Teaching the literacies in local schools
17c起草社区 secondary education majors are using games, music, art and other strategies to teach literacy in two local middle schools.
First came 鈥淒uck, Duck Goose,鈥 then 鈥淧oison Dart Frog.鈥 Next up was a relay game that had teams of kids racing to write the most words on the board in either English or Spanish. As the board filled with words鈥斺渄og,鈥 鈥渂raid,鈥 鈥渘et,鈥 鈥渜ualm.鈥 鈥渂asalt,鈥 鈥渘ativity鈥濃擳he kids, all 6th graders at Burton Middle School, were cheering on their teammates and yelling out words to use: 鈥蚕鈥檇辞产补, dude! 蚕鈥檇辞产补, dude!鈥 yelled one. 鈥淗ow do you spell it?鈥 his teammate called back. The final game of the day required the kids each to write a sentence on a paper, fold it so only the last sentence written was visible, and pass it around the table.
鈥淯se this time to think of a really awesome sentence,鈥 counseled 17c起草社区 senior Liz Steele, as the children wrote quietly.
鈥淎nd make sure you鈥檙e writing complete sentences too,鈥 added 17c起草社区 senior Andrea Campo. The resulting 鈥渆ssays鈥 praised the glories of soccer, kittens, bunnies and the Twilight series, and the kids laughed as they were read aloud.
Steele and Campo, both secondary education majors, were coordinating the games at Burton Middle School as a requirement for their 307 class, 鈥淩eading/Literacy in the Content Area.鈥 Students in the class, taught by , teach after-school literacy labs Monday through Friday at Burton school and Martin Luther King Leadership Academy. The labs are part of the after-school programs sponsored at those two schools by Campfire USA.
Many literacies
His students teach reading and writing, Sjoerdsma said, but they also teach the other four competencies that make up literary literacy: Listening, speaking, observing and representing. Because secondary education students come from a range of majors鈥擡nglish, Spanish, French, history, art, math, music, communication arts and sciences and kinesiology鈥擲joerdsma鈥檚 students can teach a range of literacies in a range of ways: anything from reading to drawing to making musical instruments.
鈥淭hese are students who are six to 12 months away from their first teaching jobs,鈥 Sjoerdsma said, 鈥渟o I give them a lot of independence, and they tend to be extremely creative planners.鈥
For Steele, an English major with an ESL minor and Campo, a Spanish major, games involving words have been the key. Campo thought the spelling relay was particularly effective. 鈥淚t was a way to get them on their feet. You鈥檇 think of a word, and a lightbulb would go on,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd it was a way to incorporate Spanish, which is always a challenge. On any given day, several of the students speak Spanish, but we never know how many.鈥 she said.
Managing a crowd
The fluctuating size of the group was major challenge, Campo admitted: 鈥淥ne of the weeks, it all went downhill, and we were a little apprehensive 鈥 We weren鈥檛 prepared to have 25 to 30 rowdy kids.鈥
Steele and Campo reevaluated their approach and turned things around. 鈥淭his is not a time for them to have lessons,鈥 Steele said. 鈥淭his is a time for them to be learning but not knowing that they鈥檙e learning.鈥
The experience taught the students about the importance of flexibility, 鈥渟tarting out with a key idea and making sure that idea was reached even if the process was different than we鈥檇 planned,鈥 Campo said. Teaching the literacy lab also demonstrated the importance of relationship-building to teaching, she added: 鈥淲e concentrated on getting to know the kids.鈥
17c起草社区鈥檚 education major has always required a literacy lab, and this is the second year the department has collaborated with campfire USA., Sjoerdsma said it鈥檚 been a revitalizing experience for many of his students: 鈥淚t鈥檚 been quite a valuable experience for them to engage with kids from an urban school that鈥檚 quite different than where they鈥檙e come from 鈥 I鈥檓 sure there are frustrations when they feel like they can鈥檛 get through and kids won鈥檛 connect, but it鈥檚 a learning process,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the great thing about the teaching profession. It鈥檚 a learning experience.鈥