Monday, March 6, 2017

Family Involvement and Epstein's Framework

Epstein's framework for family involvement includes 6 ways for effective involvement to take place with schools. One of the most vital components is communication. Communication can be engaged through conferences with parents, providing clear information through class or team websites, report cards, and other forms and communication established between teachers and parents. Challenges could come from language barriers that would have to be solved, and making sure communication links are clear and direct with parents. By communicating this information, student can be aware of their progress, as can their parents. Parents also can understand school policies and any issues that may come up involving their child. As a future educator, I feel this is incredibly vital to act upon and to insure that good communication is established. A second major component is learning at home. This can be provided through activities that students and families can do outside the classroom to learn more on a subject, or by providing homework pieces to allow students to engage with subject matter outside the classroom. Challenges might include getting students to drive their own learning away from school, and bring in parents to help engage students with the subject as well away from school. However, if done correctly, students could gain more knowledge of the subject and gain interest in it as well, while parents could engage more with their children in their education. This would also allow for teachers to give parents the opportunity to teach their own children and give students multiple outlets for help and resources. Although as a future educator I wouldn't give too much homework to my students, I feel that spending personal time to discover more about a subject would be highly beneficial to students in any classroom.

Friday, March 3, 2017

Middle School Teaming

As I start to learn more about teaming in middle schools, I begin to see learning in a middle school setting from a different perspective. Since this is my first look at teaming as an educational approach to teaching and working with students, I'm curious to see how certain aspects of it work. For instance, how does teaming differ from school to school, and what pieces often remain the same throughout school districts? Obvious changes, such as the ratio of students to teachers, will remain different, but it will be interesting to see how advisory period times during the school day vary and the different ways the time will be used. From the sources I have read, it seems that as long as the main goal of the team is met (creating a sense of community and building academic success as a group), then the means to that end will vary from district to district.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Strong Advisory Programs

The biggest key to maintaining a strong advisory program is communication and trust in working together for a common goal. Students must trust in their teachers and parents to help them achieve the most they can and stay on task, while parents must trust teachers to steer their children in the right direction while at school, and teachers must trust parents and students to continue to work hard outside the classroom. Communication between the three is essential and builds this trust, allowing everyone to know what the goals and tasks are that will build towards the success looking to be achieved. Besides maintaining trust and communication, holding a sense of community, maintaining accountability, and being focused and on task are key pieces to a strong advisory program and team within a school. These pieces keep the people within the program close, successful, and develops everyone involved in a positive way through the experience.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Bangladesh Images




In my experience with my placement student from Bangladesh, multiple images came to my mind. The first came when I discovered her love of reading and books, which she would later tell me was a big part of the culture of her country. I also made the assumption that she would be connected to the religion of Hinduism or Islam, which I discovered was the later. I also found that her and her family still enjoyed eating traditional Indian food from time to time, showing again her family's connection to their original culture at home. These connections with her home are important for helping her remember who she is and where she comes from, especially while living in a country that is filled with such diversity in culture.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

ELL Identity Comparison

Being able to understand a student's background and identity is imperative to being able to reach them as educators. I have written down in the document attached below similarities and differences between my ELL student, T, and myself, and have found multiple differences in our backgrounds that could affect the way we act in our everyday life. These differences need to be carefully observed to maintain progress and continue to build upon ever growing relationships between teachers and students.

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Wv5OMETeTg2DP0fE_Wcu-TqDVyiIdWdJ42WsaE7_hWw/edit?usp=sharing

ELL Student Speaking WIDA Level

Following the first few weeks of working with T, I've determined what I believe is her WIDA level in speaking. Out of the 5 possible levels, I have found she is a 4. I've determined this by using can-do descriptors and comparing them to our interactions and conversations that we have had. The level 4 speaking tier states that students should be able to take a stance and defend it, compare and contrast points of view, explain content related issues, and respond to slang. Level 5, however, states students should be able to engage in debates using technical language, give multimedia oral presentations, and explain metacognitive strategies for solving problems. During our meetings, T has created a pros and cons list between our two presidential candidates, and also discussed her reasoning for supporting one of the two for her own reasons. We have also held causal conversations on what we did over the past week, containing occasional slang or casual terms that was easy for T to discuss with. However, she is approaching level 5, as she has told me she presented multiple PowerPoint presentations for classes, but her ability to fully debate over a topic using high level vocabulary is not so direct. She engages in reading highly advanced books for an early high school student, specifically a Dan Brown novel, and in it keeps tabs on words she doesn't know so she can research what they mean and know exactly what the author is describing. This can in turn effect her ability to speak professionally in public and in debating topics and very high levels. By reviewing this, I can determine as an educator to focus on her development of vocabulary and academic language to assist in her oral and presentation skills.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Future Aspirations of Culturally Diverse Students

During my last meeting with T, I noticed she had the book Angels and Demons by Dan Brown with her, which she told me she was reading for fun. This surprised me, as not only is the book advanced, but she was reading it as a hobby, which many students don't do as often as they used to. This lead to a conversation about her collection of books still back in her old country, which her family goes back to every so often and allows her to bring more of the collection back, a little at a time. She also told me about a special country-wide book fair that draws hundreds and thousands to buy books from vendors every year. Hearing about this interest in books completely changed my view on other countries. As a world power, we are told most countries have little educational opportunities, which may hold true in some places, but they have plenty of passion to learn and succeed. This eliminates the preconceived notion that students from other cultures have less interest to learn in schools, and that they have the same drive other students have as well. To drive this point home, T also discussed her intensions of becoming a surgeon, and to try and attend the best school she could possibly get into, and during the time of the meeting, that was MIT. These high goals set up this student for great success, and I feel that she has the potential to get where she wants to be simply because she is sincerely working hard to be the best she can.