Use Primary Language or Code Switch
By allowing students to switch between their primary language and English, students may be able to remember more of what they learned. It also helps them become linguistically savvy. Students will be more apt to try writing or speaking in the new language because they know when they get stuck or confused they can switch back to their native language. It is said to "facilitate self esteem to be maintained, stress to be reduced, and education to be a positive experience. I think this should apply to Appalachian dialects as well. These students can use their language while trying to incorporate prope English into their vocabulary. I feel this would be beneficial to those students as well.
Reading Aloud: Student-centered vs. Teacher-centered
In teacher-centered, the lesson is focused on what the teacher asks and wants the students to know. This teacher expects students to listen without speaking, raise their hands and that will determine if they know the answer. The student-centered allows the students to facilitate what questions are being asked and what direction the conversation goes in. This checks for understanding by allowing students to develop their understanding.
Retrieved from https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:_5palgT26a4J:media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/24/EHEP0005/EHEP000524-1.pdf+getting+to+know+your+students+interview&hl=en&gl=us&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESihbHTui0felcMHojEsBpnh8z7NAdzADlw2OA4q9Vocu4GnsE9vU6W8FAkura70mCyuOla1xOr-rr-Fx2SClUgdkg0vR_t62WIa7eI5Xv0hb-0RJGU6wkBN550lYlezIl_CDQ0s&sig=AHIEtbQinv4Hao96DU6foV8n3HZ8ybE5Ng&pli=1 pages 58-66
Using Appalachian Literature
http://www.carolhurst.com/subjects/appalachia.html
This website has titles of literature, uses, how to engage the literature and other ways to include it in the classroom.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Culturally Responsive Reflection
Culturally responsive teaching is a type of pedagogy that acknowledges the importance of including the students’ cultural references in all of their aspects of learning. (Teaching Diverse Learners. (2006). Principles for Culturally Responsive Teaching. Retrieved from http://www.alliance.brown.edu/tdl/tl-strategies/crt-principles.shtml). The digital photo story we did in class was a culturally responsive assignment because: it allowed for different performance modes other than traditional pencil and paper essay or exam, it helped to build a community that respects individual differences and interests as we watch each others digital stories, and it was a type of instruction to accommodate our various developmental needs and learning styles.
First, the digital photo story allowed for different performance modes by allowing us to use the computer to create this assignment rather than writing it or finding actual pictures to cut and glue. Instead of using power point to create the assignment, we were able to use and experience this new program. This is an authentic, real-life assignment that allowed us to create and use information that we are familiar with and actually experience. Louis Moll and his Funds of Knowledge would appreciate this. Moll felt that you could gain a better understanding of your students by seeing them in their cultural element (Moll, L. (1992). Funds of Knowledge for Teaching: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes and Classrooms. Theory into Practice, 31(2), 132-141. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/1476399). By assigning a photo story that is to be a representation of who we are, it is an open-ended assignment that allows for many different answers.
Second, the photo story helped to build a community between our classmates that helps us to respect individual differences. We got to learn about various activities like hunting, fishing, other outdoors activities, sports, and many others. We were able to learn a lot about the entire class in a relatively short amount of time. By learning about other people, we could dispel some of those cultural deficits associated with West Virginia, its land and its people. Instead of looking at the bad things, deficits, we were able to find the good things with are the cultural capital of the people and land. “Tall Tales of Appalachia” said that the people who came into the area thought of us as “backward” people and felt they needed to correct us (O'Brien, J. (2003, May 10). Tall Tales of Appalachia. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/10/opinion/tall-tales-of-appalachia.html) These photo stories allowed us to ignore the views of outsiders and truly appreciate what we have. They also gave each of us a voice. We could use that voice to tell who we are, where we are from, and how proud we are of both of those.
Third, the instruction was able to accommodate various developmental needs and learning styles. Some people can’t just sit down and tell you all about their lives. However, if given the chance, they can sit down, right out some information, find images, and put together an amazing photo story. Some people are way more comfortable using images to explain things than using words. For kinesthetic learners, the act of actually putting together the photo story was the perfect task. The pictures and music was beneficial for the aural, read/write types of learners. Visual learners could see the words and the images and use those. Each type of learner was met by some aspect of this assignment.
