1 / 53

My Museum of Growth, Change, and Connections

My Museum of Growth, Change, and Connections. Presented by: Nicholas R. Baker. Personal Background. Personal Background. -I was born on September 26, 1989 in Roanoke VA. -I was homeschooled up until high school by my mother using a curriculum called Calvert from Baltimore, Maryland.

Download Presentation

My Museum of Growth, Change, and Connections

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. My Museum of Growth, Change, and Connections Presented by: Nicholas R. Baker

  2. Personal Background

  3. Personal Background -I was born on September 26, 1989 in Roanoke VA. -I was homeschooled up until high school by my mother using a curriculum called Calvert from Baltimore, Maryland.

  4. High School Experience -After I was homeschooled I entered into public school by going to William Fleming High School in Roanoke. -While at Fleming I was enrolled in the IB program. -I graduated Fleming in June 2008 with IB college credit in both History and English.

  5. College

  6. Member of the Social Studs 2014 • Within the last 1.5 years within the Master’s program here at Tech I have learned a lot about teaching and applying content to the classroom. • I have also successfully completed both my Early Field Internship Experience and Student Teaching. • During both of my internships I feel I have developed the necessary skills to become a social studies teacher. This will be supported by my evidence supplied in my E-portfolio and within this presentation.

  7. Why I Want To Teach? My Connections Between Content and Life

  8. People

  9. Places

  10. Events

  11. Time

  12. Perspective

  13. WHY?

  14. Why? Connections

  15. Why do I like History? • History has always been my favorite social science subject. • I have always loved to study the issues that plague history such as revolutions, human rights, conflicts, government interactions, and various structures and institutions over time. • I have always been very fascinated by these issues in that they are not dichotomous in that each one of these issues have many different various points of view attached to them.

  16. Teaching Philosophy: Why Do I Want to Teach? I. Student Centered Instruction II. My main goal is to help motivate my students to learn and to appreciate the study of history and to appreciate the social sciences in general. III. I want to help my students to develop the necessary skills to become historical thinkers and to adapt historical pedagogy to their daily lives. IV. The most important component of my philosophy for teaching is for my students to adopt critical literacy/thinking skills necessary to understand the various relationships and complex concepts found within the social sciences. V. I also want to help students to appreciate and to understand the importance of learning.

  17. My Growth As A Teacher

  18. My Growth as a Student Within the Program • I have gone from writing lesson plans to being able to create an entire curriculum map and unit plan. • I have also been able to successfully implement a SMART Goal within the classroom to show students growth. • I have not only done these things but I have also taught an entire 3-4 week unit in both USII and Civics/Econ during my student teaching.

  19. I Have Successfully Completed Two Internships That Have Shown My Growth Early field internship+ Student Teaching= 484 Instructional Hours + 502 Other Activity Hours=986 total hours within the classroom this past year. These two experiences have had a significant impact on me. I have learned so much in regards to both teaching in a high school and a middle school.

  20. Evidence for Student Growth and my Growth As A Teacher

  21. 1st Evidence=Prior Knowledge Paper

  22. 1st Evidence -In the paper I was able to analyze two students at the high school level during my early field experience. -These two students showed the impact that prior knowledge can have on their connection to the content.

  23. Prior Knowledge Cont… -This helped me to examine how various factors were involved in students construction of understanding regarding the content. -I also realized that a students prior knowledge was a source of making connections by the student to the content. -This helped me realize the importance of harnessing the power of prior knowledge within the classroom in order to unlock a students full potential. -I also made my own first connection between instruction and student growth.

  24. Evidence #2 Literacy Paper

  25. Literacy Paper • This paper was created during my teaching methods 1 class. This paper helped me realize the importance of relating content to the students. • This paper supported my claims found within the prior knowledge paper and solidified the idea that making connections is important for students when dealing with the social sciences.

  26. Lies My Teacher Told Me Quote from Literacy Paper • “Students will start learning history when they see the point of doing so, when it seems interesting and important to them, and when they believe history might relate to their lives and futures. Students will start finding history interesting when their teachers and textbooks stop lying to them.” (Loewen, 2007, p. 354) • This quote had a significant impact on both my early field and student teaching experiences.

