About Me

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My name is Rachel, I have two silly sibling, one older sister and one younger brother. I have graduated from University of Oregon with my BA in commicative disorder and I have graduated from Missouri State Unierstity with my Masters in Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Currently, I am a Deaf Ed teacher in Missouri. I am enjoying the ups and downs of teaching.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Week 8 - 9

Week 8 started off with my midterm evaluation. My MSU teacher was going to meet me and my model teacher at 7:30 on Monday morning. Man. I was nervous, She is the person that will give me a grade that would match my teaching skills. I hoped they were as good as I thought they were. I greeted her in the morning and then she joined my model teacher and I as we traveled to our first student. We got there, and I went along with my normal routine. I was focused on the student trying not to think about my midterm evaluation. About 1/2 through the hour, I looked up and I noticed the two teachers were conversing. I assumed about how my teaching was so far. Well that hour, was over pretty quickly. As we walked out the school, I was thinking will she say something now or wait till the end of the day. Well, We got in the car and she said that she was thoroughly impressed the way I taught that student. I was so excited to hear about that. She told me that she couldn't finally see the pieces come together. I told her that it felt like I finally know what I am doing, that it finally made sense. As the day went on, she saw one more student and again she enjoyed watching me teach. She said that you could really see my love for these kids. It was a great day, it was the confirmation that I have been wanting and wishing for the last two years.

Week 9 was the first week where I had ALL my students. Up to this point it was I had a few kids and my model teacher had the rest. I would slowly take on a new student every week. This week went great. The only thing that was hard was the go go go, barley anytime to sit and just take a break it felt like. Planning the lessons came a little bit easier, cause I know my kids and what would be good for them to work on. So it wasn't that bad, I am learning how to think of lessons and materials as we are on the go. I come home so tired, but a teacher's job doesn't stop at 3:15pm. I found myself writing self evaluations of how my lessons went and thinking of things I would do tomorrow. The only break it seemed was when my head hit the pillow at night.

Two more weeks left and then student teaching is over. In a way it seems like it just started but at the same time it seems like its been forever!!! I cant wait to head back to Springfield and see everyone on a consist basis. I missed them so much.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Chapter 6

I think this question is sort of unfair to ask without knowing a child or the family. Testing is a great way to get a number but what does that number actually mean? I mean you can have two kids with the same number but are totally different. One child's family can be extremely involved and works with the child everyday expanding their vocabulary in sign and in English. Then you can have the other child with a family who doesn't care and just gives the child whatever s/he points to or grunts at. Those two children will look totally different. So I think the answer about SAT scores for child who are deaf or hard of hearing all depends on the family. There is so much that we do depends on how involved the family is.

I see the benefit of a BiBi program because it highlight the two language as equal. We know that reading and writing in English is very important because that how we operate in this world. However, the Deaf culture is just as important. So, a BiBi program teaches the children both methods. This way they child can read and write but at the same time be involved in the Deaf Culture.

We as teachers needs to look past the number from a test because that really doesn't mean anything cause so many things can affect it. We need to look at the family involvement and see how that plays in to the score and how we can continually improve the family involvement or how we can be a support to the family that is already involved.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Reading Strategies

We all know that reading is important. It impacts our daily life so much that we read on autopilot. We read street signs, food signs, billboards, text messages, emails, books, papers, comedics and so much more. As an adult, I understand how important reading is to my life, but how do you relate the urgency of reading to a child who doesn't want to read. We know as teachers that children should learn how to read. As a deaf educator that need to teach children how to read another language and how to be skilled enough at it so they can get through life independently.

Here are a few strategies that can help encourage children to read and how we can adapt it to our children who are deaf and hard of hearing.

Making predictions: I got this strategy off of this website: http://www.readinga-z.com/more/reading_strat.html#predictions. Making predictions help students to stay engage in the reading so they will be able to see if they were able to predict the story correctly. To make predictions you need to be able to look at the photos, the title of the chapters, maps, and photos ect. Then write down the predictions about the text and then as your read revise your prediction as you learn more and more about these characters. For children who are deaf you'll need to model how to make predictions. You'll have to be patient because some children who are deaf have a hard time to think beyond a concrete concept. You'll have to model that its okay to get a prediction wrong and the way your thinking process of why you can to that prediction.

