Thursday 21 March 2013

Getting started

My first reflection on my blog! Getting started with this made me think of the way I got started with my group this year. So, here's what I've noticed about this year's starting points:

Starting Junior School
The first week was quite complicated in terms of organization and relationships. Futhermore, keeping the students awake and on task in the classroom was a real challenge. By the end of the second week, however, students had understood and incorporated many of the new routines of Junior School, such as the chant to line up, the songs we use for greetings every day (Hello and Goodbye), how to proceed when the teacher is calling the roll, and to discriminate between classwork before and after breaktime (assembly and written work, though of course these are not the names they associate with them).
In the third week we started to systematize the statement of Learning Intention and Success Criteria, and the results are already visible: students expect to "plan the day", and they enjoy providing feedback on the tasks and their performance. When they help me write the "plan" on the blackboard, they use English effortlessly, as the words are familiar to them.

Diagnosis Project: Brown Bear, Brown Bear, what do you see?
This year we have decided to change the focus of all the projects, to make them more related to the students' experience. The first project was supposed to be Winnie the Witch, and we had agreed on a lot of fun, hands-on activities for it... until we got to know that the project had already been exploited in Kindergarten. It was quite frustrating, and we had to think of a quick and efficient solution. We decided to use the book "Brown bear...", by Bill Martin Jr., as we had done last year, but with a twist -new activities, new dynamics, new focuses.
So far, I've noticed that students like the story, and they have learnt it practically by heart. They say it with the same tune I use when I read, which, I've also noticed, is different to the one the majority of the readers in youtube use. My version is quite quick, but makes a kind of chant, so it's easier for the students to follow. A tangible result of this project is that students have incorporated the use of adjective + noun (e.g., brown bear), and they tend to "correct" me if I say only one part of the chunk.
In relation to dynamics, students seem much more engaged in the type of activities we've been doing this year, such as group work, artistic tasks, experiments, etc. But it is very difficult to organize these activities, to lower the students' levels of anxiety before and after the tasks, and to "control" their behaviour. I am working on these aspects, trying out different strategies.

Let's see how it works out...


5 comments:

  1. I admire 1st form teachers! They are the backbone of primary school. Amazing that my kids do what they do, know primary routines thanks to teachers like you who make a great effort to get them organized.
    It's a pity Winnie the Witch could not be, but as usual things don't turn up the way we generally expect. We, as teachers, need to be on the alert to expect the unexpected! ha ha ha. Anyway, brown bear is also a lovely story and sts enjoy it a lot!
    Good luck!

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    1. Thanks, Dai! "Expect the unexpected" might as well be our motto... I see T-shirts and mugs with the catchy phrase in Teachers' Lounges everywhere in the near future... haha!

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  2. JAJAJA You make me laugh!!
    Lovely present for teachers' day! ajajjajajaj

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  3. Male,
    I've been there too, though some time ago...hahaha.
    Teaching first formers implies doing really hard work, but the satisfaction is SOOOOOOOO big after winter hollidays, not to mention the end of the year, that it's absolutely worth it.
    First form teachers set the ground/ base children will stand on for the rest of their lives! What a challenge!
    In my opinion, it's all about LOVE and patience and trying out different strategies till you get THE ONE for a certain situation (and group or student!).
    The unexpected is part of our job, isn't it?? We must be ready for it and for making mistakes as well. Is there any other way of growing and improving?
    LOve,
    Ceci

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  4. Girls! Thanks for your contributions! I do agree that love and patience are the words but I would include two more, flexibility and awareness.It is only by creating strong bonds that we show affection and so we wil be ready to teach and they will be able to learn.
    By the way I will consider the mugs for teachers´day

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