Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Blog 15 Participant B- Partial Data

Participant B

TF: How long have you been a teacher?
B: Ummm lets see, 20 years?
TF: really?...whao, i mean you look so young. Okay, umm where did you go to college?
B: I went to 2 years to Rampoo and then when I decided that I wanted to teach, that’s when I transferred to Kean and I graduated from Kean.
TF: And what grade are you currently teaching?
B: I teach 3rd grade. I’ve taught 3rd grade for 17 years and prior to that I did maternity leave in Kindergarten and prior to that I worked in nursery schools and daycare.
TF: So for 3rd grade, you’re an expert! Okay so, what made you decide that you wanted to become a teacher?
B: Ummm I always knew that I wanted to do something to help people, children. In highschool, I worked in a kids clothes store and i realized that I wa more drawn to where the kids play area was and wanted to be with them rather than being the sales person, so I loved interacting with the kids so I knew I wanted to do something with them…

TF: Can you recall your most influential teacher?
B: that’s a difficult one. I don’t think I have one that was most influential. Looking back, it probably was a middle school language arts teacher that was really really strict. And at the period of being in the class, we didn’t really like him but looking back, I can see the many things that he taught me and allowed me to appreciate the different styles of all teachers  and how you need a variety of each type of teacher to teacher different things.

TF: Another loaded question, what is your teaching philosophy?
B: Well I’m sure it developed through the years and just like in our school, that no child, no matter what has the possibility of being successful and learning. And my goal is to take them from where they are and teach them as much as possible in my class and without any kind of excuse.
2:32

TF: Okay so my focus on this study is a writing studies class with a focus on how teachers comment on student work.
B: okay


TF: What kind of writing assignments do you give your students?
2:41
B:  Ummm well we have a variety. We have a free writing in a journal. I have a  fun Q&A book that has fun type of questions where they have to answer  like what is your favorite thing to do on a weekend and a variety of questions where they can just write for them. They write for 10 minutes straight without me looking at punctuation where they can get writing done. And then we have writer workshop where we work on, and in preparation for NJASK, where they are required to write a speculative writing piece and then also an explanatory piece. So throughout the year we focus on that.

TF: Okay now where do you find that you do most of your grading? At school or...
B: ...for writing I usually do it at home. Yeah, I do it outside because it takes a lot of time.

TF: Do you find that you have a specific place within your home that you use to…
B: Well I have a comfy chair and do it there.

TF: ummm and during which part of the day, or weekdays or weekend do you find that you do your grading?
B: Well I like to get that back, especially since we have writer’s workshop 2 to 3 times a week, so I usually do it during the week. Yeah, something like that I want to give back to them sooner so we conference.

TF: now you said for writing its usually at home, so do you do the other grading here?
B: Umm yeah you need more time and its a more relaxed  environment. I mean to read 27 essays takes a lot longer.

TF: Ummm can you walk me through the process of grading papers?
B: For grading the paper? or revisions?
TF: for grading the paper
B: Reading the paper, we have the rubric that we have to use.
TF: is that the same rubric that 5th grade uses?
B: Ummm is a five section rubric?
TF: I think so…
B: I can give you a copy of ours. But yeah, I would use a rubric to score it.

5:08
TF: Do you have a pattern that you follow?
B: Well usually we focus, we pick one of the focus areas in the rubric, i might focus on their opening and closing and really focus and grade them more on that than everything like their punctuation and spelling. So like today we’re going to focus on creating exciting beginnings. I’ll really be looking at how they started their essay.

TF: Are you targeting your comments?
B: It would be like the mini lessons. If we’re learning how to use quotation marks that week maybe I’ll specifically be looking at their use of quotation marks correctly. So i try to focus on one area.

TF: Do you confrence?
B: Yes

TF: Can you walk me through your process with the students and the conferences?
B: When we’re working on a writing piece, after we’re done with the 1st draft, I would confrence with them, and on a piece of paper I would write their strengths and then the areas that they’d have to work on for revisions. For example, I mean something its hard to find a strength, but I will say, I love the detail about what your bedroom looked like or a strength might be that I loved how you used figurative language, or this was a great vocabulary word and I would specifically write which one, so they know what things they are doing, good and bad paper. Or you pull all the periods in the right place.

TF: Is all this on a separate piece of paper?
B: Yeah this is all on a separate piece of paper and I would be writing it as we were going over it. And then the areas to improve, the 1st thing, because its so hard for them to do revisions, you know, they know the editing to look for punctuation and spelling, so I might prompt some questions to like, if it was part of a story of when they went to school, I might ask them, what happened before I went to school? 7:14pm

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