Blogger has been giving me so much grief on my other blogs, I wanted to start a new teaching blog for my new class. Kidblog is so much user friendlier. Here is my link: http://kidblog.org/TeacherKathysClass/
This is an effort to keep in contact with my students and parents while providing them some supplemental activities.
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Friday, November 1, 2013
My Personal Teaching Philosophy
My personal teaching
philosophy is based on my definition of education, its purpose in society and
the role of the school, the role of the student and the role of me as a
teacher. I briefly mention how such a definition of roles affects my design of
the curriculum and lesson planning as well as maximize learning and classroom
management.
I. Purpose of Education and role of the school
“Liberty without Learning is always in peril and Learning
without Liberty
is always in vain.” (John F. Kennedy).
The
purpose of education is not to be a temporary preparation to get accepted into the next
school, or the right university, or even a high-paying job. Education is a
process, not an end result. Education is
learning about the meaning of life and one’s personal place in the world and
how we can meaningfully coexist with each other. I view the role of the school
in society as a safe beacon of experimentalism, and apprenticeship that
nurtures creativity, democratic values, as well as social reform. Thus the role
of the school is to provide the means of personal growth and transformation for
students (as well as parents and teachers) that will, in turn, preserve what
works in the dominant culture and transmute what doesn’t work into a more
progressive society.
In
order to foster personal growth educators need to be aware that different
learning styles are not inferior or superior. There is no one size fits all
model for an ideal student, and certainly, no one size fits all model of learning
assessment. The role of the school is to assist the student’s own
self-awareness of what learning style serves them best, what are the students’
strengths and weaknesses without an environment of condemnation or judgment. In
a tolerant, inclusiveness society, different personalities are valued because
such diversities complement and enrich the culture. This should be modeled and
begun in the classroom.
At
the end of the day what really matters most in life is our intrapersonal
relationships, our relationships with our community and to the world for the
next generations. The school and the education system have a duty to teach real
core values because so often in mainstream society or in dysfunctional
families, the students may not have such values like respect, tolerance and
inclusiveness as a model.
II. The role of the
student
“Study without desire
spoils the memory, and it retains nothing that it takes in” (Leonardo da
Vinci).
I
view the student as being an integral part of his/her own education and
personal transformation. The student has a personal and social responsibility
to discover and pursue their interests and passions. I assume students value
what interests them as well as value their own personal development, time and
quality of life. They should exercise more voice in their education, be their
own captains and less passive. The student must also come to understand that
contrary to popular culture, education is a process and to not stress about end
results. Meaningful personal growth is not going to happen with temporarily
retaining facts to pass a test that is forgotten in the next semester. I
absolutely believe this kills creativity and the desire to learn. The student
has an obligation to define and charter the goals of his/her education and to
question their learning environment and education system if it is not assisting
them in their development.
III. The role of the teacher
“I am not a
teacher, but an awakener.” (Robert Frost)
My
view of the role of the teacher is consistent with my philosophy on education
and the role of the student. If education is truly a process, then I too am a
part of a process, I too am learning and am also actively engaged in my own
self-transformation and also navigating my relationship with the community and
social reform. As a teacher, I do not value end results like tests scores as the
only dynamic mode of learning assessment or one type of teaching style as the
only means to engage students. As a teacher, I have no desire to force-feed the
truth or facts to passive students. It’s my job to assist the student to
discover the truth for themselves.
In
an ESL environment this translates into reading or listening to thought-provoking material, meaningful discussions, redrafting, creative writing, and
poetry. It is my obligation to model my core beliefs, that we are all God’s
children, and thus each of us is worthy of respect, tolerance, and inclusion. I
as the teacher also have a responsibility to facilitate the student in taking a
more active role in their own education and to integrate their goals with mine.
My superficial goal would be improving the student’s English acquisition,
self-expression in speech and pronunciation and written expositions as well as
fostering a creative voice. On a deeper level, my goal is to provoke
reflection, foster relationships of mutual respect and together transform
society to value peaceful diversity.
IV. Curriculum design and
classroom management to maximize learning
“The secret
in education lies in respecting the student.” (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
I
truly believe the student has the capacity and moral obligation to be
dynamically involved in their own education. I respect the student enough as an
individual on their own journey of transformation that when I design the curriculum
or lesson plan, I am using their own interests in mind. In the classroom, this
means fewer tests and more projects or practical assessments like role play or
outside the classroom with field trips into the community. In an ESL classroom
I would teach by conversation and they would teach each other by group discussion,
role-play and projects. I am resourceful and can tailor lessons to students’
interests and in turn assist them in discovering their passions and strengths.
I am prepared for my lessons but not stringent in executing them if it “isn’t
working.” It’s good to have a plan but also be flexible, the students aren’t
robots and what works one day may not work the next. At a very basic foundation
for classroom management are the values of self and mutual respect. This means
following social norms of politeness, being a gracious listener and allowing
space for everyone to have his/her voice of self-expression.
When
I design curriculums or lessons I usually center the subjects (reading,
writing, grammar, speech, etc.) on a theme or intersecting themes of students’
mutual interests. I have found this to
be a more holistic approach to learning and teaching material. It engages
different students with very different learning styles and is more interesting.
For example, I recently taught a theme for four weeks on Foods of the World. We
studied the cuisines of Italy ,
Mexico , the Middle East, and India . When we
studied Mexican Food, for example, I introduced the native foods they were
already familiar with (corn, chocolate) and new foods (tortillas, refried
beans). They learned a traditional Mexican Hat Dance as well as the song “La Bamba ”, their reading was a recipe for chips
and salsa (which they later made and ate) and they painted 3-dimensional cactus
paintings with toothpicks and red crepe paper. At the end of the week, we had a
fiesta with a piñata of the Mexican flag they had made and a lunch with cheese
burritos and of course chips and salsa. During all of this was group discussion
and had their writing been as proficient as their speech, I’m sure they would
have written complimentary compositions on what they learned about Mexican food
or what the liked or disliked.
V. The challenge
I
realize that Chinese/Taiwanese culture is the dominant culture and that
traditional Confucius family values are the dominant ideal. I believe in
Democracy and alternate views of Democracy and am fascinated by the democratic
ideals of Taiwan
are integrated into ingrained ancient Chinese philosophies. I also see it as a personal challenge as a teacher to promote, give a voice to alternate
subcultures and family structures in Taiwan , like aboriginal cultures
and single-parent households for example, and include them in the education
process. I hope society would become more diversified and those differences
to be more represented and respected as a result of my place as a teacher.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)