The Crazy Math Lady
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Good Luck and Farewell!
As we all head off in our many different directions, I would just say good luck and congratulations to you all. To go into teaching is a very respectable choice. We all have different emphasis areas but I believe this picture is true. 'a teachers words can shape a life' We are being given the great opportunity to help the next generations of students form who they are going to become in life. To me, that is a great privilege. All of these words in this picture are different values and all mean something to each of us in our own way. If we can change even a few of our students' lives for the better, then we will be accomplishing something amazing. In "Edwin and Phyllis", we were faced with reading about the different downsides of teaching. Some of us liked that reading others did not. I think that it was a reading that really made us have to think of what we were really looking for by going into teaching and how exactly we could defend our reasoning and values of teaching. There will be ups and downs in our careers as teachers. It is something that we will all have to face and wade our way though. Again, good luck to everyone in the rest of your degrees and in your careers.
My Approach, My Teaching
Throughout the class, I learned about so many different
approaches to teaching. Many of the readings in this class talked about
straight approaches by themselves. I felt that these approaches were a little
to extreme to be useful. A full executive approach would not benefit my math
students in any way whatsoever. There are parts of the executive approach that
do apply to the way I want to approach teaching. I want to be able to implement
good time management into my classroom. I want to be able to have some of the
structure of the executive approach but not as severe. There are parts of the
facilitator and liberationist approaches that can be mixed into the executive
approach in order to make it useful for the classroom. I want to help my
students further themselves and find who they are and how they learn best. My
students should feel comfortable and safe in my classroom. Respect, honesty, and
encouragement are all qualities that I want to be able to implement in my
classroom. I don’t think that there is a name for every teacher approach out
there. Every approach that is label has such strict set of values to it, but I
don’t fit into just one specific approach.
Most math
classrooms I’ve been in are taught with such an executive approach. I know that
I will most likely need the same type of structure in my classroom too, but I
wan to add some other aspects of it. I
want to add collaborative activities, which is not something that I’ve ever
really encountered much in high school level math classes. I want to find my students
interests and show them how math concepts can connect to their hobbies and
interests in life. I want to show them how they can apply math to everyday
activities and so many parts of their future lives.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Other than Fenstermacher and Biesta
Even though we
had the Fenstermacher and the Biesta texts, we had many other readings in this
class. I still love “Edwin and Phyllis”. I felt that it was so contradicting
and negative that it made me want to push on through to becoming a teacher even
more. It was a way of showing us the negative sides to teaching. I feel that I
have thought through many of those negative areas of teaching before.
There were
definitely some interesting and challenging readings throughout the semester.
There were even some controversial readings, like the critical race theory
pieces and I felt that the “Feministic Pedagogy” readings could have caused
quite a contradiction within our classroom. I liked the different readings.
They all had their own little qualities that made me like and/or dislike them.
They were all informative though, no matter if I was a fan of them or not.
Another reading
that I really liked was Kohn’s “’Well, Duh!’ – Ten obvious truths we shouldn’t
be ignoring”. This article was a quick read but it made me think. I liked how
it took simple things about education that may easily be overlooked because
they are so simple. It made me think about how the homework I may be giving my
students can keep them from other areas of development. Also, the way that it
talked about having memorization in teaching and learning. Just because you can
memorize and regurgitate does not mean you are smart or even that you are
learning. I think the simpleness of the article is what made me look deeper at
it. That concept makes me think of the Montessori chapter we just read. The
“Well, Duh!” article stayed simple and clear to its purpose. I felt that it was
just a good article.
Sunday, July 26, 2015
The Biesta (Beast Of A) Book Experience!
Reading the chapters in “The Beautiful Risk of Education” by
Biesta (2013) has been an interesting and challenging time. Biesta’s views were
different than those that I have been used to hearing about. I thought it was a
great way to be introduced to how people from other countries view education
and what it entails. Biesta didn’t focus on the strength of education and how
great it can be. Instead, he dug into the weaknesses of education. He pulled
out ideas that have not been brought to mind so directly before in my
experiences. I would like to be able to hear some type of presentation from
Biesta, like a TED talk. That would be interesting to see and might make his views
a little more clear.
