I want to wish everyone a great winter break. You earned a bit of a vacation this semester. It truly has been a pleasure to get to know all of you. I am a fan of hiring the rookie teacher because you often bring so much energy, ideas, and hope to the table. Our classes revealed to me you all have something to offer in this profession. Please know if you need anything in the future you know where to reach me. Good luck on the exam. Remember...this is an individual exercise. Email them back to me by December 10th. Your file name should be your last name.
These should look pretty familiar
Final Exam: Pick 3. Answers should not be for than 250 words.
1. What is the purpose of having “essential questions and enduring understandings” in unit design? How does this connect modern research on how most people learn? How does it connect to the notion or processing our media rich world?
2. What is the purpose behind the GRASPS acronym and rubric in UbD design?
3. What should a reformed social studies teacher / curriculum look like according to James Loewen? How might you defend using this as supplementary resource in a conservative school district? Why might you defend a conservative position and not employ Loewen’s research or criticisms?
4. Discuss the merits and reservations of using _____________(you select a strategy)in a social studies classroom.
5. How do you make cooperative learning work in the classroom considering the shortcomings you reviewed in the workbook?
___________________________________
How might you answer the below question in an interview? Pick only one.
1. A parent calls up complaining about how their child only learned from the chalk and talk teaching approach. The child was successful in those types of classes in which the teacher required passive learning and memorization. Your class has been taxing to the child because you have employed methods that stem from the spirit of UbD and a constructivist classroom. What would you communicate to the parent to assure them that learning was real in your class? (FYI: real question—and a real situation).
2. Let’s say you were in an interview situation again. Let’s say the district you were applying to arrived at the Classrooms of the Future grant. What might you explain in an interview that makes you the right fit to carry out the district mission of infusing technology using this grant money.
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Everyone's Last Blog
First of all Happy Veteran's Day!!! I have profound respect for our professional military keeping us safe at home and around the world both now and in a historical sense.
This will be the last one for the semester. It piggy-backs off of the last presentations in which we discussed matters of social class and contemporary history. In this blog I would like us to discuss the argument of another scholar--Diane Hess. The article is entitled "Controversial issues and democratic discourse (the PDF file was e-mailed to you). Fitting for us given some of our rich discussions on "what to teach" as a social studies teacher in the 21st Century. After identifying her main "essential questions" and "big ideas" I would like you to express commentary on her conclusions. Think about the potential of controversial issues like Iraq 2003, border control, GITMO, Lewinsky Scandal, pay raises in PA, health care reform...no shortage of issues in contemporary history.
Keep working hard in those important classrooms.
Yours, Mark
This will be the last one for the semester. It piggy-backs off of the last presentations in which we discussed matters of social class and contemporary history. In this blog I would like us to discuss the argument of another scholar--Diane Hess. The article is entitled "Controversial issues and democratic discourse (the PDF file was e-mailed to you). Fitting for us given some of our rich discussions on "what to teach" as a social studies teacher in the 21st Century. After identifying her main "essential questions" and "big ideas" I would like you to express commentary on her conclusions. Think about the potential of controversial issues like Iraq 2003, border control, GITMO, Lewinsky Scandal, pay raises in PA, health care reform...no shortage of issues in contemporary history.
Keep working hard in those important classrooms.
Yours, Mark
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Tuesday Night October 21 Presentation
Teachers: Good class Tuesday night. Hope your week is going well. It has been quiet at Camp Hill since Monday.
I want to take a moment to reflect on J&C's lesson. Specifically I would like you to comment on thier exercises. How effective was the:
Music to open the lesson...did it hook and link? Did it bring us in for a landing?
Review the textbook exercise...
Debate...
Read the article (John Brown) exerise.
See you next week. Wes promises to deliver the best lesson ever.
I want to take a moment to reflect on J&C's lesson. Specifically I would like you to comment on thier exercises. How effective was the:
Music to open the lesson...did it hook and link? Did it bring us in for a landing?
Review the textbook exercise...
Debate...
Read the article (John Brown) exerise.
See you next week. Wes promises to deliver the best lesson ever.
Monday Night Oct 20 Presentation
Hope your week is going well. No more threats to contend with at Camp Hill. Again, I will reiterate some of the most important details to consume wherever you end up are ones that deal with emergency protocol. Know your fire exits, know your emergency routes. Make sure you have your attendance book with you at all times and know where your students are.
Now let's discuss the presentation. They made us consider in stage 3 "beginning activities", "closure activities" and the research on "How People Learn". And of course the topics were John Brown and the "Invisibility of Racism".
Consider the ways they proceeded to accomplish this...evaluate how this group accomplished getting us into the lesson...evaluate how they positioned us to learn about the central ideas to their lesson...and finally comment on their closure exercise.
With regards to the open debates we were having in class over history...was this debate more about our own personal dispostions on the topic of racism or were we being dispassionate of personal feelings toward the topic? Finally...what does Loewen want us to consider and do in the classroom with John Brown and the topic of racism? Why? Do you agree?
