Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Reflection

This semester has been a true challenge for me, as well as a time of what I consider transformation and great personal growth. I was so, so nervous at the beginning... so nervous I could barely keep my composure. And today, those nerves are, for the most part though not entirely, gone. I don't really want them to ever be entirely gone, as I think being nervous should be part of teaching, as there is always room for improvement, and unfortunately, room for failure.
My first day was uncomfortable, to say the least. Though I have by now stood in front of a classroom many times, it was always with a teacher present, someone “older and wiser” than I am (though not always truthfully older). This time, it was by myself, as myself, that I stood there, and frankly, I wasn't sure that would prove to be enough. I saw their wary faces, all eyes on me, and I froze a bit. For most of them, I was the first college teacher they met and attended class with, and for a couple of miserable days, I was certain I had let them down. After class, which I dismissed a little early, I hurried off to my office hours, scared and a little ashamed. Was I doomed to fail as a teacher before every really getting started?
My feelings of uncertainty continued for weeks, even when teaching got easier, even when classes started going more smoothly, even when my students laughed, and talked, and showed comprehension. At heart, I was uncertain that I had chosen the right midlife career change, even though I have been working toward this for years now!
I've worked a number of jobs in my life that had nothing to do with where I am now. I worked as a data entry clerk in my teens, then a number of varying temp jobs in my early to mid twenties, and then as as a field crew supervisor for a conservation corps, and that was when I began to see a glimmer of where I could go. Somehow, I got roped into helping with the education program, working with ESL students at first, despite a glaring lack of ability in the Spanish language, and eventually teaching History through Art to about ten students, all trying to earn their high school diplomas. The education coordinator encouraged me, but then I decided to have children instead. Her encouragement did plant a seed though, and I began daydreaming about returning to college. Years later, I did. I finished my BA in Liberal Studies, and then vacillated between a single subject credential and the Master’s program in English, eventually choosing the latter.
At some point during the semester—I am not sure when—things began shifting, though subtly at first. My palms were no longer sweaty when I walked in the classroom door. My heart wasn't quite racing anymore. I still had to breathe deeply before opening that door...I still do. But the fear is no longer there, thankfully. Instead, I look forward to seeing my students, and hearing from them, whether it is about the reading, or just about how their day went.
From the beginning, having learned this from Maria Hess during a psychology class, I did a daily check-in with my students. The premise of this brief activity is simple—we go around the room (easy since we sit around a hollow square) and share something about the challenges we are facing, or something that happened that was good/bad/in between. I always start with myself, so that the students see that I am willing to share snapshots of my life with them, encouraging them to share their own. From the beginning, this has been a success, and when we almost missed it once (the day of our library visit), I was asked if we could please check in. The check-in allowed me, over the course of this semester, to see my students maturing, getting used to campus life, far from friends and family. It also allowed them to connect with other students, as they share many of the same obstacles, challenges, and opportunities. It gives them a chance to share a little about their personal lives in an environment that could easily be removed from anything personal. The daily check-in is something I will definitely continue over the spring semester.
Another daily to-do item was journaling. I have mixed feelings about this. I think writing regularly is a wonderful thing to do, as the more you write, the easier it gets to write. Most of my disappointment with this is due to my own lack of preparedness on some days when it came to journal prompts. Sometimes, though not often, I would arrive at class without having created or found an appropriate journal prompt ahead of time, and winging it was sometimes difficult. I think for the spring, we’ll have at least one journal prompt each week that will serve as a time of reflection directly relating to the reading. While many of my topics during the fall semester did have a bearing on what we were studying, some did not. I’d like to limit non-related topics in the spring.
One of the more enjoyable things we did during the semester was to play games based on language, on rhetorical devices. We explored irony, apostrophe, and more through activities that often left us laughing. We also worked on grammar and sentence structure through more formalized activities, tackling such topics as comma splices, needed words, run-on sentences, fragments, and so on and so forth. I’d like to continue with both these approaches in the spring, perhaps alternating on a bi-weekly basis, so that my students become more familiar with the tools of the English language, which in turn should improve their writing.
