ED 17: CURRICULUM AND METHODS SEMINAR
Spring 2002 Ann Renninger
(krennin1; X-8347)
Class:
Mondays 1/21 and 1/28, and
Thursdays 6:15-9:15
Course:
The course in Curriculum and Methods is designed to provide students with the skills required for certification in teaching by the State of Pennsylvania. It will provide a forum for exploring applications of educational theory to practice. We will operate with a flexible workshop-type format.
Course Requirements:
¥ Attendance at all classes is required for certification. (Class will be held over Spring break; your calendar is the calendar of the school where you are student teaching.)
¥ Complete all weekly and long-range assignments.
¥ Build portfolios for yourself and for your students.
¥ Attend Special Topics Workshops.
¥ Attend one professional meeting.
¥ Exam - written and oral competency exam at end of term.
Long-range Assignments:
a. Observe two-three times a day in your cooperating teacher's classes, particularly in classes you will ultimately take over. (Learn the names of all students in these classes.)
c. Observe at least one class in a grade level before and one in a grade level beyond the one you will teach.
a. You should familiarize yourself with at least 3 resources in the Materials Center that would enable you to work on making the classroom in which you are teaching more multicultural.
b. Sometime during the term use some of the ideas from these materials to develop either specific lessons of specific approaches to working with your students.
c. Summarize the way in which multiculturalism was built into your class. Include in your statement consideration of how the content and/or process of the class would need to be adjusted if the racial/ethnic/gender composition of the class were different. This statement should be placed in your portfolio.
6. Professional journals
b. Sometime during the term you are expected to use ideas from your journal reading in your lessons.
c. Develop and use at least one lesson in your teaching which employs computers. This lesson should be summarized and evaluated in terms of its strengths and limitations. File your summary and evaluation in your portfolio.
d. With assistance, you are expected to create a website (preferably interactive) for either your students, their parents, or for colleagues. For instance, you might create a website in which students and parents can check for homework assignments and support; you might make a database with links around a particular theme or classroom topic; you might create a problem through which students might interact and experience learning. This is a very open assignment.
e. With assistance, you are expected to prepare a portfolio of your work in student teaching that is then posted as a webpage.
9. Collect representative samples of three students' work over the term. Select students who differ in strengths and needs. All identifying information should be removed and then these samples should be included in your portfolio.
10. Write narrative reports describing student work in your classes. Include three of these in your portfolio. Note, it may be useful in terms of the overall organization of your portfolio to include narratives for the work of the same students on whom you report in #8.
11. Write a rubric for a content you teach in your classroom. This should be included in your portfolio.
12. Write 1-3 essays that address: (These should be included in your portfolio.)
a. Reflections - A short essay based on materials in the portfolio in which you re-look at your working theory of instruction written for Educational Psychology.
b. Connections - A short essay based on materials in the portfolio in which you demonstrate thoughtful connections between the content of the Swarthmore education courses you have taken and your experience teaching.
c. Applications - A short essay/analysis of materials in the portfolio in which you analyze the application of content-specific standards in your discipline to the curriculum with which you worked. Based on the standards, make suggestions for the revision of this curriculum the next time it is taught.
14. Secondary students--you must arrange to be observed teaching by a content-area faculty member before April 5.
Schedule and Topics:
M 1/21 Competency-based teacher education
Th 1/24 Instructional objectives, planning, school, and classroom culture/
Lesson and unit planning
M 1/28 Questioning/Verbal and nonverbal interaction
Th 1/31 Micro-teach
Th 2/7 Classroom management, routines, and environment
Th 2/14 Lesson Planning/Questioning, nonquestioning, tasks, theses, class discussion and student voice
Th 2/21 Student assessment: Documenting, discerning, and understanding progress; Feedback, test construction and evaluation
*Schedule Conference with Ann, portfolios should be up-to-date.
Th 2/28 Computers and software/Using technology
Th 3/7 Reading, writing, thinking, speaking, and learning
Th 3/14 State of the disciplines
Th 3/21 Multicultural, nonsexist, non racist education
3/28 Break
Th 4/4 Web unit workshop
Th 4/11 Conferencing: Supervisors, students, parents, community, etc.
*Secondary Students, schedule yourselves to be observed by someone from your content-area department.
Th 4/18 Inclusion/Standardized tests and measurement
Th 4/25 Inclusion/Mainstreaming, in class support, individualizing
Th 5/2 Professionalism/Rights and Responsibilities
Th 5/9 Portfolio WritersÕ Conference
M 5/13 Portfolios due
W-Th 5/15-16 Self-scheduled exams
Texts available in bookstore (others are on Ed 17 Shelf in EMC):
Atwell, N. (1987). In the middle: Writing, reading, and learning with adolescents. Portsmouth: Boynton-Cook.
Charney, R. S. (1992). Teaching children to care: Management in the responsive classroom. Greenfield: Northeast Foundation for Children.
Maria, K. (1990). Reading comprehension. Parkton, MD: York Press.
McCarney, S. B. & Wunderlich, K. C. (1993). The Pre-referral intervention manual. Columbia, Mo: Hawthorne Educational Services, Inc.
Pauk, W. (2001). How to study in college. NewYork, NY: Houghton Mifflin Co.
Stigler, J. W. & Hiebert, J. (1999). The teaching gap: Best ideas from the worldÕs teachers for improving education in the classroom. New York, NY: The Free Press.