Sunday, September 28, 2014

How? Just...how?

How do 90% of my students fail a test on verbs and adjectives? How do they fail it after we spend so much time on them? We go over them as a class, I model them, they practice identifying them in small groups. They even have a homework assignment on verbs, identifying them in their own writing. And yet they still fail the quiz.

Not all of them do, of course. The ones that I know will pass it -- K and J and B all make As, as expected, bless their souls. They hardly even need the review. That is what this is supposed to be -- a review. That is the most frustrating thing about this. This is all supposed to be a review.

This is supposed to be something that these students were to learn in 3rd grade -- and maybe some of them did -- but they lost it somewhere, or maybe they just did not get it when they were supposed to. At any rate, I am stuck trying to catch them up, and they are just not getting it. On no less than three papers did students label blueberry as a linking verb. How does one blueberry, exactly? That is the question.

And, at the same time I am frustrated, I am absolutely baffled. I said that most of my students failed the verb and adjective quiz spectacularly -- and that is no lie -- but many of them did well -- splendidly, in fact -- on the preposition and adverb quiz I gave them on Friday. How does that make sense? These children do not know the different between an adjective and a verb, but they can tell the difference between an adverb and a preposition and can label the preposition in a prepositional phrase, which I've always considered the hardest part about learning the 8 Parts of Speech.

I am absolutely frustrated, baffled, and maybe just a little bit pleased. I just hope that they can remember that long enough to do well on their project. And hold onto that information for the rest of their lives, hopefully.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

The Struggle

If I sat here and told you that this has been a challenging week in teaching, I would be lying to you. It has been one of the most challenging weeks of my life.

My personal life has been turned upside down in many ways, and it has been very hard to keep my personal issues from entering the classroom. This has been a daily struggle for me. But we're not here to discuss my personal problems. We're here to discuss my professional life, and it's been turned upside down as well.

Last week was my first week to be the official, full-time teacher in my 9th grade class. Let's just say that this class is going to break me in very quickly.

There are 22 students in this class, and about 75 percent of them have behavior issues and are known for giving teachers a hard time. Don't get me wrong.The students are great to be around. Of the 22, there are only two of them with attitude problems. The problem with this class is their talking. They want to talk about anything and everything, and most things do not pertain to our lesson. I've been faced with classes similar to this one, so what's so challenging about this class?

These students are incredibly behind. They are on a 5th to 6th grade level as far as grammar and writing are concerned, and over half of the class is failing. I have only a couple of students in this class that are truly motivated to get things done, and a combination of all these things, plus students' behavior, have made for a very interesting and exhausting week.

I'm a student myself, and on top of my teaching, I have to attend class and stay on top of MY homework. How can I motivate an entire class, bring students' grades up, and force students to behave properly in the classroom? Is it possible?

I believe it is. I believe I can motivate every one of my students. I believe I can teach them what they need to know. I believe I can get my students to behave, and I believe I can do it all on top of my school work. Everyday will be a challenge, and I'm still not exactly sure what it will take. But it can be done. After all, that's what teachers do.

Sunday, September 14, 2014

An Exhausting Week


I have been in charge of the class grammar lessons for two weeks now, or about five lessons per class.

As the title suggests, it has been an exhausting experience so far. Some of the classes have been good…some of the others, well, not so much. But I will talk about those later. First I want to address my own issues.
We are covering parts of speech, something that really should have only been a review. They should have learned their parts of speech in third grade. At the very least, those are things they should have learned to tell the difference between a noun and a verb by seventh grade. I had planned my lesson to only take two class periods. Three at the most. That definitely is not going according to plan.

One class had one A and fifteen Fs on the noun review. Another class did a bit better, making two As, one B, three Cs, and fourteen Fs.

So, rather than simply reviewing the parts in a week’s time, I have been spending a class period on each part, giving them a review the next class period, and a quiz in the class after that. It seems like a very slow process to me, but I want them to know the difference between each part of speech for when they go to their later English classes. This has also been putting extra work on me, as I now have to create a review and a quiz for each part of speech when I originally was only going to give them two reviews and two quizzes.

So, even though it is exhausting, I hope that my extra work will help them.

In two weeks I will be in charge of the literature unit as well, when we finally start our first novel of the semester, A Single Shard. This ties in to my worry about the classes, or rather, the class, that has been troubling me.

To put it simply, they’re incredibly disrespectful. I have had trouble with this class before. Sometimes it is just one particular student that will not stop talking, even when he gets pulled aside by my mentor teacher. Sometimes, like on Friday, it is the entire class.

It was nearing the end of class, and we were running out of time because they had wasted time earlier on in the class period. We had been reading from a review in their grammar books. I had sorted them into small groups, and they had to pick the verbs from a sentence and identify them as either action or linking verbs. When one of the other groups were reading their sentence, a girl from an earlier group was talking to another student. I stopped the group that was talking and called the girl out on her talking before having the last few students go through their sentences.
I wish I could say that was the end of it. But, of course, it was not.

