My
experience in this class, The Reflective Professional, has been one that
allowed me to realize the importance of reflection upon events and individual
students as a means to meet students’ needs and continually grow at a teacher. What
I learned throughout the course this semester, in addition to the significance
of reflection, is that it is important to understand my own beliefs and biases
and to increase student creativity and right-brained thinking through different
teaching models such as synectics.
We
started this course with a journal which allowed me to reflect on my first
clinical practice experience, in which I put myself in the shoes of my students.
In this journal, I described what it is like for them to be students in my
class and to move through classes in a day at my school site. It was a great
way to start this course and remind myself that it is my duty as a 21st
century educator to try to eliminate the “shuffling” that goes on in public
high schools these days.
In
the 3rd week of the course, both the night and day cohorts participated
in an online dialogue in which we responded to the following prompt: “What are
your biases and how do you mitigate your behavior when working with students?”
This was one of the highlights of the course for me, because it synthesized an
in-class activity with an online-based assignment. Many of the assignments I
had this semester were open to interpretation because there wasn’t much
class-time for discussion. This particular assignment had an entire class
devoted to this topic and it resulted in a very rich experience for all
involved.
I
also had a great time with my model presentation assignment. My group had a lot
of good preparation on the assignment, and got help from Jannis well before our
assignment was due. I thought synectics was the coolest of the different models
presented and thought we did a good job of explaining its aspects and benefits.
I have yet to try this model out in my clinical practice yet, but I will keep
it in my back pocket until I have the right need for it.
I
know I might be going over the one-page requirement , but I wanted to note the appreciation
I have for you reminding us that writing down our thoughts and being creative
through writing poetry or participating
in games such as Two Truths and a Lie are fun ways to create experiences that
will endure in my memory. In addition, I realize that this was semester with an
experiment, and the cohorters were “guinea pigs;” but I appreciate all you guys
did to understand our situation. Being a teacher means being flexible, and you
all emulated that fact. I hope you don’t take it personally when some students
attack the way this semester went. To me, to be that upset shows a lack of
flexibility.
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