Artifact One - Complete Essay
Use the tabs above the blog for summaries & reflections
My educational philosophy is definitely
progressive, refined by a touch of realism. I realized that after taking
Introduction to Elementary Education at CSULB. The course was taught by Erin
Gruwell, the inspiration behind the film and book Freedom Writer’s Diary. It
was chaotic and unstructured. Still, somehow it worked. Mrs. Gruwell had a
talent for turning learning into a game as well as a knack for intuiting each
student’s strengths and weaknesses. In the end, you passed with an “A” because it
would be devastating to let her down.
I eventually took what I learned from
her to a third-grade literacy class I was teaching. It worked wonderfully while
I was teaching the class, yet it failed them miserably after I left.
Background
Early
in life, my negative experiences in education were continuous. I moved from New
York to Arizona at age six. After about a year I moved again. Whatever friends
I made were always gone within a year. Because of this, and an unemotional family,
I didn’t have a support system to discuss feeling out of place. Not surprisingly,
I was bullied all the way up until middle school. Often the bullying happened
in front of my teachers. Most did nothing to intervene.
According
to Eric T. Moore, author of My Educational Philosophy, “The
classroom climate must be safe, professional, and collaborative, allowing
students to feel at ease to express their views, share experiences, and discuss
differences of opinion (Moore, 2018).” In retrospect, my educational
experiences were anything but safe. That had a profound effect on me. I rarely raised my hand. I never
volunteered. And asking questions terrified me.
A turning point came in ninth grade as I
enrolled in AFJROTC. At the time, my interest in science was replaced with an
interest in creative writing. I started to devour papers on writing well; I
also started to write for the school paper. By the time I graduated high school
I was on the honor roll while maintaining almost a 3.5 average. After I enrolled at Arizona State University, I
refined my major from liberal arts to journalism. But, without a great interest
in writing about plane crashes, I eventually took my BA and became a substitute
teacher.
Analysis
After
four years at Washington Middle School as an on-site substitute, I’ve come to
realize, I owe my students more than my own intuition about teaching. The
realization came when I watched my principal, Meghan Traver, handle a class
that I failed to control. She managed to connect that bland textbook to the
students’ lives as required by TPE 1.3. (Ctc.ca.gov,
2018). Once that happened, the classroom management took care of itself.
Essentialism was the philosophy I aligned
with the second most. Again, I am not surprised. While I believe in tailored
learning, I believe there are some core educational concepts that cannot be
ignored. For instance, teaching students Algebra when that student can’t pass a
timed basic multiplication test usually ends badly. Some of those core concepts
don’t lend themselves to individual tailoring.
So how do you maintain a balance between
tailoring curriculum to individual needs and an understanding that some core
concepts don’t lend themselves to personal tailoring? That comes with an
educator’s understanding of ethics. The Association of American Educators
breaks down ethics into four core responsibilities: the educator’s
responsibilities towards the students, the community, the educator and the
educator’s colleagues (Association of American Educators, 2018).
I found myself agreeing with most of the
responsibilities to students while questioning the requirements for continuous
growth in teaching methods. In my own experience, I think educators often throw
out old ideas because they’re old, not necessarily because they are bad ideas.
A good example with when all of LBUSD threw out Open Court, because the school
district didn’t want to focus on phonics. LBUSD instead wanted to take a
“wholistic” approach to reading and literature. However, based on my own
experience, students who can’t break words into their parts, will never get the
wholistic intent of any literature. That’s me temporarily abandoning
Progressivism for Essentialism.
Conclusion
I do think all the ethics can be boiled
down to one simple question: Is this approach good for the student I am
teaching now? Unfortunately, the realist
in me also knows teaching is rarely a one on one occurrence.
Remember that third grade class? They
loved learning turned into a game.
Unfortunately, the teachers that came
after me didn’t all believe in that progressive theory of education. Some of
those teachers clung to the old fashion notion learning should be its own
reward. Some never tailored the lessons to the student’s own personal needs and
background. So, when some of those students encountered a different teaching
style, they couldn’t handle it. And students need to be able to handle every
kind of teaching style they might encounter.
It seems to me, the code of ethics
published by the American Association of Educators is a solid starting point
for educational ethics in general. However, I also think it occasionally ignores
that reality that one size never fits everything, including educational styles.
No comments:
Post a Comment