Ask and Answer Questions: I also grabbed this strategy off of the same website. This strategy also encourages to participate in what they are reading. Before the reading have the students ask a question about the title, or any photos that they see. Then as the students read, write down any questions that they have. These questions can be questions of confusions or curiosity, anything really. Then as the students continue to read and find out the answers have them write them down. At the end of the story, that the students analyze to see if all the questions were answered. If not, think if there is any other outside source that you can get those answers from. For children who are deaf or hard of hearing you might have a set of questions that have already written so they can look for those answers, make sure you keep the questions simple so they are able to search for the answers. As they start to read more and more independently, model what to do and have them run the questions by you so they can have a better understanding of what to do.

Break up larger reading sections: I got this strategy from this website: http://www.isu.edu/~kingkath/readstrt.html. It states that you should break up a large section up into smaller sections. This way you are not weighed down by the large chapter but you are able to break it up and talk about it smaller sections. This would be ideal for your students that are operating on grade-level or a few months behind. This way, you can help your student learn to read the same books that they are reading in class but they might need to read it slower and have longer time processing it.

Visualizing: I was able to get and explore this strategies using this website: http://reading.ecb.org/teacher/visualizing/index.html. This website is advertising their curriculum called: "Into the book" but this strategy can be used with any type of reading. It basically says to read the story page by page and draw what they story is talking about. What a perfect strategy for our children who are deaf! Make what they are reading visual, meaningful, and authentic. I did this strategy this week without realizing it. We were reading a story about a messy room, so I brought items that were in the book and made a mess. I placed the items where the book said, for example: the books were by the door. The student loved it, it made it hit home when I asked the questions. Simple things like that makes a huge different to our kids.

Prior knowledge: I was also able to get this strategy off the previous website. As teachers we all know that accessing our prior knowledge is a perfect way to help our little ones to better relate to what they are reading but how do we find out what exactly they know versus what they don't know. If the student you are working for is able to communicate you can directly ask the student about a certain concept and see if they are familiar with it. I think as teachers we need to really use our resources: parents, family members ect... to see if that student has exposure to that theme or concept. This might be the hardest part to pull out of our deaf kids but we need to be able to come down on their level and relate our story to their lives. It is the only thing that will help them relate and fully understand the story.

Weeks 6 - 7

Weeks 6 & 7 flew by it seems.

During week 6, I added two more kids to make up for the absent days in week 5. The children took to me in no time. I was teaching half days on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and only one lesson on Tuesdays and Thursdays. These kids are so different: different learning styles, different language levels, different grades, and different abilities. I teach one kid with multiple disabilities, s/he is just a joy. Sure makes going to work on Monday morning something to look forward too. The next child I teach is also a joy. I walk out of the class with my checks hurting because we are constantly laughing. The stories this little one tells me are more than hilarious. One story that s/he told me that s/he will be married by the time s/he was 15!! Can you imagine?! Just so funny!

Week 7, I added one more. This meant that I would be teaching all day on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. We also see this kid everyday, so I don't really have a day in between so I had to have my lessons read, which was hard cause I didn't have that extra day to plan. This child I was the most scared to add because s/he could have a lot of behavior problems, so I was nervous because I really don't have a lot of experience in dealing with behaviors. However, I had a few tricks up my sleeve. First trick: visual schedule, second trick: Rewards!!! I wanted this kids to think that my classroom is fun, and exciting but we are also expected to work. So, if the child was good, I planed on using the smart board! The child good on Monday! So, we got to use the smart board. Sad to say, we couldn't use the board on Tuesday or Wednesday, or Thursday. However, on Wednesday after school, I attended an Early Intervention Behavior Modification class. Our teacher told us that we need to give the child more breaks throughout the day as a reward for doing what they are told. Makes sense. This poor kid, is in my class for 90 minutes straight and we were constantly throwing work at her/him. I would be frustrated too. So, I thought about and decided to implement it on Friday. So now, we work for a little bit, enough to get one task done and then I give her/him a break as I set up for the next lesson. IT WORKED!! We have been flying through my lessons and ending up having about 15-20 minutes of play time on the smart board. Of course, I still have objectives that we are targeting but the student doesn't have to know that. hehehe.

I am truly enjoying what I am doing. My teacher comes for my midterm evaluation on Monday. I hope she sees my skills and how much I love what I do. Wish me luck!