Tuesday, May 27, 2014

TAFE Plan for 2014-2015

I am so excited for TAFE next year! I plan on competing in Job interview, Impromptu Speaking, and Service Project and My TAFE Moment is an option to choose from as well. I think that these would be good for me because I am a confident speaker and I am good with my words. And the service project is a good option because I have this year as an advantage, plus volunteering is my favorite thing in the world. I plan on executing my plan by coming after school and taking my own time to work ahead and be completely prepared. I also want to get lots of advice from the wise, Mrs. Stevens. I am so pumped for the next year that I will not let deadlines be the deciding factor. And I hope to be have a leadership position next year as well. I would like to be the President of the class or at least a VP of LES again. I want to be involved as much as Mrs. Stevens will allow me.

My Favorite Memory with Interning

It is really hard for my to pick my favorite memory because I have had so many great opportunities and experiences this year. At first, my favorite memory was when in the midst of all the anxiety of stepping up in front of people who are barely 3 years younger then me and being so nervous about them just liking me, I checked my Instagram and I had twenty-five new followers. I had twenty-five set of eyes watching my every move… but instead of finding this nerve-racking like it may sound, I found comfort and hope in the fact that my students wanted to know me on a personal level. I had done something right… my kids already liked me. And on a side note- many teachers claim that it shouldn't matter if your students like you or not because you aren't there to be liked but to teach. To me, that's complete rubbish. If a student doesn't like you it's nearly impossible to get respect. If a student doesn't like you or doesn't respect you, how can you think that you, as a person who isn't liked or respected, will get through to them and teach them things that they probably don't really care about. You can't. Not to mention the relationship aspect of teaching. Relationships are the basis of a strong educational experience. Being liked is just a realistic factor of teaching, it isn't only important, but necessary. My other favorite memory is when I had to help one of my students with writing their essay. It is easy to get a student to find the correct answer with giving them clues or keys to understand… but it is a totally different story when you must get the student to find and understand a whole concept. I was having to teach how to properly condense writing without taking out details you need. I worked with this one student for most of the class period because this is a skill that he must have and his writing was strong, but extremely lengthy. After finally getting him to not only understand but to also feel confident, he finished revising his essay. Then after having time for the essays to be graded and returned, he proudly rushed up to me to tell me that he received a 4, the highest grade for an essay. I was beaming with pride… to many people this would be a good moment because their student got a good grade or because the student no longer needs the teachers help anymore, but to me this moment meant the world… I had helped a student reached their goal, I had done my job as a teacher. My sweet student quickly yet softly replied with, "It's all because of you. Thank you." and then I was able to reply, "Oh no, it was all because of you!" My student and I both left with smiles that day. Despite how cliche and cheesy this story sounds, it is completely true and I will never forget it.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

My Year

Here is a video I made composed of some of my favorite memories. I hope you like it!

Sunday, April 20, 2014

The Fear of Failure

    The fear of failure is beginning to control todays society. Many see it as a positive, because it causes people to work harder to prevent themselves from failing...but this concept is wrong. Without failure, how do you really learn what true success is? Without failure how do you appreciate success and its worth?

    As a current student, weirdly enough, failure is one of my good friends. The more I fail, the more I realize that I have room to grow. If I were to never fail, I would have no want or need to try harder. And without the want or need to try harder, I wouldn't push myself. Just because you aren't "failing" doesn't mean that you are succeeding. To succeed, you must fail. And to fear the stepping stone to success is just illogical.
    I've also put thought into how this would come into play as I begin my career as a teacher. And my stance stands strong. Failure is a teacher and one must learn from it. If I expect my students to learn from their teacher, then I must learn from mine. Failure is a good teacher... it doesn't just tell you what you've done wrong, but also shows you what you can do right from now on. I hope people don't take this teacher for granted. When I embark on my career, I plan on showing my kids that failure isn't something to be afraid of...because it has all the right intentions. Failure is purposeful and exists to make life easier. It isn't there to be bothersome but instead, to help you see what you did wrong so you don't trouble yourself and repeat it.   
    Many students believe that a bad grade indicates failure, but I disagree with this as well. A bad grade doesn't indicate failure, it indicates that the student doesn't fully understand the topic or that they didn't have time to finish it, or maybe even that the teacher didn't teach to his or her ability...but it doesn't indicate failure from the student. To say that a bad grade indicates failure would be to call all of my students failures. Everyone gets a bad grade every now and then and it has no reflection on their level of success. 
    Many students also believe that their grades indicate their knowledge. This in certain circumstances can be true, but very rarely. The grading system is simply the easiest and most effective way to evaluate a students progress at the moment. It can not gage a students intelligence. Intelligence is a concept that is far too broad to be held down by a grading system. "Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid."    
    And lastly I want to touch on criticism. Criticism can be used as the sticks and stones or it can be just what someone needs. The key is to keep it constructive. If criticism is used for the pure purpose of critiquing then it isn't needed. Sure, it's a good tool to learn how to take criticism such as this and to not let it effect you...but if one has to purposefully block out or strategically take in criticism so they don't get hurt, then is isn't useful and I would advise to against using it.

 Failure shouldn't be feared. It should be viewed as a friend. "Failures are finger posts on the road to achievement" - C. S. Lewis
 
Click here to view some more inspiring quotes on failure!

Monday, March 31, 2014

LiveBinder

Here is a copy of our classes live binder that I participated in.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Web 2.0 Tool: Blabberize

Web 2.0 Tools bring lessons to life!

Incorporate web 2.0 tools to introduce lessons in a fun and engaging form! Many teachers get stuck in the unoriginal pattern of passing out worksheets and expecting their students to stay on task and remained focused. But by investigating different tools to introduce lessons in a unique way and to reach different learning styles, you are truly bettering your classroom and furthering the students retention.

I am going to use Blabberize in my classroom! 


Blabberize is a website that allows limitless creativity to explain or teach anything you would like. In blabberize you pick any picture and crop the mouth out to create the allusion of a moving mouth. You then record your voice and blabberize does the rest. The website creates the movement based on the recording and it appears as if the picture is talking. Click here to go directly to the Blabberize website!

Here is Blabberize's cute introduction!

 

Watch this tutorial so you better understand this tool!

 
 
 
How do you establish an account one may ask?
1. Open the application and click register
2. Create a username and password    
3. Let the creativity begin
 
This program is completely free and doesn't require parent permission nor does it have any age restrictions.
 
Applying it to real life:
I am using this web 2.0 tool in my 8th grade English class. I will be using this to liven up a vocabulary lesson. The class will be divided into groups and each group will be given a iPad. They will all log into my personal Blabberize account for convenience. (Blabberize allows you to log into the same account from different devices at the same time). I will then give each group five SAT words, each word having a different level of difficulty. The students will then need to give a definition of the word in their own words and put the word into a sentence being as creative as they can. All of which they can make fun and unique by using silly pictures and voices, thanks to Blabberize. Then once the class has finished, each group will show their Blabberize videos explaining their words so that the whole class learns the other words as well!
I wouldn't use this in high school for the students to do... but I would definitely use it as a teaching tool. I plan on randomly inserting funny blabberize videos into my lessons to keep the students interested. So whether it be for student use or teacher use, this is a great tool!
 
I picked this tool to present because though it may sound simple, it can work for ANY subject and any introductive activity. It is a very handy and versatile tool.  
 
 
Here is an example of it working with History!

 
     
                       
 
 
 
I hope you enjoyed this as much as I did!