Monday, November 4, 2013

11/4


Ayers To Teach was very helpful read and addressed a lot of the emotional strains of teaching. It was also reassuring because I felt like I was having a conversation with someone who had dealt with everything I am going through, and they were telling me that I’m on the right path and it would be okay.  I wish I would’ve taken another look at the text this morning because I just had the worst teaching experience ever, and I’m really frustrated.
The students in my Co-Lab class were really disrespectful today and I couldn’t get through the great lesson I thought I had planned for them. My day started out pretty hectic as the computer lab ran out of paper and I couldn’t print their articles in time. Coupled with their behavior my irritation is at an all time high.
I feel like I have a lot of struggling kids who are acting out because they are struggling. They either refuse to participate or are very disrespectful and disruptive to mask their frustration with school. Some of my students are confrontational because they want their friends to think they’re “bad” and maybe the best way to prove that you are is to challenge the teacher; but they’re in for a rude awakening because there is nothing “bad” about these kids to me.
The most difficult thing is that I really care about their success and it really bothers me that I don’t know how to help them. I don’t want to write them up or scream at them every class period. I don’t want to be that teacher. I wish I could have a conversation with them, but I don’t think they trust me enough.
The hardest part is that the people I work with are lost as well. My inclusion teacher doesn’t even know what to do with the students and the one’s I’m having issues with are the students she’s responsible for. I’ve realized that she is not getting any type of support from the administration and has kind of been thrown in without any guidance.
It’s just crazy how different this class is from my Pre-AP class. The students are so much more motivated because they have the confidence to be and I’m beginning to wonder if I can help my other students with their confidence or is it out of my hands.
All in all, I need to take another look at Ayers because I don’t want to take this frustration home.  I want to be hopeful and encouraging when I see them again on Wednesday.


1 comment:

  1. I'm really drawn to your comment that the people who work with your co-lab students seem lost as well. It's powerful to be able to see how everyone who works in schools--from administrators to teachers to students experience their own strains, lack of supports, and struggles with fulfilling their "role" in school. I see you pointing to so much already of the elements that you'd need to address in helping your kids participate in learning with you--trust, relationship building over time, confidence. You also identify the power of labeling--as AP or remedial or special education--and just how loud a message that sends to students about what others believe they can do or should be like in school. Ayers talks about most of the development of teacher practice being formed in the in-service years of teaching. Although I push back some on the limits he places on the role of the teacher education experience, you do have so many years and so much more room and agency than you have now to address all of these elements that you are learning to identify and think productively about during your teacher preparation program.

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