First, the digital photo story allowed for different performance modes by allowing us to use the computer to create this assignment rather than writing it or finding actual pictures to cut and glue. Instead of using power point to create the assignment, we were able to use and experience this new program. This is an authentic, real-life assignment that allowed us to create and use information that we are familiar with and actually experience. Louis Moll and his Funds of Knowledge would appreciate this. Moll felt that you could gain a better understanding of your students by seeing them in their cultural element (Moll, L. (1992). Funds of Knowledge for Teaching: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes and Classrooms. Theory into Practice, 31(2), 132-141. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/1476399). By assigning a photo story that is to be a representation of who we are, it is an open-ended assignment that allows for many different answers.
Second, the photo story helped to build a community between our classmates that helps us to respect individual differences. We got to learn about various activities like hunting, fishing, other outdoors activities, sports, and many others. We were able to learn a lot about the entire class in a relatively short amount of time. By learning about other people, we could dispel some of those cultural deficits associated with West Virginia, its land and its people. Instead of looking at the bad things, deficits, we were able to find the good things with are the cultural capital of the people and land. “Tall Tales of Appalachia” said that the people who came into the area thought of us as “backward” people and felt they needed to correct us (O'Brien, J. (2003, May 10). Tall Tales of Appalachia. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/10/opinion/tall-tales-of-appalachia.html) These photo stories allowed us to ignore the views of outsiders and truly appreciate what we have. They also gave each of us a voice. We could use that voice to tell who we are, where we are from, and how proud we are of both of those.
Third, the instruction was able to accommodate various developmental needs and learning styles. Some people can’t just sit down and tell you all about their lives. However, if given the chance, they can sit down, right out some information, find images, and put together an amazing photo story. Some people are way more comfortable using images to explain things than using words. For kinesthetic learners, the act of actually putting together the photo story was the perfect task. The pictures and music was beneficial for the aural, read/write types of learners. Visual learners could see the words and the images and use those. Each type of learner was met by some aspect of this assignment.
Monday, September 12, 2011
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Double Entry Journal #6
A culturally responsive activity that I did occurred this semester. In science methods, we have been discussing the learning cycle. Instead of just telling us the steps of the cycle and what they do, we actually demonstrated it. For example we were discussing the cycle and to learn it, we were talking about circuits and got to work with the circuits and learned the cycle by experiencing and experimenting with it.
Teaching Diverse Learners. (2006). Principles for Culturally Responsive Teaching. Retrieved from http://www.alliance.brown.edu/tdl/tl-strategies/crt-principles.shtml
Resource: Culturally Responsive power point
This power point discusses culturally responsive teaching: what it is and how to do it.
Teaching Diverse Learners. (2006). Principles for Culturally Responsive Teaching. Retrieved from http://www.alliance.brown.edu/tdl/tl-strategies/crt-principles.shtml
Resource: Culturally Responsive power point
This power point discusses culturally responsive teaching: what it is and how to do it.
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Where I am From Photo Story
Here is my final copy of my photo story...finally! (It took multiple tries on youtube and then on blogger to get my video uploaded and the blog posted.
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Double Entry Journal #5
3 Things I learned:
- Writers often talk in order to rehearse the language and content that will go into what they write. I never really thought about this. Writing includes a lot of talk but I never really knew that.
- I learned about all the communication and networking and socialization and considerations that must come together and be utilized for good writing to occur.
- I learned that writing instruction needs to include all of the technologies that could be used as well.
2 Things I Found Interesting:
- That people can indirectly be involved in others writing and not even know it.
- That writers need to think about the physical design of the text, appropriateness and thematic content, integration of sound, etc. along with the actual writing.
1 Question I Have:
- How do you best utilize talk to assist with writng, what type of talk is the most beneficial?
Citation: NCTE Beliefs About the Teaching of Writing. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://docs.google.com/document/d/1kBob4rwoBfMr5KibZlGhE7RopH9ZVrXij2XWhbNzeVk/edit?hl=en_US&pli=1#
Resource: http://www.time4learning.com/teaching-writing.shtml This website gives steps to be used when teaching writing.
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