The presentations (i.e. “speech”) part of the class this semester was fairly informal. I had them work as groups toward the beginning of the semester, presenting sections of a reading to the rest of the class. This activity went fairly well, though perhaps I should have had it more structured. The second presentation assignment was done in pairs, and each pair had to lead a class discussion relating to an assigned reading. Overall, this has gone well. The pairs were selected by random drawing—I have found mixing up groups of people over the semester to be a generally good practice—and then assigned one of the readings we would be covering. Most came up with thoughtful questions that sparked lively discussion. In the spring, I hope to do more formal presentations, though I have not yet decided how I want to approach this. The idea of a debate seems intriguing, so I am considering ideas that would relate to the reading we will be doing.
In speaking of reading, I should mention that I relied largely on the assigned text, Emerging: Contemporary Readings for Writers, supplemented sporadically with articles I culled from the web and other sources. This did work to serve the purpose at hand… we covered a variety of topics related to identity, such as race/ethnicity, gender, media/social media/internet, and more. However, I want to step away from this in the spring, giving my students a chance to explore other genres. I may still use some articles from the textbook, but we will be much more focused on a memoir, and then a novel, as they move forward through the English program. I plan to continue with the theme of identity, but look more at how language shapes our identity, and gives us experiences that expand that identity. With that in mind, I chose A Place to Stand as the memoir, as poetry, the use of words, literally reshapes the life of the author, Jimmy Santiago Baca. And for our novel, I have selected The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak. My choice of this book is twofold: I love the use of language in it, as if the author is painting with words; and it is a tale about how books, words, can change someone’s life. I feel that reading books, as opposed to reading articles, may lead to some richer discussion, some more focused ideas, something a little closer to my own experiences at SSU through the Hutchins program and the English grad program. I know my students are only freshmen, that this is technically a “remedial” course, but I believe they are capable of great things.
One of my more recent challenges is that of failing students. I have two students who have missed numerous classes, and failed to turn in key assignments. I have reached out to both of them, numerous times. One has responded, and I am hoping can pull her way out of the mire. The other seems to have vanished off the face of the earth. I can’t help but take this personally to some degree—was it something lacking in my teaching? Or is it simply that some of my students just are not ready to be here?
What I have taken away from this semester is that this is, undoubtedly, what I want to do. I have gone from uncertain as to whether I should be doing this or not, to absolutely knowing that this is my vocation. I think of the words of Robert Frost, from “Two Tramps in Mud Time”: "My object in living is to unite / My avocation and my vocation / As my two eyes make one in sight." To be doing what I love, as a job, as a career, is something many hope for, and few get. I feel very lucky that I have had this opportunity.
I have learned too that borrowing from other teachers is a good thing, that utilizing the lessons/activities someone else planned can be not only helpful, but also rewarding, and that I can offer activities others might use as well. One of the most helpful things I have found this semester were the weekly check-ins with my teaching cohort. Hearing about the good teaching moments, the activities and lesson plans, the challenges, all helped me see my own triumphs and difficulties in a different light, and helped me feel more at home.
I have also taken away from this semester that I need to stay diligent when it comes to organization. I have done moderately well with this during the fall, but there is always room for improvement. I need to be firmer with my attendance policy (see the thoughts on failing students above), and perhaps firmer with assignments such as the Moodle forums, etc. I have plans of transitioning from just Turnitin to using Google docs with my class. Google docs would allow for greater feedback flexibility, and would give me the ability to work one-on-one with my students outside of class and office hours. I may require office hour visits in the spring as well, especially near an essay due date.
One final change that I plan on in the spring is to require community involvement...service learning. I firmly believe that what we do in school should be linked to the "real world", that we should form connections within our communities, and help those that need it. To that end, I am working with another TA in visiting elementary classrooms with our classes in February, completing a Dear World project of our own. Additionally, I may well be asking my students to find other opportunities, working maybe 2-4 additional hours as a volunteer. They could work at the Redwood Empire Food Bank, or helping coach a sport. They could read books to kids at the library. Whatever they choose, as long as they are active in their local community, I'll be happy. While this steps away from the "theme" of the class a little, I see it as too valuable an opportunity to miss, and I can see that at least the Dear World service learning could still be connected to the power of words.
Despite my experience this fall, and how much more at ease I feel now, I am still nervous for the spring. There is always the chance that I could screw up lesson plans, or fail to be adequately prepared. I could have another, different student fail. I know already my small class of sixteen will be even smaller, perhaps thirteen, as two are moving on through their chosen programs at SSU, and one is failing. I assume this will change the class dynamic, and so I worry a little about that too. Still, despite the nerves, I am very much looking forward to another semester with many of the same faces.

