Over the course of the last 4 years I have transformed as an
educator. I previously was a kindergarten
teacher, who taught routines and was fearful of change and what it meant to our
routines. I then began teaching grade 1 and wanted to change the way I delivered
my message more over I wanted learning to be enriched.
There have been 4 contributing factors to the change of the
environment in my classroom. My mindset,
my students’ mindset, the social space and the physical space.
It is my goal as an educator to foster discovery and
reflection through the dialogue and sharing of ideas. Our classroom learning
space stems from this goal: Our entire
space was designed as a free and open area where learning is facilitated by student
need.
The iPad cart is open for students to freely use to update
their blogs and select the application that serves their learning need. Our room is equipped with a projector, and an
Apple TV so student creations can be shared with each other, with other classes
and worldwide.
In order to have a positive social environment, I honor
student voice and model positive interpersonal relationships. I empower students by facilitating their
learning through collaboration with each other and me. Students in my class feel a sense of
belonging in our classroom community.
This empowers them to take risks and explore new ideas. My students have been taught to listen
carefully to each other.
Students are given problems that are relevant and important
to them. Students often need to
collaborate with outside experts through Skype or Google Hangout. My
students also use collaborative tools like wikis, and blogs. By giving them the choice on what they learn
about, they are intellectually engaged.
I center our learning goals on the big ideas and key concepts across the
curriculum areas rather than limiting the students to one topic or curriculum
expectation. Learning is art, science,
physical and virtual, local and global.
My students come to me as technology consumers. My job is to teach them how to become content
creators. Many of my students have iPads
or iPods at home already. They expect
learning to be fun. My students come to
me with curiosity and I embrace that curiosity through project based and inquiry
based learning.
I strive to inspire and develop the skills necessary for my
students to succeed in the 21st century. My students are encouraged to create,
collaborate, communicate and motivate in my classroom.
If you step into my classroom you will quickly find out that
we are a classroom with no walls. Video
conferencing, blogging, creating videos and books, teaching and learning from
other peers in the classroom, in the school and in the world about what they
are interested in is embedded into the daily instruction of my classroom. The results of this purposeful connectivity
is that my group of grade1/2 students have begun to develop a global
perspective of issues that could not have been authentically discovered if they
were solely engaged in books in our classroom.
I have not done this alone.
I have a personal learning
network of many like-minded educators who I have sustained learning
relationships with. My students embrace
change and I embrace change. As my teaching methods and the technologies I use
continue to evolve, the transformation of my learning environment will continue
as a journey, not a destination.
I really enjoyed this post of yours! I think I could have written a similar post. :) I taught Kindergarten for 8 years before moving onto Grades 1 and 2, and now Grade 6. When I started teaching, routines were so important to me -- absolutely nothing could change them!
ReplyDeleteI still believe in the importance of structure, but I'm better at embracing change. Students don't need to all be doing the same thing at the same time. If some activities take longer to complete, or something comes up that changes our plans, that's okay. We cope.
I do try to be cognisant of the needs of my various learners though. Some need stricter structures in place, and so if things are going to change, I try to prepare these students in advance.
Reading about your very integrated learning environment, I'd love to hear more about how you meet the various needs of your various students. Have you needed more structure for some students? How do you do this, while still adhering to a model that works well for many others? I'd love to hear your thoughts on this!
Aviva
www.weinspirefutures.com
Yes, yes, and yes! Here's my question, how did you get started. I would LOVE for my students (1st graders in Washington, DC) to do all of the things that your students do and more, but where do I begin? That's the question I am struggling with, there seems like so many things to do I just don't know where to start.
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