Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Captain's Log 5


Captain's Log 5
            Over the course of the past week not too many exciting things have happened in the classroom. I’m at the middle part of the quarter and my overall feelings are that I have far too much on my plate. If it wasn’t for the years I’ve spent procrastinating assignments from when I was a freshman in high school to present day, even as I write this, I wouldn’t be able to handle the stress and demand. I’m being pulled in different directions: college studies, middle school hours, my part-time job, running, family, friends and the extra stuff including graduation applications which have yet to be found. If my parents question my frequent trips to coffee shops I might just send them my course load in the mail as a response. Now days I don’t drink shots unless they’re espresso shots. I’m also confident I haven’t slept more than five hours since spring break- I miss those days. I also haven’t made a home cooked meal in weeks- unless a sandwich counts, in which case I cooked on Monday. I don’t even know if it’s about balancing everything anymore. I feel like I’m just struggling to stay on top of the water and whenever I make a gain somebody tosses me a brick: “don’t forget this!”
            In the classroom I’m trying to cope with the stress I have overall in my life by ignoring it. Ignorance is bliss, and I don’t want the stress to taint my enjoyment of time spent in the middle school. I’m trying hard to drop everything at the door and keep things separate. So far so good! I was having difficulty this morning with a bad start of spilling coffee and slow drivers that nearly made me late (thankfully I didn’t get a speeding ticked). I lucked out and my coordinating teacher gave me an organization task in which I got to just work on mindless items- exactly what I needed. I think the more this quarter goes on, the more I realize how important it is to focus on the task at hand. I can’t do everything, and some things have to just have to be let go. I know my coordinating teacher has said that a million times, but only now, when I am feeling spread thinly across my responsibilities, do I realize how important that advice is.
            In my first few years of teaching, especially in my student teaching quarter, I will be working to organize my own life in a manner that things stay separate. I don’t want stress or issues from other halves of my life to affect the other. My home life shouldn’t affect a child’s performance in school; they already have their home lives doing that for them. For myself, I don’t want school to follow me home or home to follow me to school. That will be the balance I’ll focus on most so I don’t end up feeling like I’m drowning, with too much to handle. 
This is Captain Danielle Raschko, signing off. 

Tea Time

A birthday gift I received: "I Only Date Super Heroes"

Introduction to Immigration in the PNW edTPA


TPA Lesson Plan
Teacher Candidate __      Danielle Raschko___                  _                 Grade(s)  _  7__          _   
Content Area ____Social Studies                                               Length of Lesson _51 minutes__
Unit/Subject    Pacific Northwest: Washington State History _________________________   __
Lesson Title/Focus        Introduction to Immigration __ _________________          _________
Academic and/or Content Standards
Literacy in History/Social Studies Common Core State Standards:
Key Ideas and Details
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.6-8.2 Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of the source distinct from prior knowledge or opinions
Craft and Structure
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.6-8.4 Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including vocabulary specific to domains related to history/social studies.
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
Content Objective
By the end of this lesson students will be able to identify groups of immigrants, providing reasons for why migration occurs in general as well as specific to the course content.
Academic Language Objective
Students will be able to identify the causes of migration for several immigrant groups including their reasons for migration, outcomes, impacts and prevalence in Pacific Northwest History overall.
Assessment Strategies
To assess and practice the concept, students will be assigned to groups and topics in which they will read the text, answer questions, create a physical model and present their knowledge of their assigned topics to the class. Students will be prompted to share their “essential” questions with their classmates. Worksheets from each individual student will be collected and assessed for completion. 
Lesson Rationale
This lesson will help students be exposed to various reasons for the occurrence of migration through the study of various immigrant groups. In addition, students will be asked to create their own physical representations of the immigrant groups they are assigned, allowing them to offer their own interpretation of the information provided by the text. 
Instructional Strategies and Learning Tasks to Support Learning
Direct Instruction/ Independent Work/ Whole Class Discussion (11 minutes): The instructor will welcome the class, direct students to the entry task and explain the days plan. One or two students will be selected to pass out textbooks. Students will be given time to read and respond to the entry task on the doc camera. Students will then be called on to share responses which will lead into the power point presentation.
Whole Class Reading (7 Minutes): The instructor will ask for volunteers to help read paragraphs from the introduction of the section. Students will follow along and write down three things they found to be important to the northwest from the section read. Students will be asked to share a few items and prompted again to relate back to the entry task question.
Group Work (15 minutes): The instructor will pass out worksheets, explain the instructions, clarify terms and answer questions pertaining to the task. Students will be grouped up, read together answer the questions on the work sheet and then create a model/representation to present.
Whole Class Discussion/Presentation(15 minutes): Volunteers from groups will be prompted to share their responses to the questions pertaining to immigration groups. Further students will show and explain their models. Students will have the opportunity to ask questions and share things they found particularly interesting.
Whole-Class Discussion (3 Minutes): The instructor will bring the class together, have them put materials away, turn in worksheets and close with an exit question. Students will be reminded of upcoming assignments and past due assignments.  
Differentiated Instruction
Being able to read along to a printed version of the text is appealing to visual learners. For kinesthetic learners the worksheet provides a more hands-on learning as well as the model activity in which students get to create a physical representation to show their understanding of the immigration group they were assigned. Auditory learners benefit from hearing the text read out loud as well as sharing their responses with one another.
Resources and Materials
This lesson used:
Green, M. K., Carlson, L. M., & Myers, S. A. (2008). Washington in the Pacific Northwest. Salt
Lake City: Gibbs Smith.