Monday, December 5, 2016

Almost Done

I can't believe I am already heading into my last full week of the semester. What a semester it has been! The ups and downs are subject matter enough for a [reflective] post of their own.

Last week, we did an activity in class that I borrowed from another Teaching Associate... "Wasting Time on the Internet". I chose this activity as we've focused a lot in the last couple of weeks on social media, sexting/texting, our online presence, and this seemed a way to bring it all together. It also gave them fodder for a final mini-essay (see prompt below). I had them all follow these guidelines for 45 minutes in class on Thursday (they were asked ahead of time to bring a laptop or other internet capable device):

1. No talking. You may communicate through email, text message, or social media only.
2. No TV episodes or movies. The point of the exercise is to see where the internet will take you, so follow links if they look appealing, check your social media, etc.
3. Keep track of your browsing history. Either take notes, or screenshot the actual history. You will need this for your final.

Simple enough. Dead silence ensued. And at the end of the 45 minutes, I brought them all back together, back to the world of the classroom. The general response was that this felt "weird" and "a little uncomfortable". "School shouldn't be this quiet." Yes, I did this activity alongside them, and it did feel peculiar after weeks and weeks of active discussion.

For the final:

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Essay Four Prompt

I got this idea from another Teaching Associate in my cohort, and you should have seen the expressions on my students' faces when I shared this with them!


Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Dear World Follow Up

We attended the Dear World event on campus, and a few of my students chose to participate, as did I. Here are our pictures!








I am really delighted these students chose to have this experience with me. Here's my own picture, by the way:

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Moodle Forum Oops

Maybe giving my class Tuesday "off" over Thanksgiving break was not the best plan, but I was trying to be generous. I assigned instead mandatory participation in a Moodle forum. I even extended the assignment by a few days. Still, only about half the class participated, which means a drop in points for the rest. The students that did participate had a strong discussion after reading "My Crowd Experience: The Mob Project" by Bill Wasik. I set up two question sets for consideration and reply:

1. In answering the following questions, bring in at least one quote from the text that supports your point of view.

How does social media enable phenomena like flash mobs? Use the Dunbar number (Limits of Friendship, p. 236) to examine the ways in which social media allows memes to spread. How does the rule of three enable viral ideas? Do the limitations of the Dunbar number represent a limitation on viral culture as well?

and

2.  Again, please use at least one quote from the text to support your point of view.

What role does emotion play in our use of technology? Does social media support or hinder our emotional development?What impact do memes or the bandwagon effect have on the ways in which we use technology? Do you turn to social media when you are bored? Does our ability to connect to others rely on emotions?


I did get some very thoughtful discussion, which I much appreciated. I just wish the whole class had participated.

On that note, I have two students I am very concerned about, the same two that failed to turn in essay three. One has missed many classes, but participated in the Moodle forum this week. The other had good attendance, and fairly good participation, at first, but now seems unconcerned with the class entirely. I need to speak with them after the holiday break. I plan to offer them a chance to make up a little of the credit for essay three, and a way to circumvent essay four. They won't earn full credit, but anything is better than nothing, and I hate the idea of failing any of them. Here's my offer, which I emailed to them and will follow up on next week:

Instead of two 2-3 page essays arguing opposite sides of one issue, please write a 4-6 page essay, arguing one side of an issue,  but clearly addressing the counter-argument. You must use at least two of the readings we did for class, as well as at least two outside sources to provide greater support for your argument. You can earn up to 75% of the score for the two final drafts (essays three and four) in doing this, but will receive no credit for rough drafts. I still encourage rough drafts so that I can assist you in making corrections, etc.


Sunday, November 20, 2016

Essay Three Results

It was actually rather difficult getting some of my students to firmly take a stance for their argumentative essays! Too many of them wanted to take both sides, or not express a strong opinion one way or the other. I commented on probably half the rough drafts that they needed to choose a side, and solidify their arguments. I also mentioned using sources wisely a number of times, and making sure that they followed the assignment.

