Dear Powerful Teachers,
This week I have become in charge of my own
center! I am very excited to start practicing fluency with my group of
learners. I am teaching my group of student’s phonics, fluency, and am giving
them a weekly reading conference. I started my own group of centers by
giving a mini reading conference to my students. I took notes and made every
interview a little bit different by asking the student I was working with a new
question based off of his/her answer. My favorite part of my center is
listening to them read and answering any questions they may have. I found out
one of my students does not like to read because he is "forced" to at
home. My goal for this individual student is to teach him that reading is fun;
it is not something you have to do. I am going to be using some research
theories I learned from Emergent Literacy. For example, seeing if he is
interested in what we are reading aloud, find a more challenging book, and help
him find a book he is very interested in.
I have realized this past week during my
intern class, that teachers have a lot more power than we think. With these
students I am working with, I have the power to improve their reading attitudes
and levels. I am nervous and excited at the same time. Having power is very
important. Your students can take anything you say the right or wrong way. For
example, I learned a teacher's tone has a lot of power because depending on if
it is high, low, or sarcastic, a student may be hurt by the wrong tone for the
whole day when the teacher thinks s/he has gotten the point across. As a
teacher I feel as if it is important to always have the same tone and voice
level when giving instructions and directing students but not having a monotone
voice while reading aloud or during lessons. I want to practice this upcoming
week on being more cautious to my student’s reactions and focusing on what type
of power my teacher enforces.
Sincerely,
New Center Teacher
It sounds like you are really excited! Have you read the chapter in the Levin and Nolan text about referent, legitimate, reward/coercive, and expert power? Check it out - I think you it will make sense to you. What kind of power do you think you have with your students and this kind of student in particular? How might that help or hinder your work with him in helping to cultivate a love of reading?
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