Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Course Summary: Final Post of The Semester


It has been an interesting, yet productive semester in ED3120 at Mount Saint Mary College! 
Like a lot of my colleagues, I was not very technologically advanced when the semester started. I wouldn't call myself a pro just yet, but this class has helped me gain knowledge as well as confidence in using technology, but also sharing my knowledge of technology with other people as well. 

This class has also given me the opportunity to partake in my first whole class instruction lesson. I was so nervous at first, but once I was done I couldn't wait to get back up in front of the classroom and share more knowledge and interact with the class some more. I have wanted to be a teacher since I was a little girl, but that experience made my drive to achieve my childhood dream become so much more real. 

I know I have a lot left to learn, but this class was so helpful and I feel like I gained so much knowledge in how to teach lessons, make assessments, how to work with colleagues, how to bring technology into the classroom, and how to be a more professional teacher. 

I cannot wait to continue the path to my dream of being an elementary school teacher. It has been an awesome semester and ended with positive vibes from this class. I can't wait to bring those positive vibes over to Science Methods next semester! 

I am proud to say that I survived Social Studies Methods 

Mock Interviews


I think the mock job interviews was the best activity we participated in this semester. It was very eye opening. I have been to a few job interview but they were very informal. Having this experience really opened my eyes to how formal a job interview for a teaching position is. 

I loved the question "If you could relive one moment in history, what would it be and why?" I thin the answer to that says a lot about a person and what they believe in. I also liked having to think on my feet about inquiry, direct, and cooperative learning lessons. As each "administrator" played the role of a person advocating for each different kind of lesson, it was interesting to see how whether I actually like that style of teaching or not, I was able to talk about it with positive comments only. 

I also liked that answering the questions really made me evaluate what I think I am going to prefer to do in my future classrooms. I did not like that it was done in groups but I made it work. On top of being nervous, I felt very intimidated by having three other people listen to what I say. By the end of the experience I was definitely glad to have partaken in it. It definitely opened my eyes to what a real interview in the future could be like. 

Don't Be Afraid Of Teaching Economics!


For me, teaching economics is a scary thing. I don't have much background with it. Having to do a lesson about it in front of the class made me a little less nervous to have to teach it in the future. 

In my slides, I had to teach how economics effects people, communities and the nation. 






I do think that economics is important in the classroom because parts of it are crucial to success in the future generations that we are teaching. Economics can be a fun topic if taught correctly. There are many different fun games and activities that can be used to teach economics even to young children. These games will plant the general ideas in their minds and they will be able to use the knowledge from these games and actives in their future studies, as well as through life. 

Choosing To Be Grateful




Upon reading the New York Times article "Choosing to Be Grateful", many components of the article stuck out to me. In my opinion, the most important one is that most people are thankful for the big things in life such as the basic necessitates and important relationships in their lives, but it is important as well to be thankful for the little insignificant things that make a person happy. 

Personally, having issues with anxiety and depression, I make it a point to find big and little things that bring joy to my everyday life. Some of these things are old songs, pictures, or small incidents that happen throughout the days that bring a smile to my face. I also make it a point to be thankful for these things all year, not just around the time of thanksgiving. 

When it comes to connecting the article to my professional life, the author talked about happiness and gratitude coming from the inside, out. I immediately related that to education and my fieldwork experiences now, and the ones to come. Just like happiness needs to be intrinsic before it can be extrinsic, the knowledge that is being taught to students needs to be in your mind and in your spirit and truly understood before you pass it on to students. 

This article was a great reminder of ways to keep my spirits up and always remember to look at the bright side of things. There is always something to be grateful for. 

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Native American Tribes - Muscogees


Above is the link to my group's Native American Tribe powerpoint. 
We were assigned to explore the Muscogee tribe. 
We found out about their history, hard times they faced, how they built a new life from those hard times, their government, geography, habitat, famous leaders, culture, food, and clothing. 

It was fun to present our findings to the class an compare our tribe with other tribes that our classmates had to present. I think that I would use this exact assignment in my future classrooms. It promotes cooperative learning and it also gives students a chance to get creative with how they present their findings to the class. It is also interesting to see how these native american indians made use from what was available to them on the land and how it impacted the life that we know today. An assignment like this could also be used as formative assessment to see where the students are at as far as research skills or general knowledge of the tribes. It could also be used as summative assessment. It could be a final project in a unit that contains native americans.

