Saturday, January 23, 2010

Week 2 Start at Christ the King

I completed my first full week at Christ the King in the kindergarten classroom. There are 42 five and six year olds! My first impression honestly was that it was going to be a rough ride. The students really do not fear authority and will challenge any sort of discipline, unless it is a cane. I do not feel comfortable using a cane, so I am wondering how I am going to get the students to listen to me. With warnings beforehand and being told by some people that the kindergarteners were wild, I came into the classroom being as stern as I could be. I do not want the students to think that I am a pushover so when I give a warning to a student I have really tried to follow through with what I say. I am in the classroom with two other teachers. One is the head teacher and the other is a student teacher like me, but in Ghana student teachers have to do one year of student teaching. I have not had the chance to sit down and talk with the teachers to make a tentative plan for my time here, but I am hoping that can happen soon. With three teachers in the classroom, I hope that I can get the teaching experience I need.

This week I spent a lot of time observing and doing little things to help out, like draw lines in the students’ notebooks. That is one other thing I was surprised by, that here they do not have masters to make copies or that they do not use worksheets. The teachers actually hand draw lines for both the classroom workbook and the homework book. That’s 84 notebooks to draw lines in for one subject! The time and energy it takes to do these things is incredible and I was surprised to see it happening while the students were in class. A lot of the preparation happens while the students are there and the students just sit there with the expectation by the teachers that they will sit quietly with good behavior. In terms of instruction, all I have seen is direct instruction and then after the students individually complete their class work. I have had the opportunity to teach two math lessons so far. The students are learning to write the numeral and word form for numbers, so I taught on two different occasions how to write the numbers 11-20. The first thing I did was count out different objects with the class for the number I was teaching, so for number 15 we would count out 15 pencils. For the first lesson I tried to get the students involved so I invited one student to come up and help count the objects. I had made a table on the board, and I would draw the number of objects we counted. Then I would write the numeral and word form, spelling it out with the class. The second time around, I did not have the students come up to count because it went so slow and they would drop the objects. We did the same thing for the second lesson, but went through numbers 16-20. To get the students involved this time I had them come up to the board to write in the numeral form. I used this as an incentive for good behavior telling the students that only ones who were participating would get to come up. The students then individually completed their class work as I walked around to assist them. Overall, I think the first lessons went well and the students learned what was expected. In addition to that, I have read to the students after lunch and they seem to enjoy it.

Besides being at the school, staying at the Batsa’s house has been good. I have been comfortable with the food that is prepared and with the condition of the room. The Africa Cup of Nations is going on so the family watches a lot of the soccer matches in the evening. I also have been playing cards with their eight year grandson Michael at night. The Batsa's are an extremely nice family and I know they are doing everything they can to make me comfortbale. I am still adjusting to the weather, which is way hotter than I expected. I am seriously always sweating, but hopefully I can find a way to adjust. Overall, I am really surprised actually how fast this week has gone already.

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