Most of them managed to pull it off...MOST. There were still a couple of essays that did not have enough sources, or that were a little weak in their arguments. I even had two students fail to turn in anything at all. The problem here is that essay number four will be based off this essay, and if essay three isn't well developed (or developed at all), essay four will be impossible.

I had a few that were really good, that stood out above the rest. One, whose premise I don't agree with at all, said very firmly that transgender students should not be allowed to enroll in a single-sex college. While I may take issue with this, I have to admit that the student who wrote this essay took one of the strongest stances in the class, and used sources well to back it up. It was an argumentative essay, exactly what I had asked for.

I'll post the essay four prompt soon!

Monday, November 14, 2016

Dear World

Our campus is hosting a Dear World project on November 17. I'd like my students to learn about this, and hopefully participate, as we'll be doing a service project on this in the spring (more details below). To gear up for this project, I am asking that they view the Dear World galleries, and see if anything resonates with them. I won't require them to participate, but will offer it as extra credit.

Dear World was "started...in 2009, when people across New Orleans wrote their “love notes to the city." People share a message, using their own bodies as their canvas. In the spring, we'll be working with elementary students to form their own Dear World messages, culminating in a photo-shoot that will be shared with friends and family. This is part of the service learning approach that I am coming to realize really connects real world situations to our education.

I'll post more when we have pictures!

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Visiting the Writing Center

I mentioned last week that we would be doing a workshop at the Writing Center, in addition to the library visit we had made, so that my students will be very prepared in writing argumentative essays. Unfortunately, it seems some of them are/were still under-prepared! I had asked them to bring their rough drafts, and many did indeed do that, but there were several with only vague ideas in their minds as to what they are doing for this essay, and I had two absences.

Erika had set up four stations for us: how to write clear thesis statements; addressing the counter argument/rebuttal; how to structure your essay (reverse outlining); and paragraph development and organization. I was happy when we got there to see some familiar faces ready to assist!

I think of all the stations, one of my favorites was the paragraph organization station, where they were asked to use various pen colors to underline or highlights parts of their paragraphs. This gives them such a great visual as to their strong and weak points in each paragraph! This is a technique I would like to learn more about, for use in the classroom in the future.

I wish every student had come with a rough draft as requested. I could tell it was really difficult for some of the Writing Center staff to lead them in exercises when they had next to nothing to work with. Apparently I need to make it even more clear that they need to be fully prepared for our next workshop in the spring.

Friday, November 4, 2016

Visiting the Library

Yesterday, with the essay three prompt fresh in hand, we headed off to the library for an introduction to library services and some guided research assistance. I was informed, as we were heading out of the classroom after a quick check-in, that one student would be late as he had locked himself out of his dorm room. At least he let someone know, so they could pass the message on! Once we got to the library, they were quick to assist us, and we soon found ourselves seated in a study room with laptops. I followed along with my students as we were led through the search process by Sheila. I checked in with each student too, regarding their ideas for the essay, and what kind of research they thought would be applicable.I also reminded the of essay deadlines for this assignment.

I had one student not attend at all, but the other fifteen were there, with the late student showing up minutes after we arrived. The students I checked in with at the end of class felt that it had been a good experience, and very helpful in knowing how to search, how to narrow results, and what types of resources to look for.

Next week, we have a trip to the Writing Center planned. I emailed them a little while back, including my prompt, and they are setting up a four station workshop for my students. They are to bring in their rough drafts so that we can tackle any potential issues ahead of time.

The class did get off to a bit of a rough start, as the day before, we had all gotten an emergency message from campus, relating to the discovery of a human body in a shallow grave on campus. My students were in a state of shock, and needed to have a check-in to gather their thoughts and settle down before they could move forward with the everyday tasks of writing an essay. Rumors were/are flying around campus about the victim... was it a child or an old man? Was it a student or a transient? Today I am thankful for the check-ins, because it gave us all a sense of safety in being together.

Sunday, October 23, 2016

Discussion Leadership

Here is a copy of the handout I gave for leading class discussions, as mentioned in this post.