 This picture shows the different types of houses that the Muscogee tribe lived in when they lived in different parts of the nation.
This is the typical cloak that a man would wear as part of the Muscogee tribe. 

What's New With Current Events?

What is a current event? 
current event is a contemporary development in local, national or wold affairs. 
We see current events on the news every single day. Some impact our lives and beliefs, while others are just news to pass the time. Current events can range from the latest fashion trend to more serious incidents such as the recent terrorist attacks that have been happening.

I believe that current events are a huge part of the environment around us; especially in the ever changing society that we live in. Some teachers believe that current events should not be in the classroom, but I disagree. I think that there is always news for students to be informed of. 

I had to do a current events presentation. My group's current events presentation was focused on the parts of speech. Before we even gave the class an article to read, we went over the parts of speech. 
The parts of speech are: 
  • Nouns: a person place or thing  
  • Pronouns: a word that takes place of a noun
  • Adjectives: describing word
  • Verbs: action word 
  • Adverbs: words that modify a noun or adjective 
  • Prepositions: describes the relationship between other words in a sentence  
  • Interjections: a word used to express emotion. 
  • Conjunctions: word that connects a group of words 

We went over these and then had the students read the article. In groups, they had to find 5 nouns, 4 verbs, 3 adjectives and 2 conjunctions. They were to add their findings to the powerpoint and then share them with the rest of the class.

I really liked using the parts of speech with current events. It shows how easy it is to combine subjects to enhance learning. Current events is something I will most definitely use in my future classrooms. I think that they broaden the knowledge of students and prepare them for the real world that they will one day be entered in to. 

Artifact Bags

It is true, artifacts are everywhere. They surround us and most of the time we aren't aware of it. Artifact bag projects are a fun way to bring awareness to the artifacts that exist in an area of study.

To start my artifact bag project, I asked my students, in this case my fellow classmates, to define the word artifact for me. They were spot on with the definition.

Artifact is an item made by a human being, typically an item or historical or cultural interest.

Next, I went on to explain to them that an artifact can be a primary or a secondary source. I then had them define for me, primary and secondary source. Again, they had the definitions perfect.

Primary source: an artifact, source, or document, a recording, or other source of information that was created at the time under study.
Secondary Source: documents written after an event has occurred, providing secondhand accounts of that event, person, or topic.

I then went on to show them my artifacts.

Artifact 1
This is a letter from Sebastian Brandt to Henry Hoverer. It was written January 13, 1622.
Before I told my students that information I asked them questions such as, What do you think this is? What do you think the purpose of it is? When do you think it was from?

They replied: a letter, about life in either the new colony or life in an old country, sometime in the early 1600's or 1700's. I assured them that their answers were pretty close. I then went on to tell them the story behind the letter.









Artifact 2
These artifacts are dice that have been discovered around the areas of the original Jamestown settlement.  They are made of bone, ivory, and cast lead.  They were used for child and adult gaming back when the colony first settled. 
I asked the students what they thought they could be used for and what they were made out of. Their answers were close to what the correct answers actually are. 





Artifact 3
This is a quartz crystal point. These belonged to indians who inhabited the area of jamestown before the colonists. They were used in bow and arrow hunting. They could also be given as gifts to the settlers by the indians who roamed the land before the settlers. I asked the students what they thought the quartz could be used for and all 4 of them said the thought it could be used for hunting. 




A fun website that has a game about jamestown is historyglobe.com In this game, the player is a jamestown settler. The settler has to make choices regarding their colony and at the end, depending on the choices the player makes, the colony either fails or thrives and it shows the player the data at the end. 

The rest of my artifact bag powerpoint is linked below. 

I like doing artifact bags I would definitely use them in my future classroom because I think that it brings insights of colonial life to the students and they are able to see how the indians and early settler really lived and how it is different from our life today. 

