Week 7
How can you create a relational trust in an educational setting?
One thing the I've learned is that true, effective, learning happens when there is a level of trust between the students and the teacher. The students have to trust in their teacher that what they are teaching is worth learning and not a waste of time. On the other hand, the teacher needs to be able to trust that their students are listening and learning from them and that they are not wasting their time preparing for the lessons. When there is no trust that goes both ways, then there is less effective learning, the students will not take the class seriously enough to pay attention and the teacher will spend less effort is preparation and presentation.
But this trust is not something that happens overnight. Like every relationship it takes time and effort as well as earning each other's respect. In the educational level, this relationship starts with the teacher. By tradition and state law, the teacher is given a lot of freedom to operate their classes as they see fit. Some will turn their class into a teacher-centered model in which the learning flows from the teacher to the students, while others will turn them into a cooperative learning environment in which the students share in the responsibility of learning. Whichever model is chosen however, the teacher always have to make sure clear boundaries are set limiting the relationship to the goal of learning the subject at hand. This too is the responsibility of the teacher (as the adult in the room) so that no boundaries are crossed. This may make the relationship between teacher and student never as intimate as those of friends, but that is the point. Students have plenty of opportunities for making friends, but in the classroom, it has to be made clear that the teacher is there to teach, not hang out.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Monday, May 20, 2013
Week 6
Read the article: “Defining the Integration of Faith and
Learning” by Robert Harris
How can you develop the capacity for connectedness?
I was the product of the public school system all the way
through college and I learned all there was to learn from there. At the same
time I attended church faithfully and learned all there was to learn there as
well. However, these two vital spheres of my knowledge base somehow never
connected in my head. What I learn in school and what I learned at church were
separately important to me, but separate none the less.
It wasn't until after my college, when I first started
teaching, while going to seminary that the two finally clicked. How we
understand the world in the secular sense and how we understand it in a
faithful sense should not be separated, but rather integrated into the whole of
understanding of the world around us. I learned that my students learned best
when I used my knowledge of history that I gained from college along with my
knowledge of spirituality that I was learning from seminary. When the two
worldviews, as Harris puts it, are integrated into our teaching, then our
students can fully understand not only the “when” and “what” but the “why” and “for
what” as well.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Week 5
The hardest part of teaching is not the long hours, the lack of respect, nor even the content knowledge. The hardest part is to keep the interest and motivation of students for a 180 days. You can keep them interested for a few days, or even a few weeks if the content is interesting enough, but how to keep them motivated for months and months? This aspect of teaching is what Palmer is speaking to when he talks about the "weaving" of the teacher, student and the subject into one flowing essence of learning.
I don't have personal experience in weaving a cloth, but I can imagine that it is a delicate process which requires patience and flexibility. Teaching is quite similar to this. Working with students well and keeping them motivated requires a lot of patience and flexibility. There will be times when student try your last nerve and give you attitude. There will be times when they will simply not "get it" no matter how well you think you taught them. These are the time when patience is needed where you remind yourself that learning is a long and arduous process.
Teachers also need flexibility in working with students. There has to be an understanding that each student is different and how to work with them has to adjust to the student. Some students need a firm hand to keep them in line, but some require a gentle touch to do the same. Many times, they will come into class with issues that a teacher will never know, yet their behavior will be affected by it. A successful teachers are ones that can navigate between the various personalities of students and keep them all moving in the same direction.
Like weaving, teaching is a delicate balance between science and art.
The hardest part of teaching is not the long hours, the lack of respect, nor even the content knowledge. The hardest part is to keep the interest and motivation of students for a 180 days. You can keep them interested for a few days, or even a few weeks if the content is interesting enough, but how to keep them motivated for months and months? This aspect of teaching is what Palmer is speaking to when he talks about the "weaving" of the teacher, student and the subject into one flowing essence of learning.
I don't have personal experience in weaving a cloth, but I can imagine that it is a delicate process which requires patience and flexibility. Teaching is quite similar to this. Working with students well and keeping them motivated requires a lot of patience and flexibility. There will be times when student try your last nerve and give you attitude. There will be times when they will simply not "get it" no matter how well you think you taught them. These are the time when patience is needed where you remind yourself that learning is a long and arduous process.
Teachers also need flexibility in working with students. There has to be an understanding that each student is different and how to work with them has to adjust to the student. Some students need a firm hand to keep them in line, but some require a gentle touch to do the same. Many times, they will come into class with issues that a teacher will never know, yet their behavior will be affected by it. A successful teachers are ones that can navigate between the various personalities of students and keep them all moving in the same direction.
Like weaving, teaching is a delicate balance between science and art.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Week 4
We cannot know the great things of the
universe until we know ourselves to be great things. – Parker J. Palmer
For by the grace given
me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you
ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the
faith God has distributed to each of you. – Romans 12:3
At first glance the two statements above seem at odds with each other.
Palmer seem to inflate ourselves to the
great things of the universe, while the bible seems to bring us back down to
earth telling us to be sober, or realistic about our place in it.
However, upon further review, the bible isn’t as negative as it seems.
Being realistic about our place in the universe cuts both ways, meaning that we
can have an over-inflated sense of self-worth, in which case we should come back
down to reality, but at the same time we can have a deflated sense of
self-worth.
Too many people, especially teenagers, have for whatever reason a low sense
of self-esteem. This leads to depression and even suicide for too many. It is
the role of the teacher in these cases to teach them to look at things with “sober
judgment”. If they can look at themselves realistically then they will see that
they are not strange, ugly, fat, dumb, short, nor anything else others have
said to them. Instead, they are precious creations of God, who had faith in
them to give them the talents and gifts to succeed in life. With this sense of self-worth,
they can then discover all the great things in the universe.
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