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Reflection



Reflection about my future.


I decided to be a teacher because I want to educate students, to teach them not only about my subject matter, but about being better human beings. As we can see in Spranger (1948), an educator goes beyond teaching only a subject; it is a total of various aspects regarding the transformation of a simple person into an integral being with qualities and ways of thinking who can become a model to other people, in this case, the students. That is why I decided to be a teacher, because I want to be a model with which students can identify themselves, and if not, they, at least, can take something good from me to apply to their own lives. Teaching makes this society progress and why not making that progress happen with people having better personal qualities and better education, because education doesn´t mean knowing more about any topic, but being, at least, respectful to the others and coherent with our words and acts.

Pitifully, as I want to “change the world” from my classroom, there are some people (meaning little kids) who come to class with family and every-day life issues. That is a thing that I wouldn´t enjoy from my practice as a teacher, because little kids are not guilty for the mistakes a grown up commits, but in many times they suffer the consequences. I want to help them all, I want to listen to them, and I want to be consequent with what I said in the previous paragraph: I want kids to see me transforming their lives, I want them to remember me as their helper, their caretaker, their educator; their hero. I want to raise my head one day when I have grown older and say “I have done a good job. These kids are indeed the progress of this country and I am proud to contribute to that.”
I know this is something unusual, but I will refer to the song “how many tears,” played by the heavy metal band called Helloween, in their 1985 album called Walls of Jericho, which says “In other worlds the children die lacking food, ill from a fly. Oppressed by troops to tame their land, it's all the same again.” It is unfair that children feel the weight of those whose ambition goes above the other´s human rights. If I do a good job from my classroom, this kind of persons won´t grow up in the future. I know that thinking that way is something idealistic, but isn´t “Plan Nacional de Bilingüismo” that way?


According to what I said, I want learners who reflect, who construct knowledge into the classroom; I don´t want to give them everything in their hands to let them become easygoing. I want to give them the basics of what I´m teaching and then they have to realize the rest, making in that case that they internalize the information, and then, they will talk about it properly; they will indeed learn. Thanks to that learning I, the same as the students, will become transformative intellectuals, Giroux (2001). We all will be very critic, good analyzers, and will rule our world called the classroom. My students and I will face the world with our heads held high and any problem that try to trespass against us, we will overcome finding solutions to all of them.

Finally, I have found that I have some problems when standing in front of the class. One of them is that known as authority. Of course I know that my role is not the one of punishing my students or shouting at them, but I am the one who must take control in the classroom, and I have seen that my students don´t see me as a worthy of respect as the one who directs them.


Other thing that I have to improve is the way I teach. I´m not saying that I will cover all Gardner’s multiple intelligences in one class, but I have to start thinking about being an integral teacher, thinking in all the student´s ways of learning. That is maybe something exaggerated, but knowing the ways my students learn, I will make that, what I said in the previous paragraphs, become coherent. My role as a teacher, then, is to be a good model for my students, helping them with any issues that struggle them; making them reflect upon everything seen in class and making them know that, as I am not going to punish them, I am the one who commands in the classroom and they have to respect me. If I achieve those goals, I’m sure that my life and my future as a good teacher will be certainly to envy by people.



With my partners, we decided to make a scavenger hunt regarding teacher dispositions. We four worked via Google docs to develop the activity, now that, due to problems regarding time to we all gather, that was the best way we could work. We all helped developing this scavenger hunt, taking some time to reflect, to make abstracts of the ten principles given to us by the teacher, to build up the questions implied in all the ten principles, and lastly to revise and organize grammar mistakes.
As the teacher considered that this scavenger hunt was the best way of presenting the final term exam, she told us to make a rubric to grade our peers in the final discussion taken in the classroom, after a week they had to collect gather all the information that answer the questions quoted after each principle.
The grading experience was really pleasurable, because doing that with our own classmates made us feel like their teacher. We all took notes in order to have more reliable criteria to grade them, making the experience more interesting. At the end, we all graded our peers and gave the rubrics to our teacher, so she could face those grades with hers and take a last grade for her students. Doing this activity was very enrichment and special for us, the builders of this great activity.

While doing the activity in the classroom, all my friends were saying things so important to build a great environment in the English classroom that I thought about hundreds of things of how to be a great teacher, and at the same time, I realized that I am just a poor boy trying to get to the surface of teaching. This class has helped me a lot to think, rethink, construct, deconstruct, blame me, congratulate me, and to face a lot of "bad" and good things that can happen in my head at the same time. Sometimes I thought about my future as a teacher, but everything in my head was wrong. Then, like an act of magic, my mind became enlighted and I wanted to change the world starting from my classroom. Fundamentos III, specially Liliana, my teacher, had thought me so many things about my future as teacher that I can't imagine receiving this course with a different teacher. Classes like this should never be forgoten.


PRINCIPLED DISPOSE TEACHER SCAVENGER HUNT


To create a Principle disposed teacher, you need some important aspects that are considered when teaching. One of the objectives of this scavenger hunt will be to help you create your own discourse to face your future role as a teacher, and the other one is that you reflect upon the intention of each principle in order to define them accurately. Some of them can be part of the teacher’s personality; other can be part of teacher’s beliefs, or can come from teacher’s preparation.

