Friday, January 31, 2014

Linda's First Week


Dear Dr. Shea  and fellow student teachers,
     This week (January 27- 31)  I have been working on several goals:
     My first goal is to learn all of the students’ names. I have a seating chart for each class, including study halls, and these charts are helping me to learn student names. My cooperating teacher, Jen Deibler, has assigned seats for all classes, so if a student is absent it is very easy to confirm this. If a student is not sitting in his/her assigned seat, I have the authority to ask him/her to sit in the assigned seat. 
     My second goal is to introduce myself to the other English teachers and learn their names.  I noticed the first day student teaching that the English teachers collaborate when planning lessons, quizzes, and tests, and they freely share their ideas and  paper  work with each other.  Jen Deibler asked me to bring a new flash drive so that she could share all the lesson plans, etc. with me. This is an example of the generosity and collaborative spirit manifested by the English teachers here at Manheim Township High School.
     My third goal is to become part of the school community by meeting the other teachers, administrators, and staff, attending any faculty meetings, and supporting the students in my classes by attending their sports, music, theater, etc. activities to show that I care about them.  I have attended the LGBT GSA meeting, the Performing Arts meeting, and have attended some sports activities here at the school. I am at the school from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm with Mrs. Deibler. I could easily be here for twelve hours a day if I attend the after school activities.
     In addition to these three goals, I am also working on lesson plans for Lord of the Flies for Honors English and Animal Farm for College Prep English which I will begin teaching next week. I am currently teaching Canto III of Dante’s Inferno to the Honors English class and leading all of the classes’ discussions on the daily writing prompts (writers’ notebook entries).
     I am practicing co-teaching with Jen Deibler and this is a wonderful way of providing differentiated instruction for students with EIPs, as well as formative assessments of student understanding, throughout the class period.
     I am aware of the necessity for organization and preparation, due to the short class periods, and the energy of the students.
     I have chosen my student with IEP and my student receiving ELL services for our DI class’s case studies, with Jen Deibler’s help.  I am hoping to complete that project early next week.
     I have begun my student case study for this class and am looking forward to sharing it with you.

Best wishes,

Linda Carty

2 comments:

  1. Linda,

    You sound like you are assimilating to your new classroom environment pretty smoothly! From being a part of Manheim Township's community from last semester, I have got to say that I have never felt more welcomed into a communities of learners, professionals, and staff than here. It makes me happy to see the feeling at the high school is the same.

    I LOVE THE LORD OF THE FLIES! Have fun with that unit. One of my fondest memories in high school was completing the summative assessment for that novel. In groups of 5 or 6 we had to role play as the characters from the book in a "One Year Later" episode held on a mock daytime television interview set up in from of the class. I'll never forget the ghost of Piggy that we included in our project! There is so much you can do with that text, so I hope you have fun teaching it!

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  2. Hi Becca,
    I think that for every student who reads Lord of the Flies there is a different fond memory, and for each teacher who teaches the text, there is a different approach to teaching it. I like your idea of interviewing the characters about their experience on the island one year later. You are working collaboratively with me in sharing lesson plan ideas. Thank you for your generosity!

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