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Motor Skills. How to jump, landing correctly on the balls of their feet. Healthy eating ... ( Niebrand, Horn, Holmes 1992, p 102) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Table of Contents


1
Table of Contents
  • Pedagogy and Assessment
  • EPT 114, The Maths Lesson
  • EPT 114, Evaluation of Lessons Observed

2
Pedagogy is the jargon we use for teaching. It is
also known as the art science of teaching or
the art craft of teaching. Pedagogy is the
what you do and how you do it, of
teaching. Assessment is fundamental to your
pedagogical practices you need to know if what
you are teaching has worked and how much each
student has understood to teach well. Assessment
takes a wide range of forms and youll probably
be familiar with formal tests and essays.
However, there are other ways of approaching
assessment, depending on what you are trying to
find out, for example observations, checklists,
portfolios, creative presentations, power points,
anecdotal records. Its important to remember
that assessment is part and parcel of what you do
on a daily basis as a teacher.
(Ailwood, J. 2004 CSU Bathurst, Tutorial Notes).
Pedagogy Assessment
3
  • Pedagogy aims at setting in order pupils so as
    they become willing learners of the curriculum
    set out for them. This now depends on teachers
    to be interactive so that students are engaged
    and interested to learn.
  • It is important that a teacher understand how
    best a student can learn and how they approach
    what they are instructed to do. A teacher needs
    to know how the students need to be supported as
    learners. Teaching does depend on an educated
    understanding of the learners and a personal
    interaction with the students.
  • L guess the question of how children learn best
    will be debated for many years to come but to a
    degree I believe it is also indicative of a
    teachers ability.

4
Children must feel comfortable and at ease with
the learning environment, problems can
arise when students are expected to succeed in an
environment which is not conducive to learning.
A child cannot learn when he/she does not feel
secure, wanted or comfortable for whatever the
reason may be. This responsibility falls mainly
into the arms of the teacher and the pedagogical
ability for them to correct a wayward situation.
  • A good relationship between the teacher and the
    student is of the upmost importance. There must
    be a sense of trust friendship and genuine
    concern relayed to the student if they are to
    confidently and competently learn, The art and
    science of teaching needs to think of the child
    as a whole and not just a mind.

5
  • Assessment is the review of your pedagogy, or it
    could be seen as a quality assurance test on
    yourself as a teacher. The assessment would show
    you the overall outcome of your teaching on the
    class as an average.
  • More importantly it tests the students knowledge
    of what they have learnt for themselves and an
    indication as to whether they have graduated on
    to the next level of learning.
  • Assessment is also the testing of curriculum
    knowledge and apart of Board of Studies
    accountability and is also an important teacher
    skill.

6
  • And so as we learnt in our tutorial What is
    assessment?
  • Assessment is the process of gathering evidence
    of what a student can do for a purpose.
  • It is the systemic and purposeful method of
    looking at where students are and where they need
    to go.
  • It should inform students of their progress and
    help teachers identify what students need to
    learn.
  • It should provide information so teachers can
    plan and develop curriculum.( Taken from lecture
    notes, Week 4, 18 March 2004)

7
  • Practical Report

Evidence
8
  • I have decided to use my Practical Report as my
    piece of evidence
  • as it is my first experience as a teacher in the
    real world.
  • I found my two weeks on practical as a sound
    experience of what teaching is all about. It
    confirmed my belief that teaching is the career I
    want to follow.
  • I believe that I had a successful two weeks at
    the school I chose to do my practical experience
    with. I was invited back at any time I felt I
    would like to spend time in a classroom or for
    any more practicals that I wish to do at that
    school.

Justification
9
  • My final KLA observation was on Personal
    Development Health and Physical Education, and
    again this observation was carried out on a
    Kindergarten class at 210 pm. I chose this
    lesson because I had actually read some of the
    text that the teacher used for her lesson and
    felt it was a different and interesting approach.
  • The resources and equipment for this lesson was
    hoops outside and worksheets for inside. There
    was only one student group for this observation.
  • Classroom structure
  • Grouped tables and chairs
  • Charts all around the room on healthy eating
  • Comprised of boys and girls
  • 24 students
  • related to.

