Thursday, November 22, 2012

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Mirror, mirror, on the wall...

I read in a book on teaching middle school that narcissistic adolescents like to look in the mirror.  (No surprise)  Several of the students (usually girls) have frequently asked to use the bathroom over the past couple months.  One student told me, "You know, they just go so they can look in the mirror and fix their hair."  The book suggested putting a mirror in the classroom.  I was shopping over the weekend and bought a mirror.  I put it up today at the students' height...  Sure enough!  I caught one of the girls who often asked to go to the bathroom admiring herself in the mirror.  She smoothed her hair, smiled at herself, and bounced away.  Perhaps there will be benefits!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Report Card Pick-up

Today was report card pickup (parent-teacher conferences).  No students!  We went from 11am to 6pm with 10 mins/student scheduled.  Parents of all but 3 of my 36 students attended.  I spoke to some through a Polish or Spanish interpreter while the rest of the parents spoke in English.  The principal told me participation in report card pick-up is well over 90% for the school.  This is a definite strength of the school! 

Friday, November 9, 2012

Do we have to do this one?

This was a question from a student today.  She was referring to a "word problem."  Actually, it was more of an exercise posed with a few words.  With the student asking this question, it showed how deficient our textbook is with respect to any sort of contextual exercises or problems.  It also showed that I must not be assigning enough of the few quality problems so that she expected that would be something she would not have to do. 

Friday, November 2, 2012

One Student Missing

Sad to say, but it is nice when "that one student" is gone.  Today two students who are both "that one" was gone from two of the classes.  It made for such a relaxed day!  Not only did I not have to keep my eye on those students, but they also weren't there to distract the students around them.  Wouldn't it be nice to teach only the students who wanted to be there?  (Wait, that's kinda what I do when I teach college students!)  A solution would be to remove all students who distract from classroom learning... but then how do these students learn?  Are there resources for this?  It is unfair that a few students demand and require (and, unfortunately, often get) more than their share of the teacher's attention even though they don't often put forth the necessary effort toward learning.