Working with Kellie to evaluate one another's work was an eye opening, nerve wracking experience. It was an experience to have someone critiquing my work at the same time that I am reviewing theirs. Beyond that, being able to see things that someone I admire has done with the same project was very informative and an excellent learning experience. By seeing the hard work of a classmate and the differences in our projects I was able to improve my own work and open my mind a bit when approached with assignments.
Working with Ms. Bozorth was a joy. Using what I learned with Melanie and the aspects of Kellie's evaluation which I could improve on, I was not daunted by this project. Ms. Bozorth was open minded and enthusiastic. She has such a positive attitude and a desire to make lessons that are friendly for all of her students. She also gave me a great focus for this unit. She is going to be living in Costa Rica for a year through WorldTeach. We will be doing a project that will have teh students researching cultures of Spanish-speaking countries. They have a difficult unit coming up so this lesson will be a good place for them to relax and use their creativity. She has never collaborated with another teacher or librarian so she was relieved to have help in planning.
LIB 5070
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Negative reflection
Since I was in Ireland this reflection is behind. I realized this week that I somehow missed the past several Coolest Things I Found post on Facebook. This is something that was significant enough that I feel I have to reflect on it for my own growth. I need to take my future courses day by day and manage my time better. I shouldn't get so caught up in the "big" assignments that I miss out on the benefits and lessons from the smaller assignments. I have started thinking ahead to future projects and I believe that for the second unit I will be doing something different. I am very comfortable with writing units with English literature so for the rest of my projects I am hoping to let literature take a backseat so that I can focus on the things I need the most practice on.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Out of town
I have accomplished no work this week. I have thought about my courses and stressed about what I am unable to do but other than that productivity has been a nil. As lovely as work has been the stress I am feeling about school is making it almost not worth it. I have had limited internet. I have started doubting my original convictions in collaborating with Ms. Bozorth. It is intimidating to think of writing a unit using 8th grade Spanish as the subject when I do not speak Spanish. A media coordinator is going to need to be able to work with all teachers at a school, not just the ones who teach familiar subjects.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Collaboration buddy
Working with my classmate Melanie is a real treat. She is such a strong person, I have looked to her as a mentor during this class. She has developed an impressive time management philosophy that allow her to balance all of her responsibilities with her family, her full time job, as well as course work. She taught me how important it is to discuss expectations at the start of any collaboration. We struggled with the expectations of this project because we both are much better at following guidelines than creating them ourselves. We stumbled a good bit at the start of the assignment. We had trouble with the open ended nature of the assignment. After collaborating with the other members of the class we shed our self doubt and decided to take the assignment step-by-step. We made it through and I feel really positive with our collaboration, though I know future collaborations away from the class will be quite different. I hope I can model some of what I have learned to the school-based educator.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Teacher Interview
Having gone to Lake Norman High School, I am familiar with many of the teachers at the school. For this assignment I wanted to interview a teacher that I knew would have an interesting teaching philosophy. I have been in many different classrooms because of submitting and student teaching. One class I had the pleasure of substituting for is an English class, belonging to a first year teacher, Mr. Walton. He had a guitar in the corner and video game posters mixed among Shakespeare quotes. The sub in me cringed assuming this teacher had no classroom management plan and that this was going to be a long week. How wrong I had been. His classes were respectful and self-motivated. The students work hard. I was eager to meet this teacher. So when I chose him for my interview, I was looking forward to seeing him in action. He has the philosophy that his students are responsible for their progress and grades. He will not repairman them for not paying attention but mark down for his own records so if the student scores poorly the will know why. He has never given a worksheet to his students and his lessons are individualized and relate to the students lives. We need more teachers like this one. His students respect him and he actively collaborates with other teachers and isn't afraid to ask help.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Planning successfully with a partner
Collaboration with others is one of the most important parts of being a media specialist. Working with partners during our class projects has been practice collaborating with peers. On a small scale the importance of keeping logs and records of communication with teachers is important. It helps to keep record of which teachers have used the media specialist as a resource so that the media specialist can approach those who haven't before. It was very interesting to see how Sue Kimmel divided cooperative planning into different segments. The categories: Drifting, orienting, coordinating, making connections, and making sense are ways to walk through coordinating with a teacher. Using the data Kimmel collected on how teachers plan, a media coordinator can react effectively to fill in the needs of the primary instructor.
I liked the way Patricia Montiel-Overal understood that the roles in schools have been changing and making collaborating even more important. She believes that the two key elements of collaboration are coordination and cooperation. From my experience these are necessary in effective collaboration. When I have collaborated with partners in the past we are only effective and efficient when we are able to communicate openly about what we are expecting from one another and the outcome of the assignment.
I liked the way Patricia Montiel-Overal understood that the roles in schools have been changing and making collaborating even more important. She believes that the two key elements of collaboration are coordination and cooperation. From my experience these are necessary in effective collaboration. When I have collaborated with partners in the past we are only effective and efficient when we are able to communicate openly about what we are expecting from one another and the outcome of the assignment.
Monday, February 18, 2013
Stereotypes and differentiation
When I would learn about differentiation in the classroom, it seemed like a daunting yet necessary task. A classroom without differentiation is a class that is ignoring the individual needs of the students. As daunting as the task of differentiating for one class may be, differentiating an entire library to suit the needs of an entire campus of students is much more intimidating. It will also be that much more rewarding. By assisting teachers in adding differentiation to their lessons, I will be making sure that students are given resources to help each of them learn and succeed individually. The quick check for differentiation in the article "Everyone Wins", was extremely helpful and it will be useful in making sure that students are receiving the appropriate assistance in every aspect of their learning. Adding in another challenge is making sure that we, as librarians, honor our duty to provide resources and literature for all of our patrons equally. It is also important that we show children that they are equal to one another and the stories we provide should reflect that. In the article "Questioning My Collection" I was amazed to see how somethings can be put into a book that can completely mar a student's self-esteem and self image.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)