- What did you learn about yourself as a writer?
- I believe that I am a procrastinator largely due to my
fear of sharing my personal thoughts and ideas. More often than not, I
have been convincing myself of all the negative qualities of my writing
rather than focusing on the positive. Posting these blogs has show me
that, in the nicest terms possible, that it doesn’t really matter what
others believe if I am happy with my writing.
- What did you learn about digital writing or being a member of a digital writing community?
- I have found that a digital writing community is far
more beneficial than I had originally thought. None of the participants
were actively trying to pick apart another’s writing; everyone was doing
the best they could to provide advice and commentary to each other.
- What lessons can you take to your classroom or share with future teachers about integrating blogging into instruction?
- Publishing your work, no matter how innate or simple,
can be a very empowering act. Being able to post, gather responses, and
respond on others gives a sense of camaraderie and pride in one’s own
work.
- Challenges/Successes?
- The biggest challenge I faced was actually writing out my thoughts or ideas and not over-analyzing them to the point that I was deleting the entire thing. Sometimes, flow of consciousness is the best way to express an idea and worrying about how you might be taken isn’t as important as you think.
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Digital Writing Reflection
What I've Read
Reading through Teaching
Argument Writing by George Hillocks, there was a distinct sense of movement
through the stages of proper argument writing. While being packed full of educational
tips and methods, the format of the book did a wonderful job of guiding through
the process of teaching students what
argument writing consists of and not just how
to create an essay using arguments. In order to show the parts that I found
beneficial, I picked the quotes from each section that stood out the most.
On providing clear feedback:
“The complexity of the
problem, the clarity of the objectives, and the expertise of participants are
all related to useful feedback. Experts and experienced participants will
understand and respond to feedback better than neophytes still learning what
feedback is. …working with neophytes, we need to focus our feedback on no more
than two or three related dimensions of the task at a time and emphasize what
the learners have done well.”
Feedback has such an impact on students, not providing them
with appropriate feedback is a large disservice. From this quote, I took away
the idea that it is important to treat students almost like I teach my own
children: they are new to concepts, even if they are something that they should know at that point, and simply reiterating
the same thing to them won’t work. Educators have to be the feedback they need
to show them that, even when they aren’t grasping the material, their progress
has been noticed.
On pretesting:
“Before we teach
students how to do something new, we need to know what students already know
how to do in relationship to the task.”
My education was a bit hectic as I moved from school to
school. One thing that would have been a huge benefit would have been if more
teachers utilized pretesting. Many times, certain subjects (I’m looking at you,
Math) require a great deal of background knowledge in order to even complete
simple tasks later on. If a teacher isn’t ready to provide a pretest, students
who are falling behind will only continue to fall further. The pretest should
be something that proceeds every lesson, even if it only consists of a
discussion or no-grade quiz to check for understanding.
On using small-group discussions:
“Small-group
discussions make for powerful learning environments when they are carefully
planned and monitored. … Demonstrate how to do the task in a whole-class discussion
before assigning small-group work on similar tasks. Be sure that the tasks for
small-group work are at the same level of difficulty as the task that you
demonstrated with the whole class.”
Small-group discussions have become one of my favorite
things to explore in the classroom. I was fortunate enough to be in an
internship where the teacher holds the same beliefs as Hillocks in reference to
small-group discussion. Simply telling a classroom to have a small-group
discussion is an open invitation for them to shirk the responsibility of the
problem if they aren’t informed. To model the task and keep it on the appropriate
level as the students is a remarkable method as it can be utilized in pretests,
assignments, projects, etc.
On teaching students to make inferences:
“The interpretation of
literature is all about the reader making judgements. … Students who have
learned to develop criteria to define a concept are able to bring the
understanding, those criteria, to bear in the reading of a literary text and make
inferences based on this understanding.”
Even when we are dealing in Honors courses or with older
students, it is crucial to further define their understanding of
interpretation. As Hillocks has said, a student who is prepared to complete
these interpretations (i.e. knowledge of developing the criteria to define a
concept) will be more efficient in their personal interpretations.
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
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