___________________________________________________________________________
Some ideas for leading class discussions:
1 . Come up with a reading quiz. You can ask about key arguments, or vocabulary.
2. Break the class into groups, and have them come up with “posters” that convey parts of
the reading.
3. Give each group discussion questions to consider.
4. Assign an in­-class writing that will then be shared and given comments/feedback.
5. Assign different groups to take on different points of view about the topic. Let them
collaborate, and then debate or simply present their arguments.
6. Make a questionnaire that students have to fill out, then share for commentary.
7. Make a PowerPoint or Prezi presentation on the article. You will need your laptop and
connective hardware (Dongle) to use the screen in the classroom.
8. Set up a debate. Assign students a side, give them a little time to come up with some
ideas, and then let it happen.
 

Resources that might help:
1 . Feel free to use the questions/prompts in the book… Questions for Critical Thinking (at
the beginning), and Questions for Connecting/Assignments for Writing (at the end of
each article) are particularly helpful.
2. Spend some time checking out “Exploring Context” at the end of the article to see if there
are other things you want to bring in.
3. Do a Google search for articles related to the reading, and use them as further jumping
off points for discussion.
 

Points to consider:
1 . Try to ask open-­ended questions to gather more feedback.
2. Maybe offer prizes to people that answer questions (candy works well, or team/individual
points).
3. Keep track of who is responding, and who isn’t. Encourage people sitting there silently to
give an answer to something

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Essay Two... Done!

My students have finished essay #2, the synthesis/idea exploration essay. It has been turned in and graded. I am pleased overall, as most of the grades were in the upper 80s, with a few in the low 90s, and one 78. The essay earning a 93 had several sources integrated throughout (you can read the writer's original proposal here, as the "very good" prompt), showcased the writer's opinion, offered some thoughtful analysis of stereotypes, and had varied structure. The essay earning a 78 was much more rudimentary, with awkward transitions, and a very methodical, step-by-step approach to writing.

Overall, I think this essay served as a good stepping stone between the looser first essay assignment, and the more structured plans I have for essays three and four.

We've started our student-led reading discussions too. I gave the students a handout, and put it up on Moodle, offering suggestions for leading class discussions, which I will put up as a separate post. So far, they have chosen to create questions for the class, following my basic approach of posing questions, breaking the class into small groups, and then coming back together for a larger discussion. I am pretty pleased with the questions thus far, and I can see that the students are gradually becoming more engaged and willing to speak up. When the semester started, few of them would willingly speak up, which I think is the result of their high school training. College is very different! I am getting more fluid discussion results these days though.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Visitation

Today I had my class observed. I won't lie—the mere thought terrified me. I know my students are generally well behaved, and respectful, but what if they chose today to argue, or sit in silence? What if the two leading the discussion weren't prepared, or weren't there?

The evening before, one sent me a printout... a word search she had created. My printer at home wasn't working, so I thought I would get to campus early Thursday morning (this morning), print it, and copy it. Now I know I can't download files on the computer in the TA office... it just doesn't work for me, so I planned to do it at the library. I even had money ready for printing costs. I got there early, as planned.

And the computer was sooooo slow. It kept pausing. I wouldn't load. I was frantically checking the clock, checking the progress, and finally it loaded, and finally I could print the document, and finally I could run off copies. I was nearly six minutes late to class, on a very important day. My observer was, of course, already there, sitting in the corner.

I had not told any of my students about the observation, because I didn't want their nerves on edge too. I opened with our regular check-in, then a journal prompt about what kind of qualities they would look for in a presidential candidate; among the most frequently listed were honesty, integrity, understanding of financial and environmental concerns, and openness. Thankfully, the class went quite well overall, though I wish in hindsight we had spent more time on the discussion (Ruth Padawer's "Sisterhood is Complicated"), and less on the word search. When I spoke with my advisor after the class, he said much the same thing. He did observe how thoughtful they were, and how respectful, so that was good.

What a morning though!

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Fun and Games

One thing I have been trying to do this semester is to introduce my students to rhetorical devices, and to improve their sentence structure. Along these lines, we've been doing some writing exercises and some language arts games/activities. Some of the more successful ones have been:

Varying sentence structure: I had them all write as many three-four word sentences as they could in 3 minutes. They then read them aloud, and we all agreed that they sounded very stilted. They spent another three minutes writing the longest run-on possible, then shared that. We ended up agreeing that sentences need to be in between the two extremes, and writing them in a variety of ways/lengths sounds best when read out loud.

