Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Six Assumptions Teachers Make

We all make assumptions about things our students know and don't know. Sometimes these assumptions are correct, and present no problems. Often, however, those assumptions are incorrect and throw off our carefully planned lessons. Today's post is about some of those assumptions, and ways we can slow down and plan differently to help our students and ourselves succeed.

We assume that our students know...
  1. How to behave in class.  No matter what age we are teaching, we tend to assume that our students know how to behave. When students fail to meet behavior expectations, more often than not we respond by sending them out of the room or assigning consequences. While consequences are important, we need to make sure our expectations for behavior are clear and consistently implemented in order to set our students up for success. Taking the time to reteach those expectations after any school breaks, or if things seem to be getting generally out of hand, will ultimately save time in the long run by minimizing disruptive behavior. Additionally, if the expectations you set at the beginning of the year do not seem to be working, you can always change them, as long as you make it clear to the students what changes have been made.
  2. How to take notes.  Children are not born with the ability to take organized notes. This is a skill that is taught to them. No matter how old your students are, assume that they do not know how to take notes, and teach them that skill. I used interactive notebooks in my classroom, and would project exactly what and how the students needed to copy the notes into those notebooks. I taught 6th grade, so there was very little leeway given to my students about how they were to take notes. This worked very well for my classroom. If you teach older students, they might have a method that works especially well for them. If that is the case, allow those students to keep doing what they're doing. However, this will not be true for all of your students, so make sure you set up a method that works for you and teach that to your classes.
  3. How to study.  Because students tend to take disorganized notes, they do not know how to use those notes for future studying. Using lessons to help the students practice using their notes to study is a great use of time. Some ways to set the lesson up could include letting students use their notes to play a game with a partner such as Battleship, Flash Card Flip, Flash Card Match, I Can..., or Task Card Pass. Additionally, you could set up a notes scavenger hunt by creating a crossword puzzle that uses the terms from notes and the definitions as clues. 
  4. How to manage their time.  Many teachers, especially elementary teachers, think that by giving homework they are teaching students time management skills. This is another unfortunate assumption. What ends up happening is the parent's ability to manage their time wisely is tested instead. We can teach students time management skills in a better way by timing activities in our classroom and allowing students to see the timer we are using. Timers can be used for everything from bell ringers, to independent practice time, to bathroom use (if you are a teacher that takes the entire class to the restroom at various times). If students are reading a long passage or solving multiple problems, we can help them by writing on the board where they should be at different time intervals. For example, "In 5 minutes, you should have finished the first paragraph," or "In 6 minutes, you should have completed the first three problems."
  5. How to read on grade level.  Depending on the type of school district you are teaching in, you might have anywhere from 5%-60% of your students reading well below grade level. No matter what subject you teach, we are all reading teachers. Every subject requires students to read, even if it is only the directions. By making sure you are supporting what the ELA teachers are doing in their classrooms, you are also supporting your students and yourself in your own classroom. This support can be as simple as rewriting a text to match the student's reading level, or if the majority of your students struggle, you can close read passages together.
  6. How to solve basic math problems.  Students often enter their middle school years with a poor conceptual understanding of basic mathematical operations such as subtraction, division, and multiplication. This causes many other issues later on, as one might expect. By using manipulatives and illustrations to make the math more concrete, students begin to understand the operations better. While many of us were not taught using manipulatives, or maybe even how to use them in our classrooms, it is worth the time needed to explore them for ourselves and the time needed to allow our students to use them in class. It is a much better use of our time than spending weeks and weeks trying to remediate and reteach concepts later in the year.
  7. How to think about the text or problem being presented to them.  Again, this is a skill that is learned as we grow up, which means that as teachers, it is our responsibility to teach it to our students. We can do this by coaching students to ask themselves questions as they are working on their independent practice. For math, those questions might look like: 1. What information do I know? 2. What am I being asked to find? 3. What operations can I use to solve this problem? For any class that requires reading comprehension, those questions might look like: 1. What is the author telling me here? 2. Are there any hard or important words? 3. What does the author want me to understand? [For literature: 4. How does the author play with language to add to meaning?]
What assumptions have you made that you later realized were incorrect? How did you go about correcting those assumptions? Share in the comments below!



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