Friday, June 17, 2011

Kindergarten

The other night we had are son, Brandon, and one of his long time friends, Josh, over for dinner. Now that these guys our grown up it is nice to sit around talking to them. I love hearing their perspective on life. I know Brandon had hated school. He struggled academically, got in trouble for silly things and never really fit in socially. What I didn't know was that Josh hated school as well. I always thought he liked school. After all, he got good grades, the school never had to call his parents and him seemed to have a full social life. In fact in high school he and Brandon grow apart and I always thought it was because of their high school experiences. Both boys did admit that they had liked kindergarten. This is not the first time I have heard comments like this from young people or children, so started to think about why kindergarten is so different for the other grade levels. Besides the fact that kindergarten is only half day it seems that the main difference is the attitude of the teaching staff and the forgiveness of the other students.

Kindergarten teachers stand by the door and greet each student as they come in the room. Often, they shake each hand and ask how the student is. This doesn't happen in the later grades, in fact in older classrooms students are expected to come in on their own and start some kind of busy work that is designed to keep them in their seats not interacting with others. Kindergarten teachers encourage students to interact. These teachers feel it is their job to teach students how to interact with each other. Kindergarten teachers encourage play. These classrooms come equipped with play house, block, puppets and other toys designed to get students to interact with each other. The students sit in large groups that promote working together and socializing. Because socializing in encouraged, students work and learn together.

After kindergarten we begin to encourage independence. Students begin to develop skills at different rate which is when some students begin to feel bad about their abilities. Groups of cliques start to form. The students who can't sit still for the six hours of school start to stand out as somehow different or even bad. If you are slow to learn to read you begin to feel left out. If you are not good at athletics you begin to lose social standing. These pressures grow all through elementary school. When student get to middle school, physical appearance becomes important. Kids with eight issues begin to get ostracized or even picked on. Wearing the right clothes becomes almost paramount to survival. Teachers become frustrated with the students who do not fit the mold and the other students know what students are easy marks for trouble. Kids break into more finite social groups. There is no changing your social status in middle school. If your a trouble maker you are always ion the office with the other trouble makers. The kids who get in trouble have to miss socials and field trips. They see each other in Saturday school, leaving together to go to the mall. The lines are drawn. many kids just try to go unnoticed. They stay out of extracurricular actives and hope that the bullies or popular people just leave them alone. if they are lucky the find one or two other students they have common ground with. Even many of the so called successful students I have talked to find that fitting in is painful. many of these students do things they regret just so they can hang with the in crowd.

How do we fix this. First, we need to focus on connecting with each student. It would be nice if every child got a handshake and a nice to see you before they enter the classroom each day. Second we cannot drop social training in kindergarten and we cannot continue to segregate students who need to learn more social skills. All students deserve to be included in the fun activities school has to offer. Last, each child needs to feel valued for who they are regardless of their abilities.

So to Josh and Brandon; Thank you for sharing your stories and feelings with me. I promise to remember how you felt in school and will always try to reach every child.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

I love when I come up with a plan for my students and it works!! My plan to help the students with the transition time between an educational assistant and myself is a success. The EA has to leave before I get there and the students were having a hard time with the free time. The students could not get focused for our 15 minutes together. I spoke to the EA and asked her to get them started on their independent work. She did this, but as soon as she was gone the students would loose track of what they were supposed to be doing. I decided the problem was that they are kids and left untended they are going to loose track of what they are doing. After all the are only first graders. So it was time to come up with a way to mold their behavior. I am a firm believer in using positive reinforces to change behavior. Fortunately for me first graders love stickers. I laid out the routine and their choices and explained that each day they are on task when I come into the room they each earn a choice of 2 stickers. Right from the start they loved this idea and have been on task every time I get there.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Part of being a special education teacher is working with and/or supervising other people. In one situation, at my student teaching placement, I share a small group with one of the SPED Educational Assistants. The assistant in this position is here as a long term substitute, covering for another assistant who is on leave. She’s a great person, the children like her and she works very hard. The one problem we are having is transitioning our shared group from her to me. She works with them on spelling and handwriting for a half an hour and then I come and continue to work with them for fifteen minutes. The group contains three students who, earlier in the day I have for seventy-five minutes of reading. Two of the students also have ninety minutes of math in this resource room. Basically by the time she gets these students they have had a full day of academics and are getting tired and squirrely. Because of the way the schedule is written she has to leave to supervise other student’s right at 12:30 and I often run a little late getting to this group because I am leading a math group in another room. There are other adults in the Resource Room, but they are running groups, however the children are safe because they have some peripheral supervision. Another complication is that we have different styles of instruction and different behavior expectations. So the problem is that when I get to this group they are off task and inattentive. It’s hard when I only have fifteen minutes to work with them, which is cut down by three to four minutes because I come in late, and then I can’t seem to get them back on task. The best solution to this situation would be for one of us to stay with the group for the whole forty-five minutes, but because of scheduling that isn’t going to happen. I also feel like they have spent more than enough time away from their peers and the last fifteen minutes would be better spent back in the general education classroom. This is also not an option because the time is written into their IEPs. So the only option is to come up with a plan so that the students keep busy and engaged.

