Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Reflection 3: Dancing to Learning



In all honestly I grew up not being the biggest dancer in the world, and I tend to stand to the side rather than get in the middle of a dance, but I really like the idea of using it in the classroom. Probably the main reason for this is because last year I went to a small lecture where a man taught a group of students that were interested in becoming elementary about dance in the classroom and how essential it was. It was really amazing because he applied it to math, something I had never ever thought of doing before. Additionally he noted that students learn best when they are moving, and that when you are learning about something exciting to you, you want to move around, but usually you are confined to a chair and a desk, and that this hinders learning more then helps it.

Because of this prior knowledge I was really excited to review what I had learned as well as a few more things. The brain dance in particular was really awesome as I hadn't seen it before. AdditionallyI hadn't really thought about connecting dance to anything other than math, so the Jewish dance was really awesome, connecting it to social studies made a lot of sense as well, and would relaly connect to the student like it wouldn't have before.

I definitely think that the more experience you have with dance the more you understand how important it is to learning, and an individuals general happiness and well-being. Sometimes particularly for me its easy to forget how important it is when its not your focus. So I think its really great that people with a focus in dance are continually trying to get teachers and students to have more of a focus in this area. I definitely want to try and using it in my own classroom in at least the subjects of social studies and math, I will need to think of a few more... maybe music integration for English? I am not sure yet, but will definitely keep thinking about it.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Reflection 2: Intergrating Drama in the classroom



Its really amazing to look at the importance of using drama in the classroom, and what is sad is how forgotten it can be when it comes to trying to get the 'best test scores'. I definitely am planning on integrating drama as much as possible in my classroom, before it had more to do with the fact that I already enjoy it quite a bit, but the difference for students is amazing, both in their problem solving ablities and in their basic ability to function. (This is refering to test scores as well as functioning later on in other classrooms.) I do think it might be a little bit tricky at first in the classroom considering that kids tend to get a little bit rambuncious and I still wouldn't know how to guide them to the best of my ability, but I think after a few bumps the classroom would get it and settle into a really great environment for learning and drama collaborating.

One of the things I want to do in my classroom is make sure that no lesson is without integration with another subject. To do this may be a little bit tricky especially considering math and science, which tend to be the most disliked subjects in our schools today. With subjects like social studies, english, and technology I can think of a dozens different ways to integrate drama, but I am hitting a bit of a blog with those two. I think that this may be the cause of so many students having a difficult time with these subjects when they really can be alot of fun. I am going to have to brain storm on some ideas, but so far its only the history part of those two subjects I can think of. Maybe it would be possible to intergrate a drama game of 'investigation' with science. Considering the two have alot of similarities its not too far fetched... And math we could do fraction games where students are what make up the fractions. Lol. I am really not sure, but over time I will come up with more ^.^

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Reflection 1.5: Roleplaying in the classroom.

I have always had a love of role playing and drama since I was a little kid, so I was really excited when I heard that we were going to be learning how to impliment it into the classroom. It not only gets kids up and moving when they are learning, but it allows the students to imerge themselves into a world that they would likely not to experince otherwise. In this context I am thinking older grades in reference to events of history. Yet, there are other applications to drama in the classroom as well, things that I wouldn't have thought of before our lesson about it. For instance using it as an assessment tool. I would tend to have it be an activity that the kids build up to inorder to review at the end before the assessment, but it works just as well the other way, if not better for those students who have a difficult time with test taking.

It was extremely fun to do the interviewer game where both A and B students had different tools, and I also think its a great way of getting students to maybe take an interest in news. It can be really boring just watching two people talk on the news, but with some schema maybe they might take more interest in it. The second game we played Hot seat, was also really great, especially to re-introduce or review with students (or assess of course). And finally the specialist game where each of the tables gave their specialitys and opinions on an event was great for anaylzis, something I definitely will be using in my classroom.

Reflection 1: Activities in the Classroom

Today in class it really astonished me to play the story as one game. I really wasn't expecting to follow along as someone else was telling a story, and then to be picked and totally blank out what to say! It was a really good experince though, and I think it would be fun to use in the classroom, I definitely tried teaching it to my friends afterwards! The next game we played was the A-Z sentence game, where everyone adds their own unique sentence to the story starting with a given letter. I got to say this game was really hard. My letter was C and I had a horrible time coming with a start to the sentence, I kept on wanting to say Come, but that sounded wrong so finally I went with a name. :)

One of the things that really hit me was how important it was to make sure that creativity was a part of the every day classroom. With time being as restricted as it is making sure that there is some part of creative arts in every lesson goes a long way to not only help the students learn whatever subject it is, but also allow them to flurish in a system that sometimes does the opposite of what its supposed to. I am really looking forward to the rest of the class :)