This scavenger hunt is designed for people from the course Fundamentos III, in the English Teaching Program at FUNLAM. For collecting data, you must gather elements that represent the principles that correspond to dispositions. For collecting such information, you must move around the university and take advantage of the different tools you have around it, including the library, the computers’ lab, and teachers. Written information is only one option; pictures, recordings, and other strategies that you prefer are also suitable. The time of this scavenger hunt will be established by the teacher in charge.

Notice that each principle has a question for the students to reflect. At the end of this activity, all students will have a discussion that helps for understanding and clarifications about the topic. From this discussion will emerge the information to evaluate the student’s job, as well as their self assessment in terms of collaborative work, involvement and attitude to face the activity.



Steps to develop the scavenger hunt:


PRINCIPLE 1: Clear awareness about the tools and strategies: Look for elements that are important to create opportunities for learning. Why are these important?

PRINCIPLE 2: Comprehension about student’s learning styles and context. What might be an appropriate environment for teaching and learning? Describe some elements to have into consideration.

PRINCIPLE 3: Adaptation to the different ways of teaching into the same topic. How do I adapt my teaching to facilitate students learning? Ask one of your teachers for characteristics that best adjust the situation.

PRINCIPLE 4: Implementation of meaningful information in all the classes and foster critical thinking. How would you represent the kind of teaching strategies that are suitable to encourage students into real situations for an appropriate communicative competence?

PRINCIPLE 5: Comfortable and positive social interaction environment. Look for relevant information that shows how to provide social interaction into the classroom. How can social interaction enhance the learning process?

PRINCIPLE 6: Effective communication to foster interaction in the classroom. What are the characteristics of effective communication? What are some strategies to work strongly in the interaction of students?

PRINCIPLE 7: Good planning taking into account the knowledge about the classroom context. What are some elements to take into account to connect planning with curriculum and community? How to get students become aware of the importance of the social transformation?

PRINCIPLE 8: Formal and informal assessment to support students’ growth. Look for some clues that will be useful when assessing students. What are the criteria of an appropriate assessment?

PRINCIPLE 9: Reflection upon the daily practice impact in order to grow professionally. To what extent does the role of the teacher participate in the affective schemata of students? How does the teacher take part of  the affective schemata in the students in a positive way?

PRINCIPLE 10: Foster relationship among the educative community (students, teachers, parents, administrative part and organizations) that surround the institution to support learning and well-being. Think of some ideas that are important to create engagement and the strengthening to work all of the as a team work.




As Fundamentos III helps constructing a better reflective perspective of our practice as teachers, we students were ask to interview our classmates about their experience teaching in their practicum or as a job. We were free to ask anything we wanted, so I decided to reflect my experience teaching in a high school in the questions that I made to my partner. The friend that I asked those questions was Alejandro (I won’t write his last name because I didn’t ask him about letting me write his name here) and he, with no problem, answered the questions. For me, these questions helped me know that I am not the only one that has suffered good and bad moments at school, and as a reflection, I decided to think more about my students and not about me, now that in my practicum I, sometimes, have thought about my own “sanity” by letting my students make anything they wanted to do in class if that made me feel good in class, even if I that related to not having to give class to the students. As a teacher I am helping to build this society’s basis and I can’t allow that those basis grow weaker. Is my task to make strong students in order to have a better place where to live.

The questions are:

1. What do you do to prepare your classes at school, taking into account that sometimes those classes don´t cover enough time to cover the whole planning? If at the end of the term you haven´t covered the whole program, do you evaluate, in the final test, even the topics that weren´t covered in the term, or do you evaluate only what you taught, taking into account that the final evaluations are standardized?

2. What made you become a teacher? What did you feel when you took that decision?

3. How long have you been teaching? Who do you like to teach to: kids, teenagers or adults?

4. What do you do when the class goes out of control, to engage again your students to the class?

5. Do you like your students to be reflective in class or do you give them everything “masticado”? according to your answer, how do you evaluate them?

ANSWERS:

1. Well, time ago, I faced such situation and what I do is to work on the topics that are more important or relevant and of course I evaluate those that were worked. it is impossible to evaluate the ones that were not covered. it is important to organize properly the time and the activities in order to avoid that situation. a good planning is the key for a suitable class developement.

2. I decided to be a teacher because it is a within feeling of passion that I have. I am dealing now with the teachers dispositions to be able to identify how it came out. what is clear is that I love to be a teacher and I will keep on doing it for long. on the other hand, when I made the decision I felt amazing, I felt that it was what I loved and what I love now.

3. my experience in teching is not long, i have been teaching officially 10 months ago in a language institute, before this; i had been teaching on private classes. the population is not relevant for me because I love the fact of teaching to everyone, though i´d prefer to work with adults rather than kids. but either population as well is perfect for me.

4. when my classes are out of control I inmediatelly stop explainning and I stay quetly in front of the class and cross my arms, students inmediatelly look at me and stop the noise. after that, I ask the students what is happenning?

5. I like reflective students but also students that construct knowledge, I evaluate in the way I teach. I for example I have to teach grammar because the conditions ask me for that, so I evaluate grammar. on the other hand, if a teach in other ways, I evaluate like that. it is a matter of been coherent.

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