Monday, January 30, 2017

Teaching Blue Jays: Old and New Beginnings (Week 3)

I would call this week one of old and new beginnings.

First of all, I picked up Ag II this week with their unit of Fasteners. We are splitting the class in half. I will instruct half the class (9 students) for 2 days, followed by the other half the next 2 days. When they are not with me, they will be finishing their sheet metal/soldering/riveting unit with Mr Brown.

The second day of the first group was observed by Dr Foster, who made his first of four visits on Wednesday.  It is one of my student teaching goals to make everything purposeful, and I received some wonderful feedback on that goal. The piece that stands out the most was to create a sense of urgency in group work. I introduced Fasteners by having them categorize examples of fasteners. It will work better for me to set a time limit, then introduce the next plot twist or idea and set a new time limit. I have the first two days of the second group this week, and I am looking forward to making some changes and seeing how it works! Next week, I will continue with the fasteners unit and help Ag I start their record keeping journey in The AET.

Another highlight of the week was taking students to Tunkhannock HS for the area mechanics, small gas engines, and ag sales CDEs. I got my first taste of CDE competitions and got to meet teachers from across northeast PA. I also had a proud teacher moment with a student in the plumbing part of the mech competition. Earlier in the week I stayed after school to help a student solder (sweat a joint) for the first time. She was familiar with what to do, but it was her first time doing it herself. Well, on Friday she was the only student to get a perfect score on that part of the competition!

At this point in the blog, I started to discuss my weekend at 4-H State Leadership Conference. What resulted was a deep reflection on my history in youth development teaching philosophy, so I thought it would come across best in a stand-alone blog. Watch for that in the near future. I am excited to take the successes of week three in to week 4!

Friday, January 20, 2017

Teaching Blue Jays: Week 2

 Week two of student teaching is already here and gone. As I said last week, these first few weeks are about trying to take my passion and fit it in to the school setting. As I reflect, I can't believe how far I have come in that school setting since Monday. I am at the point where I am becoming comfortable with the daily routine of the classroom, and I am still very fortunate to be where I am.

Monday was an in-service day; my first as a teacher. The morning was focused on the first interventions teachers can take with academically struggling students before actions like remedial courses are taken. The afternoon was spent watching a video of a speech by Manny Scott, one of the original students whom the movie "Freedom Writers" was based on. Both were timely topics for me to hear.

The rest of the week, I assisted Mr Turner and Mr Brown in all the classes I will be taking over. The most notable of these was performing shop demonstrations and assisting students. Mr Brown and I agree that this type of interaction is building valuable report with the students. I am starting to see relationships with students and other teachers develop, after talking about the importance of it for three years, and it is a joy to experience.

Working with Freshman creed speakers before school
I continue to teach the full year ag 1 classes. We are moving through the careers unit, currently taking about cost of living and how it should effect your search. I developed a Problem Based Learning activity for them, where they are given a scenario, calculate living expences by researching real-life numbers, and compare it to income. That is the most engaged I have ever seen a class. I know that the topic was interesting by it's self, but I saw a dramatic behavior in some particular students from the previous day. It gives me drive to create new and exciting lessons for them in the future!

Next week, I will start with Ag 2 in their fasteners unit. The "ag power lab" room, which is a separate workshop next to Mr Brown's room, is where my desk is, and I am trying to make it in to "my" room. It was designed to be able to facilitate classroom instruction, but it has not been done yet. I will start my time with Ag 2 experimenting to try and make that space my own. Also to note, I have been assisting with the creed and small engines CDE teams before and during school, and I will be making the field trip to the area cde competition for s.g.e. and others this Friday. I'll keep you posted on how it all goes!

In summery of week 2, I am starting to feel at home here at Central Columbia. There have been no changes to my philosophy so far, mostly just reinforcement. I feel like I am being eased in to my position perfectly, and while I'm itching to take more on, I know it will come. I am trying to put out the best quality I can right now, so that quality of instruction, not quantity, becomes engraved in my mind as the norm. I can't wait for what is to come in week 3!


Sunday, January 15, 2017

My First Week as Mr Repetz: Welcome to Real Life Teaching

As I sit here to write down my reflections on student teaching, I can't express how amazing it feels to be in the classroom everyday working with students. This past weekend I returned home to volunteer at Farm Show/celebrate my early birthday with my family, and I have been talking constantly about my first week. The tag line of those conversations has been: "I loved every second so far, but I haven't hit a bad day yet, so call me then." 

