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Functions of Star Teachers

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Title: Functions of Star Teachers


1
Functions of Star Teachers
  • EDU 701
  • Kevin Walker
  • Karen Anderson

2
PERSISTENCE
  • What is persistence?
  • Stars believe that it is their responsibility to
    find ways of engaging their students in learning.
    They describe their jobs as the continuous
    generation and maintenance of student interest
    and involvement..

3
PERSISTENCE
  • In what three ways do star teachers demonstrate
    this persistence?

They feel a constant responsibility to make the
classroom an interesting, engaging climate that,
on a daily basis, involves the children in all
forms of learning. (Group needs)
Stars are persistent in meeting the needs of the
talented, those with handicapping conditions, and
the neglected gray-area kids. (Individual needs)
They find what works with problem children.
(Special circumstances)
4
PERSISTENCE
  • Contrast the persistence of a quitter/failure
    with a star teacher.

5
PERSISTENCE
  • Contrast the persistence of a quitter/failure
    with a star teacher.

6
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGWhy do learners
in a poverty setting need to be protected?
  • Children in poverty are less likely to have
    out-of-school models who study and learn because
    they are well-educated, enthusiastic students of
    subjects from which they derive personal benefit.
  • For children in poverty, succeeding in school is
    a matter of life and death. They must make it in
    school or spend their lives in hopelessness and
    desperation. They have no family resources or
    networks to help them start careers or
    businesses. They must succeed in school to have
    any occupational mobility

7
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGHow do star
teachers protect the learning environment in
their classrooms?
  • Stars protect the learning environment from the
    students THEMSELVES.
  • Stars believe that all students are naturally
    turned-on to learning.
  • Stars employ both modeling of the learning
    process and the project method successfully.

8
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGHow do star
teachers protect the learning environment in
their classrooms?
  • Stars protect the learning environment from the
    teachers COLLEAGUES.
  • Stars convince their colleagues that they will
    not be shown up or threatened in any way if they
    are permitted the freedom to teach using the
    project method rather than direct instruction.
  • Stars build a network of colleagues with similar
    interests as their own.

9
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGHow do star
teachers protect the learning environment in
their classrooms?
  • Stars protect the learning environment from the
    schools PRINCIPALS.
  • Stars convince their principals that the
    childrens test scores will not go down and will,
    indeed, increase.
  • Stars convince their principals that the benefits
    are worth the extra fieldtrips, the additional
    equipment and unusual materials, the use of
    resource people, and the noise created by
    productive children.
  • Stars are constantly negotiating for their
    students/classroom.

10
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGHow do star
teachers protect the learning environment in
their classrooms?
  • Stars protect the learning environment from the
    systems BUREAUCRACY.
  • Stars always choose the children over the system.
  • Stars try negotiation and reasoning, and to prove
    that their children are learning from the
    activities.
  • Stars collect portfolios.
  • Stars invite skeptical principals and others to
    visit.

11
PROTECTING LEARNERS AND LEARNINGHow do star
teachers protect the learning environment in
their classrooms?
  • Stars protect the learning environment from the
    systems BUREAUCRACY.
  • Stars willingly submit to having their children
    tested to show that they are learning as much or
    more than children being taught by typical
    textbook instruction.
  • Stars are also willing to move some of their time
    on projects to before school, after school, free
    time, weekends, and vacation periods.
  • Stars are NOT WILLING to compromise the learning
    of their children.

12
GENERALIZATIONS PUTTING IDEAS INTO PRACTICE
  • Define the relationship between ACTION and IDEAS
    in a stars classroom.
  • ACTION Stars can PERFORM teachers role
  • Stars can conceive of numerous specific things to
    do to keep children active and busy.
  • Stars are constantly searching for new, varied,
    and interesting activities to hook the students
    onto learning.
  • IDEAS Stars can UNDERSTAND teachers role
  • Stars can conceptualize and verbalize about
    teaching.
  • Stars can see the purposes and implications of
    the activities in their classrooms .

13
GENERALIZATIONS PUTTING IDEAS INTO PRACTICE
  • What is the role of REFLECTION in a stars belief
    system?
  • Teachers must continually develop and improve
    themselves.
  • Without the ability to reflect on ones behavior,
    there is only rote learning.
  • Stars are able to reflect on their experiences,
    and thereby grow and develop on a career-long
    basis.

