Saturday, April 12, 2014

IRELAND

Hi again,

I have been in Ireland for almost a month now! Time really does fly.
Here's what I felt my first 48 hours here:


Upon arrival, I noticed differences between Ireland and the United States immediately.  On the flight, directions and communications were said in both English and Irish.  Most signs on the airport were written in both languages, as well.  On the drive over, the landscape was completely different from my familiar side of Indianapolis, Indiana.  There is a generous amount of open land in Ireland that still belongs to farmers.  On the way from Dublin to Ballinasloe in County Cork, I saw the most sheep I have ever seen in my life! The first night out, I went with my host sister, Sonia, and her friends.  I did not think language would be a problem since we speak the same tongue, but it is difficult for me to understand what people here are saying all the time.  They speak quickly, their intonations are very soft compared to American English, and their vocabulary terms for things are extremely different! I will have to be a quick learner to be able to participate in conversation over here fully.  Around town, the houses themselves are different.  Most are built out of stone or a stucco-like material instead of vinyl siding.  I have also noticed that very few houses have full front and back yards.  My host, for example, has a patio covering the length of her backyard instead of grass.  Overall, language is the biggest barrier that I will have to surpass in order to have a wonderful experience. 

 Prior to arrival, I had heard that the Irish lifestyle is more laidback and slow-paced.  Yet, I was not prepared for it at all! At my previous student teaching placement, I would often work through break and lunch with my cooperating teacher to prepare lessons and look at data.  However, it would be unspeakable here! I did not take my morning tea this morning because I had a hectic schedule, and the teachers I talked to were horrified that I did not give myself a 5-10 minute tea break.  All of the teachers also take their lunch together, whereas in most of my Indiana placements, my teachers ate lunch in their classrooms either alone or with one to two other teachers.  The principal at Scoil an Chroi Naofa ate with all of her teachers, which seems like a great idea for building rapport between colleagues.  In addition, the school day is also an entire hour less than schools in the United States—their days are six hours long instead of seven.  I doubt schools in Ireland would add more days at the end of the school year or hours to the end of their school day to make up for snow days!  Relaxing during the school day will be a big adjustment for me, but I will definitely try to acclimate. 

As mentioned above, I knew some words would be different in Irish English as compared to American English, but I did not think I would have such a hard time understanding some people talk! In general, I understand well, but if the person is talking extremely quickly or casually with a lot of slang, I cannot understand what they are saying exactly.  For example, at the lunch at school today, the teachers were talking about exercise.  I understood a little, but it took me a while to understand that they were talking about triathlons and Insanity.  

The biggest things here that are different is that they are just so laid back, classroom management/discipline is rare, St. Patrick's Day was extremely tame, and no one uses napkins! I love napkins, so naturally I look like I'm single handedly killing off a forest when I bring them in to lunch.

Enjoy some pictures:

I volunteered at a "jumble" sale for a cancer center! I really loved it!

From the courthouse in Galway. The balance is intentionally uneven because the Irish had less rights than the British prior to Ireland gaining independence.  

Cold, windy Galway!

Gaelige or Gaelic Irish board in my junior infants classroom (ages 4/5).

Play Rota or play rotation schedule for the kiddos in the morning.

River in Galway.

Role play area in the junior infants classroom.

SHEEP

My schedule right now has me in three different classrooms doing group work, pulling students out, and doing the occasional lesson.  I'm doing my reading certificate here so teachers have me working with "low" students to get them higher in reading.  I also help with a student who has autism for an hour at the end of the day, giving him time for play therapy, OT, and a little bit of reading intervention.  It was a lot to adjust to having such a hectic schedule, but I'm finally on top of it!

For me, it is finally EASTER BREAK!!!! I will be going to London, Edinburgh, Northern Ireland, and Southern Ireland for about 12 days.  I'll update after that!

~Kaitlynn 

Student Teaching Wrap Up

Hi all,

It has been a while...like a few months! I ended my student teaching placement back home. Here are some highlights:


One of the many prosthetic arms made during a fun science lesson!

QUISWA...a great way to teach problem solving.

The lifeskills!