Pre Tests and Post Tests

 Why should I use Pre-tests with my class? You should use Pre-tests because it is a great way to assess the prior knowledge of your students. This prior knowledge will help you, as the teacher, decide what to focus on the most when teaching a topic that students have been exposed to. Some examples of pre tests are:

  • KWL Charts 
  • Questionnaires 
  • The Post Test 
Those are my 3 favorite ways to give pre tests. I like the KWL charts because it gives students the ability to track their own learning because they fill the chart out as the unit goes along. I like the questionaries because the students get a sense of what they will be learning within the upcoming weeks. Lastly, I like the Post test..because it gives students a sense of what they will be learning, but I like that it also focuses on specific points that will be covered within the unit. 

Before my fieldwork experience at Bishop Dunn Memorial School in at the 5th grade class. We created a test to give to them. My groups 3 questions were: 

5. What was Jamestown famous for? 
6. The origin of jamestown comes from...
     a. the colonist's king 
     b. Virginia's ordinary person
     c. one of the explorers 
     d. after the river
7. What was the name of the Native American Tribe who helped with the survival of Jamestown?
     a. Inca
     b. Powhatan
     c. Iroquois
     d. Mayan


Post tests are great for assessing your students as well as yourself as a teacher. It tells you what the students have learned, as well as where you may need to focus your instruction on for the next unit or the next year. I think teachers need to make it clear to students that the assessments they are given in and out of class are not just to test the students knowledge and does not always measure their intelligence. When my group created the post test, we created similar, but more challenging questions because the students had shown us that they are very intelligent and are able to retain the information that we are given to them. 

I also believe that teachers need to find other ways than just unit tests for post or summative assessment. In my last blog post I discussed different ways of assessing students and the benefits of them. But to recap, summative assessment , or post tests can be unit tests, final portfolios, or any other sort of project, presentation, or assignment that will prove to you and the student what they have learned. 



Monday, December 14, 2015

EdTPA Tips And Why They Are Important!


10 Tips for edTPA Success! 
1. Communicate with your cooperating teacher. 
It is important to communicate with your cooperating teacher because they have insights and background knowledge to what you need to do and where you need to place the majority of your focus. edTPA is such an important thing that if you have any questions, you need to reach out and ask...do not push them to the side. 
2. Find the right time in the school year to begin the process.
Timing is always crucial! You want to find time where you have the proper amount of time to focus on the several tasks at hand. The more time you put into your portfolio, the better it will be. 
3. Plan Plan Plan! 
The tasks in edTPA are so specific. The more planning you have done, the higher you will score. 
4. Get acquainted with the portfolio platform. 
Like anything else, the more you are acquainted with something, the easier it will be. 
5. Quantify and Qualify 
edTPA looks at the quantity of your lessons just as much as the quality of them! 
6. Read the commentary prompts and rubrics before video taping. 
Knowing exactly what to improve on and to focus on will make your videos so much better overall. 
7. Videotape every lesson you intend to include in your portfolio. 
Even if the lesson doesn't seem important now, the way the students responded or worked cooperatively could be perfect for your portfolio at the end...you don't want to not have a video because of your assumptions. 
8. Send out videotaping forms to families early. 
The families should be notified when and for how long you will be videotaping. If they do not want their student in the video, this should be taken seriously and worked around. 
9. Plan the seating arrangement and camera placement before taping. 
If the family of a student does not feel comfortable having them on video, their request should be honored even if that means rearranging the room for a few lessons. 
10. Focus on student interactions during video taping. 
There is nothing worse than looking at the camera when you are being filmed. The best idea is to forget it is even there and go about teaching the lesson like normal. 

Getting Creative With Geography



Geography is the study of the physical features of the earth and its atmosphere, and of human activity as it affects and is affected by these, including the distribution of populations and resources, land use, and industries. 

Geography can be a hard topic to teach because it can be so boring...but not anymore. The following powerpoint contains 103 exciting ways to teach geography. I am going to highlight a few of my favorites and a few that I would use in my future classroom; but I truly believe that all 103 of them are fantastic ways to teach geography to elementary students. 


All 103 ways are great, but I am just going to share some of my favorites with you here and now!

