1 / 42

Thoughts on Teaching

Thoughts on Teaching. Cell Phones. Topics Covered. Language Attitudes Best/Worst Teacher Expectations General Thoughts. THE FIRST YEAR AT NMSU SYLLABI AVAILABLILTY TESTS GAIN THEIR ATTENTION PACE AND CONTENT. WE TEACH STUDENTS (PEOPLE) NOT MATHEMATICS, ENGLISH,

luke-boyer
Download Presentation

Thoughts on Teaching

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thoughts on Teaching Cell Phones

  2. Topics Covered Language Attitudes Best/Worst Teacher Expectations General Thoughts

  3. THE FIRST YEAR AT NMSU SYLLABI AVAILABLILTY TESTS GAIN THEIR ATTENTION PACE AND CONTENT

  4. WE TEACH STUDENTS (PEOPLE) NOT MATHEMATICS, ENGLISH, SCIENCE, ENGINEERING …

  5. PLACES FOR LANGUAGE USE • HOME LANGUAGE • SCHOOL LANGUAGE • ACADEMIC LANGUAGE • PROFESSIONAL LANGUAGE

  6. Identify a key concept from your academic discipline that when first introduced was difficult to understand (i.e., in government, the concept of “Due Process”)

  7. Often Used IdiomsA fixed, distinctive, and often colorful expression whose meaning cannot be understood from the combined meanings of its individual words, for example, “to have somebody in stitches” TWO PEAS IN A POD PRIME THE PUMP PUT YOUR HEADS TOGETHER BIT OFF MORE THAN HE COULD CHEW FOUGHT TOOTH & NAIL

  8. Often Used Idioms (cont’d) • SLIM CHANCE/FAT CHANCE • SANCTUARY • DO YOU HAVE A CASE • UP THE CREEK WITHOUT A PADDLE • DIAL THE PHONE • “Side Kick”

  9. Define these academic terms: LACHRYMOSE NOCTURNE PYROLYSIS GALLUSES “WITHITNESS”

  10. ATE AACTE NCATE NCSS ABD ASCD UCEA CEC CACREP Professional Acronyms

  11. LITERATURE MATH HISTORY SCIENCE

  12. Student Attitudes Toward • Teacher/Instructor • Subject • Their ability to succeed • Attitude toward presentation style

  13. Identify Characteristics of Excellent Teachers

  14. EXCELLENT TEACHING TRAITS HIGH EXPECTATIONS METHOD OF PRESENTATION PERSONAL INTEREST INTELLIGENCE RESOURCEFUL TIMING WAS GOOD

  15. EXCELLENT TEACHING TRAITS PREPARED ASK STUDENTS TO THINK AT DIFFERENT LEVELS ENTHUSIASTIC RESPECT EXHIBIT LOVE OF TEACHING SHOWS INTEREST IN STUDENTS

  16. Identify Characteristics of Poor Teachers

  17. POOR TEACHING TRAITS NO SENSE OF HUMOR NOT TEACHING SUBJECT MOOD SWINGS - INCONSISTENT DID NOT GIVE DIRECTION PUT DOWNS

  18. POOR TEACHING TRAITS TOO STRICT/AFRAID/BULLYING CONTRADICT AND EMBARRASS STUDENTS DID NOT EXPLAIN UNORGANIZED ONE TEACHING STYLE NEVER KNOW WHERE YOU STOOD

  19. Expectations…

  20. Teacher ExpectationsRelated to High Achievers vs. Low Achievers

  21. Expectations • In Israel, Babad and Taylor (1992) conducted a study that focused on non-verbal communication. Eighty-five people, ranging from 10 years old to experienced high school teachers, viewed Israeli teachers interacting in Hebrew with students. Using only teachers’ facial expressions and body language, judges were able to distinguish between the high-and low-expectancy students.

  22. EXPECTATIONS 1 • A student is seven years old. He cannot read. His mother tells you he didn’t speak until he was four. • A music teacher tells a student he is hopeless as composer. • A cartoonist is fired by his newspaper editor because he has “no good ideas.” • A student is rated as “mediocre” in college chemistry.

  23. EXPECTATIONS 1 (cont’d) • In the store where he works, a man is not allowed to wait on customers because he “doesn’t have enough sense.” • A teacher tells a student he is too stupid to learn anything. • A boy fails sixth grade • A soldier enters a war as a captain and leaves the war a private.

  24. EXPECTATIONS 2 • Born in Cuba, fled the revolution led by Castro, came to the United States and did not speak English. • His father had to drag him out of the house to attend school in the first grade. He did not speak English and therefore he did not speak a word in school for months.

  25. EXPECTATIONS 2 (cont’d) • She was born into a poor family in Brooklyn, NY, was sent to live in Barbados with her grandmother because of family financial problems. • Born a slave and forced to do adult jobs at a young age, was struck in the head by an overseer that caused her to fall into a coma.

  26. EXPECTATIONS 2 (cont’d) • His father was a waiter and when he attended school he was usually in some type of trouble because he argued with teachers. He was denied admittance to law school because of his race. • Was one of the first women admitted to Harvard Law School and was told “Do you realize that you are simply taking the place of a qualified man?”

  27. EXPECTATIONS 2 (cont’d) • She did not speak a word of English when she entered grade school. Both her parents were immigrants and neither parent had any type of formal education.

  28. GENERAL THOUGHTS HELP STUDENTS VISUALIZE PHYSICAL EXAMPLES STUDENT PARTICIPATION VARY TEACHING ACTIVITIES DEMONSTRATE HOW YOU THINK ABOUT SUBJECT

  29. GENERAL THOUGHTS PACE & CONTENT ATTITUDE TOWARD SUBJECT CURIOSITY/SUSPENSE ENERGY/ENTHUSIASM EXPECTATIONS

  30. A PENCIL’S STORY • Symbolically • Misinformation • Science • Math • History • Economics • Literature

  31. Beginning of supplemental materialsNot part of basic package

  32. ATTITUDE TOWARD SUBJECT STUDENT PARTICIPATION CURIOSITY/SUSPENSE DISTURBING/CONTRASTING INFORMATION

  33. FEEDBACK ENERGY/ENTHUSIAM TAKE RISKS CONCERN FOR STUDENTS EXPECTATIONS

  34. VARY TEACHING ACTIVITIES FOCUS ATTENTION HELP STUDENTS VISUALIZE INTEGRATE TECHNOLOGY USE PHYSICAL EXAMPLES ACTIVE PARTICIPATION

  35. DEMONSTRATE HOW YOU THINK ABOUT SUBJECT BRAINSTORMING ACTIVITIES GAMES/SIMULATIONS/ROLE PLAY

More Related