these around the images, and we write the matching vocabulary words underneath.
       The other domestic concept that is found in this book is the idea of an American houses with a fence, the need to paint it, roads, and the maintence of the lawn. Using a two column graphic organizer, the students could draw or post a picture of what their cultures housing is like on the left, and on the right, they can cut out, draw, or post pictures of what the American equivalent is. We can post the vocabulary words next to the images.
     There are societal concepts in this book as well like neighbor, mayor, occupations and hobbies/sports. I would teach these concepts with act it outs, because the movement involved and the location of objects really impact the understanding of the vocabulary word.

      The second book I chose was Olivia Saves The Circus  by Ian Falconer. In this book there are concepts around household living as well, which could be taught the same way or added on to the previous book. This book looks at the indoor living aspects of indoor plumbing and having your own bedroom. You could do a fun lesson around uniforms and accessorizing by having a paper doll and discussing the vocabulary as the students created, added and adjusted the styles. This book aslo had a scooter and sailing which I would teach the same way I did with the societal concepts of the previous book. Finally, and obviously, there is the concept of a circus with a trapeez, trampoline, tight rope, and the animals. Here you could do a compare and contrast chart with these vocabulary words. This part also lends itslef to the study of animals from the previous book.