#3 Google Earth Trip:
- This is a fun activity for pack up time or unpacking time in the morning. One student gets to choose a slip of paper and on that paper is a world city, a landmark or other destination and whatever strip is drawn is the class destination for the day. 


#6 Go Local
- Assign students to walk or drive 5 minutes from their house and take pictures of what is around them along the way. Have them create a photomontage and even link it to a map if they can.

#8 Adopt A Rock
- Give a rock a home. Rock has rocknesia. Identify the rocks name, makeup, where it may have come from, what process have shaped it, etc. This is good for long weekends or holiday breaks. Make sure to have students photograph their rock along its' travels.

#12 60 Second Film
- Have students to summarize a concept as a 60 second film. It will develop their understanding and unleash their creativity.

#23 Bingo!
- Print 3x3 grids and have students fill them in with vocabulary words. Read the definitions of the words aloud. The first person to get Bingo! wins.

#24 Model
- Create physical features of a place with modeling clay.

#40 Describing Photos
- Have student sit back to back. One describes a photo and the other draws what it looks like. The students compare pictures when they are done.

#51 Landscape In A Box
- In a small shoe box students will create a landscape that fits inside the box so when the box is open, the landscape is revealed. A map is put on top of the lid.

#62 Before, Before, After, After
- Choose an image and ask students to consider what happened before the image and what they think is going to happen after the image.. in 10 years, 20 years, 50 years etc.

#72 Model Your Place On A Paper Plate
- Using modeling clays, students will create an environment on a paper plate.

#82 Dizzy Directions
- Each student gets a compass. The teacher calls out directions and the students have to face that way. The last student to face that way is out.

#100 Use A Shower Curtain
- Get a world shower curtain and display it on the wall or floor. The teacher or student can annotate it with expo or any dry erase marker.



The Not So Horrible Horrors of Assessment


Every person would define assessment differently. Students see assessments as horrible assignments that determine their intelligence. To a teacher, assessment can be used in many different ways and there are also three different types of assessment. Each type serves its own purpose in the overall category of assessment.

A big question about assessment is what exactly can be assessed? Here are some things that can be assessed.
Readiness 
Interest 
Learning Profile 
Readiness can be tested by skills, concepts, and content knowledge. Interest can be assessed by interest surveys, interest centers, and self selection. Learning profiles can be assessed by self awareness, work preferences and areas of strengths and weaknesses. 

Another issue that arises is when should students be assessed? This is where the three different types of assessment really come into play. Students should be assessed before they learn something new, during the time they are learning the new topic, and after the new material has been taught to them. These three types of assessment are: 
Diagnostic Assessment 
Formative Assessment 
Summative Assessment 
Diagnostic assessment serves as a pre test. Pre assessment is any method or process used to determine a students current level of readiness or interest in order to plan for appropriate instruction. Some examples of diagnostic or pre assessment would be: 
  • Pre-test 
  • Graphing for greatness
  • Inventory
  • KWL Chart 
  • Checklist 
  • Observation 
  • Self Evaluation 
  • Questioning 
Formative assessment is assessment that occurs during a lesson or a task. This is a process of accumulating information about a student's progress to help make instructional decisions that will improve his/her understandings and achievement levels. Some examples of formative assessment are: 
  • Conference 
  • Peer evaluation 
  • Questioning 
  • Exit Card 
  • Portfolio Check
  • Quiz 
  • Journal Entry
  • Self Evaluation 
Summative assessment is the last part of assessment and should be done after the new material is thoroughly taught. Summative assessment is the means to determine a student's mastery and understanding of information, skills, concepts, or processes. Some examples of summative assessment are:
  • Unit Test
  • Performance Task
  • Product/Exhibit
  • Demonstration 
  • Portfolio Review


The majority of my elementary education tract was based off of types of summative assessment. Seeing how this has changed makes me have high hopes for the children of the future. As a teacher I will focus a lot on formative assessment because it sheds the most light on what students are really thinking and learning from information that they are gathering, 

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Social Studies Does More Than We Think

When someone hears the term "social studies" they automatically think of the American Revolution, George Washington or a class they sit through in school. Social Studies is so much more than that. It is a vital component to the education of a well rounded student and a well rounded individual in today's ever changing society. 



