Posts Tagged teacher

New Teacher Training: Classroom Management – preview.video.3


schoolimprovement.com In their Classroom Instruction That Works research, McREL and Robert Marzano identified nine strategies that can be applied in any learning environment and result in significantly increased student learning. When implemented consistently and correctly, these research-based strategies can provide average percentile point gains as high as 45% on student achievement tests. Although most educators are familiar with the Classroom Instruction That Works research, teachers still need help transferring the theory into practice.

Share

Tags: , , , ,

Teacher suspended for corporal punishment


The head of the Gauteng Department of Education has placed an educator on precautionary suspension pending an internal disciplinary enquiry. The educator is shown on video footage administering corporal punishment on a learner. The department is horrified by the images on the video footage and would like to remind all teachers that corporal punishment is outlawed by the Constitution. A grade 12 leaner at Diversity High in South of Johannesburg who recorded the video says he was punished by the educator with other leaner’s for skipping an Afrikaans class.

Share

Tags: , , ,

New Teacher Training: Classroom Management – preview.video.2


schoolimprovement.com In their Classroom Instruction That Works research, McREL and Robert Marzano identified nine strategies that can be applied in any learning environment and result in significantly increased student learning. When implemented consistently and correctly, these research-based strategies can provide average percentile point gains as high as 45% on student achievement tests. Although most educators are familiar with the Classroom Instruction That Works research, teachers still need help transferring the theory into practice.

Share

Tags: , , , ,

I feel like I got a terrible cooperative student teacher?

Now I did a placement in 7th grade that was tough but I got through it just fine.

Im back at my old HS student teaching and everything has started to fall apart my last week of student teaching. After the fourth week( was incredibly sick but refused to call out), my student teacher bluntly came up to me and said I was boring.( I had observations before that went fine with my supervisor. )

My coop is someone I kinda knew before and honestly did not know what to do with me. She did not make her expectations clear and she was very unhelpful with helping me create new materials( a huge problem I have as a new educator). After a week of calling be boring, like watching paint dry comparing my handwriting to a special kid, and calling out my lesson plans as too vague, she has started saying things like she wouldn’t recommend me for a teacher. She compares me to another student teacher in the building and says Im not as good as them. She also barely gives and strategy to better myself other than “to be an asshole in front of the kids” .

I plan anywhere between 1-3 hours a night for my lessons and now she has started to want them days ahead of time. She criticizes me in front of the kids and says stuff like “Theyre eating you alive and you’re going to have problems” right in front of the kids. She says I have no classroom management but when I observed her for my first week she simply sat down read from an overhead or powerpoint and talked all period or showed a movie that many of the students did not understand why they were even watching. Shes got a real nasty tone and keeps saying things like “you need a another semester student teaching” and I didnt think you have the passion to be a history teacher…you don’t read enough..you seem uncomfortable in front of the class”…IM UNCOMFORTABLE BECAUSE IM WORRIED ABOUT THE NEXT NEGATIVE THING SHE IS GOING TO SAY TO ME NEXT…I mean today she got upset with me because I didn’t know where a website was where a video was…

If you think saying things to a student teacher like you’re boring, there’s something weird about you,calling a lesson a “train-wreck” and not giving suggestions to make it better, you don’t have the spark to teach ,you’ree unprepared(despite coming in everyday with something), you have to be an asshole in front of the kids,telling someone despite 4 years of training and a 1st placement(albeit slightly different) that theyshouldn’t go into teaching ….please let me know because this lady is making me lose sleep at night. Im seriously considering going into a counselor because the things she has said and done are not only incredibly hurtful, but simply seem unprofessional to me and other teachers I tell…
Please tell me your opinion

Share

Tags: , , , , ,

I am a school teacher, and I want to know method for maintaining Class discipline, Can we Plan class disciplin

In India the students are relativly more disciplined tan students of other countries e.g. USA.. Yet, in public schools/ (private schools) the students are more active, adventureous, and more experimental. This leads to more indiscipline.
Additionally. the students are supported by parents against the teachers. Moreover, the police, and the high court always give judgement or take action favouring the students, in case of a dispute.
In view of this, the students have no fear of punishment, or restraints from their parents, thus affecting classroom Discipline.
The school managements also avoid confrontation, thus indirectly putting the problem under the carpet.
In view of this what will be the best strategy for the Class teacher to ensure class discipline, and the best management practise to ensure good class management.

Share

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Substitute Teacher Strategies For Grade 7 and 8 ?

I’ve been a supply teacher for over a year now. Whenever I enter classrooms with kids in grades 6 and under I feel comfortable and I don’t have many classroom management problems However, I also occasional get supply work for grades 7/8 and I have NO idea how to manage them.

Can someone give me advice on how to do things like
- get their attention (somehow “1,2,3 eyes on me” doesn’t seem appropriate)
- How to keep them under control and working while I’m in their class
- Any other advice you can offer!

Thanks!

Are there any little tricks I could use to help manage the class? Like for example with little kids I draw a happy face on the black board and I tell them that if they are rude that I will make it a sad face and they will need to stay in for recess. For the kids who a bit older I have a minute box. If the kids are rude I add minutes to the box and that is how long they stay in at recess. Is there anything like that that will work with 7/8s?

Share

Tags: , , ,

Public schools teacher – what did your training include?

I’ve noticed some teachers on Yahoo Answers ask questions that I thought would be covered in every Teacher Training program! thought it would be interesting to see what different K-12 teachers did as part of the Teacher Training program. This would also help people thinking of becoming a teacher make decisions about their education.

TWO YEAR BACHELOR OF EDUCATION DEGREE

Entrance requirement: Bachelor’s degree & GPA ~ 3.2

Semester One: two days per week observing classes in a real school, two days on campus. Classes dealing with child development, brain research, classroom management, assessment, learning styles and theories, diversity education and ethical issues.

Semester Two: Still two days of observation in a school, plus two days of classes dealing with curriculum in our chosen subject area. Grade-by-grade curriculum analysis, unit planning, lesson planning and teaching strategies.
Semester Three (Year 2): Four days per week of teaching in a school while observed by a classroom teacher, and one day per week of discussion on campus.

Semester Four: Student-selected options on campus. Choices include special education, counseling, ESL, gifted education and educational leadership.
I go to a top-level university. Bachelor of Education degrees are awarded in two years FOLLOWING the completion of a first Bachelor’s degree.
I don’t know what you people are thinking. ALL CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES (that have Education programs) offer post-degree Bachelor’s of Education degrees in either twelve or sixteen months of full-time studies (not counting summer break). You don’t have to get it from the same university you did your first undergraduate degree in. I think it’s a pretty sad state of affairs when people can’t see beyond their own local borders.

Share

Tags: , , , ,

Powered by Yahoo! Answers