I feel that the best plan for this transition time is for the students to reread the story form the earlier reading. They need to practice independent reading and rereading the story from earlier in the day will help cement the words and or sounds from that lesson. I have asked the assistant to give the instruction for the students to reread the story and I have left the books on the table as a reminder. For some reason I cannot get this to happen with any kind of consistency. She has been fairly consistent with having them read a book off the bookshelf’s but one day last week, Thursday to exact, I came into the room and the students were all doing things that they did not have permission to do. When I got to the group I had a hard time getting them to put up the things they were playing with. They were not the least bit interested in working on reading, spelling or handwriting and I was frustrated because the assistant had let them play with things that they should not have been playing with. Needless to say the group was not enjoyable for any of us. Later, when I had the opportunity to speak with the assistant, she explained that she had lost track of time and had to leave the group in a hurry. I told her that it had made for a very stressful time for both the students and I and that she really needed to make sure they knew they needed to be reading when she left. She said she would make that clear to them in the future. This week hasn’t gone much better. They are back to reading books off the bookshelves, but they are still not rereading the story from earlier in the day. I had another conversation with the assistant and she informed me that when she leaves they are rereading the story for the lesson. So, the problem is that the students change what they are doing after the assistant leaves. Now I had to come up with a way to motivate the students to reread the story. I am going to try using stickers. I bought some new more exciting stickers and I am going to tell them that they can have one every day they are rereading the story. On top of the stickers we will have game time on Fridays (Thursdays on four day weeks) if they reread the stories the other four (or three) days. Tomorrow I will introduce this new plan to the students.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Some days just seem to be more stressful than others. Today was one of those days. I can’t say for sure why it was more stressful than other days just that it was. My morning groups ran great. My first grade math students are progressing well. They have been introduced to new concepts in the last few days and are catching on quickly. My first grade reading group is also doing great. The students are making very few errors when reading the stories from the lessons and they are getting better and better at their sight words. I am not having any real behavior problems. One student, who is impacted by Autism, is having problems with his eyes. He is continually complaining because he feels like there is something in his eyes. I think maybe he has allergies and the itching makes it feel like there is something in his eyes, but it is really hard for him to function with this going on. So far all I can come up is to give him a wet towel. That helps with the itching, but it gets in the way of him completing his work. My most challenging student, behavior wise, has been working really well since I started playing the student teacher game with him and he wasn’t even there today. The weird thing is that I was not the only teacher who felt this way. When all the students were out of the room, one of the other teachers said, “Wow that was a hard day.”

Ok. It was a hard day. That happens, but as the grown up it is my job to stay even. The students need to depend on me to treat them with kindness and respect no matter how I am feeling. I can’t be short with them. They need to feel safe with me always. Some things I can do to help keep my stress from showing; Have a plan but stay flexible. Today when I got to my afternoon reading group and they were not doing what they were supposed to I needed to relax and move us toward the plan. If we didn’t get all the way through what I had planned, no harm would have been done. It is a short amount of time and although my mentor teacher wants us to keep it academic sometimes that just isn’t possible. I do however need to find a fun way to work on rhyming with this group. I want it to be fun and it needs to be quick because we only have fifteen minutes

