The Teaching Life

My journey through the wonderful world of wackiness (otherwise known as teaching)!

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

It worked!

I haven't written in a while because I have been EXTREMELY busy. I am finishing up my fouth week as a pre-k teacher and I am finally starting to adjust. Just to start, starting home living cleaning up fifteen minutes earlier really helps. I have also discovered that having them beat the song helps (it was a suggestion from a fellow teacher.) They like racing to clean everything before the song ends. There is a problem with this, though. I thought I had the perfect song; it got them up, motivated, and they would clean. Problem? They would throw things where they did not belong to finish up and dance to the song, or simply start dancing and not clean at all while the other students cleaned. I tried using a different song today, but it didn't have quite the same get up and go, and to be honest they looked confused. I said "OK, here's our cleanup song. let's clean!" And they looked at me like i had lost my mind. So, I need to find a song that is upbeat enough to get them moving, without making them want to just stop and dance. As well as laying down some ground rules about cleaning BEFORE they start dancing.

Thursday, February 03, 2005

Much Needed Help

After school today the teacher next door pulled me aside to talk with me about the philosophy of the "curriculum" at our school. I don't think that we've been doing anything TERRIBLY wrong, and she didn't say we had, but there are some things that need to change. For example, we have been closing a certain center when it was not cleaned up properly the day before. Closing centers lessens the opportunities for children to problem solve. Instead of closing homeliving, we need to encourage children to problem solve. "Last time you played in home living it took a long time to clean up, are you sure you want to play there today? " or "You want to push the shopping cart? There are already fifteen people there, do you really think you'll have the chance to push it?" Another suggestion that this teacher gave was to have students clean up home living early. I think that having them clean up at nine, instead of nine-fifteen, will really help. We've also decreased the amount of floor space in home living by moving some book cases around. We'll see tomorrow how this works!
There was also something else that I wanted to write about, but I can't remember now! Oh well, if I remember I'll add it on later.

Wednesday, February 02, 2005

"Octopus" starts with O

I am a new teacher in a state-funded pre-k program that is within a private daycare setting. I just graduated in December, and I know that I am extremely fortunate to have found a teaching position in the middle of the school year. Though it has had it's challenges and I expect the challenges to continue, I am gradually adjusting to working with four and five year olds, but I need all the help that I can get. I plan on using this blog to post hints, tips, and tricks that I discover or that are shared with me by the wonderful collegues I am fortunate enough to work with. Any comments about teaching practices and/or discipline procedures would be GREATLY appreciated. I hope this blog is as helpful to others as it will be to myself.
My boyfriend shared a recent post with me today entitled Self Esteem and Encourgement . It basically said that children don't need to be praised for everything good or bad, but praised for their achievements and helped work to improve whatever it is they still need to work on. I totally agree. Praising all students all day long regardless of their achievements means that the praise loses something. It is no longer praise because you are proud of them or because you think they really did a great job and deserve recogniztion: it is praise for praise' sake. On the flip side, I do not think that ANYONE should ever discourage a child or put a child down. There are ways to let a child know that they need to work on things without telling them that they totally stink at it. "I like the way you're really trying, but maybe tomorrow we'll work more on following the lines when you cut something out." This is an area on which I would like to improve, one of the many areas I would like to improve. I'll keep you posted as I journey through pre-k land.