Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Growth in Language Arts
I have never done a blog before and at first I thought it was kind of silly, but over the semester, the weekly journaling has allowed me to express my thoughts and feelings and better develop my writing skills. I really enjoyed when we were able to do free writing blogs because it allowed me to talk about whatever was on my mind, rather than just answering a question.
I also enjoyed being able to make the book, because it put everything I learned about the writing process into one final project. It also allowed me to create a personal story and add whatever I wanted to into it. I was able to use every step of the writing process, create my own digital book, and add pictures to make it even more personal. I hope to someday use this in my classroom, because I think it is both a fun and educational way to apply the writing process.
Overall, I have really enjoyed this class and I have taken a lot from it. I am definitely saving the book as a reference because I think it has some great tools and ideas in it and it will help me out a lot in the future.
Monday, April 6, 2009
Field Experiences
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Planning for reading and writing instruction
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Recent Thoughts
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Stages of Spelling, Writing Process, Personal Writing
At first, I had no idea what I wanted to write about for my book project. But after thinking for awhile, I knew exactly what I wanted to write about. My book is going to be about my experience in the marching band in high school. The beginning will discuss about how I was unsure about joining, the middle will describe how much I hated it at first and I was convinced I would be dropping out, and the end will talk about how much my feelings about it changed and how I ended up doing it for all 4 years and how much I took out of the experience...
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Social Skills and Language Arts
When children have special needs especially reading and writing skills, it makes it difficult for them to express their thoughts, ideas, and feelings with others and it may hinder their social life. But in other cases, children may have very normal social lives. I truly think it depends on the child and how much encouragement they are receiving and how much help they are getting with their disability.
My younger brother has a learning disability and especially when he was younger; it was obvious that he was having trouble keeping up in class and that the bigger environment was not helping him improve his reading and writing skills. When my mom pulled him out and put him in a private school, he was in much smaller classes so he had more one-on-one help, which in turn made his social skills stronger. It is important that parents and teachers work with the specific child for their individual needs.
As a future teacher, I think that the most important thing is meeting the needs of every individual child. When a child has special needs, it is the teacher’s role to do everything they can to help the child reach their full potential and achieve goals that are developmentally appropriate for them.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Reading Wars
When I was little, I learned language in a variety of ways. I believe that the number one way to learn language as a child is to simply pick it up from adults and by interacting and hearing other people. When I babysit and observe young children, it is amazing to me to see how much they can easily pick up just by listening. They expand their vocabulary each and every day just by hearing new words. I also learned language because my parents always kept our house filled with books and I can remember my parents reading to me every night before bed. This not only helped me expand my language, but it also helped me to learn how to read as well. I don’t think learning language ever stops because I am constantly learning new words through classes, books, and every day conversation. Language is one of those tools that anyone can always improve on.
I think that as time goes along and children learn how to read, they do end up creating sight words. Because sight words are some of the most frequently used words in the English language, children pick up on these words more easily. I think it is a great idea to have “word walls” in the classroom especially for the younger grades, because it gives them a reference of some common words. A teacher that I observe has one of these and the students do use it when they are writing in their journals. I also think it is a great idea to pick one or two sight words per week to focus on because it helps the students to better understand these commonly used words.
I believe that symbols are one of the most important tools to impact literacy learning because children are able to connect words through pictures. I always loved looking at picture books when I was younger because it gave me a sense of the word was and for visual learners, symbols are a great tool. I think that this reinforces new words and old words for children who are beginning to read and it will help them remember it easier. I have seen in various classrooms, specifically preschool classrooms, teachers will label things around the classroom, so the children are learning the words and symbols at the same time. Everyone learns literacy in different ways, but I think that using symbols is very effective.
