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Sunday, April 4, 2010

Prompt #2 : Shor

http://www.infoworks.ride.uri.edu/2009/pdf/usinginfo/28158E-info.pdf

My classroom is pretty diverse. The students are mostly Hispanic and African American, but there are two or three White and Asian students as well. There are about sixteen students in the classroom, with twelve of them being boys. According to info works, ninety percent of the school is eligible for free or reduced price lunch. Knowing this data and going off looks, I am guessing that most of the children’s families are in the lower class range. None of the students in the school are receiving English as a second language, but twenty five percent are bilingual. This is interesting to me because I have heard two of the students in my classroom speaking Spanish to each other. The entire school is just as diverse as my classroom. Info works says that the school is 59% Hispanic, 31% African American, 6% White, 3% Asian, and 1% Native American. This is very different than the school system I grew up in, this school being much more diverse with all different races.

On info works, it says that eighty four percent of the students in the school do not receive special education services. The other sixteen percent is self contained special education and special education students with support. In the classroom that I am in now, there are no special education students. But I was in a different classroom the first week where there were two special education students and there was one aid in the room to help.

With all these differences throughout the classroom, I can tell that sometimes the teacher has a difficult time getting through to all the students. They are all at different levels of reading, writing, math, etc and you can see this when observing the classroom. The teacher really has to use different methods and take the extra time to make sure each student is able understand the lesson. Each child comes from a different background and different family life, so you never know, as a teacher, how the students are going to respond. The first or second time that I was in the classroom that I am currently tutoring in, the teacher was just beginning a new science unit on weather. She gathered everyone at the rug and went through all the different tools they would be using for the next month or so in this unit. There were about fifteen or twenty tools she wanted to show them; things like thermometers and how to measure rain water. Going over these things would seem like a quick and easy task, but it actually took her about 45 minutes to an hour to finish. This was because for each tool, every child had something to say about it and each had a different way of looking at it. I found this to be very interesting because it shows that each child has something different to bring to the classroom environment.

This goes along with what theorist Ira Shor said about participatory classrooms. Participation in a classroom is very important because it uses interaction between students and the teacher, and the flow of ideas. Shor says that this is the type of classroom that we need, unlike a passive curriculum, which instead will prepare a student to follow, not lead. My classroom is quite interactive. Discussions like the one I mentioned above have happened almost every time I have been there so far, and I can tell the teacher truly tries to have them as often as possible. It is important to get that participation in the classroom, as it connects with a democratic point of view, having both students and teachers working together on certain tasks. Shor argues that participation can work against the endullment of students’ minds. The teacher in my classroom is doing just that; working against endullment and helping the students to have a voice in their classroom.

3 comments:

Jennifer said...

I completely agree with your post. The school is very diverse and I notice more differences between the experiences i've had in my own school and experiences there. My teacher is the same way. She really tries to find ways for every student to understand the lesson. She puts them in groups based on their common weaknesses and has them work together to figure out the assignment. I really think it works becuase every week I see more imporvement with my group of students. I connected this experience to Dewey and how he said that not every student learns the same. Teaching traditionally and by a script, for many students, doesn't interest them or really have them learn. But participating and changing the lessons up to be a little more fun and interactive, i've seen through my service learning, helps students learn and develop more.

Becca Dee Marie said...

psssst. you might want to take down the link. it gives away the name of the school.

Gerri August said...

Pertinent and strong connection to Shor, Sam. Today the students feel invited to build a conversation about weather; tomorrow perhaps they will feel they can contribute ideas about history or ecology or school policy. Good stuff.

Keep me posted,
Dr. August