Evidence
10
  • Learning outcomes were addressed by the teacher
    modelling and scaffolding
  • The importance of warm up exercises
  • How to stretch correctly
  • Motor Skills
  • How to jump, landing correctly on the balls of
    their feet
  • Healthy eating
  • This was a very interesting lesson, as we have
    spent weeks learning that pedagogy is the art and
    science of teaching. In this lesson I saw the
    term pedagogy role played. The teacher here used
    a book called Ready to use, Fundamental Motor
    Skills Movement Activities for Young Children
    written by Joanne M Landy Keith R Burridge. I
    believe it is important that you choose something
    that will keep the childrens interest and in
    this lesson I believe the teacher has structured
    a program that is of great benefit to the
    children in their learning, but also something
    that they obviously enjoy.

11
  • You make curriculum decisions to meet learning
    objectives for the day, the unit, the semester
    and the school year. Those decisions must be
    creative and appeal to the learning styles of
    individual students. (Niebrand, Horn, Holmes
    1992, p 102). Here the teacher used terms from
    her book such as, Stand at home, Scrambled eggs,
    Iceberg, Kangaroo hop (words that came from her
    activities book) but words that the children
  • In relation to this KLA the teacher has reached
    the suggested outcomes of the syllabus
  • MOES1.4 Generates a general awareness of how
    basic movement skills apply in play and other
    introductory movement experiences.
  • MOS2.4 Displays a focus on quality of movement in
    applying movement skills to a variety of familiar
    and new situations
  • PHES1.2 Displays basic positive health practices
  • PHSI.12 Discusses the factors influencing
    personal health choices
  • PHS1.12 Recognises that positive health choices
    can promote well being. Syllabus, English K-6,
    1998)

12
  • I chose this Key Learning Area for my evidence as
    it was a class that seemed to be different from
    the other classes. Different in that the
    children were obviously eager to become involved.
  • There was no real effort to engage the children
    as they did this by themselves. There was a lot
    of different movements in this class that kept
    the children interested in what they were doing,
    movements with such names as iceberg, kangaroo
    hop, jelly, freeze and a lot of other moves
    with names attached to them.
  • The teacher kept complimenting the children on
    how well they remembered the moves and on how
    well behaved they were while they were learning.
  • In speaking with the teacher, she did mention to
    me that there was a lot of success with this
    physical education program and obviously was the
    one she preferred also.

Justification
13
Assignment 3 - EPT 114
  • Forum Posting 3 The Maths Lesson.
  • Introduction
  • Learning outcomes
  • NS2.2 Uses mental and written strategies for
    addition and subtraction involving two-, three-
    and four-digit numbers (Board of Studies,
    Mathematics k-6 Syllabus, p. 48).

14
  • To get the students engaged and interested I
    would have the students play a game to start
    with. The teacher would explain the game to the
    students and then model it so the students
    understood how they are to play. Word knowledge
    and sentence structure can usually be merged into
    the development of mathematical concepts by the
    use of language arts analogies. (Page, Elkins
    OConner 1978, p.61). This is one way the teacher
    could successfully engage and teach the children
    as she maintains a comfort zone for the third
    class students as they are taken through the
    different stages of the Teaching and Learning
    Cycle. The students can learn quickly and
    understood tasks placed in front of them by also
    doing examples for the students on the blackboard
    and showing them examples of the work that they
    will be expected to know. You make curriculum
    decisions to meet learning objectives for the
    day, the unit, the semester and the school year.

15
  • Those decisions must be creative and appeal to
    the learning styles of individual students.
    (Niebrand, Horn, Holmes 1992, p 102). I believe
    this myself and hence believe in variety in
    teaching to allow yourself room to move with the
    different abilities of the different
    personalities in the classroom.
  • In using the game, the teacher would be assessing
    their prior knowledge, which would be assisting
    her in developing her program to suit the
    students educational needs.

16
Main Part
  • On gauging the stage that the students are at, I
    would then divide the children into groups to
    attempt the game themselves, wondering around the
    class to assess whether the students were
    grasping the concept and learning from it.
  • It is important that the students do experiment
    with hands on stuff and that they use concrete
    materials, which assists the children in seeing
    an outcome in what they are doing. It would also
    be appropriate to send the students back to their
    desks to do their own group work from their books
    as suggested by Miss Smith.

17
  • At this stage, you would have given yourself the
    opportunity while you were walking around the
    classroom to see who understands the work and who
    does not. As it is easier at times for students
    to learn more from a peer, you could buddy them
    up at their desks with their peers to assist the
    ones that have not grasped it as well. This
    would allow you time to assist children who maybe
    even more behind.