Apostrophe (borrowed from another TA): I told them about apostrophe as a rhetoric device (not the punctuation)., gave them examples, and then had them write and share their own.

Collaborative Writing: I asked each student to take out a sheet of paper, and start a story. We then passed the paper to the right, and the next person continued the story, passed it to the right again, and so on. The stories, when read out loud, resulted in gales of laughter!

Irony: I explained irony, and gave examples. They wrote their own ironic sentences and shared them with the class.

We have also worked on:

  • Comma splices
  • Run-on and fragmented sentences
  • Coordinative conjunctions
  • Hyperbole and understatement



Saturday, October 1, 2016

Working in Groups

I recently assigned my first group project to my students. I split up the reading, "Preface and the New Civil Rights", by Ken Yoshino, into four sections, then broke the class into groups of four as follows:

Group 1: Shayna, Luis, Elly, Stephanie P. Please read "Preface"
Group 2: Moira, Brenda, Gio, Samantha N. Please read from page 541 ("The New Civil Rights") to 543 (end with "...'brothers' of other nations")
Group 3: A.J., Natasha, Elida, Alyssa. Please read from 543 ("The universal rights...") to 545 ("...not my healthiest impulse")
Group 4: Hanna, Mikayla, Stephanie G., Samantha C. Please read 545 ("Law is also an incomplete...") to the end.

I assigned this project as follows:
____________________________________________________________________________
I have split this reading up into four sections. The groups listed below are assigned the sections as follows. Each group will be responsible for defining unfamiliar words, summarizing key points, and sharing quotes they find really reflect the author's purpose/writing. Each group will share these ideas in class on Tuesday, after some time working together. I am setting up a Moodle forum for each group -- please contribute BY MONDAY AFTERNOON as this will really help with the in-class work.

And then later in the week...
Continue your Moodle forum discussions over the next couple of days, so that you are prepared, as a group, to share your section of the reading on Tuesday, 9/27/16. Each group will be given about 10 minutes to present their section.
____________________________________________________________________________

Discussion in the Moodle forums I set up was... okay. They all posted, but there wasn't quite the give-and-take with responses I was hoping for. I did give them some further advice as well as part of their continuing in-class and Moodle discussions:
____________________________________________________________________________
Each group will be given about 10 minutes to present their section. Consider the following as you work:
1. What roles do you want everyone to take on in sharing with the class? Do you want to split the load between paragraphs, ideas, or have some people handle ideas, others vocabulary, etc.? How do you want to share the information you've read?
2. What are the main ideas in your section?
3. Is there any unfamiliar vocabulary, or unusual terminology?
____________________________________________________________________________

Finally, we got to presentation day, and again it went... okay. Each group did meet the basic criteria of the assignment, but there wasn't a lot of expansion.

I think for future assignments, I need to be more directive.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Essay Two...

For Essay #2, I asked them to synthesize ideas and concepts from the readings we have done so far, citing at least two sources, one from the text (minimum) and additional sources as needed/desired. The first stage of the essay process I've decided on is a basic proposal:

Using the essay assignment handout, please write a (solid) paragraph explaining what direction you plan to take with this essay. Include which readings you will be working with, your viewpoint on the subject, and a couple of points you hope to make. Turn in via Turnitin before midnight!

The proposals themselves ranged from quite well done to fairly bare bones:


Example One: Very good!
Stereotypes have been a prominent part of culture. Can we reverse our thinking despite the very clear snap judgments made and should we remove all stereotypes, positive and negative? I will be using “The End of Race” (Olson), “Paper Tigers” (Yang), and Blink! by Malcolm Gladwell to analyze this topic. I will be exploring the idea of stereotypes and how one can decide to choose how they are instead of others assuming. I want to cover the way women are viewed in media and how snap judgments can alter entire cultures and individuals. I feel that snap judgments are constantly made whether someone wants to make them or not, whether they want to control them or not, and we all have made snap judgments. I also feel as though we can only eradicate assumptions about people if we stop assuming positive or negative assumptions all together. I also feel that women are seen as objects in media and they are assumed to only serve that purpose. Lastly, I feel that anyone can choose who he or she is and should feel safe in their decision in who they are as a person. 

