Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Does Anyone Have Nancy Atwell’s Phone Number?


Lined paper: $3. No. 2 pencils: $2. Colorful pens for revision and editing: $6. Paycheck: $0. The experience of learning to teach writing: priceless.

Being an English teacher, naturally I was excited when I discovered that the first unit I would ever teach was persuasive writing. I love writing, and I love to help others find their voice in writing. The opportunity galvanized me into creating a unit rich with writing workshop activities: writing time, peer reviewing, conferences—the works. Now I know why teaching writing can be an uphill battle. Crashing and burning, and then quickly recovering, in the course of this unit was an invaluable learning experience. I could write extensively on this, but I’ll stick to only a few lessons I learned. Let’s just say I really wish I had Nancy Atwell’s phone number.

The greatest obstacle (not including classroom management) was time. Especially considering that students are not really taught to write these days, I did not anticipate just how much there was to elucidate. My unit of seven days quickly became a unit of ten days. Even then, another week would have done my students well. For example, they did not understand that they had to fully explicate their statements. It was very difficult to articulate to them how to present an idea and exhaust it fully. I finally discovered that telling them to pretend they were explaining their position to a two-year-old child works wonders. Of course, I had to tell them not to write like a two year old.

Also, conferencing always takes far longer than expected. With minimal writing experience, it takes a significant amount of time to help students correct their challenges, even if selecting only the most important aspects of the paper. They all needed a great deal of assistance with composing a good thesis statement, organizing their arguments, fully explaining each new idea, supporting their position, writing topic sentences, using transitions, and writing good introductions and conclusions. Please note: that list does not even begin to touch upon better word choice (they still think “good” and “bad” are acceptable!), spelling, punctuation (commas in particular), verb tense, pronouns, sentence structure (run-on sentences are especially popular), and innumerable other mechanics and usage challenges.

Another challenge in teaching writing was trying to get students to just write. They all wanted to sit and think of the perfect sentence before writing it down. It is as if they think that writing something down is setting it in stone. But then I had an idea… I brought in several of my papers: one revised and edited by a professor, a tenth draft that still had marks all over it, a very first draft, and one that was a first revision. The last was the messiest of them all. I projected them one by one with the document camera while explaining how messy writing is. All I heard was, “wow!” and “ooooooh!” and “geez!” Several students asked if I failed the paper that the professor had marked up, which made me giggle. They were shocked to find I had received an A. It seemed that everything was beginning to click. I highly recommend this strategy, and it would have been most valuable had I thought of it for the very first day.

All in all, I think the unit went very well. My students and I learned a great deal.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Wider Views -- Beth

Something we talked about earlier this week in my seminar class was response to various issues like cheating or disruptive behavior. Our class had several experienced teachers (like over 40 yrs of combined teaching experience) in the room telling us how they have dealt with these types of issues. One experienced teacher stated that we as incoming professionals need to decide what we want our students to walk away with at the end of the semester -- which is hopefully much more than just a better understanding of our content material. In the examples the other teachers gave us, what was clear to me was the ability to listen and be patient with the students and not just assume that the issue’s solution would be black and white. This is not to say the teachers were push-overs. For example, one teacher told us how he responded to irresponsible lab behavior. Instead of banning labs for the rest of the semester (a threat that perhaps was warranted after the poor behavior), the teacher the following day informed the students that he expected adult like behavior in the lab and knew the students could handle this opportunity and that they would be repeating the same lab they did the day before until they could do it correctly. The students then performed as the teacher expected. During my student teaching time I often feel “busy” with all the planning and grading, but this class caused me to reflect on the broader reasons of why I want to be a teacher, to encourage student’s creativity, inquiry, and enjoyment of the scientific world around them, but also the feeling of what it is like to be in a respectful classroom (which I hope I maintain).