Monday, September 27, 2021

Exit Slip September 23, 2021 (Updated)

 

This was a wonderfully engaging lesson. There was something magical about working with your own hands to make something that is seemingly simple but at the same time so intricate and beautifully symmetrical such is the case with rope making. My first rope was a very simple twisted rope and after I mastered that I wanted to try something a little more advanced. At first I started with a simple all one color 7 layer braid that took a few tries to get going and to understand how the braiding actually worked. It was not difficult but you have to make sure to keep track of the procedure of it is very easy to get lost and braid the wrong strand in the wrong order. Once I was confident, I endeavored to create something a little more interesting. I used several colors to create the seven layer braid and that’s when the fun really began for me. I started to notice a pattern emerge in the raid as a braided more and more of the rope. It really made me think of how I can create new shapes and patterns simply by using the strands of ribbon. The structure of something so simple created such detailed and beautiful patterns. I really enjoyed the exercise and when used a classroom setting can really keep students engaged in a math lesson.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Entrance Slip September 23

 There were a few things that made me stop and think when reading the Kallis article and watching the videos.  The ideas of backsourcing, creating fulfillment in our lives and that rope making can be a form of technology really caused me to think more deeply about my lifestyle and my place in society.  I am completely new to the ideas of backsourcing  and un-venting ancestral knowledge and lost skills. I have never even considered that we could be growing useful crops for ourselves and become less reliant on industry. I have always thought of food as just something you buy at the store. While I know that it comes from farmers and such, growing my own food was not something I considered doing or attainable. I really like the idea of the self esteem gained from one’s own creation and that this movement is equally about becoming less reliant on industry as it is about creating fulfillment emotionally, physically and spiritually. I have never considered this until reading this article and it has really changed the way I view consumerism. This being said, I not sure if I’m ready to give up on buying things just yet at the moment. I love my modern conveniences and technology and it was eye opening when I watched the rope making video that rope making is a form of technology. I had really not considered this as when I think about technology, I think mostly of modern technology. But as the video points out, technology is cumulative and even our most modern devices can have roots in the technologies of the past.

Outdoor class reflection

 

I was truly surprised by the structure and content of the class. It was truly eye-opening that a “Math” class could be taught in such a way that was so lively and engaging. I did not realize that seemingly unrelated activities such as sketching items in nature and singing a song can be integrated into the “classroom” in such a meaningful way. I’ve always pictured math class, especially in the university setting, as a place where you sit and learn from a lecturer who is often not really interested in teaching and engaging his/her students. Even the sharing of watermelon in class I feel is an invaluable activity of community building where students and instructors can interact freely and enjoy themselves in a more informal manner. The free-flow structure of having an outdoor classroom and having students move around and become a part of the lesson itself seemed quite foreign to me at first but after experiencing it first hand, it has really resonated with me as a something I could try in my own practice.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

On Becoming a Reflective Teacher

 

Grant and Zeichner’s article “On Becoming a Reflective Teacher” resonated quite strongly with me and there are a few points that really intrigued me. I was struck by the article mentioning the amount a choice a teacher faces. From the choice of style, institutional values and views, to which content to stress as being important, to how we teach to specific groups of children and even our very mindset as to how we go about teaching. I was unaware of the level of influence that a teacher has on a child goes beyond just the classroom and has a huge impact on the student in the future. In the school I worked at previously, the administration stressed that how a teacher conducts him/herself as a person both inside and outside a classroom is equally as important as the actual act of teaching itself; that as a teacher, we are held at a higher standard than the regular person. This completely resonated with me after reading this article where the point was raised that because of relationship between school and society, the consequences of school lay beyond just the classroom and we must be responsible for ourselves and our students understanding the consequences of our teaching.  The article mentions that as a teacher candidate and the as a future teacher, that I must be critical of the information and training provided to me by the institution and at my practicum as there are often inherent biases, viewpoints and knowledge that are all distinct from one another and that I must make my own decisions on what is important to me and how I will approach teaching as a whole. Being reflective in this point will allow me become a better educator and help to further the field of education.

On Becoming a Teacherman

 

What I took away from class was the idea of inquiry can stem from many places. In the video we watched about Frank McCourt, I was inspired by the fact that McCourt truly accomplished the American Dream. He grew up from basically nothing, and through his need for knowledge and education to becoming successful and accomplishing his dreams. It really struck me as the difference of past times to where we are now is that McCourt without any sense of formal education was able to attend a University and become a teacher. That seems like it would be pretty much impossible today. It truly demonstrated that because he was curious and driven by inquiry, he was able to succeed. There was little requirement aside from the pursuit for knowledge itself that is the driving force to success and that this inquiry based approach to learning can be applied at any level especially for ourselves and our future students. The video inspired me to wonder about what education actually means and is the simple pursuit of knowledge enough as the basis of our learning? It caused me to wonder if institutional learning should be the only source of education or is there other forms Education that would work equally as well for different individuals.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Resources Week of January 10th

  Wrigley, W. J., & Emmerson, S. B. (2013). The experience of the flow state in live music performance.  Psychology of Music ,  41 (3), ...