My first week was actually only 3 days in the classroom due to Mid-Winter Convention on Monday (see the blog on that!) and a snow day on Wednesday. In the days I have been in school, I have worked with the classes I will be taking over. Mr Brown and Mr Turner have an excellent way of working together, and I have slipped right in. For an example to clarify that: Mr Brown and Mr Turner frequently have the same class (Ag 3, ag 4, etc) in the same period, so the combine the classes. They will team teach a unit, one takes one unit and one takes the next, or one will take one half to the shop and the other will stay in the classroom and they switch the next day. 

They have both have immediately made me a teaching presence in the classroom, welcoming my input wherever I feel comfortable. Ex: using my PSU meats judging experience to contribute to Mr Turner's meat science unit, and using my shop experience to be a second teacher to assist, monitor, and provide feedback to students when they are working on projects. I have also contributed outside of class time. I have sat in on parli practice before school, and helped Mr Brown in the concession stand at the boys basketball game. 

I started my actual instruction with my Ag 1 careers unit on Friday. This coming week will continue to be crazy because of an in-service day on Monday, and it is the final week of the 9-week semester so there will be reviews and mid-terms/finals. I will continue to teach Ag 1 periods 5 and 8 each day possible, and continue through the rest of the internship. One thing I learned from talking with family and friends this past weekend is that our system of team instructing and even school schedule makes sense in my head, but it is hard to explain to someone else. Bottom line we got a plan, and it's a good plan.

Philosophy: I want to work with others to create a love of learning, not just delivery of instruction. I also want to be a staple in the school and local community. I think my placement is so great because I can see that in Mr Brown and Mr Turner. While not everything they do is not how I think I would do it, I am learning how they do what is best for them. I am sill your typical young buck with great ideas who wants to change lives, and that's ok. This first week, and probably the next few, are all about taking that drive and passion and learning how to make it operate in the everyday craziness of a real life classroom. My heart is full. Bring on week 2!!

When you teach with Mr Brown, you never know when your picture will be taken (and sent to your professors and school admin). Nevertheless, I'm glad he does. Teaching soldering to Ag 2.

BONUS Story of the Week:
(Scene: Mr Brown reminding students of a massive project, due tomorrow, that was assigned just after national convention. Student 2 is Student 1's occasional partner in mischief.)
S1: Mr Brown you never went over this, how am I supposed to get this done, I need an extension!
S2: What the heck S1? How can you even ask that? He has been over this so many times! Mr Brown, I don't know how you do this sometimes! 

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Student Teaching Day 1: Farm Show field trip

Myself with our 9 Keystone Degree Recipients
 I tell people that I was basically raised at the PA Farm Show Complex. My grandfather served as the livestock office manager there for 30 years, which overlapped with my childhood. I still remember being a young kid riding around in the golf cart with him. The past few years, I have followed in his footsteps and worked in that same office. With my family history at the PA Farm Show, it was fitting that my first day as a teacher would be spent there chaperoning students

Central Columbia brought down a full bus load of students, about 55 total and all grades, for Farm Show. This ends up being most of the active chapter. Mr Brown did not assign any particular scavenger hunt or related activity for them, but let them roam free from drop off to pick up. I thought this was a good approach because the students on the trip were trustworthy, it limited our headaches, made a better accepted experience for students, and we had other fish to fry that day. I definitely wasn't thrown in to the first day as far as leading students. Mr Brown is so well prepared that the day went smoothly and I could, for the most part, enjoy the day and get to know students.

Mr Brown and Mr Turner with senior Alyssa Yoder, state star in placement
The highlight of my day was seeing one of our students win state star in placement. I was at Central the day she was scrambling to get things ready for regionals that night. Mr Turner had to pull some teeth with her to get things completed, but in the end her records were through enough and she interviewed well enough that she took home the star. In short, it was the perfect example of times ag teachers push students to a potential they might not see in themselves. Fun Fact, Alyssa is only the 4th state start Mr Brown and Mr Turner have had in their combined 40+ years!

The biggest take away from the day was the feeling of community within ag ed. I'm now that guy who walks around and stops every few minutes to talk to someone he knows. Trust me, I was raised by those people, so to be "that guy" feels good. I talked to many ag teachers I have already met, and met many new ones as well. This teaching thing seems like more of a perfect fit every day, and I can't wait to get in the classroom!