Social Studies by definition is " an integrated study of the social sciences and humanities to promote civic competence."

Some of these social sciences and humanities are:

  • Anthropology
  • Archeology
  • Economics
  • Geography
  • History
  • Law
  • Philosophy
  • Political Science 
  • Psychology 
  • Religion
  • Sociology
  • Humanities*
  • Mathematics*
  • Natural Sciences*
*These are sometimes recognized as part of social studies.

Like anything else, Social Studies has a main purpose. The main purpose of social studies is to help young people develop the ability to make informed and reasoned decisions for the public good as citizens of a culturally diverse, democratic society; in an independent world.

In schools there are no specific standards for Social Studies like there are for math and literacy set forward in the Common Core. The National Council for The Social Studies does however, set forth 10 Themes that should be covered in a student's Social Studies learnings. These themes are:

  1. Culture
  2. Time, Community, Change 
  3. People, Place, Environment
  4. Individual Development and Identity 
  5. Individuals, Groups and Institutions
  6. Power, Authority and Governance 
  7. Production, Distribution and Consumption 
  8. Science, Technology and Society 
  9. Global Connections
  10. Civic Ideals and Practices 
Though these are vague themes, many teachers use them as standards. As an undergrad student we are taught to align these with grade level Literacy, Reading, and Writing standards to create appropriately targeted lessons for our students. 

Knowledge is a huge part of social studies. Different kinds of knowledge can be seen in social studies and well as any other subject. They are all part of Fragile Knowledge. There is also Inert knowledge, naive knowledge, and ritual knowledge. These highly effect a student's deeper understanding and their understanding performance. 

Fragile knowledge is knowledge that is learned in school but is not remembered or understood. 
Inert knowledge is knowledge that allows students to remember information when they are tested, but they do not make any sort of outside, real world connection with the knowledge. 
Naive knowledge is when students rely on simple examples of a topic to provide an answer. 
Ritual knowledge is when a student goes through the motions of school every day but does not apply the knowledge they learn and they make no outside, real world connections with the knowledge. 
Deeper understanding is knowledge that a student can think about, explain and apply to situations beyond the classroom. 

That deeper knowledge leads to understanding performances. These understanding performances are things students do to show that they understand what they have learned. When they understand what they have learned, they will be able to do the following: 
  • explain the information 
  • give clear examples of the information 
  • apply the information to situations beyond the classroom 
  • justify the information 
  • compare and contrast the information 
  • use the knowledge in context 
  • make generalizations of the information

Lastly, the principles of teaching and learning social studies. 
  1. Social Studies teaching and learning is powerful when meaningful
  2. Social studies teaching and learning is powerful when integrative 
  3. Social studies teaching and learning is powerful when value based 
  4. Social studies teaching and learning is powerful when challenging 
  5. Social studies teaching and learning is powerful when active
I firmly believe that Social Studies can be every students favorite subject in school. Social studies is so much more than the memorization game that teachers these days make it into. In my future teaching, I plan to make social studies meaningful, integrative, value based, challenging, active, and most importantly fun! I want all of my future students to have the same positive Social Studies experience that I was lucky enough to have. 

PCK: Pedagogical Content Knowledge


To understand what Pedagogical Content Knowledge is, you first have to understand what Pedagogy is.

Pedagogy is the method of practice of teaching, especially as an academic subject or theoretical concept.

Pedagogical Content Knowledge has many definitions. The one that spoke to me most was "teachers interpretations and transformations of subject-matter knowledge in the context of facilitating learning" (Schulman 1986).

There are 5 key elements to PCK They are:
1. Knowledge of representations of subject matter
2. Understanding of students conceptions of the subject and the learning and teaching implications that were associated with the subject matter.
3. General pedagogical knowledge (teaching strategies)
4. Curriculum knowledge
5. Knowledge of educational context.
6. Knowledge of purpose of education.
(Shulman, 1987)

Some other fun facts of PCK are:
- PCK combines theory, learned during teacher preparation and experiences gained from on going school activities.
- PCK is influenced by the background of the teacher and the context in which they work.
- PCK is deeply rooted in experiences of students and their families as well as their communities.