lack of common vision between methods and student teaching
The following is an exchange from one of my distance classes on educational reform. The first writer is in her forth week of student teaching.
Teacher Training!
Ron, I LOVE our program...you know that, but the practicum and student teaching format needs work. I don't feel like we students of teaching get to employ all of the lessons and techniques we learn while out in the classroom. If we do, it is a novelty and an exciting event, but not the norm. I do not fault the teachers we are with, but the restrictions and realities of their day to day job of teaching. We student teachers are guests, that is the reality of the situation. How can we become the qualified teachers this report demands when we cannot fully practice what we learn? That is like training an Olympic caliber athlete for an event then asking them to compete in that event, but not use the techniques they have learned and perform based only on how others are performing around them. "We want you to win, but don't do what we've been talking about, do what others are doing around you...and do your best...this is important!"
Reply from Ron:
I think this is one of those thoughts that is best thought and not written, but most of you know me and know that I share my heart and my thoughts. So here goes.
XXX is correct. The miss fit between current research on effective practice and the realities found in most classrooms leads to a conflict between teacher prep and practice and I am sorry to say, reality wins. I and many other educators prepare teachers with one vision, only to have classroom practicum and student teacher placements force these new teachers into the old outdated mode of operation.
I miss the days of campus schools or lab schools where we controlled the environment for learning and teaching. I miss the days where I had direct contact with each and every cooperating teacher and knew his or her philosophy of teaching.
Today, with greater concerns for security, control issues and Unions, I am not allowed to recruit the best teachers as models, I am not allowed to visit classrooms daily as I did for years, I am not allowed to wonder into schools to see best practice at work. And with greater demands on teacher time, I have not found a way to meet with all cooperating teachers to share the current visions or new practices. For example, I would love for cooperating teachers to follow up in the classroom to reinforce: inquiry based lessons, concept mapping for both the teacher organization and student learning assessment, authentic assessment experiences, rubric designing and use, CBL's in use regularly, preparing lessons with the outcomes established FIRST, portfolios for documenting student learning, understand layered curriculum as a way to implement the latest brain-based learning and simply being part of the teacher prep team, instead of an independent influence. At present, I feel like I prepare one kind of teacher, only to have that vision wiped out by reality and replaced with old school status quo.
I know these comments will offend many good teachers, but I am not convinced that it is their fault. The system is designed and implemented, thus creating constraints that few if any, can break. I am guilty of first creating a teacher with a vision of what should be. I also know that reality must fit this image at some level. But I grow more sickened by reality daily.
I just read this to Nicolette, who of course feels very differently. She feels I should point out that practicum and student teachers should focus on the culture of the classroom and big picture, thus learning about teaching and schooling, and in time what YOU will do in your own classroom.
One primary reality is that during this time, YOU ARE NOT IN YOUR OWN CLASSROOM. The real goal then is to not lose the vision and to work toward the day when you control your own learning environment. She pointed out that the networking during the first three years of teaching is crucial. We MUST work together so we do not feel isolated. That is why I have the listserve for each cohort and why we spend so much time on relationships.
As we confront system analysis of schools these next few weeks, please help me figure out how to regain the communication with the classroom, so teacher prep can once again function as a whole, with a team effort between the teacher prep vision and the classroom practice.
Thanks
Ron

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