Having
the chance to go spend an entire day at a school as an elementary education
student was amazing. For 350, we observed in a classroom for an entire day to
see how things worked and what a normal day looked like. I observed and learned
many new strategies that I will want to implement into my future classroom. For
410, we had a discussion on integration and what we thought about the whole
integration process.
I
learned so many new things, but I want to talk about just a few that I felt
were very important for furthering my education and being a teacher soon. The
observation really gave me the opportunity to see that integrating technology
and other subjects together can be a seamless process that comes naturally. I
had the privilege of observing a teacher that integrated beautifully. If I wouldn’t
have been walking around and seeing what the students were taking a part of,
then I wouldn’t have known when the next subject was being taught because everything
connected and was taught without gaps. It was so rewarding to be able to see
integration take place and not even realize it, then come into class the next
day for 410 and realize what was happening. I know that this teacher worked hard
in making her classroom this way, but I also know that there will be days when
things don’t go smoothly because of other circumstances.
Being
able to make connections with my observations and how I want to teach in the
future was powerful. It’s nice to be able to see ways that different teachers
do things and pull new ideas from them. Making the connection that the students
don’t need to know that they are actually learning science, history, and language
arts all at the same time brought a sense of comfort to me because that can
hinder a student’s learning. I remember being told it was history time when I
was a student and dreading it because it was not my favorite. However, if history
would have been integrated into language arts, that I enjoyed, I would have
felt better about it.
Being
in an actual classroom and learning what integration is ties into all our
NCTCS. I could see how I need to demonstrate leadership as the teacher, respect
all my students, know what I teach before I teach it, differentiate, and
reflect. Even after graduation, when I’m in my own classroom, these standards
should be a basis for what I believe and how I teach. In my future classroom, I
want integration to be as smooth as it can be. I know this will take lots of
practice, but seeing it take place gives me hope. I want my students to not
worry about the actual subject they are learning. I want them to just be
excited that they are learning new things because the things that don’t particularly
enjoy may be something that I integrated and tied with something else.
For
my outside research this week, I wanted to research ways in which I could
manage my classroom. The classroom I observed was very well managed. I learned
a few of the strategies that the teacher used, but I wanted to research and dig
deep into ways that classroom management is handled. This article has many good
strategies that can help in managing a classroom.