I
just had the most interesting phone conversation with a parent. First, let me say that a professional
goal of mine this year is to call at least one parent a day. On average, I have accomplished this goal
and have been very happy with the results. Today, I actually spoke with 8 parents – crazy, I know.
I
was calling to let this particular parent know that her daughter can come in
tomorrow morning to re-take a quiz that she did not do very well on. I then asked how she thought “Suzie”
was handling the material of AP Bio.
We both agree that she is understanding most of the material but is
struggling with how to study on her own since so much of AP Bio is left for the
student to undertake on their own (the book is 56 chapters long).
Suzie
reads the entire chapter, watches the videos, and takes great notes – just like
I have asked every student to do this year in my flipped model so that during
class we can do activities, labs, and critical thinking problems. Then her mom said that as a parent, she
is concerned that her daughter is at a disadvantage because in class I will
spend all of my time catching up to speed those students who did not read or
watch the videos (she did say this in the nicest and most concerned way). I told her I appreciated her saying
that (I actually said she had “balls” for saying that to me!!! We both laughed
and she said she liked me for it – whew!).
Anyway,
I said that might be a valid concern for other teachers, but that I have
already called the parents of the handful of students who are not keeping up
with their end of the bargain. I
reiterated in no uncertain terms to those parents that their students must keep
up or they will fall behind because I cannot take class time to cater to
them. Students must help
themselves and do the homework before I can help. Now, if a student has done the homework and is still
struggling, then I absolutely will take class time to help them. At that point, they at least know
enough to know what they DON’T understand about a concept.
This
is the catch-22 of the flipped model – what if students don’t watch the video
and read the book? What if they
don’t come to class prepared? This
is a much bigger can of worms, I believe, that is related to students taking responsibility
for their learning. In my profile
on this blog and on Twitter, I state that my interest is “in putting the
learning back into the students’ hands”.
For so long, students have been spoon fed exactly what they need to know
for standardized tests and asked to memorize it, only to forget it a week later
(I know because this is how I got A’s in high school a decade ago).
But
now, we as mentor/teachers are asking much more of them and I believe that this
can only be a good thing. College
is not spoon fed to them and life certainly is not spoon fed to them. They need to know how to study and
learn material and then apply that knowledge to new and different situations.
On Terie Englebrecht's (aka @mrsebiology) blog, "Crazy Teaching", she writes
“Students need to learn that
the only person that has power over their own learning is them, not us. We
teachers can influence it, guide it, tear it down, or build it up....but it is
not ours. Learning belongs to students. As teachers, we need
to find powerful ways of giving students power over their own learning.”
Very well said!!
As I spoke to parents today, the
common theme was that their student was struggling with HOW to master the
material. My response was that I
will give them an array of resources to use and they must decipher for themselves
which resources help them the most.
If they are exposed to concepts from all different angles, I believe
they will better retain the material.
For example, they watch the video on enzymes, do an enzyme catalysis lab
with me in class, and also read the sections on enzymes in their book.
I apologize for the long post today,
but I wanted to end with the most interesting comment made by “Suzie’s” mom. She said she was worried for my sake
because parents might start complaining about me to the principal when their students’
grades drop from not doing the homework and coming to class prepared. She supports my methods and agrees that
students need to take control of their learning, but fears that other parents
might not see things the same way.
I had never thought about this before – should I really be worried? I sincerely hope not, but I will keep
you posted.
In reference to the catch 22 "What to do with what to do when kids don't come prepared" This is a problem I first encountered teaching an English class. Students needed to read the book at home and then come prepared to discuss. Kids who didn't read the book would do poorly in discussion and try to fake their way through it. So I instigated a pre-quiz, they came in and took a quick 5 minute quiz at the level of basic recall/comprehension. Kids who passed the quiz could join in the discussion and got credit for the day based on participation in that discussion. Kids who didn't pass the quiz were asked to review the chapter and write a synopsis of the passage. After a few times, every kid started passing the quiz!
ReplyDeleteThis made me realize that English teachers have been dealing with a "flipped" classroom for a long time.
Also in general I think we don't have any real consequences for students not doing any kind of homework (traditional practice based or flipped classroom initial exposure to material based).
What do most of us do if students don't do traditional practice homework? I think we all too often allow students to cheat or skip out on practice problem style homework and then those kid's grades suffer and they do not master the content. However, they get to keep "floating along" through class. I think at least with a flipped classroom, you have a greater incentive to make kids accountable for the homework.
Thanks for the idea - I will definitely use! I really appreciate you reading and commenting.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if you've read it, but the book "Mindset" by Carol Dweck is an excellent book that may help you with this. It deals with the differences between a growth mindset versus a fixed mindset. If we can develop growth mindsets in our students, they begin to take more responsibility for their learning and begin to enjoy it for it's own sake. I used bits and pieces from it last year and it really seemed to help my students performance.
ReplyDeleteReally appreciate the quote from my blog! ;)
ReplyDeleteI really do believe that learning belongs to students, and that, like you said, they have to be able to choose how to master the material. The problem I often face (and I teach 9th & 10th graders) is they come in with the idea that there is only one way to learning--the "game of school" they have always been taught. Deviation from what is expected usually will draw some parent and student concerns (I found this out when I was the only one to use SBG in my school) so I would maybe make some preparations for parents that will be focused on the grade rather than on the process of learning.
I have absolutely wonderful and supportive admins, and they helped a lot when parent concerns arose last year. I would make sure your admins know what you're doing so they can help support you if concerns arise. What you're doing is good for kids, so they should support you 100%.
Hello, my name is Tyler Davis and I am from the University of South Alabama. I am taking the class EDM 310 under Dr. Strange, and I was assigned to you to comment on your blog. You can view my blog at davistyleredm310@blogspot.com.
ReplyDeleteFirst, I would like to say that some parents will not see things the way that you and "suzie's" mom did even though I am completely on the same page as both of you. I like how you are giving your students every chance to succeed and as a future educator I hope I am able to do the same thing. Another thing I liked was the quote talking how we can guide them, build them, or tear them down but we cannot do something for them and they can only do it for themselves.