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I will always remember the effect of a civil war in Nigeria that left hundreds of thousands of children malnourished. Tens of thousands of the rural population were afflicted with different types of diseases. Malaria fever was prevalent, and it was the main cause of death among children and infants. I can recall vividly sitting in an empty room after the end of the civil war in 1970, and assured my self that I must go beyond the confines of my continent – Africa to seek knowledge so as to assist in alleviating the suffering of my people. After I had graduated from high school, my dream of coming to the United States of America was far fetched reality. At that time in my life, coming to America was almost impossible. My family lost everything during the civil war. The civil war forced my parents to abandon their properties in the northern group of provinces, and returned to their ancestral home in the southern region. The soil is sandy and porous – the region suffers from soil leaching and soil erosion due to torrential rainfall. Harvests from our farms after six months of toiling under the heat of the sun were scanty. We barely eked out a living. Life then was harsh, and the future was blink. In spite of the odds confronting me, I was determined to forge ahead no matter what. After the civil war, I went back to school to complete my high school education. In 1971 I graduated from high school. I worked briefly and enrolled in a private institution under the auspices of the Seventh Adventist Church in western Nigeria. There, I complete a two-year diploma in business education. Andrews University in Michigan was affiliated to the Seventh Adventist College, and thus, it facilitated my opportunity of obtaining a ... ... middle of paper ... ...ator, it is my responsibility to transform, mold, and impact knowledge to every student that comes into my classroom for instructions. As a science instructor, I have developed strategies in science instructions that enable students deficient in calculation to succeed. With respect to classroom management, my democratic approach has proven to be more effective, both for classroom management and student learning. My managerial background enabled me over the years to be patient, to be industrious, to be dedicated, and above all, to be trustworthy. I consistently manage my students, time, and other available teaching resources and equipment. I have spent valuable amount of my time mentoring students from varied socio-economic backgrounds. I have learnt from them just as they have learnt from me over the years. At the moment, I have jointly
I have many things that I love in this life, one of those things is wrestling. I have been wrestling for seven years and I have developed quite the passion and love for it. Wrestling has always been an interesting sport for me. Growing up in Oregon I watched my uncles wrestle in high school. I watched both of them win their state tournament in their respective weight classes, this is one of my fondest memories of my childhood. One of them went on to wrestle division one, I thought this was the coolest thing in the world. I looked up to my uncles and wanted to be just like them. I did not always wrestle though. The process of pursing my dream as of becoming a wrestler started of with basketball, then went to a rocky start, then being on Worland High School wrestling team.
I have been a mentee in three mentoring programs and I understand from firsthand experience how important mentors have been in my life. Each relationship was very different; one of my mentors was about two generations older than me, while my two more recent mentors have been only a few years older than me.
As I touch on some of my teacher characteristics I will be touching on some of the philosophies and theories that resonate with me including the authority base continuum, the theories of classroom management continuum, models of discipline, and the CALM model. Of the three teacher authority bases I feel that I would combine two of them to create my style of teaching: referent, and expert. Personally I feel that I would like my students to behave in line with my expectations because they like me and feel that I care about their learning, and I am looking out for their best interests (Levin et al., 2016). I would also like my students to listen to me because they see me as a knowledgeable person who can help them on their learning journey. In order for my students to feel this way I would communicate to them that I care about them as individuals and learners, and I would teach them things that are interesting to them so that they value what they are learning (Kohn, 1996; Levin et al., 2016). I feel very strongly about providing the students with material that interests them because students will not be engaged if they do not want to learn about something, which would not benefit anyone. This is where an element of effective planning comes into play.
“Our limitations are those we set up in our own minds.” These are the words my family always live by due to the difficult experiences we have encountered to reach to where we are now. Being raised in a very poor family in Toluca, Mexico, it made it extremely difficult to make a living. Various factors contribute to harsh living conditions especially with the ongoing corruption many Mexican cities dealing with, we were just one of many families struggling to put food in our plate every single day. These conditions always made our community to become hard workers because that was the only way to support our love ones and help create a bond with all the other families to help each other when needed. From young ages, children
I was born and raised in Tallahassee, Florida. My mother was born in Taiwan and moved to the United States to continue her education when she was in her mid- twenties. My father is from Fort Walton Beach, Florida. My parents have different cultures, and as a result they have completely different backgrounds. When I was growing up, I had a hard time reconciling these different cultures. It was difficult for me and my sister to know what to do in many social situations because our primary schema (our parents) would act completely different in similar social situations. When I would ask my parents for advice, they would give me contrasting suggestions. As I grew older, I started to realize that both my parents were right, even if they acted like opposites.