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Halfway through my student teaching and completely finished with my work sample. I will spend the next six weeks enjoying my time in the elementary students without the pressure of going home every night and spending two hours working on my work sample. I feel great about the way my groups are going. The students have become accustom to me and my expectations and they all seem to bee making progress. Each of the students that I am working with have had an impact on me. I love the diversity of their personalities and needs. It is rewarding when you find something that a child can enjoy while learning. One of my math students, who is impacted by autism, will work very hard if at the end of group he is given time to make math problems out of building blocks. Not only does he make the build the math problem with the blocks, he also write the number sentence to go with it. He thinks this is a reward and I think he is gaining more math skills. In the same group I have another young man who is easily distracted, but has made such great gains this year that he can do most of the math independently. This student often finishes his work ahead of the other two students. One of my concerns for this student is that he write many numbers and letters backwards. So when he finishes his work I give him the Stamp and See from Handwriting Without Tears and he practices writing his numbers. He thinks it's fun and I think it will help him with his letter reversals. The last young man in this group is highly impacted with ADHD. His attention span is about ten seconds, but he is the kindest, sweetest little boy. The best thing about this guy is that he wants to do well. He often says thing like; "But I want to follow directions," or "It's hard to pay attention," or "This is hard." The truth is he really is doing his best and he doesn't understand what we expect from him. So, to help him understand exactly which of his behaviors need to change I have started using the teacher student game. Each time he talks out, stares off or does not follow my directions I take a point. Each time he exhibits proper student behavior (asking when asked, staying seated, writing the answers in his book) he gets a point. If he looses (which should not happen more than once in a two week period) he owes me a minute at recces. For every point he earns he gets that number of color spots on he prize incentive sheet. I don't really like taking recces time away, but that is school policy so I feel that I have to use it. This student really struggles with subtraction. He can count backwards from twenty, but when you ask him to cannot back one time from five he cannot do it. I take a little extra time everyday with him and really work with subtraction. This group often feels like three separate groups and it is very challenging to keep them all occupied at the same time, but that is what I live about this job. That and their sweet little smiles.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Today's lesson went really badly. I tried to present a lesson that was fun and interactive for the students, but that is not what happened. First, only one student was there and that makes it hard to have an interactive lesson Second the student who was there doesn't like the feel of Play Dough, so he really didn't like making letters with it. That was suppose to be the body of my lesson and take about ten minutes, but because he hated to feel of the Play Dough under his finger nails this part took only about four minutes. I really thought making the letters out of Play Dough would be a fun way for the students to review the two letters we have learned. Next time I try to make letters with the students I will try wax sticks or noodles. Third, The poem Twinkle, Twinkle little star was too overwhelming for the student. I thought seeing the letters in a poem would be a fun assessment. But I was wrong. The student took one look at the poem and was overwhelmed. Looking at it now I can see that the letters are too close together and there are too many of them. One line from the poem with the letters spread apart may have work. Something I may try in the future is to have the whole poem to read, but just a word or two from it for the students to work with.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Today I finished my fifth lesson in my work sample. That is half way to being finished with what I think is the hardest piece of the graduate program. Working with two kindergarten students is fun and challenging. They seem to understand something one minute and not have any idea what you are talking about the next. The nice part about this work sample for me is that with kindergarten students it is still acceptable to play games and have fun. I believe this should be true for all ages. School is hard for students with learning disabilities and in order to keep their interest and keep them coming. I had a really great conversation with two second graders today. They are both behind their peers in reading and today they said they couldn't wait to read like the other students. I want these guys to except themselves for who they are and still work to improve their abilities. but it does them no good to see themselves as less than their peers. I then I shared that I couldn't read in the second grade either and that I was in a class much like the one they are in. I explained that to become a great reader you really have to find books you enjoy and then spend time reading. I also explained that learning to work hard now will give them an advantage when they were older. I had seeing second graders already becoming defeated. They have so many years left in school. The one student said that at her old school other students made fun of her because she couldn't read. In a society were we are suppose to honor diversity have a learning disability is still a stigma.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Today was a great day. You know one of those days where you see growth in all the students you work with and where you come up with some amazing ideas to deal with challenging situations. It has taken me three weeks, but my first grade math group is starting to use the number line. The group is three boys so when I saw Spider-man flash cards I thought they were worth a try. I made the rule that while we were playing Spider-man flash cards they had to get their answer on the number line. For the last three days the first thing they ask me was, "Can we play with the Spider-man flash cards?" They not only do they love playing the game, but they are learning to add and subtract at the same time.

A new little girl has joined my first grade reading group. She is a great new addition. Her presents is helping push the other little girl who has been in the group all along. They like reading together and they help each other and encourage each other. Because the two girls move together and the little boy in the group is height then the girls I needed to find something for him to do. I wanted it to be meaningful work, so I found a book with stories for him to read that have work sheet that go along with the stories. He has been wanting to work independently so this will give him that opportunity.