14
APPROACH TO AT-RISK CHILDREN
  • Define AT-RISK student.
  • Essentially, they are the children of poverty
    from diverse cultural backgrounds in our urban
    school systems.

15
APPROACH TO AT-RISK CHILDREN
  • What do stars emphasize as being the MAJOR CAUSE
    of students being at-risk?
  • While quitters and failures emphasize the
    short-comings of the students, stars emphasize a
    wide variety of ways in which school curricula
    and teaching methods cause large numbers of
    students to be at risk.

16
APPROACH TO AT-RISK CHILDREN
  • Why do stars learn about their students lives?
  • Stars genuinely care about their students.
  • Stars want to help with a referral to an agency,
    or to report some sort of abuse that must be
    addressed.
  • STARS WANT TO MAKE LEARNING MORE MEANINGFUL AND
    RELEVANT

17
PROFESSIONAL-PERSONAL ORIENTATION TO STUDENTS
  • What role does LOVE have in the teacher-student
    relationship?
  • Stars do not see love as a prerequisite to
    teaching children. Nor do they see it as a method
    of teaching. They would rather use words like
    caring, respect, and trust.

18
PROFESSIONAL-PERSONAL ORIENTATION TO STUDENTS
  • What is the relationship between LOVE and the
    LEARNING ENVIRONMENT?
  • Stars are sensitive teachers who are aware of
    their students and the learning environment.
    Stars are quite aware that they may initially
    exploit their close relationships/trust with
    students in order to get them involved in a
    particular activity. However, they are also
    sensitive enough to recognize this dynamic and
    work hard to quickly shift the impetus for
    childrens work to their choices, their
    follow-through, and the satisfactions they derive
    from pursuing an activity in depth.

19
PROFESSIONAL-PERSONAL ORIENTATION TO STUDENTS
  • What is the relationship between LOVE
    and DISCIPLINE?
  • STARS NEVER SEEK TO MANIPULATE A CHILD WITH
    GUILT! They expect and plan for the times when
    even their most lovable children will engage in
    negative behaviors. Stars reaction is to
    patiently pursue the logical consequences of
    whatever has occurred. Stars show children that
    some things have occurred that are unwise or
    regrettable but were in this together and can
    work it out.

20
THE CARE AND FEEDING OF THE BUREAUCRACY
  • What skills do stars possess in regards to
    protecting themselves and their children against
    school bureaucracy?
  • Stars learn which rules and policies must be
    obeyed and which can be ignored
  • Stars learn which clerical demands must be done,
    which can be delayed, and which can be put off
    indefinitely
  • Stars learn how to throw out most of what is in
    their mailboxes and deal with the fewest items
    possible

21
THE CARE AND FEEDING OF THE BUREAUCRACY
  • How does NETWORKING help relieve the stresses
    that the bureaucracy creates?
  • Stars know which janitor, which secretary, which
    safety guard, which other teachers will help them
    do what they want with the least paperwork,
    permissions, or hassle.
  • Stars know which associates and colleagues they
    can depend on for what
  • Stars have a support network of teachers from
    various schools.
  • Support networks counteract burnout by offering
    teachers mutual support and by generating
    activities.
  • Stars are experts at making the system work for
    their children

22
FALLIBILITY
  • Do stars admit mistakes?
  • Yes! Their confessed errors usually relate to
    reaching a judgment too quickly about which child
    may have initiated a problem situation, without
    getting all the facts. They are also aware that
    apologies must be made in the same manner that
    the criticism is made. In other words, you dont
    accuse in public and apologize in private.

23
FALLIBILITY
  • What do stars do with mistakes in their
    classroom?
  • They actively teach children that we all LEARN by
    making mistakes. There can be no learning without
    mistakes. Making a mistake is not a sign of
    weakness, but a point of instruction.

24
EMOTIONAL AND PHYSICAL STAMINA
  • EMOTIONAL How do stars move past all the
    inescapable disappointments inherent in poverty
    settings?
  • Stars move past the disappointments by focusing
    on the successes. They generally have a much
    longer and severe list of disappointments in
    their careers than do their quitter/failure
    counterparts, but they also refer to infinitely
    more instances when their students have had
    successes.

