Title: Secondary School Teaching A Guide To Methods and Resources
1Secondary School TeachingA Guide To Methods and
Resources
- Chapter One
- Secondary School
- Teaching Today
- Recognizing and Understanding the Challenge
29 Key Points- of chapter 1
- Define differentiation between a middle
school, junior high school and a high school - Key characteristics of a exemplary school
- Small learning community concept
- Key developmental characteristics of 10-18 year
olds - Quality education for each student
- Teacher as a reflective decision maker
- Trends, problems, issues
- N.C.L.B
- Parents, guardians and the community
3- Secondary School combination of grades 7-12
- Middle School usually grades 6-8
- High School combination of grades 9-12
4Multi Cultural Education
- As a teacher today you must be knowledgeable and
skilled in using teaching strategies that
recognize, celebrate, and build upon the cultural
diversity in your classroom - One out of every six students age 5-7 speaks a
language other than English at home - English language learners-
- 5.5 ELLs in the U.S. public schools
- 80 speak Spanish
- 400 different languages
5How Effective Teachers Accommodate Differences
- Establish a classroom climate in which all
students feel welcome, can learn, and are
supported in doing so - Use techniques that emphasize cooperative
social-interactive learning - Building upon students learning styles,
capacities and modalities - Used strategies and techniques that have proven
successful for students of specific special
characteristics and differences
6To Become and Remain an Exemplary School/Teacher
- The school/teacher must be in a continual mode of
inquiry, reflection, and change the advantage of
utilizing a combination of practices concurrently
is usually greater in helping all students
succeed in school. - Schools and the teacher must constantly change
there is no single shoe that fits all children in
all neighborhoods. America is too large and too
diverse fro that to ever be the case.
7Teaching Teams
- Collaborative Teaching Teams several teachers
work together to reflect, plan and implement a
curriculum for a common cohort of students. - Team Teaching two or more teachers
simultaneously providing instruction to students
in the same classroom - Teaching Teams can be all teachers from one
grade level, subject, or interdisciplinary
8Community of Learners
- An interdisciplinary teaching team and its common
cohort of students can be referred to as a
community of learners, where each team of
teachers is assigned each day to the same cohort
of students for a common block of time. Within
this block of time. - Teachers on the team are responsible for
building the curriculum and instruction around
their students interests, perspectives, and
perceptions.
9Advantages of a Community of Learners
- Within a community of learners students are able
to make important and meaningful connections
among disciplines - It also provides both peer and adult group
identification, which provides a very important
sense of identity and belonging.
10Block Scheduling
- Block scheduling for at least a portion of the
school day or week , blocks of time ranging from
70-140 minutes or more replace the traditional 50
minute period. Alternate day block planning is
also know as A-B planning - Advantages greater satisfaction among teachers
and admin. - Improvement in behavior and learning of all
students - Students do more writing , peruse issues in
greater depth, enjoy school more - Teachers get to know their students better and
are able to respond to the students needs better
11- Disadvantages of block scheduling
- Possible mismatch between content actually
covered and that expected by state mandate
testing - Content in course may be less than traditionally
covered - If teachers do not use a variety of teaching
techniques students tend to get bored and become
unengaged - Alternatives
- Modified block or Split block
- Flexible block
12Responsive Practices for Helping Each Student
Succeed
- Perception that all students can learn when given
adequate support, although not all students need
the same amount of time to learn the same thing - Attention to coping skills and the emotional
development of each child - Engagement of parents/guardians as partners in
their child's education - High, although not necessarily identical,
expectations for all students - Highly qualified teachers, specialist teachers,
and smaller schools with smaller classes
13Responsive Practices for- cont
- Peer tutoring and cross-age coaching
- Personal attention, adult advocacy, scheduling,
and learning plans to help students learn in a
manner by which they best learn - Time and guided attention to basic
skills-especially those of literacy, thinking,
and social-rather than solely on rote memory
14Junior High School Middle School
Most common grade span organization Traditional 50 min. periods 6 per day Flexible usually block
Subject organization Departmentalized Integrated Interdisciplinary
Guidance / Counseling Separate session w/ counselor as needed Full time counselor Advisor/Advisee relationship between student Teacher in homeroom
Exploratory curriculum Electives by choice Common wheel of experiences for all
Teachers Subject centered Grades 7-12 Interdisciplinary teams- student centered k-8 or 6-8
Instruction Traditional lecture Skills and repetition Thematic units Discovery techniques and study skills
Athletics Interscholastic- Competition focused Intramural- Participation focused
15Middle-Level Education
- Are school based on a philosophy that
incorporates curricula and instructional
practices specifically designed to developmental
needs of young adolescent students (students
between the age of 10-15).
16Common Traits of Committed Teachers
- Knowledgeable about the developmental
characteristics of the age of students the teach - Understand and committed to the schools
philosophy or mission statement - Know the curriculum and how best to teach it
- Are enthusiastic, motivated, and well organized
- Demonstrate effective communication and
interpersonal skills - Are willing to listen to the students and risk
trying their ideas (French fry story) - Acknowledge students strengths, not their
limitations - Are reflective and responsible decision makers
17N.C.L.B. Act of 2001
- No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB)Executive
Summary - http//www.asha.org/about/legislation-advocacy/fed
eral/nclb/exec-summary.htm
18Home and School Connections
- Although not all schools have a parent/guardian
organization, many have adopted formal policies
about home and community connections. - Enrollment of entire families as members of a
learning team - Home visitation programs
- Homework hotlines
- Involvement of students in community service
learning - Parents/guardians volunteer to co-teach in the
classroom
19Community Service Learning
- Through community service learning students learn
and develop during active participation in
thoughtfully organized and curriculum-connected
experiences that meet community needs.