I really did like how he points out that students are not
objects, but are subjects. Students can’t be treated like objects that can be
moved and thrown through hoops. They need to be treated like they matter and
like we want to teach them and help them have learning experiences. Biesta made
me think about the way that I would communicate with my students. I wan to be
able to communicate my true meaning to them. Also, in the case of learning, I
liked the direction that Biesta went in. Biesta went to what is learning, when
does it start, and what is the “learning age”. All of these questions really
make you think about what learning really means. It made me think of Justin
during lectures in saying he doesn’t know what learning means or is. I’ve never
really looked at that. I’ve always just thought “Oh the teacher is teaching,
the students are learning.” But is that really true? Does learning mean
something different for every person out there? Also, how does a person
actually learn? Is it through experiences, being lectured, or doing homework
assignments? How do you teach and how does someone learn from your teaching?
I want to take all of these questions and find a teaching
approach to help my students find how they learn and what they learn, in
whatever learning means to them. I know I will have certain state requirements
to fulfill but I want my students to be able to understand what is that I am
teaching to them. I want to understand what my students need from me to better
enhance their “learning” environment.
I have no clue if I interpreted Biesta right or if I really
did understand what he was conveying to me. I do know that it was an interesting
book to read and to experience.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Beauty and Risk
Education has risks to it, just like everything else in
life. There will always be risks in what you do. Education may be full of risks
but at the same time I think it is also full of inspiration and
accomplishments. The students that I can reach during my career in education,
however few they may be, will make the risks of education worth it. I think the
positives of education can come to outweigh or at least balance the risks of
education. From reading Biesta, the risk in education will always be there
because it involves human interaction. There will always be risk in education,
otherwise according to Biesta (2013) “there is a real chance that we take out
education altogether” (p. 1). I think there are many different risks in
education. There is the risk of not having enough subjectivity between the
teachers and students (subjectivity in the meaning of Biesta). There is the
risk of not having actual communication and not being able to then connect with
the students to be able to help them in their educational careers. There is the
risk of causing unintentional harm to the students, like Phyllis told Edwin. Education
is a beautiful risk to me because although I may face those challenges, I will
be able to hopefully connect with at least one of my students in a positive
way. That is the beauty of all the risks. There is always something wonderful
that can come from all the risks. To me, a risk is anything that can be seen as
something that may get in the way of a child’s performance. We try to eliminate
the difficulties of human interactions in order to eliminate communication
errors but I don’t think we can ever truly get rid of this type of risk in education.
I think that is the meaning of beautiful. The risks are something that is
naturally there. They can’t be removed without getting rid of education as a
whole. There are risks all through life that we have to work our way through. We
can’t just eliminate all the risks and make things perfect. The risks in life
are what make life worth living, just like the risks in education make it worth
going into an education career. Seeing those who do go into education, even
though there are the risks, is beauty in itself.
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
The Liberationist....
A teacher who uses the liberationist approach is almost a
mix between the executive approach and the facilitator approach. To me, it collects certain aspects from both
of the other approaches. It focuses on the knowledge of the students, like an
executive would. Then, it also focuses on helping the students grow as better
human beings, like a facilitator would. It has some of the same concepts going
on but the liberationist approach is quite different from the executive and
facilitator approaches. Liberationist teachers see knowledge in a completely
different light than executive teachers do. They see the ends as something
different that facilitator teachers do.
For me, personally, I think it would be somewhat hard to use
a liberationist approach to teaching. I feel that it doesn’t have the right
type of structure to it to help in learning mathematics or chemistry. I am
talking about using a pure liberationist approach though. I wouldn’t mind doing
hands-on projects in either of my subjects and connecting them to different
things in the world. I could easily connect math to every day issues. Chemistry
would be able to be connected to food and beverages we eat and drink every day.
The relations to life are what help the students to see why they are learning
topics and going to school at all. At the same time though, I think more
executive aspects will appear in my classroom. I do like the points about
mannerisms of being a liberationist teacher. I think it almost applies to
teaching in general though. If you don’t have the ability to have the right
mannerisms, you won’t be able to connect with the students in the way that they
need in order to learn. I think it is important for teachers and students to
find that connection or relationship to help aid in the reinforcement of
wanting and needing to learn and the ability to learn.
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