Example Two: Just passed (spelling errors are in the original proposal)...

As of now I will be writing my essay on “The End of Race” by Steve Olson. I do believe racism can come to an end, but it will not be easy. I am going to answer the questions you have given us and maybe add a few myself. As of right now I am going to use “The End of Race” story for sure, and not yet decided on what other sources I want to bring in, weather it be my own article or something you have given us. 

Next up, rough drafts!

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Testing my memory

It is surprisingly hard to remember 16 names when you only see your students a couple of times a week! But I had some help, and I think I've got it now.

I meet once a week for a discussion based class with my teaching cohort. Stephani, a fellow Teaching Associate, shared her alliteration activity recently, so I tried it with my class. Each student had to choose an adjective to go with their first names. We started with the student to my left, and went around the room, with each person repeating the name(s) before them, and then their own. I was the last to go, so I had to repeat all 16 before introducing myself again. And no one was allowed to write them down!

I have:

Happy Hanna
Brilliant Brenda
Elusive Elida
Amazing AJ
Awesome Alyssa
Know-It-All Natasha
Elegant Elly
Sappy Samantha
Low-key Luis
Miraculous Mikayala
Genuine Gio
Shining Shayna
Silly Samantha (prefers to be called by her middle name, Samantha, rather than by Jenifer)
Mild Moira
Stupendous Stephanie
Steady Stephanie

Not easy with two Stephanies and two Samanthas!

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Discussion Abounds!

We read "Race, Ethnicity, Surgery", by Maureen O'Connor, and then discussed it in class. This time, I had them all fill out "Say, Means, Matters" charts to help guide the discussion. I usually split the class into small groups to discuss the ideas before coming back together as a group, but somehow this reading caused the groups to bubble over and reform as a class almost right away. I've never seen such spirited discussion from my students!

Topics that came up:
Ethnically related surgeries
Plastic surgery in general
Eating disorders
Hollywood and false images
Photoshopping
Micahel Jackson
The Kardashians
Media

My students were finally embodying the kind of discussion I've been hoping for: they were eager to talk and to respond. They wanted to break into the conversation, and everyone had something to say. People were talking about having pride in how you look, without surgery, and how far surgery can remove someone from their original appearance. We talked about familial pressure, and how hard it could be for children to grow up with a parent, or parents, that had altered their appearance significantly (the Kardashian family, for example). My black student said she thought it would be particularly hard to have black parents that lightened their skin, because that would leave the child, or children, feeling very different, out of place.

There was a general consensus that plastic surgery for personal or necessary reasons was fine, but not when bowing to pressure from family, friends, or society as a whole.

I noticed too, when they left class, a greater sense of camraderie.


Sunday, September 4, 2016

First Essays

As I mentioned, I gave my students their first essay assignment last week, based on the "This I Believe" theme, one to two pages. This weekend, I've been reading and grading them. I've graded many essays before, having been an active reader at the junior college for the last 5 years. It is different though, knowing that I set the boundaries and expectations now!

Overall, they are good. Most of my students followed the prompt and samples well. Here is the actual assignment:
_____________________________________________________________________________
Due at the start of class, Thursday, September 1, 2016.
Read the attached sample "This I Believe" essays, then craft one of your own. Make it a topic that you connect with, that you are passionate about, no matter how small it seems. I don't care if it is something huge, or tiny, or even something you might think is silly, but it has to be something you believe, and follow the same general format as the sample essays. I will not be grading this essay down for grammar, or misspellings, though if I see a lot of errors, I may take the time to address some skills we should work on.
Please aim for one full page, and no more than two pages! This essay will be turned in directly to me (typed, please), though future essays may be uploaded through Moodle.
_____________________________________________________________________________

My favorite one by far, and which followed the samples most closely, was one on ice cream. I did learn a lot about my new students through this essay -- one has parents that have taken in a couple hundred foster kids over the last 20 years. Another coached Little League for four years, during high school. Two of them wrote about the importance pf music, and playing instruments.

I feel overall, this was a good start to the semester, as far as assignments. Not high stakes, plenty of freedom within it, and I feel I know them a little better!