20Current Actions
- Changes in standards for teacher certification
- Emphasis on education for cultural diversity and
ways of teaching and working with E.L.L - Helping students make connections between what is
being learned and the real world - Connections between subjects in the curriculum
and between academics and vocations - Emphasis on standards based education
- Improving test scores
- Improving home, school and community connections
21Key Trends and Practices
- Continuing influx of immigrant and language
minority students throughout the U.S - Smaller cohorts of students
- Reflective thinking and self discipline
- Holding high but not always identical
expectations for all students - Movement to grades K-8 9-12
- Personalized instruction
- Providing students with time and opportunity
think and be creative, rather than simply
memorizing and repeating information
22Major Problems and Issues
- Controversy over the value of N.C.L.B
- Funding gaps- state budgets
- Deteriorating schools
- Recruiting and retaining the best teachers and
administrators - Scarcity of the male/ 2 out of 10
- Scarcity of minority role models
- Increasing youth at risk dropping out
- Using standardized test scores to judge and
reward the performance of schools and teachers - Resegregatiom that is occurring in schools
23Meeting the Challenge Recognizing and Providing
for Student Differences
- Communicate with students in a clear, direct,
respectful, and consistent manner - Maintain high expectations, although not
necessarily identical, for every student
establish high standards and teach toward them
without wavering - Provide tiered assignment, with optional due
dates that are based on individual student
abilities and interests - Use interdisciplinary thematic instruction
- Use multilevel instruction
- Use reciprocal peer coaching cross age tutoring
24Developmental Characteristics of Young
Adolescents 9-14
- Physical Development-young adolescents tend to
- Be self conscious and concerned about their
physical appearance, especially increases in
acne, height, and weight - Be physically at risk homicide, suicide,
accidents and leukemia - Experience fluctuations in basal metabolism that
can result in a lack of energy or spurts of
activity - Face responsibility of sexual behavior before
full emotional and social maturity has occurred - Have ravenous appetites and particular tastes
- Mature at varying rates
25Developmental Characteristics of Young
Adolescents 9-14
- Social Development-young adolescents tend to
- Be vain and want to show off
- Be self-conscious about social behaviors
- Want social acceptance. They can be fiercely
loyal to peer group values and sometimes cruel or
insensitive to those outside the peer group - Strive to define sex role characteristics and
search to set up positive social relationships
with members of the same and opposite sex - Challenge authority figures and test the limits
of acceptable behaviors - Be rebellious towards parents but will be
strongly dependant on parental values
26Developmental Characteristics of Young
Adolescents 9-14
- Cognitive Development-young adolescents tend to
- Be egocentric, display and increased ability to
convince others, and exhibit independent critical
thought - Display increased imaginative powers
- Be interested in primarily in activities outside
of school - Be able to reason, judge, and apply experiences
- Exhibit strong willingness to learn what they
consider to be useful and to enjoy using skill to
solve real life problems - Prefer active to passive learning experiences and
favor interaction with peers during learning
activities
27Developmental Characteristics of Young
Adolescents 9-14
- Cognitive Development-young adolescents tend to
- Sulk and show anger
- Fall in and out of love frequently
- Be psychologically at risk. At no other point in
human development is an individual likely to meet
so much diversity in relation to one's self and
others. - Want to be popular and have friends
- Want interdependence from adult control but
return to caring adults for help and reassurance - Be optimistic, hopeful, and sensitive to what
others think
28Developmental Characteristics of Older
Adolescents 15-19
- Physical Development-older adolescents tend to
- Be concerned about their physical appearance but
with increasing self-confidence - Need extended periods of rest, perhaps more than
at any time since infancy - Sometimes display annoying physical habits, which
are age-normal displays of their attempt to
become independent
29Developmental Characteristics of Older
Adolescents 15-19
- Social Development-older adolescents tend to
- Be socially at risk, tend to have a naïve but it
wont happen to me attitude. Adult values are
largely shaped conceptually during adolescence,
and their negative interactions with peers,
parents and teachers may compromise their ideals
and commitments. - Refer to peers as sources for standards and
models of behavior. Media heroes are singularly
important in shaping both behavior and fashion. - Search to set up positive social relationships
with members of the same and opposite sex
30Developmental Characteristics of Older
Adolescents 15-19
- Emotional Development-older adolescents tend to
- Have few close friendships
- Have a sense of humor based on increased
intellectual ability to see abstract
relationships - Want greater independence from adult control
- Want to be seen as an original or unique person
- Work well with teachers they admire and respect
and who treat them with respect - Have a sense of humor based on increased
intellectual ability to see abstract
relationships
31Developmental Characteristics of Older
Adolescents 15-19
- Cognitive Development-older adolescents tend to
- Be able to reason, judge, and apply experiences
with a greater degree of maturity - Give increased thought to their lives after high
school - Be interested in activities outside of school
- Display increased imaginative powers
- Exhibit a strong willingness to learn what they
consider to be useful and enjoy using those
skills in their lives - Have a greater degree of responsibilities outside
of school
32Conclusion
- Regardless of all the legislation and other
responsive school practices, in the end it is the
dedication, commitment , and understanding of the
involved adults- the teacher, administrator, bus
driver etc. that remain the incisive in
childrens learning. - Marzano Marzano, 2003 have concluded that it
has been made clear that teachers actions in
their classrooms can have a far greater impact on
student achievement than school matters of
curriculum, assessment, staff collegiality, and
community involvement.