Reflection 1 of Spring Semester and of my new classroom.
“Welcome to the wonderful world of your spring 9th grade English Class, taught by me, Ms. Acton.”
Okay, that one still needs a little work. I’m ready though, with a bunch of icebreakers, a first unit that’s mostly ironed out, 4 days planned for getting to know each other and a strategy to lock one of the doors to my classroom and barricade the other with all the impressive physical mass I can muster in order to shake every hand - every day.
I have just moments more.
The ball drops and the curtains go up on Feb. 1, next Tuesday. I’m ready and also, I’m not. Hello Teaching! Last semester, AC and DM who have been teaching at the HS for 16 and 22 years respectively, told me that they still have that anxiety dream where you are up in front of the class and suddenly realize that you have nothing prepared. Man, I’ve been having that dream A LOT lately. Yow.
Since I have been forewarned and instructed that this semester is going to be insane while I’m getting my PACT (Performance Assessment for California Teachers -for those not yet in the acronym know) done, I’m going to follow the advice of my seminar teacher and use PACT specific prompts for all of these weekly reflections until my PACT is done on 4/14/2011. For those of you who are not my supervisor, and probably for you too Kate, it may render these a little dry.
PROMPT: What do you see experienced teachers struggling with at your school? What can you learn from this?
This seemed like a good start in order to introduce the concept that I am seeing a lot of experienced-teacher-struggle right now in my new CT, JW. I took this placement in another small school at the HS) with the 9th graders because it was very strongly suggested to me that AHA would like to hire me for next year to be their 9th/11th grade English teacher. I knew that it was going to be a challenging spring placement and that I would be required to do more work than the average student teacher. So, I know, I knew, and I only have myself to blame, and hopefully I will be getting a great job out of the bargain. So these are some things I have generally seen some really great teachers struggling with are:
1. Staying present
2. Not getting complacent about teaching
3. Really getting to know your students
4. Not getting overwhelmed by the responsibilities of the job
And I guess right now the biggest thing that I can learn from all of those and this also applies specifically to my relationship with JW, is that teaching is an incredibly hard job to do well. Being kind to yourself, your students and your fellow educators while trying to stay present, do your best work and maintain boundaries is a tall order. I think it can be a real pitfall for a new teacher, hot off the presses and bursting with excitement about educational equity and new ideas, to judge veteran teachers for their current relationships with their jobs. Yes, it is important to know what we believe and to recognize patterns that we don’t want to fall into and attitudes that we don’t want to reflect in our own teaching, but it is also incredibly important to recognize the humanity in every educator. The ability to be critical without stripping another person of their humanity or villanizing them is a very important adult skill. I think it is one I have struggled to maintain in the midst of this program. It can be very easy to give in to bad-mouthing teachers we perceive as “bad” or “unfit” and I think that there is
a way that in groups it can be very easy to give in to that lowest-common-denominator urge to shit-talk. So, as far as my situation goes right now, I’m resisting the urge. I’m respecting JW’s humanity and the choice that he made to be an educator and believing that he has skills and ideas to share with me, and that there are things I can learn from him. Okay, I know I really just scratched the surface of those 4 things, but I fell myself and my brain winding down and I’m starting to make a lot of typos… so, good night.