Thursday, April 11, 2013

Thinkquest

ThinkQuest Lesson

What students will learn from these lessons is basic knowledge about different battles of the Civil War. They will learn about key events and people that helped shape America in this dark time in our history. This lesson would come in the middle of a U.S. History class and we would use it study the history of slavery and the history of African Americans. Also we will study how society changed after the Civil War, and how the economy changed due to the Civil War.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

ThinkQuest Project

http://library.thinkquest.org/06aug/01071/homeframe.htm


This is something I would use in a U.S. History class when we were talking about slavery. I would use it to make sure the students understood the severity of slavery and how it was so much more than just living on plantations in the South.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Best Practices Blog

From the beginning it seemed that this teacher had the right idea. She knew that she had to make learning science fun for her students. However, this can not be the sole purpose of the class because then the focus becomes more on the fun and less on science. However when she was put into an EL she found that there could be a balance of fun and learning the content. The EL class gave her the tools to be able to make the concepts fun and engaging while still getting the information out there. These strategies are not simple and they require a great deal of planning and monitoring but the allow for a much deeper understanding of the content. In order to do this the teacher is going to need a great knowledge of her content and is going to have to pose tasks that really engage the minds of her students while also being fun. This type of teacher has a lot of work but her results will more than likely be the best because the knowledge her students gain will be knowledge that will stick.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Where I am From





Jonathan Fansler
02-12-13
Inclusive Classroom Practices
Culturally Responsive Teaching
Being a Culturally Responsive Teacher takes a lot of work to achieve, and has many different angles to do so. As teachers we have to be aware of everything that can affect the classroom and its students, and one of these things is language. Language is a powerful tool and those who use it the most affective are the ones that succeed. Purcell-Gates points out that people from lower economic status, whether it is from impoverished countries or other places tend to have more trouble with literacy than those from higher economic status.

Many teachers today that have students who don’t succeed at the rate at which the teachers believe they should get frustrated with the child. The teacher then begins to stereotype the children and say that the reason they can’t succeed as well as they should is because of where they are from or because of their socioeconomic status. These stereotypes are known the Cultural Deficit Model where the teacher sells the child short. The way to remedy this is to try harder to find or create ways to better relate to the child and then to also get the parents or guardians of the child involved because it will be hard for the child to learn at a successful rate without the help of people at home.

It can be difficult to overcome Cultural deficit problems in a classroom, but there are some ways to do so. Perhaps and approach could be like Hilda’s approach from the Moll study and build units around what the students interest are because students learn better when they are interested in something. Therefore the key concept that jumps out at me is making the students interested. When they are interested they are more engaging.

The Where I am From project was a very meaningful and helpful project. It allowed each person to see where people come from and get a general idea of what the person is like and therefore provides a reference of how to relate to them. Therefore if we as teachers were to use this in the classroom it would provide a good resource for community building in the classroom. Perhaps divide into small groups and play the videos in that group and allow the activity to be an icebreaker so that students can learn about each other. Also as teachers we can use these videos as a way to know where the student is coming from and can learn enough about them to be able to better relate to them in the classroom and provide a more meaningful learning experience.

I believe that in the classroom Standard English should be the standard. However, I don’t believe we should dismiss students who don’t. We should work with them and bring them along until they can write Standard English proficiently. Students will not learn properly until they can write and speak the language proficiently and it is our job as educators to make sure they can do this.

Monday, January 28, 2013

The Story of Me


I am from a the base of the Sauratown mountains, the only chain in the U.S. to start and end in the same county, and from trees so beautiful in fall that you forget everything and just stare.
I am from the small white house in the back of a small development.
I am from the place of beautiful trees and good weather year round.
I am from competition and from the idea that hard work will always pay off.
I am from Fansler and from Amen, from the concept of always finishing and never accepting losing and from always putting God and family ahead of everything.
I am from the food lovers and sports fanatics.
From a family that will always be there for me and from friends whom I can trust my life with.
I am from belief in God and faith that His plan will always shine through no matter what the storm.
I'm from Foothills of the mountains and from 4 generations of North Carolinians, and from Mac and Cheese and big juicy steaks.
From a family where sports have traveled up the lineage for years, and from many afternoons and nights of working on Baseball with my dad.
I am from the South, from warmer weather, from people with warm hearts and from a family that spent their time on me!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Best and Worst WebQuests

The best to me was the Ice Cream Webquest because it had a great color scheme and it grabbed my attention very well; also it is a very fun topic that will make it intersting in itself. Also the oricess is mapped out well with the steps explained well. The next best one was "Where is My Hero." This one was interactive and had a fun topic. Also, the topic itself promotes good people skills. The worst were would have to be "Grow Schools Green" because it is bland and it isn't very appealing to make students interested in it. The next worst would be Underground Railroad because it isn’t interactive enough and the way it is written just seems like it was thrown together and not enough thought was put into it. The best and the worst just simply mean to me which ones have the most thouoght put inot them and which ones jump out at me and are appealing, are interactive and have good links to the necessary information, and the ones that are written well for the students to understand what their task is.