I started my work sample three days ago and it is going great. Everyday I see growth in these two young students. They both want to read and they are working very hard. I have found a lot of good resources on the Internet. I found the best little letter books that I can print off the Internet. I am trying to bring in a variety of letter game and fun activities. Good week....Great day!!!

Monday, March 28, 2011

Started my work sample today. It went very well. One of my two students was not there so I only had one student, I hope that doesn't happen very often. I do like the one on one time so I can really focus on that student and their needs. I just feel so bad for these little guys. I know they are doing their best but they just can't keep the information in their little heads. The thing I kept thinking is this is just the beginning. They have twelve years of public education ahead of them.
I am starting my work sample this morning. I have decide to use my kindergarten reading/writing group. This group contains two kids who are learning the names and sounds for letters. I am going to start my lessons with a review sense we are coming off spring vacation. I will be interested to see what these young kids retain after being off for a week.

After working with middle school kids for the past twelve years I am finding it hard to modify my vocabulary to fit the younger students. The other day I told my first graders they were going to learn a new concept. They had no idea what the word concept meant so they sat there staring at me with blank looks on their faces. I have to really work to use words and ideas they understand.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

My First Week of Student Teaching

After one week working in a primary resource room I am really beginning to love it. The kids are so cute and so eager to learn that it makes every day a fun and exciting experience. I have decided to use my kindergarten reading group for my work sample. Of all my groups this is the one that I feel I can add to the current curriculum and not through their whole program off. The first and second graders that I work with have been using a direct instruction curriculum sense the beginning of the year and it would be hard for me to add my own ideas to these groups without upsetting the students academic growth. I am using my talents to change tedious lessons into games or other fun activities. I still believe that when done right the best way to educate students is by using direct instruction and adding other activities to keep things interesting. I want to bring books, rhyming games. and other attention getting activities to all my reading groups. I want the give the students the gift of enjoying books so that they will work hard to become better readers. I want to bring fun activities to my math groups as well, but I am finding this harder to do. I want to look for some ideas on hands on math. One of my students only wants to add. He doesn't quite get the minus means going backward. When I gave them a add/subtract test, I could hear him saying the problems to himself. "Five plus three equals...five, six, seven, eight," he said for the first problem. "Six minus four equals...six, seven, eight, nine, ten," was his response to problem number two. No matter the problem he always counted up. So I tried working with the number line, but it is too early to see if that is helping. He has some behaviors and is short on attention so it may take some time to get him to understand the difference between adding and subtracting. I think this week I will add in some manipulatives too see if that might help. In my other math group I have one student who is on the spectrum. On Thursday he decided that he was only going to say and write numbers that ended with eight. I did my best to come up with add and subtract problems that ended in eight. The problem came when he had to complete his progress monitoring assessment. On the first side he wrote eights on every answer, so this was not a good measure of his abilities. On side two I told him he could have a Sponge Bob sticker for each problem he wrote the right answer to. I had to give him eight Sponge Bob Stickers.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Day three of working in a primary resource room. I am finally getting use to some of the differences between middle school and primary elementary school. In the middle school I didn't have to tie shoes or help blow noses, but I did have to watch for hand holding and inappropriate clothing. Nose picking is something both age groups do (along with adult male who was next to me at the stop light this morning). Both age group also like to have fun, want you to like them and want to feel successful. These are just kids who get out of bed every morning, come to school and try their best. Sure the have some behaviors and they don't always want to do what we want them to do, but they aren't bad. It is our job as the adults in the situation to make learning as fun and interesting as possible. It is our job to make each child feel important and cared about. I know I learn better when I am not weighed down by stress, judgment and pressure. In fact I have a hard time even paying attention in situations that cause me stress. So it is my plan to always make school a positive situation for every child I come into contact with. I will do my best to smile when I see a child, greet them with a friendly comment and compliment them as often as I can. I think I am succeeding because today a second grade girl I work wire said, "Will you be here again tomorrow? I like school now."

Monday, March 7, 2011

Day One of Student Teaching

Today was my first day of student teaching. It was a big change. I have been working in middles schools for the last twelve years and now I am working with kindergartners and first graders. They are so darn cute. They came in with big smiles on their little faces. The hardest part was keeping them moving and on task. The class room is very busy which makes it even harder for the children to stay on task. The teaching staff is very warm and positive. Each group comes and goes at their own. The room is in constant movement. Overall this was a great first day!

