Yesterday was my first day of observation this semester, where I got to see two 11R classes, two 9H classes, and a 10H class (all with the same teacher). There was quite a lot that I admired about this teacher and the classroom atmosphere he fostered. As students walked into the classroom, he had music playing on the SmartBoard, which he also turned on again later when they did group work. He greeted them, chatted with them, joked with them. His general demeanor was always positive, and he frequently showed students that he respected and appreciated them. The students, in turn, respected him and were fairly active participants.
All 5 classes, regardless of grade, began with the same Vocab Word of the Day and 5 minute mini-mini lesson on the word and grammar. He stated that he felt it was better to do a bit of grammar each day so that they wouldn’t have to do entire full-period lessons on it. I don’t support drilling vocabulary (he did mention vocab quizzes) but I actually appreciated the brief touching on grammar. I have been told at length that we should not teach grammar, and while I agree that full lessons on it and/or drills, dittos, quizzes, and the like should definitely be avoided, I think his few minutes of grammar had value and he went about it the right way. Rather than just telling students what a compound sentence was, he helped them understand why they’re important to use in writing.
For the 11th graders, the central focus of the lesson was exposition. He drew a plot diagram on the board, something all of them had seen before, and asked them to tell him what it was and what the components were, then zeroed in on exposition and talked about the kinds of elements that are introduced in exposition. I appreciated that he did this all based on student answers and wrote it all on the board as they went, rather than just putting up a powerpoint slide with a dictionary definition of exposition. He then demonstrated exposition by diving into the first few pages of Lord of the Flies, which they read together and discussed.
The 9th and 10th grade classes had similar lesson structures: both centered on discussion and analysis of a short story (The Cask of Amontillado and A Jury of Her Peers, respectively) that students had already finished reading and annotating, and both involved small group discussion. The groups were formed primarily by counting off, but he did something interesting in the 10th grade class: he asked for students to raise their hands if they felt they had a strong understanding of the plot of the story, and 5 students slowly raised their hands. He then asked if those students would be willing to serve as discussion leaders of groups, and they agreed; he then assigned each of them to a different group. In doing this, he made sure each group had at least one student who had a strong grasp on the story and could help facilitate the discussion and explain any misconceptions with their peers. I felt these lessons were effective in getting all students to be active participants in discussion, and students in all three classes went beyond the discussion prompts to talk about the texts in details. Their annotations seemed well done and well used, and they were already in the habit of supporting their answers with details from the text. The teacher was always sure to celebrate insightful responses and frequently commented on their good thoughts. Overall, I felt that these classes served as successful models of collaborative analytic discussion.
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