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Such a Good Day!

I know my first day was not the best. I was actually scared to go back the following class day. But, I persevered, and made it through a whole week... then a week and a half. And it was less painful, but still not great.

Then today happened.

My class went SO well today! I started with a check-in, something I learned from a former professor, to gauge how my freshmen are adapting to college life. Overall, it seems to be going well for them, although they cited some difficulties in getting used to the homework load (lots of reading!).

We had a fairly thoughtful discussion on stereotypes, white privilege, and media portrayals of minorities, basing our discussion of a series of articles I gave them to read:

The Critical Media Project: Race & Ethnicity
Where Bias Begins: The Truth About Stereotyping
White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack

My issue with the topic we are covering in regards to my students is that some of them fully believe their generation does not have issues with racism, that they have eradicated it, and that only us "older" folk are still practicing it. As for white privilege? Truthfully, I think there's a lot of it in this class, but they won't admit to any of it.

Finally, as a break from all the serious stuff, we ended the class on a lighter note with a collaborative story writing exercise, which we will finish up next week! Basically, each person pulled out a sheet of paper, and wrote the first sentence of a story of their own imagining. Everyone then passed their papers one person to the right, and so on, around the room. They are looking hilarious so far!

I also collected their first (short) essays, on the "This I Believe" theme, which should make some interesting weekend reading. I gave them an "easier" first assignment, as I want them to have a little freedom in their writing, and I want to see who they are and what they hold dear.
 
I teaching so far!

Friday, August 26, 2016

Our Rules

In watching other teachers teach, preparing myself mentally for teaching, one thing I noticed was the setting of class rules. Some teachers are more autocratic about it... they set the rules. Others let students collaborate to come up with what they deem to be appropriate. By and large, I decided on the second approach, as this is more their class than it is mine. So I simply grabbed my marker, and stood at the whiteboard, while students called out ideas. As a class, they discussed them, combined some, eradicated others, and then and only then, I added a few of my own. This process took us maybe 15-20 minutes in class, plus a few on my own for typing them up and posting them later. I lie that we kept them simple on the whole, which makes them easier to remember.

You can read our class rules here! CLASS RULES

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

The First Day...

The first day of class was, for lack of a better term, terrifying. I have been a student seemingly forever. I have experienced good teachers and bad. I thought the transition wouldn't be, couldn't be, that hard... until I was there.

"There" is a small classroom on the second floor of a fairly institutional-looking building. At least it has windows looking out over the courtyard. I've been in classrooms without windows, and they feel somewhat claustrophobic. "There" is standing in front of a group of unfamiliar faces, my back to the whiteboard, throat dry, mind completely blank. I've stood in front of a class before -- presentations in junior high and high school; more presentations in college as an undergrad; even "teaching" the class in grad school (I'm working on my MA in English Rhetoric & Composition). But to be utterly in charge of the fate of sixteen individuals, all fresh to college life... well, that is a wee bit unnerving. Okay, really unnerving.


Even though it's embarrassing, I admit that I had all these fantasies in my head before walking in that door. Fantasies where I was the awesome teacher, where I had witty things to say, and so much to offer that my students would instantly declare me the best teacher ever.

That is, sadly, not what happened.

They are/were so quiet. We even did an ice-breaker game, which I was really hoping would break them out of their shells, but it didn't. Sure, they answered the question their thumb landed on, and tossed the ball to the next student, but that's as far as that went. [Note: the game works as follows: take a large rubber ball, and write all over it, asking questions like "Favorite animal?", "Best book you ever read?", and things of that sort. Toss it from person to person, with each one answering the question a thumb lands on.]

Then it was just dead silence again.

Yes, I know it is their first day of college. I know they are away from home, in a whole new world, with a lot facing them over the next year. I guess I need to be patient, and hope that the awesome conversations will come!

I do have kind of a funny story though. I knew our classes were limited to 16 students, so imagine my consternation in finding that I had seventeen! Student 17 was not on my attendance sheet, but I thought maybe there was a mix-up somewhere. She was one of the only students that actually spoke out in class, which I really appreciated. After class, I emailed my advisor and the department secretary, only to find out Student 17 should have been in the class next door. Oops.