Sunday, September 18, 2016

Task 2: "Practices in the Classroom" Reflection


 I really enjoyed watching Ms. Owens teach her students beginning reading and writing. It reminds me of the similar teaching scenarios I’m currently using in my Pre-K classroom. From what I recall back to kindergarten and 1st grade guided reading, shared reading, read aloud and independent reading were taught to me. Even when I began teaching I use similar aspects to teach and it came from my childhood.

I believe Ms. Owens was very positive to her students and showed a lot of positive reinforcement when they will say an answer. She showed them to speak with courage and not under estimate their answer. I like the fact that from day one she had the same routine with the students and a goal so they can eventually become independent to read, write and express their own feelings on paper.

When it came to her ELL students, I love that she took out time in her lesson and day to put them in a small group and work with them. Many times teachers will not find time to do this or say they will learn from other students. This is totally incorrect and a disadvantage to ELL students. I currently have a group of 5 ELL students only speaking Spanish no English. Every day I put them in groups to go over work and to make sure they understand. I even took out time to label everything in the room in English and Spanish.


I totally agree with the Read aloud technique Ms. Owens does, asking question before you read a book allows the students to think and get their thoughts racing. I also notice it keeps the students intrigued and focus on the book. Every aspect that Ms. Owens used in this video are techniques I have used in the classroom and will continue to expand on.

4 comments:

  1. I also thought Ms. Owen's daily activities with are class are wonderful. Especially how she is so positive when they answer questions or do an activity independently.

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  2. Great point with your statement about routine. When students know they can expect the same thing every day, they start to gain more confidence and can really work towards independence.

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  3. Great point! When routines and procedures are carefully taught, modeled, and established in the classroom, children know what’s expected of them and how to do certain things on their own. Having these predictable patterns in place allows teachers to spend more time in meaningful instruction. Erica- What do you normally do with your ELL after you put them in a group? Do you also put them in heterogeneous grouping? :)

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    1. Depending on the topic for the week we will go over work on that topic, reading and writing, as well review of sounds and letter. This week however I had to go over rules they did not understafnd, I do not put them i`n groups by heterogeneous because they are young and the blending grouping works. I also honestly believe they are all from Central America. So it works out.

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