Monday, March 8, 2010

Final Exam

1. Personal vision for schooling in 21st century
In schools, I would like to see: student activities that are engaging and meaningful, and learning that is connected with real life; students feeling part of a community, with respectful and strong social relationships among them; students who feel their time in school in valuable to them; their learning gives them skills in problem-solving, social interactions, literacy and numeracy, and ability to critique and reason.

2. One action to implement this semester...
To frequently connect the science content with students' lives and the real world, and to make the subject matter up to date by highlighting recent discoveries and technologies. This can be done right away, by doing discrepant event demonstrations, and using simulations and online resources to engage students.

3. One action to implement during first two years...
I will aim to make much of science learning inquiry-based, not just in the context of labs but in the instructional classroom setting too. In chem labs, tasks are often too 'cook book' - a given procedure on a given unit topic. I hope to be able to shake things up, and blend content areas in more open ended questions and investigations. To develop inquiry-based approach across the whole of the chemistry syllabus is a longer term development process, because it will require collaborations with other teachers, agreement from administrators, etc.

4. Action later in career...
Looking longer term, I will become an advocate for change in school structure. I would like to see a shake up in the school system in all areas (schedule, classroom set-up, relationships between teachers in different content areas, assessment procedures, teaching methods) so that student experiences of school - their activities, relationships with other students and staff, and their learning - are not separated and remote from the outside world, but which enhance it. As bell hooks states "an attempt to create conditions for young people for becoming active participants in a changing society".

5. Each of these three timelines are connected with a desire to see change in schools, or 'reform in secondary education', away from the traditional, separated- subject approach commonly practiced. The idea of 'powerful teaching' is the link between all three. The short timeline (this semester) is a change that incorporates more powerful teaching (student-centered, inquiry-based learning, linking across content areas), this connects with the mid range timeline (two years) that develops powerful teaching by making a large component of the curriculum inquiry-based and connecting content areas in interdisciplinary thematic units, and finally the longer timeline of making these approached dominant in the school, this requires restructuring of the school as a whole.

2 comments:

  1. Michael - I know you will be a really committed, giving, wise, engaging, and fun teacher. The teaching community needs more people like you, and just as you are connecting your professional and personal experience to the world and your students, it will be awesome for you to show your students just how learning, the real world, and the future can merge. I look forward to seeing you put these principles into practice and changing the field (and the world) in tectonic ways. :)

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  2. I agree Michael that we need to make our content more relevant to the students these days in order to keep them engaged. It's difficult to keep the students motivated in class if all they are learning are facts and equations. Inquiry based learning will help students explore mathematical and scientific topics in more detail than they would in a 20th century classroom.

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