Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Thing #2

The videos on Thing #2 were completely and utterly moving. I have seen the “Did you know” video before, yet I continued to re-watch it for the fifth time. It never loses my interest because the numbers are amazing. There are so many facts in the short minutes of that video that overwhelm an engaged mind. The last video that featured the 21st century learners brought tears to my eyes. So many of us are guilty of NOT engaging our students. We seek conduct marks, office referrals and other alternative sites when most of our students simply need their teacher to engage them. I do think a lot of the blame goes on teachers who do not engage the students. Of course there are going to be students who need the discipline, but it is amazing how during a truly engaging lesson discipline takes the back seat. I myself taught a lesson last Monday that bombed, in every class even though I tweaked it in each. At the end of the day I had to assess why I was frustrated and why the students were frustrated. I was honest with them on Tuesday when I redid the lesson in a way to give them more ownership. I had them go back in their notes and completely cross out what we did they day before. I explained that this was a learning experience, but today we would actually learn the curriculum. It was such a payoff at the end of the week when I actually thought about how much easier it was when I engaged them.

I have accepted the fact that I have to engage students, however I have sparingly done this with the use of technology. I myself need to learn more technology that I can share with my students. I know that if I give the students these tools to work with they will be motivated which leads to success. It is my responsibility as an educator of this 21st century to teach to the best of my abilities. My abilities in technology are currently lacking, so I signed up for this course. I have to get my students ready for what they will face in the world ahead of them. If I don’t, who else will?

1 comment:

  1. The greatest gift a teacher can give a student is to admit when something didn't work and try, try again! It's not easy, but I believe it makes the biggest difference when they see that we make mistakes and own up to them! Good for you!

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