Tuesday, August 20, 2013

There's a first for everything, including my blogging experience.

Well, it’s the first week of school and everybody is getting back into the swing of things. The students are learning the routines that allow their teachers to maintain order and manage class time with ease. The first lessons plans will break the ice and help teachers remember individual names, a task that is aided by seating charts and computer programs that display the students’ school photos.

In many classrooms you will find a college student beginning the first semester of his or her final year in the college of education. These students are future teachers learning their craft through observation and hands on experience.  I am one such college student, my name is Jake, but my students call me Mr. Thimesch. Through this blog I will share observations and personal thoughts on my pre-student teaching semester.

I have the good fortune to work with the cooperating teacher whose class I observed in last semester. It is helpful that I already know her routines and we have a good rapport. While I know my cooperating teacher, all of the students are completely new to me and I have a feeling that it will take me a few class periods before I remember all of their names. There are only twenty-one students, so the task is not too daunting. The first day I was in the room the students presented personal timelines which helped me associate information about the students with their faces and names. I still think that the most helpful thing for me to learn names as a student-teacher is handing back home work. I also look at the names on the top of the students’ folders. While I am not a fan of assigned seating, I will most definitely use a seating chart the first few weeks in my own classroom.