Module 1
Concept 1: Research
Summary:
In chapter 1 of Woolfolk, it discussed the idea of how research
is used in education. In a classroom the research can be used to understand
what works and what doesn’t to benefit the students learning and the way a lesson
is being taught. On page 21 Woolfolk says, “By focusing on a specific problem
and making careful observations, teachers can learn a great deal about both
their teaching and their students.” This quote sums up what researching can do
for the teacher and student. By researching differentiated ways of teaching,
teachers can find the most effective way of teaching that their students
understand and enjoy doing.
Reflection:
When you research, you are looking for a specific connection
of the teaching strategy being used and how the students respond toward it. You
will look for the student’s achievement through and after the strategy which
may take a bit. You will look for any improvement in a concept by the work they
do and how they react while being taught with the new strategy. While reading,
I learned a variety of aspects about researching, like the differences between
action, principle, and the many studies, and what needs to go into it for the research
to be executed.
In the current classroom I am in, I have had the pleasure to
see how research and looking at past works can be useful in the students learning
and how to teach the students. During my time there, I have been testing the students
reading skills. While looking at their past progress, I can tell who has been
doing exceptionally and who is struggling. From this, the teacher can see who
needs help in reading and who doesn’t. She can then find different ways of
helping the students sound out words by viewing or using an arm motion they us
when sounding out their spelling words. Just like looking at the reading tests,
you can look at any tests, quizzes, and any out or in class work. By looking at
this, it will help the teacher see who is understanding the concept and who isn’t.
From there, they could look into reasons why the student is having difficulties
understanding the specific concept that maybe their classmates were able to
understand.
In my future classroom, I will make sure to research and
observe my students. Researching will help me understand what my students can accomplish
and what I may need to change in my instruction to help the students succeed
and reach their highest potential. If I do not research, I know nothing will
change in my class because I will not take the time and energy to see what the
problem is in the students learning. I hope to keep up with my own research in
my differentiated instruction and how my students react and accomplish in the classroom.
Concept 2: Development
Summary:
In the second chapter of Woolfolk, it gets more into the
child’s development. During this chapter, it focused on Piaget’s theory of cognitive
development. Piaget’s theory is split into four stages with an approximate age:
sensorimotor, ages 0 to 2, preoperational, beginning when child starts talking
to around 7 years old, concrete operational, about first grade to early adolescence
of age 11, and formal operational, which is adolescence to adulthood. By understanding
Piaget’s model, we can inform ourselves of what our students can do at an age
range and how they develop. It is important to know this because we cannot
overestimate the ability of what our students can do even if they are in the
age range as said by Woolfolk, “Piaget noted that individuals may go through long
periods of transitions between stages and that a person may show characteristics
of one stage in one situation (46).”
Reflection:
In a class I took called Lifespan and Development a while
back, I learned a bit about Piaget’s theory of cognitive development. By learning
a bit about what Piaget in that class and this class, it is clear how his
stages can fit into teaching. Teachers
need to note that not every child will develop the same or at the same pace as
another. On page 46 it also states, “Therefore, remember that knowing a student’s
age is never a guarantee you will know how the child thinks.” In the Concrete
Operational stage children will be learning how elements can be changed or
transformed but still conserve the same characteristics as before.
In my placement I can see this being taken place. Many of
the students I have helped with on their math do not see a connection between
the idea that 4+5 and 5+4 are the same thing. Only a few of the students were
able to make the connection and had an easier time doing their math problems. With
this in mind, it shows how each child develops differently than the other. Some
students can identify and see the connection between these two math problems while
others need to continue doing the same problems until they notice that 4+5 and
5+4 both equal 9. Being a teacher, you need to see that the students’
development varies, and they will eventually reach the tasks that are set just
at a different pace and by using a different strategy.
As a future teacher, I need to remember that each student
develops differently than the other. At times it may be frustrating that a student
has trouble executing a task that others have, but they will understand as time
goes by and using different learning strategies. Since I am in elementary, I
will be focused on Piaget’s Concrete Operational stage where children, “can
think logically about concrete (hands-on) problems. Understanding conservation
and organize things into categories and in series. Can reverse thinking to
mentally “undo” actions. Understand past, present, and future (47).” I will be
focusing on using hands-on problems especially in math where students will benefit
by using manipulatives and even games to help with their addition and subtraction.
