Professional
development seems farfetched for music teachers. For my school district,
professional development days are usually for the core classes. Myself, along
with my arts colleagues, are required to attend these meetings. I do see the
point of them because they benefit my students and, in the case of classroom management,
they improve my own teaching methods. Meetings about special education is
helpful for my classroom. It would be nice if there were more professional
development meetings about music and the arts. One thing that frustrates me
about these meetings are when we are working on the Ohio Improvement Process
(OIP) and an arts representative comes in and tries to help. The keyword being
tries. Most of the time, this instructor is a core teacher and helps us with
lessons we can use in our own classrooms about the core subjects. Most music
teachers are performance based and cannot provide a language arts or a math
lesson. It would be nice if they knew our standards and give us ideas on how to
help keep our students interested in music and art. “Professional development
needs to be relevant to a teacher’s personal interests and needs” (Bauer,
2014). Since we do not have that kind of option, I really enjoyed reading the
book this week about other ways to do professional development. Having a
personal learning network (PLN) has shown me to use other resources for the
classroom. Before this class, I never was a fan of Twitter. My fear of it was
how easy it can be for anyone to join; especially my students. I make it a
priority to make my personal life private and I am able to do that in the
privacy of my own home. From being in this class, Twitter has given me the
chance to meet other professionals who have shared resources that have worked
in their classrooms. Another idea that the book mentioned was the use of blogs
and Google+. I was very skeptical of writing in a blog every week for this
class because I am not an open person. From it, I have met wonderful teachers
that gave me some great ideas to use in my classroom and I have also learned to
improve my teaching from them. When this class is over, I plan on continuing
with my blog and adding others in my circle through Google+. As long as
everyone has the same goal, a blog would be a great way to meet other
professionals.
This class has shown me
many resources that I plan to use in my classroom. It has also shown ways to be
organized. I learned about bookmarking in college and found it very easy when
saving materials. This method is something I still use today because it keeps
me prepared when I teach and helps me keep lessons in mind when I want to use
them later. I mentioned this in one of my blogs before about Facebook. I knew
two fourth grade teachers who made a page for their classroom. They and their
students, and their parents, were the only ones allowed to be members. If
anyone missed a day in class, the students were able to get their materials
from this page. On the first page, you see the words “this is a safe
environment”. They also wrote their intentions which were to keep the students
on track; in case they missed anything from the day. Although Facebook is very
public, it can be another resource that is able to keep the teachers organized
if used in the correct way.
Bauer, W. I. (2014). Music learning today: Digital pedagogy for creating, performing, and
responding to music.
Hello Ashley,
ReplyDeleteI sympathize with your need to keep you private life away from your students. I have always avoided social networks for the same reason. I value mine and my family's privacy and all my contacts with students are through school channels. I even abandoned Edmodo when it became more social. I also agree that Twitter has proven to be a valuable tool for networking and professional development.
I have never thought about creating a blog before either, but I see the possibilities of creating a closed blog in Google Classroom for my students. Reading everyone's ideas has definitely inspired me to try new things in my classroom, which was one of my goals when I started the program at Kent State.
Hi Ashley,
ReplyDeleteI feel the same way about professional development hours and days when people come in to tell us how it incorporate math and language arts into our lessons. I just wish one day was music based!
I understand keeping your private life from students like you and Raul mentioned in his reply. I too do not discuss this with my students. My students ask me questions all the time about 'Do you have kids? A boyfriend?" etc. My simple reply is, that's great that you are curious, but that is not part of music class and part of this lesson. Then I continue one.
Similar to you and Raul, I always thought creating a Blog was going to be open to the world for everyone to read. This experience in class has shown me that it can be educational, and productive, instead of someone typing out their feelings and opinions about something. This could be a great tool for lessons, restating what happened in today's class for the students to follow. With Google Circles, this would be easy for my students, because my school is "Going Google", so they all have a Google account email.
Thank you for your post! Enjoy your weekend!
Sara