SOAR Day 1
Today I got to sit in on Mr. Spencer's 4th grade summer
reading class. This was an interesting experience for quite a few reasons: 1st
the class times were short, 2nd the
classes varied in number of students, 3rd it was the first day so
the majority of class was introductions, 4th most of the students already
had a firm grasp on English, while others had very low proficiency, and 5th
Mr. Spencer was not an elementary teacher, and today was his first time ever
teaching elementary. This last point was fun to observe, because Mr. Spencer was
trying to adapt his registrar and lesson plans to appeal to a younger learner.
He told me that he had trouble coming up with a lesson plan since he had no
idea what a 4th grader actually found enjoyable to do. Unfortunately
I did not get to see some of his lesson plans since today was focused on administrative
thing, and getting to know one another. But, from what was done in class they
seemed very effective. Most of the class we ran with introductions, Mr. Spencer
lowered the affective filter by telling the students where we are from, how big
our families are, why we are teaching English, and so-on. He then asked the
students about their lives, some students were very vocal, while others were to
shy to speak. Afterward, we did some pre-activities to build schemata through
posing the question “I could not live without (blank)” and asking the students
to think about those necessities that we believe we must have in our lives. I
noticed this helped get the class on track towards the first lesson. One of the
classes consisted of only two Marshallese boys who were very shy, and whose
reading skills were quite low. Therefore, we ignored most of the background
stuff and jumped straight into the lesson. He had the boys distinguish between
the /ou/ sounds and spellings, for example the words; ‘ouch’ ‘brown’ and ‘grow’.
He had them draw a chart to separate each sound and gave them words to write in
each column. After this pre-activity, we opened up a very simple story book and
had the two boys read aloud to us the entire book. We were looking for any pronunciation
errors. The two boys had some difficulties while reading the book, but overall
did very well in pronunciation. Lastly, he gave the boys a copy of the book and
asked them to continue practicing at home. The last class of the day was also
fairly informative, Spencer introduced the book they will be reading for the
week, which was a "reading-level J” (?) story about a some kids who are out to solve a
mystery at a castle in Maine. Since some of the vocabulary was new, Spencer had
the kids think about what the word might mean in reference to a castle – such
as the words “mote” and “drawbridge.” Once the students had a gander at the definition
(some of them knew already) Spencer gave a quick explanation and then showed a
short clip from YouTube to illustrate. He read the first chapter aloud while
the students sat and listened, well most of the students listened others kept
talking. Time went pretty quick, so we had to cut off pretty early. I talked to
Mr. Spencer after class and he was telling me that today was probably as much of
a learning experience for him as it was for me, since it was his first day doing
this. The last thing I want to mention is the student management during school.
It was pretty interesting to see how well the students followed the instructions
of the faculty, but also the techniques used by the faculty to manage them. For
instance, one system at the end of the day had the students line up in certain
parts of the hallway depending on what their transportation was for going home.
Overall, a good experience!
See even an experienced teacher can have new experiences just like you are having. This is really something fascinating to be able to get to see just how he handles that type of situation. How refreshing that you enjoyed it, and based on your reflection of it, you really do understand the factors on how he decided to carry out many of the activities that he did!
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