13 September 2015

Being a Teacher & My Morning at Clark Street Community School

On the first day, the staff at Clark Street Community School introduce themselves to the student body and answer a question.  This year the question was: What are you most excited about doing at school this year?  My answer: Being a teacher.  

Many of you know that for the last four years I have spent most of my time at CSCS in the role of Program Coordinator (which is a title that I made up for myself).  As Program Coordinator I worked as member of our school leadership team, planned meetings and inservice days, collaborated on the design of various learning processes and our graduation plan, recruited students, conducted outreach to the community, etc.  The list goes on, but this is starting to feel like a resume and I am sure you get the idea.  

This year, for the first time in many years, I am a full time teacher.  While I have said that this was what I wanted for a long time, I was secretly worried that I was having a "grass is greener" moment and that I might regret my choice.  If I am being honest, I also struggled with the idea of "going back" to the classroom.  For a while I thought I would move on from being Program Coordinator and go to grad school (again) or start consulting or something.  While I really tried to listen to my heart to make this decision, I was scared that it might somehow feel like I was going backwards.  

I know we are in the honeymoon phase of the school year, but this week I left school smiling and thinking to myself: I love teaching.  It feels great to be back in a classroom and to be connecting with students.  It is hard and hectic and way to much to do in a day... but I am happy and that tells me that I made the right decision.  

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As we are still at the start of the school year, I thought I would spend some time telling you all a little bit about what I am teaching this year.  Today I am going to write about my mornings at CSCS which consist of Advisory, Reading Workshop and Math Workshop.

Advisory: Every day at CSCS starts with advisory.  I have twelve little angels assigned to my team; they are of various grades, backgrounds, ages, talents, and interests.  I do have a high population of redheads, which I consider a major bonus.  My students are truly a crew of amazing individuals.  A few anecdotes:

  • One student is working on drafting her own spirit animal quiz for our advisory as she was dissatisfied with all of the online versions she researched.  After all of the members of our advisory take the quiz (of her own creation), she is going to draw animal likenesses of each of us.  I WILL post mine on this blog - stay tuned.
  • One student who hopes to be an elementary school teacher in the future, has designed a hybrid schedule this year and is participating in internships at several progressive elementary schools in the area.  I am excited to talk with her about what she observes and learns throughout the year.
  • One student has a sound effects app on his phone.  When I am talking to long, I hear the music come on... kind of like at an award show. 
Every day my advisory starts with the same circle question: How do you feel today?  I like this question because it offers up a moment to pause and check in with yourself. I often find that I haven't really thought about how I feel until I ask the question.  In addition to a personal check in, it allows us all to give each other important information about where we are on any particular day.  Students can say that they are happy because their favorite team won last night or that they are hungry because they missed breakfast.  The circle allows me know what is going on and to follow up on anything of importance, but just listening to how they feel seems to start the day acknowledging that we care about each other.

The start of the school year in advisory is a lot of business and set up.  At the end of the first two weeks students have established  tools to use to manage, personalize, and archive their work; they have measured their progress to date in math and reading; they have reviewed the community agreements (be independent, be an active community member, be responsible, create a safe learning environment); they have practiced mindfulness; they have learned all of the various protocols for moving through their school day; they have learned each other's names.  As we get into our regular schedule, advisory time will be a place to start each day together, check in, get organized, and hopefully move on to the rest of the day with a positive attitude.

Reading Workshop:  Reading workshop is my jam.  It is probably the simplest, but also the most joyful part of my schedule.  Students in reading workshop are working to become better readers and create reading artifacts for their portfolio.  They spend time in workshop reading independently or in a small group discussing a recent article.  I love talking to kids about reading.  I love reading with kids.  I love when kids who believed they couldn't read become readers.  I LOVE it. (*Note: If you didn't read about my amazing Little Free Library - please do!  Donations of books or funds to purchase books are always welcome.)

Math Workshop:  One of the ideas we most embrace at CSCS is the Carol Dweck's Growth Mindset.  Embracing a growth mindset means that you understand that intelligence and skills can be developed and you focus on improvement.  We have been talking about this idea for a long time, but I am excited to have the opportunity to practice it for myself in my first ever math workshop.  In the first two weeks, we have been working with growth mindset ideas and playing with different math challenges to identify important characteristics that help us learn math: growth mindset, emphasis on thoughtfulness over speed, creativity, and multiple routes to a solution.  I often wonder how I would feel differently about myself if I would have learned math the way students do at CSCS.  Can I rebuild the way I think about myself as a math learner by teaching math?  This week we are moving on to constant ratios in right triangles and contemplating the Leaning Tower of Pisa.  This is all new for me, but I have a lot of support, and am excited to learn. 

And that's my morning.  I don't think you missed much else except a cup of coffee, my sassy comments to kiddos in the hallway, and a snack scarfed down somewhere between sections if I am lucky.

Next week I will write about the two new seminars I have created and am teaching in the afternoons.  I am very proud of them and excited to share them with you.  As always, thanks for reading.

  

1 comment:

  1. 1. Nice font.
    2. So happy you got over the 'going back' idea. I used to say that people should have to work their way up to teaching from administration instead of the opposite.
    3. Super proud of you for taking on a math workshop. Hope you learn a lot and have tons of fun.
    4. Keep blogging

    ReplyDelete