Malmgren, K. W., Trezek, B. J., & Paul, P. V. (2005). Models of classroom management as
I grew up as a Southern Baptist. My family has always belonged to the same church and to this day my parents and my brother’s family still attend First Baptist Church in Forest City, North Carolina. One of the reasons Baptists are given this name is because they are not baptized as infants, but when they are old enough to understand the full concept of Jesus and the sacrifice He made for us. I accepted the Lord as my personal savior when I was thirteen and made a public profession of my faith by walking to the front of the church one Sunday morning. Many factors in the past have influenced my relationship with God and continue to do so daily.
It was a cold dark night, I’m in a Hummer H2 limousine and it’s just a few more miles away. I am about to receive the National Medal of Technology by President Tim Johnson. This is the moment when all my hard work has paid off. This is the time when people actually treat me as a person with respect. I was so confident that I was going to win that award. As the limo was driving, I noticed the driver was driving really hard and the car keeps on jumping. So I went to the front of the vehicle and as I opened the window I saw liquid all over the place. I was shocked and when I noticed the driver he looked so tired and he had hazy-bloodshot eyes. He was drunk. I told him to stop the car and that I would take the taxi to the award ceremony. He started screaming and telling me that nobody would get out of the car. I immediately called the police but I was too late. The driver hit a pole and the car was shattered in the front. The driver fell down and I noticed he had blood on his neck. Just then, I fell on the floor and I was knocked out. All of a sudden, all these things were in my head. My childhood, education, struggles. It all went flashing through my mind, I couldn’t stop it, I could only go along for the ride. This story will explain that the world shapes me.
Science Autobiography I think my science education happened both inside and outside of the classroom. Even before my formal education started, my mother incorporate science into mine and my siblings’ life. Whether it was baking and talking about the science that happened during it or simple and fun science experiment. This fostered a love for science for me that continued when I was in school.
If asked what is my philosophy on classroom management become coming into this class, more than likely I would’ve responded by asking for a definition of classroom management, and I’m sure I still wouldn’t have had a clue. This course has taught me much about the development of middle-level students and the implication that this development has on how we should teach them, and my time in the practicum also helped shape my thoughts and beliefs on classroom management. Classroom management includes a broad range of classroom aspects: time management, classroom organization and schedule, rules enforced, rewards and consequences in place, classroom community, lesson preparation, and classroom involvement in school and community activities. It’s
Dreyer, personal communication, 13 February, 2016). I was hungry for information on classroom management following a substitute teaching experience with seventeen kindergartners. The session only lasted for an hour and I wished I could have had eight hours of instruction on the topic. R. Dreyer modeled setting expectations, with step-by-step procedures that can set the right tone for the classroom from the very first day. I have further research to due in the area of Accountable Talk, but I did take away two gems from this lesson that I have already started implementing. Firstly, setting specific expectations for students from the very beginning is helping me put forth the type of authority I desired in my teaching. Letting students know what tasks we will be conducting and what behavior I expect from them has already changed the way I substitute teach. Secondly, understanding that students will do what you allow them to do, not what you tell them to do has helped me set boundaries. I have a tender-hearted nature and would overlook an infraction here or there, but now realize that was undermining my authority. Now, after having set clear expectations, I lovingly hold my students to
My education journey has been through some setbacks, but I have continued to push forward and conquered. I have felt that I have a fixed mind set and just am not capable of achieving some things. After learning the difference between growth and fixed mindset I have realized that everyone is capable of learning anything through hard work and dedication.
I grew up in the 80s (born in 1977) and while I am sure that era impacted me in more ways than I am even aware of, I think that it was my own personal home life that set me on my current path. My mother was much older (she was 40 when I was born) and only had a 6th grade education. My father was 19 when I was born and had his GED. They had a tumultuous relationship for obvious and private reasons. They divorced when I was seven years old and I remained with my mother. Both parents worked in manual labor type jobs—my mother cleaned houses and my father repaired mobile homes. Neither knew how to be parents. My mother was an alcoholic who, I now believe, was also bipolar, and my father was just
This I Believe Philosophy statement will include my thoughts and beliefs about classroom management with comparison to other theorists’ models. The major theorists that will be mentioned are Barbara Coloroso, Linda Albert, and Lee & Marlene Canter. I highly agree with the Canter’s and Coloroso’s models of classroom management because it best fits my personality as an individual teacher. I believe that an affective classroom management plan is first practiced and then modeled for improvements. My ultimate goal for my Classroom Management Plan is to model self-discipline by teaching it through my daily actions so that students may be able to self-manage themselves accordingly.
I believe Classroom Management is the main component in the educational setting. I believe if students are in a safe environment, then learning can take place. This doesn’t mean punishing behavior problems but rather a combination of setting the tone in a class, preventing behavior problems with interesting and engaging curriculums and effectively including all students in the classroom so that their needs are met. Having the right environment for all students to learn is my major goal of implementing good classroom management--without it the students would not be able to learn.