Monday, October 24, 2011

Teaching AP

This year is my first year teaching the AP Physics class at my school. I have 8 students and they are all bright and, depending on the day, motivated. For the most part. I think. Well, perhaps some of them fake motivation better than others. Hard to tell, really. I have some As, Bs, Cs, a D and an F. I am not sure how much of the grade is due to me (good or bad), how much is the material, and how much is the student. There is also the fact that a few of the students bit off more than they can chew this year - academics, sports, social lives... And of course by social life I mean shopping aka the OMTs (obligatory mall trips that happen each weekend). The holy grail of teenagers apparently...

In any case, let me list the good parts so I can remember next year and laugh at my naivete. The students in this class do listen sometimes and they are clearly motivated by grades if nothing else. They work with me outside of class when needed and so far, I am delighted to meet with them during study hall or G blocks. I can actually get into the more interesting stuff with them and do cooler labs and more interesting problems. The grading is easier because I have a homework set a week/a chapter and I give them the solutions and they add to their homework so that they have a corrected version. I grade the tests (half m/c and half free response) and the labs carefully, but there isn't a lot of other stuff to grade.

Then there is the bad: since I am doing the B test, we have to go very fast. I have one student who needs help with the math, and most of them who have never taken physics before. Usually AP classes are the second year of the subject for the students. Not mine... Anyhow, I don't have much time so the labs I have done are not as well thought out, interesting, or fun as they should be. The problem sets are easy to grade but doing the solutions means I need to do the homework myself. Good for me but time consuming. When the kids thing, "Oh, she is such a nice person," somehow that translates into, "Her classes must be easy." Then they are shocked when the class is not the easy thing that they expect.

Anyhow, this next summer I would like to go back to the AP Summer Institute in St.Johnsbury, VT and take the AP lab week. I think that will really help me out. Perhaps next year I can teach C instead - half the material but adding calculus. I will have a different set of students at that point. I think I will also make a prerequisite of the completion of pre-calculus to the course since sin/cos/tan knowledge is prime and one of my students hadn't run into that before.

In the meantime, Physics 12 has a number of students who completely lack motivation and I can't even imagine what the springtime for those seniors will be like. I have taken a more traditional approach this year to see how things work, and so far - bleah. Tradition just isn't what it used to be. (-8 Next year perhaps back to a lab-based idea or a conceptual model. I will have to think about it. If I have a lab-based model, the write ups will be tough for the unmotivated students, though the labs usually get them into the material. If I stick with conceptual, it is tough to have extra/different stuff for the honors students who are planning on taking AP after this. I only have one of those this year.

Physics 9 has a wide range, as usual, but they are pretty good kids overall (not that the others aren't, but there isn't as much pressure for some reason). I have ESL mixed in with non-ESL this year, and they are doing relatively well now that we have passed the first mid-trimester phase.

Geometry is harder this year because I have it E block. I let the kids out early a few times because I had soccer games, and now I have interviews with the head of school candidates and one last soccer game and then a conference. That means every class this week will be shortened or I won't be there. I feel terrible about it. I should have thought twice about going to the AIMS conference since I already have so many obligations. Sigh.

Hopefully I can convince other teachers to help me out. Perhaps I can trade Starbucks cards for substituting. Who knows?

Monday, October 10, 2011

Blog once a year, whether you need it or not.

This year I am involved in a year-long learning program that will combine use of technology and new views of education and community. The complex environment of the global economy and the age of social media has changed the way students learn and our program looks at the way we teach and view education in relation to these changes.
Exciting, right? Sort of. It would be more exciting if I had more time... Reading a 3 inch binder about possible candidates for the next head of school and then grading 4 inches of tests, labs, and article summaries melted my brain. So here I am at Starbucks, writing in my poor, sad, abandoned blog in order to feel like I have at least done something positive about the PLP program.
What I am not doing are the two student recs that need to be completed by Wednesday. Maybe later?
Anyhow, here I am, being all digital. I have signed back onto Twitter https://twitter.com/#!/reraUM and I have even tweeted. Or Twitted, as my department head says. Department heads? He is my department head twice over (for math and science)...
I have also sent invites to the other PLP people to join MCPop, a Ning that promotes sharing of ideas regarding how to combine best teaching practices with pop culture. Very fun and interesting.
An interesting article on tech in the classroom and the rules for using it wisely:
My favorite quote is: "I know that developing children into knowledgeable and successful adults is not about content. My role is to teach students how to learn. Do I worry about them knowing more than I do? Nope. The amount of stuff to know about today is mind-boggling. We learn together and from each other. Want to get a kid excited? Let them teach you something.We’re also working hard to get parents on board."
Good times. I need to take this to heart.
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