25
EMOTIONAL AND PHYSICAL STAMINA
  • PHYSICAL How important is it for a star teacher
    to care about what they are teaching?
  • For stars, the learning process is living. It is
    full of growth and infinite potential and thereby
    invigorating. Stars act as if they can teach
    anything they care aboutand they care about a
    great deal. Perhaps the most accurate term for
    describing this quality is neither stamina nor
    enthusiasm, but irrepressibility. They are not
    worn down by children.

26
ORGANIZATIONAL ABILITY
  • How do stars manage MATERIALS?
  • Stars are constantly seeking better and more
    materials that will benefit the children and
    their learning process.
  • Stars generally have more and varied materials in
    their classrooms than do their quitter/failure
    counterparts.
  • Stars select materials on the basis of their
    interest level and relationship to the project at
    hand.

27
ORGANIZATIONAL ABILITY
  • How do stars manage PEOPLE?
  • Stars establish a high level of trust with
    children so that they not only take care of
    themselves but each other.
  • Also, stars often employ several children as
    co-teachers

28
ORGANIZATIONAL ABILITY
  • How do stars manage TIME?
  • Stars derive value out of miniscule amounts of
    time. No time is to be wasted in the learning
    process.
  • Stars do not allot themselves grand amounts of
    time to lecture/direct instruction. They think,
    plan, and interact with children so that the
    children are speaking, questioning, finding out,
    testing, writing, measuring, or construction. The
    teachers serve as coaches and resources to the
    children.
  • Stars often plan for multiple simultaneous
    activities. To quitters/failures this may look
    like utter chaos.

29
EFFORTNOT ABILITY
  • Why is EFFORT more important to stars than
    ABILITY?
  • Stars place the emphasis on effort rather than
    ability because they are committed to individual
    differences, and to the immeasurable potential of
    all people if given sufficient encouragement and
    opportunity. Pursuant to this, they give no
    credence whatever to any form of standardized
    assessments of potential or ability. They favor a
    commitment that no one can possibly know in what
    directions and how far a still-developing
    immature youth might grow.

30
EFFORTNOT ABILITY
  • What steps do stars take to ensure that students
    put forth their best effort?
  • Stars quickly determine the extent to which their
    students use ability rather than effort to
    explain success.
  • Stars assess the degree to which the class is
    prone to deprecate one anothers efforts.
  • Stars actively and directly teach the concept
    that trying and making mistakes are normal and
    desirable activities in learning as are the
    processes of correcting, revising, and polishing.
  • Stars demonstrate their commitment to effort in
    their daily teaching, their marking and grading,
    and in the way they discuss their students work
    with parents and the students themselves.

31
TEACHINGNOT SORTING
  • Define SORTING as it applies to children in
    a classroom.
  • The process by which children are academically
    screened or grouped by ability and subsequently
    labeled according to the results.

32
TEACHINGNOT SORTING
  • Why is sorting detrimental to the learning
    process?
  • Sorting children into groups of can-dos and
    cant-dos forces teachers to predetermine
    which children can and cant learn. This mindset
    gives the quitter/failure teacher an easy out
    when a child is not successful and belongs to the
    cant-dos. It also, even if subconsciously,
    allows teachers to do less for the cant-dos
    since it would theoretically be a waste of time.

33
TEACHINGNOT SORTING
  • How do stars combat the sorting issue?
  • Stars abhor labels because of their ability to
    limit those who happen to receive negative ones.
    They see all children as worthy of an education
    regardless of background or grouping. Indeed,
    they see their jobs as problematic from the onset
    and do not succumb to the idea that certain
    children should not be in their classrooms or are
    not their responsibility. Star teachers believe
    it is their responsibility to interest and engage
    the children in wanting to learn. They also
    accept responsibility for making their lessons
    relevant to students lives.

34
CONVINCING STUDENTSI NEED YOU HERE!
  • How is the issue of OWNERSHIP viewed in a star
    teachers classroom?
  • The star teacher recognizes that the
    classroom/learning environment belongs to the
    students.