  27. Quote from How Students Learn History Mathematics and Science in The Classroom “Moreover, learning history entails teaching students to think quite differently than their “natural” inclinations. As Wineburg suggests, historical thinking may often be an “unnatural” act, requiring us to think outside familiar and comfortable assumptions and world views. Such work, then, requires both substantial knowledge and skill on the part of the teacher to help students learn historical content while expanding their capacities to use evidence, assess interpretations, and analyze change over time “(Ashby, Lee, & Shemilt, 2005, p.180).

  28. Evidence #3 SMART Goal

  29. Macro View

  30. My Smart Goal During the latter part of the school year, 100% of my students will make measureable progress in using evidence to support their persuasive writing. By the end of the school year, each student will increase his/her ability to use evidence by one level on the Middle School Instructional Writing Checklist rubric. Student scoring at a “4” in evidence will maintain their score. Furthermore, 85% will score at “proficient” 3 points or above on the Middle School Instructional Writing Checklist rubric.

  31. Background of Students/Sample Population -My SMART Goal was targeted towards my CT’s Civics/Econ honors class. This is a class that is needed to graduate. It is composed of 23 students that are 14-15 years old. -Unfortunately, for the SMART goal I only had nine students out of the 23 turn in all three writing assignments from this class.

  32. Baseline Assessment -Asked students to write a persuasive letter regarding three things that they would like to change about their school or the city. -I had students write the letter to either city council or the school board.

  33. Instructional Sequence/Pre-Writing the Baseline Assessment -FARTO: Format, Audience, Reasoning, Thesis, Organization. -Four Square:

  34. Feedback -I realized that many students drop evidence without a clear link to the main thesis of their assignment or their intended audience. -This is something that I wanted to work with them on in that this is key to writing great essays in high school social study classes especially for honors.

  35. Mid-Assessment (DBQ Essay) -For the mid-assessment I decided to do a persuasive DBQ essay. -The essay was on the American Jury system and asked students to answer in favor or against, “Is the Jury system still a good idea today? Why or Why not?” -The DBQ already had built in pieces of evidence through articles and mock essays in support and against the Jury system.

  36. Instructional Strategy for DBQ • For the DBQ essay I wanted to help students to scaffold their use of evidence by going over each article and by analyzing the differences between an essay with evidence and an essay without evidence. • I also thought this was a great way to introduce using research by helping students analyze the articles provided and the good and bad essays that were already built within the DBQ.

  37. Instructional Strategies DBQ cont… • I also really liked the two prewriting strategies that were used called chicken footing and bucketing.

  38. End of Year Assessment -For the end of year writing prompt I decided to use a “Frankenstein Instructional Strategy” or FIS for short. I decided to meld the letter at the beginning of the year with the DBQ. -I decided to have students write a persuasive letter to city council, sheriff, or to the mayor in regards to whether or not they believe a recent crime rate finding was accurate. For the letter I gave students various articles for them to use and went over each article in class.

  39. Smart Goal Revisited SMART Goal: During the latter part of the school year, 100% of my students will make measureable progress in using evidence to support their persuasive writing. By the end of the school year, each student will increase his/her ability to use evidence by one level on the Middle School Instructional Writing Checklist writing rating rubric. Student scoring at a “4” under evidence will maintain their score. Furthermore, 85% will score at “proficient” with 3 points or above on the Middle School Instructional Writing Checklist rubric.

  40. Did I achieve my SMART Goal?

  41. Micro View

  42. Micro View Focusing on Two Students Writing

  43. Conclusion: Making Connections

  44. Connection between Student Growth and Instruction • Making connections between student growth and instruction have played an integral part in my own growth as a teacher. • Connecting instruction with content was a key connection that led to my successful completion of both my early field experience and student teaching. • These connections have helped me realize my own strengths and weaknesses as an instructor. In my opinion this has made me a better person and hopefully one day a wonderful teacher.

More Related