I will focus on understanding the strengths and weaknesses of my students to
better understand where they are in their development and challenge them as
much as they can work and handle to reach their potential during that time.
Concept 3: Self, Social, and Moral Development
Summary:
Chapter three of Educational
Psychology speaks on the subject of self, social, and moral development. Any
type of socialization can affect the way a child develops. Things that affect a
child’s development are due to family situations, culture, peers, physically,
and many more. With this in mind, it can affect how a child thinks about themselves.
It is important for children at this development to have relationships with others.
On page 86 it says, “Friendships are central to students’ lives at every age.”
Students rely on friends and create bonds with them and even teachers that can affect
how the student achieves academically. Lastly the chapter goes more in depth of
how socialization can influence their lives and at school and how
teachers can help their students.
Reflection:
After reading this chapter, I was informed of the variety of
ways social aspects can affect a child’s development throughout the years. If
students have trouble making friends, it can affect how motivated and emotionally
distressed they can be during that years and the years to come. Teachers can
help students who may have emotional distress from a variety of reasons of parents
getting divorced, hard times in their lives, and just having difficulties
making friends. Teachers need to be concerned about their students and what
they go through even if they have no ability of changing anything. Teachers need
to be there for the students showing that they care and are concerned for them.
In this chapter it says that, “good teachers are good motivators (90).” When teachers care about their students, the
students will see this, and their motivation may boost with the idea that
someone does care about their needs and what they are going through.
In my placement, I have seen many things from children having
more than two parents because of a previous divorce, making friends or loosing
some, and how they interact with one another. Friendships are a huge deal for
first graders. One day when I went in to aid, a student in my cooperating teacher’s
class came up to me and the teacher and was crying because one of her friend pushed
her and said they couldn’t be friends anymore. They had a talk with the other
student who pushed her and during that process, one of her other friends kept
comforting her and showing that she still had someone who cares about her. The
girl was a bit upset the rest of the day but was eventually able to concentrate
on her work toward the end of the day. In the end, social interactions can
affect a student’s development and how they can achieve in class.
When I become a teacher, I need to pay attention to each of
my students’ lives and notice small things about how they are feeling throughout
the day. I need to be there for my students whenever they need me and show how I
care about them in every lesson I teach them and be available to talk when
necessary. Friendships, family situations, and culture are some aspects of
their development and I need to help them see what they are capable of being
and who they are as a unique student in the classroom.
In classrooms, the thing to keep in mind about research is not so much on how well students are doing, although that certainly comes into play, but it's about what teaching strategies actually work. That's why teachers should use research-based strategies, the ones that have been proven to work. When you do the edTPA, you will need to find out what really works and use those strategies in your teaching. Interestingly, a recent research study found that lecture was not very effective.
ReplyDeleteI think it's really beneficial and good to know how well research is able to be used in a classroom and used to understand what is working for the students and what is not. It's really important for teachers to know where their students are at, and some types of research do a really good job at telling us this!
ReplyDeleteI liked reading about your experiences of seeing research being used in the current classroom that you are in. I also was able to see research at work in the placement I was in last semester. I was in a resource room, and my teacher would keep track of her students everyday to see where they were improving and where they needed more guidance.
When it comes to development, I agree with you when you say that it's important to remember that each student develops differently. We need to know and understand that all of our students learn at different paces, and take this into consideration when we are planning our lessons for them. I also like how you said that you will focus on understanding the strengths and weaknesses of your students; I think this is really important!
Research is very important in education. I think that is cool how you have been able to test the student's reading progress. I was able to do this once with my class, but I was not able to do it multiple times such as you have. My cooperating teacher has let me look at the sheet she has filled out throughout the year to see how well the students have been improving. Research is very important because it shows how well the student are improving or not.
ReplyDeleteI also agree that it is important to recognize that students will develop at different paces than one another. Some tasks might be too difficult for a student, while others are very easy. For students to identify that 4+5 is the same thing as 5+4 can be difficult for some students. It is interesting to see how students develop.