35
CONVINCING STUDENTSI NEED YOU HERE!
  • How is individual worth capitalized on in a star
    teachers classroom?
  • Stars consciously create opportunities to
    demonstrate to the students that this is your
    class, your work, your effort. Whatever happens
    here thats good and praiseworthy is something
    that you make happen. I need you and we need you.
    Without you we wont have a project, a team, or
    an activity we can fully complete. Creating
    activities so that the youngster can readily see
    that the class really is dependent on him or her
    is what star teachers do.

36
YOU AND ME AGAINST THE MATERIAL
  • How do traditional classrooms position the
    children, the teacher, and the material?
  • Usually traditional classrooms position the
    teacher as the expert disseminating the material
    which the children must master. Traditional
    classrooms put the teacher and the children at
    odds with one another with a brick wall of
    material in between.

37
YOU AND ME AGAINST THE MATERIAL
  • How do star classrooms differ?
  • In star classrooms, the children and the teacher
    work together to tackle, dissect, understand, and
    master the presented material. Stars use coaching
    as their basic means of teaching, and coaches do
    not merely serve as sources of knowledge.

38
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • What role does environment play in the
    star/student relationship?
  • Stars recognize the home environments that their
    students come from. They are also aware of the
    previous school environments that students have
    encountered. A star teachers first goal is not
    to make matters worse. Their second goal is to
    create a school experience in which students
    succeed and relate to one another in ways not
    determined by the threat of force and coercion.

39
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • Who is in control of how much and what a student
    will learn?
  • Stars realize very quickly they can succeed only
    by getting off the power theme that ultimately
    EACH CHILD is in control of how much and what he
    or she learns.

40
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • What are examples of gentle teaching strategies?
  • Put students ahead of subject matter. Use
    students interests. Generate students interest.
    Never go through the meaningless motion of
    covering material apart from students
    involvement and learning.
  • Never use shame or humiliation.
  • Never scream or harangue.
  • Never get caught in escalating punishments to
    force compliance.
  • Listen, hear, remember, use student ideas.

41
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • What are examples of gentle teaching strategies?
  • Model cooperation with all other adults in the
    building.
  • Respect students expressions of ideas.
  • Demonstrate empathy for students expressions of
    feelings.
  • Identify students pain, sickness, and abuse.
    Then follow-up with people who can help them.
  • Redefine the concept of a hero. Show how people
    who work things out are great.

42
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • What are examples of gentle teaching strategies?
  • Teach students peer mediation.
  • Do not expect students to learn from failing
    repeated failure leads only to more frustration
    and giving up.
  • Devise activities at which students can succeed
    success engenders further effort.
  • Be a source of constant encouragement by finding
    good parts of all students work.
  • Defuse, sidestep, redirect all challenges to your
    authority. Never confront anyone, particularly in
    public.

43
GENTLE TEACHING IN A VIOLENT SOCIETY
  • What are examples of gentle teaching strategies?
  • Use cooperative learning frequently.
  • Create an extended family in the classroom.
  • Use particular subject matters as the way to have
    fights science fights about rival
    explanations, math fights about different
    solutions, social studies fights about what
    really happened
  • Never ask students for private information
    publicly.
  • Dont try to control by calling on children who
    are not paying attention and embarrassing them.
  • Demonstrate respect for parents in the presence
    of their children.

44
WHEN TEACHERS FACE THEMSELVES
  • What are the five steps of overcoming our
    prejudices?
  • First step A thorough self-analysis of the
    content of our prejudices.
  • Second step Seek answers to the question of
    source How did I learn or come to believe these
    things? Who taught them to me? When? Under what
    conditions? How much a part of my daily life are
    these beliefs?
  • Third step In what ways do I benefit or suffer
    from my prejudices?

45
WHEN TEACHERS FACE THEMSELVES
  • What are the five steps of overcoming our
    prejudices?
  • Fourth step Consider how our prejudices may be
    affecting the many issues surrounding what we
    believe about schools, children, and how they
    learn best.
  • Fifth step Lay out a plan explicating what we
    plan to do about our prejudices. How do we
    propose to check them, unlearn them, counteract
    them, and get beyond them?
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