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EVERGREEN MIT 2008 - Field guide W-Sp 2007

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OVERVIEWASSIGNMENTSThe Evergreen State CollegeMaster in Teaching ProgramTeaching the Child in Front of You in a Changing WorldWinter/Spring 2007 Field GuidelinesOVERVIEWThursdays are devoted to learning in public schools and the community. School placements for Winter will continue through Spring quarter and progress to where you will teach lessons in your assigned classroom(s). You are to arrive at your school site at the time teachers are required to be at the school (generally 20-30 minutes prior to the actual start of classes). You should plan to be at your school with your assigned classroom teacher all day each Thursday (see syllabus for schedule). During these weekly classroom visits, you are expected to collaborate with your teacher to determinehow you might best be incorporated into the activities of the classroom as a “teacher’s assistant.” The expectation is that you willbegin to be directly involved in roles that are connected to the teacher’s teaching responsibilities, particularly working directly with students. In addition, you are to conduct six interviews (see assignment below).You are also expected to attend no later than March 9 (a) a school parent-teacher organization meeting or school site council meeting and (b) a school board meeting (see school office for schedule of meetings). You must include in your field journal the agenda for the meetings you attended and your reflections on the meeting based on what you have been learning in this program.NOTE: For these two quarters you will need a separate portfolio (or a large program portfolio) with notebook dividers to separate categories/assignments below. All prompts listed below by week and for interviews must have written responses that are put in your portfolio. To complete these assignments, you will often need to ask various school personnel for information anddocuments.Due: - Friday, February 9: Current field notebook for mid-quarter evaluation- Friday, March 16 th: Final field notebook for Winter Quarter for end-of-quarter evaluationASSIGNMENTSWEEK ONE (JAN. 11): In order to get a sense of the variety of daily experiences – classes, playground/lunchroom duty, planning period, etc. – that one teacher has, the first week is an opportunity for you to get acquainted with your teacher. In addition to noting the flow of the teacher's daily schedule, you should devote this observation session to following last quarter's first observation assignment on describing the classroom environment (see Fall guidelines). Because the physical environment includes curriculum materials, you must add to this a request to examine textbooks and other resources (including any educational software for the computer) that the teacher uses. Note the names/publishers of these books or software.Your observations should also take note of something in the school/classroom that relates to at least one of the readings assigned for this week. As is the case for each assignment, all of this information must be recorded into your field notebook.THE FOLLOWING INTERVIEW ASSIGNMENT IS TO BE COMPLETED NO LATER THAN FEB. 16TH.A SUMMARY OF THE RESPONSES (OMIT NAMES), PLUS THE REFLECTION PIECE, ARE TO BE SUBMITTED (TYPED) ON THAT DATE. It is highly recommended that you do two interviews by Jan. 26, two by Feb 2, two by Feb. 9 in order that they can be done well and you have time for reflection in competition for time with other assignments.A FIELD INTERVIEW: A PROJECT TO TEST YOUR ASSUMPTIONSIN ORDER TO INVESTIGATE THE EXPECTATIONS OF OUR SCHOOLS’ CLIENTS AND PROVIDERS, AND TO TEST YOUR OWN ASSUMPTIONS, COMPLETE THIS INTERVIEW ASSIGNMENT AND SUBMIT IT TO YOUR SEMINAR FACULTY.Method:- Interview two parents with children in school (not the same family), two k-12 students and two k-12 teachers. They need not be at your assigned school; they can be from your own community or elsewhere with a goal of interviewing those who work in / are served by the “system.”- Tape record the interviews with permission of the interviewees, assuring them that it’s just to help you write your reflections later and that the tape won’t be shared. This is to free you to listen to the speaker; take field notes if you must, but not in a way that intrudes on the interview.Elicit their opinions on the topics below, taking care not to convey your agreement or disagreement with the response as this could hinder authentic responses – seek only to help the respondent convey her/his feelings / thoughts.Interview questions:1. Describe what, to you, would be a good classroom environment.2. What to you would “good teaching” look like?3. How do you think student learning/growth should best be evaluated?14. Describe the nature of a good “student – teacher” relationship.5. What, to you, should a teacher’s professional responsibilities be/include?6. Have you ever heard of the “No Child...” law? Do you have any reactions?Summative (synthesis) reflections:Using your recording/field notes for all six interviews:- What surprised you?- What commonalities (if any) emerged?- What assumptions of yours were confirmed or challenged?- What do you derive from the opinions expressed about teaching/learning/schools.Please type your reflections and opinions in a summary reflection paper.WEEK THREE (JAN. 25): 1. Cultural diversity & education- How does the school curriculum include a focus on issues of power and privilege through examples in history, art, science, and other disciplines?- How are structural changes being made in the school to make it a more affirming and just environment for students from different racial, ethnic, cultural, language, and social class groups?- What changes are being made in teaching strategies to accommodate students from different racial, ethnic, cultural language,and social class groups?1- What community and school resources exist to support cultural diversity and equity?2. School-community demographics- What are the demographics of your school/school district? Note race, class, and immigrant/English language learner populations/percentages. - How do these school demographic figures compare to what you have been able to gather about the community in which the school district is located?WEEK FOUR (FEB 1): 1. Arrange to talk to your teacher about his/her lesson plans for the day. Determine what assessment approaches the teacher uses to evaluate students. Compare/contrast these assessment procedures to what


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EVERGREEN MIT 2008 - Field guide W-Sp 2007

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