I assume this is a joke. |
As I mentioned in the post directly above this, with 24 minute class periods, there simply is not enough time to teach anything using the student led discussion methods I prefer to teach with. I refuse to teach from a single sided standpoint where I force powerpoint and lectures at them without stopping to digest and discuss. This is a much more effective use of this time. |
Student led means you are not teaching. No, it’s not effective. |
| We are teaching and carrying on as usual. We just won't get to the entire lesson so it will carry over into tomorrow, which is fine and pretty typical regardless. Or when we get to the independent assignment, I just turn it into homework instead of classwork to keep pacing. I have not decided yet. |
Thankful for a block schedule |
Already returning! Received our acceptance two Fridays ago. So excited! At least I can say I tried public for a year. |
Do you not have a job? Why do you care? What a weirdo. |
Student led is the latest trend in education. It is what is required of us at this moment in time. |
DP. Student-led is a trend, not sure if I'd call it "latest." More recently it seems like education research seems to be emphasizing the need for explicit/direct instruction. Not that "student-led" elements can't be incorporated, but there has to be a balance. But MCPS probably hasn't caught up. |
| Still teaching my courses today. |
| I had a quiz scheduled today. I still held most of it, but students will have 15 min to do the paragraph section tomorrow. |
No, it's not. It's a choice, just like a flipped classroom, where there is not too much teaching. Plenty of teachers are teaching. Interesting you are posting here vs. teaching. You using the trendy methods are why students are failing. They don't work. |
A trend? When I was in high school in the 80s much of the discussion was student led. It’s not new |
It's new in MCPS, it wasn't done back then. Students need real teaching, structured with textbooks and none of this non-sense. This is why scores are way down. |
| ES teacher here-- early release days are exactly the same as regular days, just the afternoon is cut off. My grade has a long morning, so we really don't miss out on much with early release. Math, ELA, small groups, then lunch, read a story, dismissal. We skip recess, specials, and social studies/science. |