Monday, September 30, 2013
assignment 2. (Connecting School and Home Experiences):
The question, " what influenced you to think what you now think?" about anything, is a very interesting question. So, to now be asked to think about an experience that shaped the way I think about my current discipline, takes me back; throughout memories of my entire life. I should mention that my discipline is Math/Stats. One experience that I had with math has greatly affected the way that I conceptualize math in general. As a child I grew up spending time in my grandpa's shop. He was a carpenter, and a very efficient and precise one at that. In fact, he was well know for his precision; actually having some of his work put in a museum. The obvious part of this influence is with measurements, fractions, and angles. But, for me, the biggest influence was that it got me asking, how could I? or why? or what if? or how does that relate to that? Lets call those the Necessary Questions. I understand that it might be hard to understand why theses questions would be begged from working in the shop, it is hard to explain. To build something original or complex, you have to build it in your mind and then on paper first; before anything else. I always had ideas but, in some cases, they couldn't be done because of limits of the machinery or of the wood itself; so I had ask and answer each of the questions mentioned above. Each time I asked a question, Math was the test, and Math was the answer. I think that every experience you have in life will affect your way of thinking or understanding. This experience was of great impact to me in life, and especially in school. In school, this gave me an advantage. This experience led me into asking all of those questions mentioned above, about everything. It also, in many ways, gave me a way to relate and visualize what I was learning. But foremost, it got me to be engaged and to ask higher order questions about what I was doing. This will no doubt influence my teaching in the future and in many ways. Comparing this to my English classes, where nothing really got me to ask those questions, there was a profound difference, which still exists today. Every teach seems to want to teach a lesson that can relate to their students. That is important, but only in gaining temporary focus; unless it is done in the correct way. For example, using basketball to show relationships of angles might get a child's interests for a moment, but what happens after that. Those children, when they play basket ball in the future, will not be asking those Necessary Questions. The correct way to relate is by relating the subject to something that begs those Necessary Questions about that subject. So when asked how can I draw from my students background experiences in my discipline to connect them to the State and National standards, I have a clear answer. Find out what in there background is already begging those Necessary Questions and push them, as much as I can, into answering those questions.
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I agree that learning takes place better if the students are asking the questions. We need to get them to ask why?, how could I?, what if?, how does this relate to that? And that's not even the end of the list. I hope I can get my students to ask lots of questions, and want to figure them out. That is part of what I am expected to teach as a science teacher, is science process and thinking skills. Or I just like to call them figuring things out skills.
ReplyDeleteIt was very interesting to learn how you started using math at a young age. I can see how being in a sharp would spark your creativity. I liked that you talked about needing to have necessary questions. Although I must disagree with your comment about math and basketball. To this day when I am running I still think of some of the things my high school math teacher related to running in regards to math.
ReplyDeleteI like how you are really focusing on what matters in education, versus what is fleeting.
ReplyDeleteThis might be a totally wild hypothesis, but sometimes I wonder if more boys enter STEM fields because their parents do a lot to encourage spatial reasoning in their young years...through apprenticing them to carpentry, for instance, or even through throwing balls and back and forth with them while they have to learn about concepts such as trajectories, and keeping sports stats with them. I think it would be great if girls were given opportunities to connect STEM to their lives as well, as you were.
It always amazes me how our family has such a great influence in our lives. It sounds like that is the same for you, your grandpa was able to spark your mind to start thinking a little deeper and dream. I agree with you that you first have to come up with the idea in your mind. Then you can create it on paper. I believe that is why education is so important. As a teacher, you get to teach your students to put there ideas on paper and hopefully one day they will take it off the paper and make it real!
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