Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Valentine's Day Lesson

As always I feel skeptical about the lessons I have to prepare for class. Not being a core area teacher has its benefits but also its down falls. I never feel  comfortable with what I imagine would work in a "real" classroom setting, though I do enjoy stepping out of my art box and looking for ways to improve my teaching.
Looking at the setup for the new standards helps me understand what an important role art can be to the curriculum. Seeing how the spiral effect of the standards is challenging but makes so much more sense. the lessons will be deep and have a developed structure from year to year.
I enjoyed imagining a lesson that could be taught in a real classroom setting. It was exciting and I felt an sense of accomplishment when I completed my task. I now know that I will be able to produce art lessons that will fulfill the standards and my students will benefit from cross curricular lessons.
I am always fascinated with the lessons the elementary and middle school teachers develop. If I had a child in early grades I would want these people to teach my child. I am inspired and encouraged to do more. It wasn't a bad way to spend Valentine's Day.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Group Work

I enjoyed our lesson last Tuesday night. I taught me how to paraphrase and how important it is for all teachers in all grades to know the standards.  I think these standards will help immediately when implemented properly. I hope all teachers will research the new curriculum and study the new standards  to be better able to communicate with the teachers at their school. I am concerned that we will not have enough staff development and that the webinars will not be taken seriously. I hope I am wrong, but like everything new in education, there seems to be a pocket of teachers who resist change and cause wrinkles in our learning process. Hopefully with the cross section of teachers from  this class, each of the class participants will be able to light a new fire in their school.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Art in the curriculum

I found this article on education.com. I hope you can find time to read it and share it with your Art Teachers.


Before making decisions about what to include in our arts programs and how we will go about our work with the children, it is important to give some thought to why we make such decisions. Without some strong philosophical underpinnings, our visual arts programs could be simply a series of ad hoc activities or the slavish following of a formula.
Research in early childhood art education has enjoyed an increased amount of attention over the recent years (e.g., Bresler, 1994; Kindler, 1996; Matthews, 1999; Piscitelli, 1996; Thompson, 1995; Wright, 2000). A review of the literature shows multiple forces pulling in different directions, with policy statements emerging from the field of early childhood and the field of art education. Uncertainties are perpetuated in a number of common beliefs or myths about the nature of art, development, and creativity of young children (Kindler, 1996).
The complexity and diversity of influences that have shaped views on the teaching of art can be understood as a palimpsest, a term that describes the way in which the ancient parchments used for writing were written over, but new messages only partially obliterated the original message beneath. Both the new and the original messages still stand, albeit partially erased and interrupted (Davies, 1993). A reading of the numerous philosophies and practices of art education throughout our relatively recent history allows us to see familiar things in new ways. This new way of seeing enables the continuous exploration of new ideas in bids to improve practice, while recognizing that traces of previous thinking are not always completely obliterated but instead recur, shape, and interact with new developments.
At the site where a young child is learning about art, there are points where ideas about the child, art, and teaching meet, sometimes connecting, sometimes colliding, sometimes competing. We have beliefs that have shaped our ways of seeing the child, art, and teaching. Media can enhance our understanding of children and the art media themselves and how we can scaffold young children's learning within these media.

content reading

Content Reading is reading that deals with a particular subject.
Domain Reading is the actual process of reading.
The difference is- Content reading is reading in math science, social studies and technology while domain reading is concerned with actually reading.

Content Knowledge- is the principle of a particular discipline.
Domain Knowledge- is the knowledge of a certain area--knowing what you know.
The difference is- Content knowledge is concerned with how to teach students in order for them to understand while domain knowledge is knowing about something in order to benefit from it.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The Brain

After viewing the different areas of the brain in class last week, I remembered my Curriculum Professor at JSU when I got my masters. She was very unorthodox in her teaching methods and unfortunately one of the only valuable lessons I remember was her discussion and lesson on Right Brain- Left Brain learners. I have a brain test for everyone and a short description of the differences between the two. It came from Scholastic. I have found this article to be very helpful. I hope everyone enjoys finding out if they are in their right mind.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

DIAGNOSIS;the missing ingredient

"Of course, diagnosis will not make any difference if it does not lead to action."
Questions fo\r my high school:
How will RTI help high school students?
How will we discern which students need the help?
How will funding and staff be provided?
Is it too late for high school students to benefit from such programs?
What a simple but powerful statement. All too often in education we are faced with discerning what a problem is and all too often we do nothing about the problem. After reading the article by Lipson and Chompsky-Higgins, I feel that the majority of our early educational leaders are doing a great job at diagnosing the problems we are facing. Not being in a core class nor ever given a bench mark or reading assessment, it is hard for me to say what we are and are not doing well.However, examples given from Vermont we uplifting, not in that they are burning my soul to try these methods, but we in our county are using these methods of assessment and planning for the individual student.
We as educators know all too well that on program does not fit all, especially in the area of reading and comprehension. I am not sure, as I stated before, the intricacies of teaching a student how to read and comprehend, but I am smart enough to know that we all have to get on board and face the challenge ahead of us through testing, planning and doing what is necessary for the good of our students.
With testing unfortunately comes time and money, things no county seems to have enough of. Research may be pointing to tailored interventions, but how will we be able to fund these interventions that will help prevent reading disabilities and or improve students' abilities during later years?