A great form we had the kiddos use to boost up each other's self esteem.

BE PREPARED!!

The three rules of this fifth grade classroom.

I also loved my teacher's motto, "there is nothing more important than relationships with people." The classroom community kind of speaks for itself from that motto.  I LOVED student teaching there, and I miss the kiddos and my cooperating teacher so much! I'm going to visit at the end of May, and right now, I can't wait!

However, I'm in Ireland right now, so that means enjoying all of that. I'll make another post devoted just to Ireland.

~Kaitlynn

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Halfway Point

I'm halfway through my current teaching placement! In about a month, I'll be in Ireland (if all things go correctly!).

This week was my first full week of student teaching, with no delays or school cancellations.  It was long for everyone, but it also ended on a sweet note because of Valentine's Day! I was blessed with tons of stuffed animals and candy from the kiddos.

My main lesson from this week was support! I could not have gotten through it without the support of my cooperating teacher and the rest of the fifth grade staff.  If necessary, it is always okay to call in reinforcements either into your classroom or to send out students if they are interfering with the learning of others.

I also am in love with this website: http://www.flocabulary.com/subjects/ I've used it to find rap videos for several lessons so far, and the kids seem to love it! I have to admit, they're not the strongest raps I've ever heard, but they definitely get the ideas and subject matter across :)

~Kaitlynn

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Crash Session

The last few weeks have been a crash session on teaching in an urban school! Although I grew up in this township and in these schools, it's totally different on the teacher side of things.  Here are some big ideas I've gathered the past few weeks:

Week of January 20th: 
  • FLEXIBILITY! This week we had MLKJ day off, a surprise field trip to the high school from the district heads, two 2 hour delays, and two fights. The students were struggling to find focus as much as the teachers! 
  • Ask a hook question at the beginning of the lesson! I had totally forgotten about this until about the end of this week.  This is something we learned last semester, and although I had a "hook" for every lesson I taught, I noticed that I didn't immediately grab students' attention because I didn't have an engaging essential question at the start of each lesson.
Week of January 27th:
  • This week gave me another two hour delay and snow day.  Luckily, this week was also when the students stopped testing me as much! Biggest lesson fully learned this week: follow through with every discipline problem. A couple students got mad at me, and I talked to a very supportive parent, but it's worth it for students to see that you mean what you say/say what you mean.  
  • My teacher also gave me a list of things that are essential in my future classroom: your own printer, a visual presenter, relaxation music, lamps around the room for warm light, an electric teapot, a hideaway jar full of goodies, and homemade curtains for shelves to make the room look more inviting. 
  • On Friday, I got to teach a really fun science lesson! I chose the standard 5.4.1: Investigate technologies that mimic human or animal musculoskeletal systems in order to meet a need.  Prior to the lesson focus, students did a journal response from Winter the dolphin's point of view (Winter received a prosthetic tail). I then did a prosthetics lesson in which students learned about what prosthetics do and what needs they meet, and then students paired off and got to make their own prosthetic arm! All groups got their arms to move using mechanics! It was really exciting seeing them so focused and determined to succeed.  My PowerPoint can be found at the bottom of the page here
  • I also got frostbite this week on my toe! I am currently extremely jealous of Jake and Kailey living it up in the west! ;)
Week of February 3rd:
  • This was a good week! Students are finally getting focused after our weeks of battling the weather, even though we had another snow day this week.  We finished reading our chapter book as a class (14 chapters long...), had a standardized test, changed where students sit, and finally got caught up on some lessons that went to the wayside after all of this snow!
Overall, I am so blessed to be at this school and with my supervising teacher.  She's amazing and is incredibly supportive.  We teach basically all of our lessons up front with students sitting on the floor with their clip boards.  This really helps students focused, rather than having all 27 students spread out at their desks and fidgeting with all of their supplies.  It also amazes me how these kids are still really little at heart even though they're 10-13 years old and dealing with some really adult issues! They thrive when books or passages are read as expressively (or cheesy) as possible, they like math rap videos, and they don't mind me reminding them to "turn their listening ears on." I'm in love with these kids and this school, and unfortunately I'll be out of the country faster and off to Ireland once I figure out everything!

