Last night was the first night of the Nature & Acquisition class. I love the class, but always seem to be behind schedule, and last night was no different. Introductions took longer than I planned, yet hearing each person’s story was really important. I didn’t want to rush it. It gave me a chance to get a sense of where each person was coming from as they move into this world called literacy education. We then discussed the syllabus. I had asked the students to review the syllabus/course handbook before coming to class and to be prepared to ask questions. The majority of the questions were asked by a handful of students and the majority were about the annotations, wiki, and the blog assignments. And of course, that took longer than I expected too. I wish I had done the index cards as I originally planned, because I fear that some questions were not addressed. So to address that issue
I invite students to post additional questions about the course using the comments function of this blog.
After break we moved into reader’s and writer’s workshop. I gave the students a vocabulary self-awareness chart and they dutifully began filling it out. I didn’t give them time to complete the whole chart – again the tyranny of the clock – but at least they had a chance to begin thinking about those terms and concepts and know to keep an eye out for those terms as they read the assigned texts for this week. We then moved in to taking a look at the Gee chapter “What is Literacy” and I did a think-aloud protocol and interactive reading of the first page where he defines D/discourse. I did this to raise student awareness of how academic articles are often about definition (that chapter in particular), and also how to work their way through a dense article.
After reading Gee, we moved on to reading about positivism and interpretivism. We’ll return to those concepts next week. The purpose of reading those two pieces was to gain a sense of how to write annotations. We did the positivism one as a whole group and then the interpretivism piece in small groups. Based on the feedback provided by the students’ exit tickets it was time well spent. I’m not thrilled with those two excerpts, but to date, they are the most succinct definitions of the terms that I’ve found. We need to do more discussion about those concepts though and link it more clearly to literacy and the material we’re going to be studying this semester and into the rest of the program.
We didn’t get a chance to do the discussion on “what is literacy.” I really like having that discussion the first night of class before they do their reading because it gives me a base line of what the students already know. But we’ll adjust. We’ll have that discussion next week after they do their readings. I’m wishing now that I had had them do a quick opinionnaire or anticipation guide. I think that would have gotten at the prior knowledge/misconceptions piece without a lengthy discussion. I will do that next time I teach the course. (and this type of realization is why I believe it is so important to take a few minutes to reflect after teaching and most importantly to write it down somewhere so it doesn’t get lost).
So that was the night. In some ways I feel we didn’t get a heck of a lot done, but in other respects I think we did. We began to build a learning community, I began to get a sense of individual personalities and learning needs, and I hope the students began to get a sense of my expectations and who I am as an instructor.
Just to clarify what the assignments are for next week:
- Read
- Larson & Marsh chapter 1 – write an annotation
- Gee “what is literacy” – write an annotation
- assigned pages of Jenkins et al – no annotation required
- one of the “Your Choice” articles – write an annotation
- Bring those annotations to class. I will not be collecting them, but you will be using them as part of your discussion.
- Someone in your group should go to the class wiki, go to your group page, and try it. You do not have to post a summary of your discussion because we didn’t do much discussion last night.
- To access the wiki, go to the email you received from pbwiki notifying you of your invitation to join.
- Click on the link and enter the required information, including a password of your choice.
- That should take you in.
- If you no longer have that email, go to mypbwiki.com
- Go through the sign-in
- You’ll get a message that you have a verification pending
- Request a new verification
- Go to your email and use the link from the new verification.
- NOTE: YOU MAY HAVE TO GO TO THE SJFC SPAM FILTER TO FIND YOUR VERIFICATION. SOMETIMES IT GETS SENT THERE.
- Consider adding/revising material on the “Terms and People to know” page of the wiki.
- Consider commenting on this blog post. If you have any questions, here’s a good forum for asking. To comment scroll to the end of this post. You’ll have to scroll past the blogroll stuff (those are links you might want to check out sometime). Click on the link that says either “no comments yet” if you are the first person to comment or “comments” if someone else has commented.
If you have problems getting into the wiki, come to class 15 minutes early next week and I’ll work with you to get you in.
September 14, 2008 at 6:50 pm
The first class (and first week of work) was very overwhelming for me. I feel like I am in an unknown world barely staying above water trying to survive. I am hoping that it begins to become less overwhelming and more manageable the further that we get into the semester. I appreciated the time spent on answering questions during the first class and the extent of explanation given to each class requirement. I really liked the vocabulary list and how it started the wheels turning on their meanings and if and where I had heard the terms before. It sparked extra attention while reading when a word would be used that I did not know after seeing it on the list. I found that to be quite helpful.