18
Conclusion
  • In concluding, it would be appropriate to finish
    the class with question and answer time to allow
    yourself to see what the students have learnt and
    if they are progressing as you would hope.
  • It could also be a time where the students could
    assess the teaching of the subject and give their
    opinions on what they thought was useful to them
    and what they thought was not of help to them in
    learning the topic.
  • It would be important that as a teacher you take
    time to reflect on how you felt the subject was
    covered and how you, especially as a new teacher,
    could improve your lesson.

19
Referencing
  • Niebrand,C, Horn,E, Holmes,F 2000, The Pocket
    Mentor. A Pearson Education Company Needham
    Heights, MA 02494
  • Page,G, Elkins,J, OConnor,B, 1978, Communication
    Through Reading Vol.2 Diverse Needs Creative
    Approaches. Australian Reading Association
  • Board of Studies NSW, 1998, Syllabus. Board of
    Studies NSW, Sydney

20
Forum Posting 1
  • Evaluation of Lesson Observed.
  • Maths was observed on a kindergarten class in the
    same classroom as English at 1130 am. I spoke
    to the teacher about her maths lesson at morning
    tea and thought she had some good ideas in
    keeping the students interested long enough to
    teach them what she had planned.
  • Learning outcomes were addressed by the teacher
    modelling and scaffolding
  • Whole numbers
  • Addition
  • Subtracting, and
  • Patterns

21
  • The teacher used buttons, table charts, portable
    blackboard, and their number board for her
    resources and equipment for this lesson. The
    students were divided into four different maths
    groups according to their ability.
  • During this lesson, the teacher was familiarising
    the children with counting and patterns and in
    doing this used a counting frame made up of 100
    blocks. The children were sitting in four
    separate lines, grouped according to their
    ability. The teacher asked different questions
    of the lines depending on their level.

22
  • To get the students engaged and interested the
    teacher played Guess the number game? The
    teacher modelled this so the students understood
    how to play. The attention span for this age was
    not great, so after three games were played it
    was time to do something else. The teacher kept
    the students interested by using buttons to play
    games whilst doing their sums word knowledge and
    sentence structure can usually be merged into the
    development of mathematical concepts by the use
    of language arts analogies. (Page, Elkins
    OConner 1978, p.61) I believe that this is how
    the teacher successfully engaged and taught the
    children as she maintained a comfort zone for the
    kindergarten class as they were taken through the
    different stages of the Teaching and Learning
    Cycle. The students learnt quickly and
    understood tasks placed in front of them.

23
  • I believe the teacher was successful in covering
    her maths lesson with the children. She had such
    a lovely rapport with the children and had put
    great effort into planning what would keep them
    interested. According to research students were
    more likely to participate with people they knew
    well or in supportive situations with clear,
    well-defined tasks. (Groundwater-Smith, Ewing
    Le Cornu 2003 p 124). I believe that children do
    learn better, when they are with someone that
    they are comfortable with. I see this as a
    parent, when your children are uncomfortable with
    something they are not positive and consequently
    will not have a positive attitude to what they
    are learning.

24
  • In relation to this KLA, the teacher has reached
    the suggested outcomes of the syllabus
  • NES1.1 Counts to 30, and orders reads and repeats
    numbers in the range 0-20
  • PAES1.1 Recognises describes creates and
    continues repeating patterns and number patterns
    from objects and pictures. (Syllabus, English
    K-6, 1998)
  • During my first practical experience, I was
    fortunate enough to experience a different class
    each day. I had kindergarten through to a
    composite year 2/3 all boys class even though I
    went to a co-educational school.

25
  • The only time I found that most students did not
    achieve the planned learning outcomes was with
    the composite class of year 2/3 all boys. On
    this day, the usual teacher was off sick and a
    casual teacher was called in. Although there was
    work left for the teacher, she was a first year
    out teacher and the class of boys had full
    control over her and not the other way around.
  • This was in turn a very valuable experience
    despite the fact that it was a very
    non-productive day.

26
  • Referencing
  • Page,G, Elkins,J, OConnor,B, 1978, Communication
    Through Reading Vol.2 Diverse Needs Creative
    Approaches. Australian Reading Association
  • Groundwater-Smith,S, Ewing,R, Le Cornu,R 2003,
    TEACHING challeges and dilemmas. Harcourt
    Australia Pty Ltd
  • Board of Studies NSW, 1998, Syllabus. Board of
    Studies NSW, Sydney
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