By Sarah Hughes | Grant Writer
Rhonda is an Assistant Principal at Anacostia High School in the District of Columbia. Just before this, Rhonda was a middle school social studies teacher in DC and she received intensive, year-long teacher training from Center for Inspired Teaching. In the following commentary, Rhonda shares details about how our training helped her create an engaging classroom.
I see classrooms and the classroom learning environment differently because of Center for Inspired Teaching.
I used to think that good teaching involved a teacher standing in front of the class and lecturing on and on, while students quietly take notes at their desks.
Not anymore.
Now I see that good teaching involves creating a classroom where students are doing as much of the talking and thinking and problem solving as the teacher. Good teaching involves creating a classroom environment where students are tackling questions and problems that are relevant to their daily lives.Good teaching involves helping students learn to think for themselves.
I learned to create this kind of classroom when I started receiving training through Center for Inspired Teaching. The training involved one-on-one coaching and accompanying teaching units.
I learned to hook students' interest with big, bold questions. For example, when I taught a unit created by Center for Inspired Teaching called “The Cocoa Journey: from Bean to Bar” I asked students a series of fun questions: “Who loves chocolate? Where does chocolate in the chocolate bar come from?” Then, I would share with students that we are going on a learning journey to trace the production process of a chocolate bar—from the moment that the cocoa bean is picked in a field to the point at which the chocolate bar is sold at the grocery store.
As a result, I saw my students’ engagement go way up. I had students asking more questions, doing more research, and making more claims that were actually backed by texts and primary sources.
In fact, I noticed that when I taught this way, my general education students started outperforming my honors’ students.My general education students just dove into the research and started asking bigger and bigger questions that pushed them to research further and deeper, and pushed me to expand my teaching into more sophisticated areas. For example, my students were so invested in learning about the production process as part of the cocoa bean teaching unit that we started studying the three-sector theory in economics, and students started using this theory to understand other big questions about production and global markets.
This school year, I am in the classroom in a different way. I am now an assistant prinicipal and I now coaching my teachers in much the same way that Center for Inspired Teaching staff once coached me. I tell my teachers that it is important to have strong structure and routines in the classroom and it is also important to hand over more of the work of understanding and problem solving to students when they are ready for it. I tell my teachers that if they do all the talking and spoonfeed everything to their class, they rob students of the opportunity to make their own way to an answer, and the confidence that comes with that accomplishment. When students' confidence grows, they want to take charge of their own learning, and that builds their confidence even further.
By Sarah Hughes | Grant Writer
By Sarah Hughes | Grant Writer
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