ASKING QUESTIONS, EXPLORING OPTIONS, CHANGING THE IMPACT OF PUBLIC EDUCATION.

School House

Writing Outside the STAAR.

Teacher, teacher!  What are we going to write about today?

Working for “Writers in The Schools”, WITS is one of the best jobs I have ever had. I love the job because it gives the writer the freedom to expand. The writer’s imagination lives without the pressures of preparing a student for the test. It lives without the demands of having the child to produce. The child grows at his/her own pace. They discover their own voice first before working towards the mechanics of writing. When a child is just waiting at the door for his class to start, one knows, one is doing something right.

Sir Ken Robinson in his book “Out of Our Minds” wrote, “Many educators want to provide a more balanced and dynamic form of education that makes proper use of their own creative energies. Too often they feel they cannot do any of this because of political pressures of conformity and the disaffection of students who suffer under the same malaise.”

When I was doing the after-school program at “The Chicano Community Center” I had kids who looked forward to coming to my class. In fact, the writing class became the opportunity, a reward for those who behaved. They would not be allowed to go into my classroom unless they followed and cooperated with the staff.

These were some of my happiest and most successful teaching years. The coordinator trusted my work and the kids loved to come to my class. So, what was different about it that helped the students and I become successful?

 

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School House

I Speak in Two Voices.

I speak in Two Voices

One of my favorite lessons for ESL students is The Two-Voice Poetry. It is a form of poetry written to be performed by two people. The poem is made up of two columns and is read from top to bottom. One takes the left hand part, and the other reader takes the right. The poem is to be read by the two readers at once. Speakers take turns going back and forth between the voices however; some lines are composed to be said out loud together by both speakers.

This is just an innovative way to use the poem with students who can speak more than one language. It is exciting to see and hear the combination of different languages read out-loud. They can sound like a dialogue or even a song. The poem can be used with any language, from Chinese to Arabic. At a WITS Parent Literacy Workshop, I had the opportunity to see parents work with their children combining their mother tongue with English. There were parents who spoke Tamil, Arabic and some Spanish. In the world we live in today were schools have children from around the world, this is just one fun way to showcase both worlds blended into one.

How does this work? How does one set it up?

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School House

A Lesson From Pre K.

Hi everyone! My name is Carmen Jacobsen and I am very excited to have been invited to be part of a group of people who are interested in sharing their creative thoughts on education through the REEP blog!

I feel like I started my teaching career backwards. I started out working with professional adult doctors and bankers who wanted to learn English As A Second Language (ESL) paying my way through Medical School. After several twists and turns in my life, I stayed with teaching, so here I am years later.

I am currently a Pre K teacher, but I have also taught creative writing to all elementary basic level students through the after school and summer programs with Writers in the Schools-WITS and  Hua Xia Chinese School on the weekends.

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