Reminder...a friendly one too. When you participate in the blog...you are enhancing your participation score. I read your comments...I know some of you were quiet on Monday...this is your forum to revisit participating.
Have a great weekend. Phillies up 1-0!!!!!
Now let's discuss the presentation. They made us consider in stage 3 "beginning activities", "closure activities" and the research on "How People Learn". And of course the topics were John Brown and the "Invisibility of Racism".
Consider the ways they proceeded to accomplish this...evaluate how this group accomplished getting us into the lesson...evaluate how they positioned us to learn about the central ideas to their lesson...and finally comment on their closure exercise.
With regards to the open debates we were having in class over history...was this debate more about our own personal dispostions on the topic of racism or were we being dispassionate of personal feelings toward the topic? Finally...what does Loewen want us to consider and do in the classroom with John Brown and the topic of racism? Why? Do you agree?
Reminder...a friendly one too. When you participate in the blog...you are enhancing your participation score. I read your comments...I know some of you were quiet on Monday...this is your forum to revisit participating.
Have a great weekend. Phillies up 1-0!!!!!
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Tuesday Night: 2nd Presentation
Great class the other night. Let me start with that. Why I sometimes enjoy this job so much is because I get an opportunity to reflect on my own practice by watching you teach. This group went out of thier way to take the strategy of lecture and fit it to a 21st Century adolecense audience. Here are a few questions I would like you consider as you respond:
As a "student" what kept you engaged in the lesson?
Schools indeed are a battleground for contending values. Once again if you chose to utilize some of Loewen arguments in our instruction we might run the risk of opposition from students or parents. How would you defend your choice to include these ideas to parents or a principal?
Go Phillies!!!!!!!!!
As a "student" what kept you engaged in the lesson?
Schools indeed are a battleground for contending values. Once again if you chose to utilize some of Loewen arguments in our instruction we might run the risk of opposition from students or parents. How would you defend your choice to include these ideas to parents or a principal?
Go Phillies!!!!!!!!!
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Monday Night: 2nd Presentation
Thanks again for your patience with my delay last night and then later allowing the group to finish properly. Their presentation would have fit in neater if I had arrived earlier. We were getting tired and you hung in till the end offering contributions and attention.
1. So let's begin where the group left off. The last item this group offered us was a prompt. The document asks us (the learner) to think big (it is an example of a closure exercise)...What did I learn at school today. What might we say to that question? Keep it limited to 2.
2. From a pedagocical point of view...what might we do with those responses? Why?
3. Suppose you had a child take this view on Thanksgiving home to mom and dad. Mom and dad respond to this lesson with suspicion if not rage. They phone the admin and school board. The results are...the principal want to meet with you...what do you explain to the principal?
The parents want a meeting too...what do you explain to them?
1. So let's begin where the group left off. The last item this group offered us was a prompt. The document asks us (the learner) to think big (it is an example of a closure exercise)...What did I learn at school today. What might we say to that question? Keep it limited to 2.
2. From a pedagocical point of view...what might we do with those responses? Why?
3. Suppose you had a child take this view on Thanksgiving home to mom and dad. Mom and dad respond to this lesson with suspicion if not rage. They phone the admin and school board. The results are...the principal want to meet with you...what do you explain to the principal?
The parents want a meeting too...what do you explain to them?
Monday, October 6, 2008
Tuesday Night: Group 1
You are on "Fall Break". I am back at work. I went to check on the blog last night and saw that the Tuesday night prompt was not published. I forgot to hit "publish" when I wrote it out last week. My apologies for the delay.
Let's weigh in on the presentation from last Tuesday. I am interested in constructive criticism.
D. and Z. presented chapters 1 and 2 in Lies while pronoucing the pedagogical purposes of designing a "beginning to a lesson" and "end" to a lesson.
Could you please comment on how they did that.
A few moments to remind you of the lesson. (I took a few notes)
The "Google Search"
The "Work at the board"
The "Workbook exercise"
The "Exit ticket"
Think of the usefullness of the above as it related to the Loewen chapters.
Hope you enjoyed yesterday's great weather. The Phillies are in...the Eagles...well...my committment is waivering with them...and Penn State is on a path that I like. Wisconsin next week! Finally, check out the debate this Tuesday.
Mark
Let's weigh in on the presentation from last Tuesday. I am interested in constructive criticism.
D. and Z. presented chapters 1 and 2 in Lies while pronoucing the pedagogical purposes of designing a "beginning to a lesson" and "end" to a lesson.
Could you please comment on how they did that.
A few moments to remind you of the lesson. (I took a few notes)
The "Google Search"
The "Work at the board"
The "Workbook exercise"
The "Exit ticket"
Think of the usefullness of the above as it related to the Loewen chapters.
Hope you enjoyed yesterday's great weather. The Phillies are in...the Eagles...well...my committment is waivering with them...and Penn State is on a path that I like. Wisconsin next week! Finally, check out the debate this Tuesday.
Mark
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