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Friday was my last day at Agnes Stewart Middle School, because I start u student teaching at Riverbend Elementary School on Monday. This made me feel very loved. They gave me cards and small tokens to show how much they would miss me. The students, even the ones I don't work with very much, all came to say good bey to me and that made me feel great. One group of girls, who I only see at lunch time, said they will miss me because I stick up for them when other staff seem to be picking on them. I thought all the well wishes would make it harder to leave, but it actually made it easier.

I am feeling a little nervous about student teaching. I have worked in middles schools for the past twelve years and I am comfortable working with this age group. My student teaching is going to be in a primary (K- 3rd) resource room. I will need to be careful about my approach. These students will be so much younger and their humor and feelings less developed. The teacher, whose room I will be working in, already has my groups planned. The curriculum he uses is very similar to the curriculum I have used in the past so that part should be fairly easy. It's the student interaction that has me concerned.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Counting down to my student teaching. Today I starting telling the students at my current school that my last day is this coming Friday. I am really going to miss many of the students. I hate leaving in the middle of the year, but I know that kids are resilient and the will be fine without me. I have been looking at lower level curriculum and I am getting excited about the different challenges I will be facing when I begin to work with the younger students.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

One Week Left at ASMS

Normally I love snow days. An extra, unexpected day off, who could complain about that? Well this is not just any day for me. It is one of my last seven days at ASMS before I leave to do my student teaching at Riverbend Elementary School. I will miss the staff and students at ASMS, but I am very excited to get to work with the younger kids and I have been researching curriculum for the age group and level of students I will be working with. There are some very creative and intriguing ideas for teaching reading to young students. One place I found some good ideas was Webquest. I really like a lesson plan called 5 Day Read Aloud. I absolutely believe that all students can benefit from being read to. This is especially rue for beginning readers. It allows student access to materials they could or would not read themselves. I find that sharing a book makes the book more fun and interesting. I am hoping that I will be able to incorporate some types of read aloud lesson for my work sample.

So thank you snow day for allowing me the time to look into the materials for where I am going...even if it means one less day with the greatest staff and students ever......

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Start the Count Down

Seventeen days until I start my student teaching. I as starting to get excited. I will be going to a K-3 resource room. That will be a big change sense I have spent the last 12 years in a middle school. The hardest part will be leaving the students at my current school. This has been a great year and I have gotten to work with a lot of great kids. I will also miss the team I work with, but to get to my goal, a masters degree and teaching license, I must make this move. And really every time I have stepped out of my comfort zone I have always been happy I did. I am already looking at resources that represent the level of the students I may be working with. I am trying to get an idea of what students in these grades may be learning. This will be a whole new experience and I can't wait to get started.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Just finished my first week of my second spring term. I can't believe that it has been a year. I have to admit I am tried, my house needs my attention and the job prospects are not good. With that said I am still glad that I took on this endeavor. The important things, like my family and my job have not suffered. In fact my children has made great gains of their own while I have pursued my life long dream of becoming a teacher.

When looking ahead, to what getting my masters in SPED would require, I was most concerned about getting my class work done and taking the required tests to get a teaching license. Although both of those requirements were (are) challenging, the aspect that is proving to be the hardest for me is leaving my current school to do my student teaching. I am looking forward to my placement in a k through 3 pull out setting. I think these kids will give me new challenges and stretch both my skills and my love. So it's not a new place that has me all emotional. My emotions are being driven by the love I have for the students I currently work with. Every year that I have been in the district I find myself completely committed to the students I am teaching. I don't apply for jobs mid-year because I don't want to leave students who are making progress. Leaving for my student teaching is no different. I know the students will survive and they will continue to grow, but I will still worry about them.

The other part about leaving for my student teaching is that I may not ever be back to the school and staff I have grown to love. The hope is to find a teaching job after graduation and my school will surely not have any openings. In a perfect world I would be able to return to this school to teach, but the reality is that the SPED teachers are all happy there and are under forty so they are going nowhere.

All of life's best and biggest accomplishment come with a few tears. This next step in my life is no different. I am sure that I will shed many tears as I pack up my belongings, my memories and my hopes to move to the next step in my life. If all goes well, I will find a place to teach that brings me as much joy as my current placement has.