Thursday, February 9, 2012

Video of Teaching Warm-Ups

Here is a link to my warm up video. I couldn't figure out how to email it to you all. The quality is pretty good but I am using a new program so I did not know this was the way it would turn out. You can't see much. Sorry. It picks up a few minutes in, but you don't miss much. My teacher is putting the screen together so that is why it starts out with a computer desktop screen. We are reviewing scientific notation that we learned in the last class. I think that the biggest strengths in my teaching of warm ups were that I made students explain everything and answer the questions so that it wasn't just me talking the whole time and explaining. I got a good sense of how much information they retained. The evidence of student learning was in the responses. I don't think there was a lot of activity and engagement, so I think it seemed like there was less than there really is. I don't think many of the students were engaged, you couldn't see but there were about 20 students in the class and it sounded like there were four. I am really struggling at this school because students are not very active in class. They mostly expect to be taught and not respond. My role in supporting learning was to help lead students to the right answer when they were struggling to find the answer. One challenge that I observed was that there was a lot of wasted time waiting for students to answer and respond. I need to find a way to be more engaging to students who are not used to being active in class. Most of the other teachers just lecture the whole class while everyone is quiet. The typical mistakes students made were mostly due to focus. Students tended to guess on a lot of answers instead of thinking. I could tell they were reluctant to answer due to lack of confidence and that many of the students are shy. I would revise this routine by maybe starting out with something fun or just me having more energy in general. Engaging the students early and setting the tone for the whole class would help improve the warm-ups and the entire class.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Jeremiah. The video came through as Private (so you may need to modify the rights) so we can view it. If you have the video on your local computer, please consider uploading it to your VIMEO account, as this can deal with large file sizes AND is very secure and designed for educators.

    One can also EMBED the video into a blog post (I can assist with this).

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  2. Good job overall with the warm up. I liked the pacing and you have good presence. The one thing I noticed is that you sometimes talk to the board. Each time you talk you should try to maintain eye contact. I learned this because Campagna picked on me for an entire week about it before I eliminated it from my teaching. I really liked how you made a generalization about adding exponents when you have like bases. I thought that came across really clear and it showed students that we ALWAYS add exponents when the bases are the same and we are multiplying. Good job!

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