I asked them to be quiet while I was passing out their homework, but, of course, they were not. They kept talking, and I had to tell them to quiet down three more times before they finally did. I reprimanded them, asking them why they were talking when other students were talking. Why they were talking when I was talking. I told them that it was disrespectful and that I was their teacher, even when Mrs. W was not in the room (because I tend to get left alone with that class more than any other). I told them that I should not have to raise my voice to have them listen to me. I should not have to tell them to be quiet twice, let alone three times.

I am starting to dread teaching that class when I love teaching the others. How am I supposed to take over completely – teaching all day every day – when they won’t even listen to me and I’m not sure how to get them to listen without having to raise me voice like that?

Monday, September 8, 2014

Making the Shift

Last week was my first full week as the 7th graders' teacher.


I now deal with not only teaching and lesson planning...but managing the class as a whole as well. I have to say that it has been an interesting experience and something that I have had to adjust to.


The good news is that the adjustment has been fairly smooth. As strange as it seemed, I noticed that the students were having a more difficult time adjusting than I was. It seemed as though they were unsure as to how they should see me or act around me. I could tell that a few of the students almost felt uncomfortable talking to me the first couple of days.


I can't say that I blame them. Imagine being a 7th grader and being told that this one woman is your teacher and then two weeks later being told that wasn't the case and that you had a new woman there...who was your teacher...but she wasn't really a teacher yet? Wait...what? I get it.


I struggled with how to get my students comfortable with the idea of my being their teacher. I realized that all I needed to do be the best teacher I could be and let them see on their own that I wasn't going to bite them.


That's exactly what I did. I've made it a personal mission to know all of my students' names and greet them at the door each morning. I make sure I talk with them and hear about the different things going on at school and in their lives. Now, I no longer feel like an outsider at the middle school, and my students no longer se me as the strange lady in Mrs. Porter's classroom. I am Ms. Albert, their English teacher.


I have to say that the best part of teaching that I have experienced thus far has been getting to know my students (my wonderful, exciting, and very talkative students) and getting to hear them refer to me as their English teacher. The shift doesn't have to be so hard.

Monday, September 1, 2014

How Did I Get Here?

Thinking about how I got to where I am today is actually a little terrifying. Not because of how hard I had to work to get here, but because I know I could have ended up in a place I didn't really want to be.

My freshman year of college at UACCB was exciting, at first. I was going to be a physical therapist and make a lot of money while I was at it. After all, why else would I go into the medical profession? I had never enjoyed a single science class in my life. In fact, I hated science, but I could suffer through a few years of terrible classes to make that kind of money.

As it turns out, I couldn't. My grades were in the toilet. They didn't suffer because of my lack of ability to get the job done, and they certainly didn't suffer because of the lack of support from my family. My grades were in the toilet because I allowed them to be. I didn't care what my grades were in my science classes because, to be honest, they just didn't matter to me.

I remember the very first semester I had without a single English class. It was ALL science. I was a sophomore, and up until that point, I had at least a literature class, something to keep me entertained. Classes like that always kept me entertained. I was the only senior in my high school AP English class to not only complete her final paper, but do so by exceeding the page requirement by ten pages and have a blast doing it. I can remember watching my English teacher everyday and thinking that she must be one happy lady. She had the best job in the world. She got read some of the coolest stuff and teach it to us...FOR A LIVING!! However, that wasn't for me. No.I was going to bring home the bacon, hopefully working in a clinic where I could make six figures.

That first semester of my sophomore year was brutal. I was bored stiff, and I had two very unhappy parents when it was time for grades to come out. Needless to say, there were a lot of tears. I can remember thinking that if I had classes I enjoyed, such as a literature class or a class where I could at least write a paper, my grades would be outstanding. I told this to my very loving boyfriend, and I remember him saying to me, "Well then why don't you just take them?" This seemed simple enough, but no way. I couldn't do that. There was no room and certainly no time to change my major. The medical field was where I wanted to be.

Wait a second...no it wasn't. The path I had chosen was not chosen because of my passion for biology or calling to help those who are in need of my medical expertise. I chose that path because I wanted to make a lot of money and have things that all of my friends would be jealous of, completely ignoring my passion for knowledge, literature, and the desire to prepare young ones for their future, just as my English teacher did for me when she showed me the difficult tasks I was able to accomplish. I wanted to do that for someone.

I woke up. I realized that continuing on the path I was on meant being in a place I didn't truly want to be, and suddenly, making all of the money in the world didn't matter anymore. Telling my parents was the hardest part. I feared they would be disappointed in my decision, but I guess that in my haze I had forgotten how loving and supporting my family really is.

The day I decided to change my major was the day I decided to tour Lyon College. I had previously had my eyes set on ASU, but I knew that Lyon College was the better place to get an English degree. After touring and talking to a few professors, there was no question. I wanted to be a Lyon graduate, and though it has been a long road filled with sleepless nights, thousands of papers, and hundreds of lesson plans, I'm only nine months from being just that.