I think students procrastinate because they feel swamped with work. We go to school 8 hours a day, 5 days a week. Summing up to roughly 40 hours a week. Not including tutorials before and after school and also extracurricular activities. That's not even mentioning the excessive 4 to 5 hours of homework a night for many other classes. Students feel overwhelmed by all the work. So many, in hope of just taking a break, set aside their assignment in order to call their rushing brain to a halt. But, because of their overpowering work load, they are facing with yet ANOTHER assignment. Quickly casting the first one out of their mind and onto the back burner. Then, at the last minute they realize that they did not complete the assignment and that it's due the following day. So they are forced to stay up until wee hours in the morning finishing their work, most likely just to make a seventy or less. Today's students' overwhelming work load is a main reason why many assignments are hastily finished, or not even done at all.
I think students now should set realistic goals for their school work. If you're not excelling in on-level English, DO NOT go into Advanced Placement, thinking it'll raise you're GPA. You will fail.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
If I Could Change Education, I Would......
I f I could change education, I would do away with standardized testing. I think that many students suffer from test anxiety, so even though they might know the material well, they still do poorly on the test. Also, I think that a child's knowledge of a subject cannot be decided on one test, alone. I think a fair replacement from standardized testing would be a collaboration of the student's work throughout the year. It would reduce the costs of thousands of tests being printed each year, just to be thrown away after the four hours of the actual testing. And with the money the school board saves, we would have extra money to spend on repairs to schools, salary raises, projects like Project Celebration, and other school activities.
Lesson Planning 101
Activity Number One:
Engage kids in a fun, learning experience by exercising their descriptive writing skills. Have students partner up in pairs. Then have one student turn their desk facing the wall, and the other facing the board. The student facing the board will be the "writer" while the student facing the wall will represent the "reader". The teacher will put a picture on the board (i.e: a tree, teakettle, or bongo), then the "writer" will have to describe the picture to the "reader", using similes and metaphors. Once the activity is finished, the two switch.
Activity Number Two:
Have students draw a venn diagram, comparing the two protagonists in "Walk Two Moons". Have the kids identify the differences and similarities in the two characters, while also honing their writing skills.
Activity Number Three:
Have students act out a scene from the book "Walk Two Moons". Have kids memorize the scene, block it and present it to the class. It makes for a nice review game before the book test.
TEA link to TEKS
Engage kids in a fun, learning experience by exercising their descriptive writing skills. Have students partner up in pairs. Then have one student turn their desk facing the wall, and the other facing the board. The student facing the board will be the "writer" while the student facing the wall will represent the "reader". The teacher will put a picture on the board (i.e: a tree, teakettle, or bongo), then the "writer" will have to describe the picture to the "reader", using similes and metaphors. Once the activity is finished, the two switch.
Activity Number Two:
Have students draw a venn diagram, comparing the two protagonists in "Walk Two Moons". Have the kids identify the differences and similarities in the two characters, while also honing their writing skills.
Activity Number Three:
Have students act out a scene from the book "Walk Two Moons". Have kids memorize the scene, block it and present it to the class. It makes for a nice review game before the book test.
TEA link to TEKS
Thursday, November 3, 2011
My First Week as a Teacher...
My First Week as a Teacher...
My Site School is North Ridge Middle School
The name of my mentor teacher is Wendy Kempe.
Mrs. Kempe teaches sixth grade Pre-AP English at North Ridge Middle School.
I am most looking forward to helping the students learn English while also learning effective teaching

My Site School is North Ridge Middle School
The name of my mentor teacher is Wendy Kempe.
Here is a link to her web page.
Mrs. Kempe teaches sixth grade Pre-AP English at North Ridge Middle School.
On the first day in my intern classroom, I felt very welcomed and excited. my kids all asked me
questions about myself, and my teacher was very nice about explaining classroom procedures and rules.
I am most looking forward to helping the students learn English while also learning effective teaching
methods.
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