  • Pen/Pencil
  • Computer
  • Microsoft Office Word
  • Document Camera/Overhead Projector
  • Worksheets- 110 Copies
  • Colored Paper
  • Markers
  • Pipe cleaners
  • Miscellaneous Craft Supplies
Management and Safety Issues
Not applicable.
Parent and Community Connections
Not applicable. 







Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Captain's Log 4


Captain's Log 4
            On Monday I had a break through moment with a female student in my class who in the past has been shy, reserved and resistant to completing class work or participating in discussions at all. I asked her how her day was to which she shook her head and just said “awful”. I asked her what was going on and she said her mom and her had a fight, and that it was a regular thing. We talked about her upcoming move to England to live with her father; our connections to the Air Force and at the end of the conversation she asked me, “Are you going to be here the rest of the year?” To which I answered “Yes, of course!” She smiled- I have never seen this girl smile-and said “Good”. During the conversation, however, she confessed (I’m paraphrasing for her own privacy) that the fights between her mother and her were moderately physical. I was shocked that she had decided to share this with me. I reported back to my coordinating instructor which he said he would document and report during his free period, and then we briefly discussed her past history. Apparently she had shared similar information with him, but left out the physical aspect of the fighting. It dawned on me that for this girl I had become someone she could trust with private and personal information.
While I know it is mandatory to report, and I fully believe in the idea, I am worried that our teacher-student relationship will lose trust to which I see as harmful to her. I see this as harmful because I see already see her disconnect in the classroom and I’m hoping this won’t add further to it. I also can tell that these fights DO affect her classroom performance and that it is absolutely necessary to report this- that this is quite possible her call for help.
            My experience from this incident serves to affirm, in my own beliefs, the importance of mandatory reporting as well as the weight of relationships between students and teachers. We need to be the person they can trust but also act as their safety line, especially when they can’t see the way out for themselves. In my own classroom in the future I want to establish trusting relationships with my students and maintain an open door policy so when things like this happen in their lives they can trust me to act in their best interest.
            A final thought: What do you say to a child who says something like that? I’m a little in despair about that conversation still. At that time I just sort of paused, and sort of re-directed the subject. I don’t know if it was the right thing to do, but she must not have thought anything poorly of it by the way the conversation ended. I mean how do you console someone who confesses something like that?
This is Captain Danielle Raschko, signing off. 

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Captains Log 3


Captain's Log 3

This last Friday I taught my first lesson in the Social Studies classroom. Let’s just remember my major is English and a History minor with only two history classes under my belt, so I was pretty impressed with the results. I planned a power point introduction on the Oregon Trail, covering the highlights of the book and then created a note worksheet for students to fill out while I was lecturing. The goal of the worksheet was to help students remember information, allowing them auditory and tactile mediums in which to retain the information. Further, the worksheets would help them learn the information so they could answer questions during the game. After we went through a slide, I would pause and check to see if students had the questions and notes filled out. During the presentation I would prompt students with lead-in questions, for example: “Why do you think Native Americans would have been upset with the pioneers during the migration of the Oregon Trail?” After the presentation, we reviewed the presentation to help students fill in their missing information. Following the presentation, we played a game in which two students at a time faced off, responding to a question. I thought this would be a great game to play on a Friday because students are already in the weekend mind-set as well as they had just completed MSP testing the day before.
            While my lesson was a little too fast for first period, it was down to the last few minutes and ran smoothly. I was surprised and proud by how well students responded to my prompt questions. Everything ran smoothly until sixth period, which was surprising because my fourth period class- which is usually the most disruptive- ran the best. In sixth period a group of boys required attention in the back with their disruptive behavior, so while I was impressed with my ability to teach students from the back of the class, I was a little annoyed by students walking outside the class through the emergency exit that had been propped for airflow. In addition students were not participating in the presentation at all and were instead throwing their worksheets around and tearing them up. While the majority of the class did well, it was difficult for me to know how to discipline while trying to teach lessons; I felt like the most talented chain saw juggler ever.
            What I learned? I learned I still need to practice discipline and familiarize myself with the procedures. The student behavior was out of control, but thankfully my coordinating teacher handled the detention slips for me; however, I felt that I should have more participation in that process. Also, I learned that I do have the confidence to teach! It only took one period for me to slow down, but after the second run-through I felt confident about the topic and comfortable to ask different questions and run with the teachable moments as they arose. I was also very proud of my students! I had a student- the brain of the class- who informed me he had researched the topic before he came to class. I was impressed by their insights and honestly, I would not have thought of half of them myself. 
        So a further conflicting issue for myself is knowing the discipline procedures of the school and when to act on them. I knew in that situation that something needed to be done, but I didn't know what or how. I don't know what I would have done if my coordinating teacher hadn't been there and thats a thought that scares me. I want to be confident that I can handle these situations when they arise. Finally, my coordinating teacher was very impressed with how the lesson ran and decided to create an activity which we will run this Thursday. I was happy to hear this news and slightly embarrassed (in a good way) when he bragged to the Principle about how my lessons went that day. 

This is Captain Danielle Raschko, signing off.