Part 4 really engaged me because I’ve watched education
change from the beginning of my career until now. During my student teaching (1995), everyone taught
whatever they wanted and “whole language” was the buzz word. I don’t believe everyone using the buzz word
fully understood the philosophy behind it, and neither did I. After several years of subbing and a yearlong
paid internship, I was hired for my first teaching position in kindergarten. I bought Month by Month phonics because there
wasn’t a curriculum to follow and not really any materials.
After my first year, I was asked to participate during
the summer in curriculum rewrites where we aligned our district curriculum with
the state standards. The curriculum
director bribed me with a king size package of peanut M&Ms. The new
curriculum was distributed to teachers, but they still chose to follow it or
not. The following few summers we
continued the curriculum alignment and added required district wide assessments. Teachers were told they would follow the curriculum and use the new assessments. This began the micro-management era in our
district.
As you might expect, there was a lot of push back from teachers,
but as administrators got on board, they held everyone accountable to using the
curriculum guide and adopted materials.
What I didn’t entirely realize was that this movement was
in response to No Child Left Behind (no teacher left alive as we called
it). Even though, I think NCLB is
ridiculous, I think the tightening of the curriculum and creating a scope and
sequence was a good move for our district.
Next came the standardized testing which led to more
micro-management. This led to our
mandated district wide reading “switch” which is where students are ability
grouped and the lowest groups are drilled following a triage method where they
receive 10-15 minutes of phonics and word work instruction, 10-15 minutes of
fluency drills, and 10-15 minutes of actual reading or comprehension. This time replaced literature circles, guided
reading groups and other individualized instruction. We were also required to teach the district’s
adopted reading series with fidelity for the remainder of our reading
instructional time. I suppose in the
district’s eyes this is differentiated instruction, but having taught that low
group for years, I could see that they needed more time reading and more authentic
reading but the whole group drilling approach didn’t allow for it. In addition to that, even though they are all
“low,” they still have diverse needs that aren’t being met with whole group
drilling.
I’ve noticed more and more over the years that kids are
losing their enjoyment for school, for reading and their ability to think or
work independently. They are so used to
being spoon fed information. After
reading The Book Whisperer, I was inspired to do my research on
self-selected reading with follow up activities to see what impact it might
have on students’ attitudes and self-perceptions. Another reason for focusing on that is that
SSR is viewed as a waste of time and as teachers being lazy by many.
Flat
World…
The biggest idea that resonated with me this week was in Ch.
6 on p.173 where it said, “Empowerment of the teaching profession produces good
results.” Most decisions about education
are made by people who have no experience or training in the field of
education. That’s sad.
Chris,
ReplyDeleteIt is amazing how far education has come. In my district during my internship we had curriculum. I luckily didn't have to be in the situation that you were in where you had to buy your own materials. My principal has been awesome when it comes to materials. With our reading curriculum she has made sure that our special edu. materials align with the general edu. curriculum so all of us are on the same page. She has been a huge advocate for having the other special edu. teacher and I even go to trainings that weren't necessarily for special edu. teachers just so that we would know what the general edu. teachers and students are required to do so that when we pull for small group instruction we are speaking the same language to the kids.
I love the Book Whisperer! I agree that self-selected reading inspires and motivates kids to be readers. I found in my research that students are also motivated in mathematics by choosing their own strategy to solve problems. Students need more time on authentic reading and math tasks to improve and enjoy!
ReplyDeleteChris,
ReplyDeleteYou have pursued this idea of making change in your school through your action research project. You are showing your school and others, through your research, that teachers can engage in great lessons with great results that impact students without being tied to a close knit curriculum. SSR was my favorite part of school, I hated all the other stuff and from time to time encourage SSR in my classroom after tests and homework is done. This builds a valuable resource for students to find connections to on a continuing basis. Good job for standing up for your beliefs because you are the classroom teacher, the professional who understands and knows what is best for your group of kids!