Monday, January 4, 2010

We're Back!

Hi everyone

No Tim and I are not dead. We have just been busy with the end of the first trimester and Tim's family coming over to see us. Well we have also been I suppose a little lazy too. Have no fear though, you are in for a very long update. What have we been up to for the last two months?

School for Becky:

Ok so school for me has been pretty interesting. Last blog, we wrote about my first exam. Well as most of you already know, it was rather brutal. One class had 29 students pass the exam and 20 in the other. Lets just say that I went through quite a few pens while I was correcting there tests. Most of you can imagine how I felt, having 49 kids out of 180 pass is not stellar. My opinion is that the kids just didn't study. I had a nice chat with each class and I told them that I have no idea how they all didn't pass the exam. I explained that every question on the exam was a homework problem with different numbers. Some of the questions I didn't even change the numbers. Sigh...

After the first exam, I started our first section of geometry. I was hoping that the kids would be really good at geometry since algebra really isn't their thing. Teaching geometry is very interesting here. I teach straight out of the book, but I do not always agree with how the book presents certain concepts. I usually only teach what is in the book, but there are some concepts that are extremely difficult for the kids to understand, so I have started incorporating my own way of explaining different concepts. I will admit that the kids think I am exceptionally bizarre. One of my favorite sections this time was trying to explain the different types of symmetry. Most of you can probably recall your teachers doing the whole manipulation of you hands to see the different types of symmetry. I did that same activity with my kids and wow, they went nuts. I have never experienced anything like it. First the kids look at you like you are some alien creature and then one of the kids finally sees what you are showing them and get all excited and explain it to their neighbor. After that, the race is on, all the kids are manipulating their hands and their neighbors to get all the types of symmetry.

I gave my second exam at the beginning of December. I had a lot of fun creating the exam. I got to draw a few images and I used African animals on the name the type of symmetry section. The kids laughed when they saw the animals on the test. I was informed however that my lion was sick because he had spots. I laughed to myself and thought poor cheetah, he is going to have a complex with some of the kids thinking he is a lion. Well grading the second test was a treat. One class, I had 24 pass and the other class I had 48 pass. This did not make me extremely happy. I do not understand the differences in the classes. The class that only had 24 pass is the class that I teach second. Thus in theory, they should get better scores because I have worked out all the rough spots in my teaching. Oh what to do, what to do. I am so proud of my 5eme C, having half of the kids pass is amazing. Now I just need to keep those kids motivated and get the others motivated as well. Wish me luck :)

One thing I have learned in my three months of teaching is that pattern recognition is something that these kids can not do. This has certainly made teaching math very challenging. I am hoping to finish the book early this year. I have already gotten through seven chapters and there are 19 in the book. I want to have a few weeks at the end of the year were the kids do nothing by puzzles and brain teasers. I really think that if I can get them to develop even a little pattern recognition, their life will be a hundred times easier.

Oh I almost forgot! I now have a peanut gallery in my room. Ok let me explain. I have trouble with kids not paying attention to the lecture. They will just start staring off into space and I can't get them back. I also have the kids who put their heads down on top of the desk. That is a very dangerous thing for them to do since they love to sleep. I also have the kids who will fall asleep while sitting up. Thus I have three different types of offenders that I just didn't know how to deal with. I really didn't want to kick them out of my class. That only hurts them more; the kids are devastated by getting minus five points on the test every time they are kicked out. I was getting rather frustrated with the kids too. One day while teaching and about 15 kids were not paying attention in one way or another, I had a stroke of genius: the peanut gallery. I explained to the kids what the peanut gallery was in America. They laughed and I told then that if they didn't pay attention to the class they were a peanut and would have to sit in the peanut gallery. The kids were not to sure about this. They new it wasn't a good thing to be in the peanut gallery, but it wasn't necessarily a bad thing either. When I tell a kid to sit in the peanut gallery, they have to sit in the front of the room on the floor and take all their notes there too. This helps me to know that they are taking notes and I can make them pay attention by asking all sorts of questions to them. There are some rules to the peanut gallery. The peanuts can only talk with other peanuts and not to the other students. Their name is changed to peanut for the entire day as well.

I have had to add a few other things to the peanut gallery game too. I have had a peanut try to run away to its seat and so I told him he was a mouse. A mouse certainly couldn't sit with peanuts, so he got his own spot on the other side of the room. That same day, I had a peanut who could not stay awake, so she became a mouse too. Well, I could very well watch those two kids while I taught, so I made another student a tiger to guard the mice. If the mice misbehaved again the tiger was to inform me and I would kick them out of class. Oh yeah :) Well this game has gotten quite fun some days. I have had a monkey and an ostrich in the game too. Now the whole school knows about the game and when kids are walking outside and see the peanuts they will yell “Peanut! Peanut!”
Slightly unorthodox....possibly. Highly entertaining....definitely.

2 comments:

  1. ok.. can i just say that your school sounds so much more fun than Mr. Mac's attempting to teach us. Man if we had our "peanut gallery" maybe I would of enjoyed math a little more...the whole mass catastrophy going on in the classroom sounds like an action movie that I wouldn't want to miss. Love ya K

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  2. Loved reading your stories. So glad to see your school.So glad to be able to visit and see everything. Love and hugs Mom and Dad

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