Effective Teaching...

by Harry and Rosemary Wong

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This article was printed from Teachers.Net Gazette,
located at https://teachers.net.
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October 2011

Seamless, Transparent, and Consistent


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Christina Shoemaker (center) with her music department colleagues, Kirk Hickman (left) and Bert Johnson (right) department chair

This has happened to all of us—“You have a second?” plea from a co-worker.

Christina Shoemaker was on her way to teach her 7th period Concert Choir class at Lincoln-Way North High School in Frankfort, Illinois, when she was stopped in the hallway by a colleague.  The conversation ended up lasting about 8 minutes into the 7th period class.

Then, she was greeted with a wonderful sight.

Christina Shoemaker feared the worse.  What would greet her when she was 8 minutes tardy for her own class?  As she entered the door, there was the Concert Choir partially through their warm-ups!  She asked them what they were doing and they told her they just went ahead and started class without her! 

She asked what they had done so far.  They responded that they had worked silently on their bellringers.  Then, students volunteered to put the answers to the bellringer on the board.  Next, they continued on with the procedure and

one student simply read the announcements found
on the teacher’s music stand.
 

After announcements, they began to write in the solfege for the sight-reading exercise so the class could get a head-start.  After that, one of the class officers initiated the stretches and breathing to begin the warm-up. 

The students did not miss a note in starting the class.  Christina was ecstatic with how the class was proceeding without her. 

Christina began her teaching career with a plan ready to put in place.  She knew how to set up and manage a classroom in such a way that the students would know how to function responsibly on their own without the teacher in the classroom.

Christina was no stranger to a well-managed classroom.  She was a product of classrooms that were organized and consistent so there was time for teaching and learning.  She says,

“I went from Lincoln-Way East as a high school student to Bradley University and back to Lincoln-Way North as a teacher and at each of these places, the organization and procedures were consistent.”

Flashback

Christina was a high school student in the music department at Lincoln-Way East High School in Frankfort, Illinois.  As a student, she simply followed the procedures in her classroom and found them acceptable because the school experience was rewarding and “fun” for her.  The teacher who created this atmosphere for Christina was Mrs. Lambert, her music teacher in her junior year.  Christina describes Mrs. Lambert as, “Someone who teaches music as a part of life and that it is closely tied to a person’s soul and character.  Mrs. Lambert changed my life.

Christina watched Mrs. Lambert closely in her junior and senior years, observing her teaching style and her interactions with students.  Her classroom was a place where great order existed and it was out of that order and structure that great musical expression was achieved. 

Christina reflects that because of the organization of the classroom, Mrs. Lambert was never too busy to talk to her about music, or teaching, or life.  She had time to connect with students.  (Unlike teachers who are too busy handling behavior problems leaving little, if any, time to connect with other students in the class.)

In Christina’s words, “Mrs. Lambert encouraged me to become a music teacher and it was her influence, her confidence, and her guidance.  Her faith instilled in me that I could possibly succeed at teaching this passion:  music.”

Christina was enamored with her teachers, first in the 2nd grade, then in 4th grade, then in 5th grade, and then all of her high school English teachers.  It became obvious to her that the classes she wanted to teach were directly related to the teachers, whom she admired, that taught them.  She says, “Those teachers were passionate, caring, helpful, and understanding and were people I desperately wanted to emulate.  These experiences were the foundation for the kind of teacher and person that I try to be every day in the classroom.” 

Today, Christina (on the left) and Alysia Lambert, “Mrs. Lambert,” are friends and now professional colleagues, who communicate daily. 

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Christina went to Bradley University and experienced another culture of consistency in the Music Department there.  Her professors were passionate and stimulating and always working to make their students better musicians, teachers, and people.  Then, in her junior year she enrolled in a Classroom Management class.  The adopted textbook was The First Days of School and Christina sheepishly admits, “I didn’t even know it existed not to mention, ‘Who are the Wongs?’”

Dr. Victoria Huffman was the course instructor and she brought the book and the video, The Effective Teacher, to life.  When Christina first started reading the book and watching the videos, she says, “Everything that I believed about order and structure were right here!  I couldn’t wait to start working on my Classroom Management plan because it had happened to me when I was a high school student.”

Christina says that she took the class project very seriously because she knew that it would only be a matter of time before she would be using it in her own classroom.  The project guided her to organize her own thoughts into a practical and useable plan for her future students. 

Amazingly, most all of the procedures
she came up with in that project
are currently in use in her classroom today!

Flash Forward—Christina Becomes a Teacher

Christina returned to teach in her OLD high school district and all of a sudden the whole concept of organization with procedures was a major Aha that made sense, but more importantly worked for her and her students.

She realized that from the moment a student steps into the classroom, they need to know what to expect.  The procedure for every class period is the same—a culture of consistency—with the objectives for the day always listed on the board.  Class begins immediately at the bell and the class works for the full 50 minutes, right up until the next bell, making full use of instructional time.

Procedures for Starting Class

Class Schedules

Procedures for Starting Class

Christina’s Greatest Joy

At the beginning of the year the procedures are presented to the students in a handout as a part of the syllabus and taught on the first day and reinforced throughout the first week. 

Christina has a poster with the classroom procedures that she hangs in the classroom. Click here to see Christina’s poster with the classroom procedures. 

The students also get a copy with the class syllabus.  The syllabus was adapted from syllabi she has collected through the years, from Alysia Lambert, and from the syllabi used by the other two teachers in the music department so there is consistency of procedures within the department.  She says, “My syllabus is a work in progress as I update it each year with my newest ideas.” 
Click here
 to see Christina’s class syllabus. 


Christina says that she admires the syllabus used by music teacher Nile Wilson we shared in our December 2008 column.  Click here to see this syllabus.

But, Christina’s greatest joy is forming meaningful relationships with her students and sharing her love of choral music with them. 

“It is incredibly gratifying to watch them fall in love with choral music, to work their very hardest, and to achieve high levels of success. 

“My advice to any new teacher would be to set up your own classroom procedures before the students get to school and be confident in them.  Then teach them thoroughly and consistently until they are mastered.  If you do that, you will be able to truly enjoy teaching your students!

“My teaching is a reflection of the wonderful teachers I have had and this is a great way to honor them as well.”

The Power of Influence

Each day in millions of classrooms, teachers blaze the route for futures untold.  Our every move, every action, and every word is scrutinized, analyzed, and synthesized, and then either accepted or rejected by our students.  We are examples of what can be, what the future holds.  We can be a negative influence with our disgruntled attitudes, absence of care, and lack of dedication to our chosen profession.  Or we can leave a positive mark in the beliefs of students so they are equipped to make choices for their future.

Your influence in the classroom has a ripple effect with no foreseeable edge in sight.  There is a Mrs. Lambert in each of us—someone who creates the music in students for generations to experience.  May your music be heard loud and clear by each of your students.

 

 

 


Harry & Rosemary Wong products: http://EffectiveTeaching.com

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