This beginning of the intern semester has been a very
overwhelming but exciting time for me.
The Friday before school started, I had to switch placements to fulfill
my special education placement. I moved
from Rivesville Elementary to East Dale Elementary in Marion County. East Dale is very different from Rivesville;
the first difference is that it is a much bigger school than Rivesville. Also, East Dale is a much newer school and is
set up as open concept classrooms. The
open concept classroom is a concept that I have only heard about but have never
seen. There are also many more faculty
members and an assistant principal.
Getting to be placed in another school and experience how it is run is
very eye opening. I am learning a lot
about how all schools do not operate the same, and rather on their own
individual needs. Being able to
experience two different schools and how they operate allows me to take in the
different school environments. At first,
I was very nervous about transferring to a different PDS, but now after my
first week at East Dale, I am starting to very comfortable and a part of the
East Dale family! Everyone is very
helpful and willing to allow me to learn in any way possible.
This week has also been a very eye opening experience being
my first time in a special education resource room. The first thing that I have noticed about
being a special education teacher is the amount of paperwork that they are
required to complete at the beginning of the school year. The first few days was focused on getting the
accommodations/modification sheets to the general education and specialists
teachers, making the daily schedule, and additional paperwork. After we started to see students on
Wednesday, we noticed a few glitches in our system and had to readjust to be
able to service all of the students on the caseload. Before I was in my placement, I thought that
we would only be working in our classroom with students being pulled into our
classroom. However, we will be
co-teaching in a 3rd and 4th grade classroom with the
general education teacher for math and reading.
Co-teaching will give me the opportunity to experience actual
co-teaching for the first time. It will allow
me to cooperatively work with the general education teacher and develop a
professional relationship with the other general education teachers. Working with two different general education
teachers will give me the opportunity to observe and learn from two different
teaching strategies and classroom environments that will be very beneficial to
me. My mentor teacher has already given
me many resources and experiences to learn from in the first week, and I look
forward to learning more from her throughout the semester in an area that she
is an expert in. She gives me every
opportunity to learn from herself and the students to make my placement
successful. I am greatly looking forward
to this semester at East Dale!
Now that I
am starting to meet the students and get into a routine, I am starting to think
about my students, what they need to work on, what areas could be improved, and
how they could relate to my action research.
It seems that the area where the students struggle the most is with
staying on task, reading fluently, place value, motivation to work, independently
working, and learned helplessness. I
hope to focus on the learned helplessness during my action research because
this is a reoccurring theme that I have noticed across the boards with
students. The students I will be working
with range from kindergarten students to fifth grade students with disabilities
ranging from Autism, LD, MI, BD, and ADD/ADHA.
At some points, I have felt overwhelmed with being the special education
room with students and working with them one on one. I do not want to give them too much help, but
I also do not want to not provide them with the amount of assistance they
need. In the next weeks, I hope to get
to know the students and their individual learning and ability needs better along
with solidifying my action research question.
Hi Brittany,
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, welcome to East Dale and thanks for being so helpful to the tutors at orientation. I think they all got to see what a great resource you can be to them. I'm so glad you got to start the year with your mentor teacher. Seeing those opening routines is so helpful when you get your first classroom - especially considering all the paperwork required of special educators. Is there one thing you think you'll take away as a lesson learned for opening your classroom? I'm so glad you'll get to co-teach this semester. I'm really interested in your focus on "learned helplessness". It'll be fun to think about data sources and analysis strategies for this. Don't forget to copy your posting for Cathie and your mentor teacher. See you soon!