I worked for 4 years as a mentor to 19 new
teachers (TFA corps members getting their Masters) in my role as a field
specialist at Fordham University. I
explained to them how different my preparation to become a teacher was compared
to the lack of preparation they received.
One major difference was that when I
student taught at Taft H.S. in the Bronx I had a master teacher, Phyllis
Opochinsky, as my cooperating teacher. I was not allowed to teach for weeks. I
only observed her and other teachers. We discussed methodologies. We prepared
lesson plans. We discussed techniques. Only then was I allowed to “teach a
class” once a week with her observing and coaching afterwards. Finally, when
she deemed me ready, was I allowed to take on one of her classes full time.
After several years of observing what
has happened to her chosen profession, my guru speaks:
“After three decades of teaching I know what many of you have yet to
learn. I wrote the lessons and tests and decided what my students needed
to know about history, government, and current events - And then I graded the
tests.
However, I learned to build in other measurements because I recognized my
own fallibility. What arrogance would it have been to think I could decide and
then measure what they knew?
So I questioned them, using questions designed to be thought-provoking
rather than one word answer fact driven, listened to their answers to and added
their participation in calculating grades. In addition there were grades
on term papers and projects.
I learned to look for those who came at the questions differently-- the
creative thinkers. I wanted them to love learning and leave the classroom
still talking about what they learned. Interestingly, I had MANY
colleagues who did the same! This all happened in the Bronx at Taft and Walton
High Schools.
We were not measured by our test results. We were taught and supervised not
by business people and politicians, but by supervisors, colleagues and our
students about what worked and what didn't work.
Where is the time for a "teachable moment" in classes where an
answer takes the class and teacher in a never to be forgotten experience?
Where is there time for the one sentence comment to a class or student that
is life changing?
Where is the opportunity for teachers, not those outside the profession, to
design and grow something like the Walton High School /Lehman College
Pre-Teaching Academy where high school students interned and taught their
peers.
I am so saddened about this testing system and lock step teaching.
Hopefully, this will change but the change must be fast!”
https://dcgmentor.wordpress.com/2015/04/29/a-master-teacher-speaks/
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