~Kaitlynn




Sunday, February 2, 2014

Another Good Week!

Once again, I've had a great week! My students are responding well to the changes I have made and they continue to strive! This week was the dance in the dorms and I had the pleasure to be the dj so of course the music was fantastic and the kids had tons of fun (naturally with me playing the music ;) )! Haha but here's a picture of fun dancing!
Love the awkward age of finding a dance partner haha but every Friday is test day so I allowed my students to play their favorite sport out here (basketball) 
Those are my handful of fifth graders! I like giving them some relaxing time since they don't get a recess! Helps them release some engery making them more focused to learn and take their tests! Other than that the week was uneventful making a relaxing week but filled with fun and enjoyment! To end the post I'll show you what rain looks like from far away. Still gorgeous out here even when it rains. 
Thanks for reading! :)
Ps. Glad to see my Hoosiers beat #10 Michigan at home! :) go Hoosiers!!

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Finally Have Taken Over My Whole Classroom


I finally took over my whole classroom and it was a great week of teaching! We have assessments every week and almost every student improved in math so I guess I'm doing something right! On Tuesday we went to an Apache dance and concert and it was amazing! 
It was so fun and I have a video but unfortunately I can't upload it on here! The tradition is amazing and I had a blast! Then on Sunday we went to Canyon de Chelly (pronounced like shay) and it was gorgeous 
I'm enjoying all the experiences we have had so far! I have become friends with one of our substitute teachers and she said she will be on the look out for ceremonies that we can attend so I'm hoping that will happen! She also told me that we are not supposed to whistle after the sun goes down because it is like summoning the dead back to life. I'm learning something new everyday! Can't wait to keep sharing all the new things I'm learning and doing!

Monday, January 20, 2014

The Rez Rocks!

Hello world!!! Sorry for the lack of updates!! Our school actually blocks the website we use for our blogs :( ANYWAY..... the first two weeks on the reservation have been incredible on so many levels, I don't even know where to begin...




School:
I am teaching an amazing group of 3rd graders! I have 24 students who have completely different types of personalities, interests, and they are constantly keeping me on my toes. The second week of school I was able to start teaching math lessons! The kids were amazing and grasped a great understanding of all the concepts that were taught! GO ME! My teacher is very sweet, and I'm excited to start taking over more in the classroom this week! 
My class on our Friday walk!
My backyard...yeah!
School playground!
Dorm:
MY ABSOLUTE FAVORITE PART! These kids are....hilarious! After the school day, I get to go to the dorm and help students, 1st-6th, with homework and having fun! We typically do the boys homework session and then go to dinner. During the boys homework session I am always entertained and pushed by my 1st and 3rd grade boys. They love to laugh!! They have such personalities that are truly incredible for the lives that they live. Their strength truly inspires me! After dinner, we have "dinner recess!" We run and play outside, and typically I'm pushing kids high on the swings! "MISS KAILEY! MISS KAILEY! PUSH ME HIGHER!!" (It never gets old!) After going inside, we move on to the girl's study time! The girls also have big personalities, and huge hearts! When all the work is over we get to have some fun! This fun typically includes going to basketball games, making signs, playing xbox, playing games and talking about life! This week we are taking a field trip to the swimming pool! Updates on that soon to come! 
Dorm supporting our basketball teams!
My crazy kiddos! 
Basketball team!
Weekend Exploring
When we aren't teaching or in the dorm we get to travel and explore the amazing area we are in! The first weekend here we were able to go to the four corners, bluff and monument valley. Words do not even come close to explain the beauty of the area! It is just....WOW! The second weekend explored Hovenweep, a hiking trail filled with ruins, and Abi and I were invited Kinaalda! A Kinaalda is a puberty ceremony for a girl entering woman hood in the Native American culture! We had gotten to the home where the ceremony would take place around 11:30pm and left at 9am!!! It was a night filled with singing, laughing, blessing, and reflecting! The family was very open, and made sure we were involved throughout the night! As a parting gift they had given us each our own blanket, that they had blessed throughout the ceremony! This weekend Abi and I traveled and met up with the four boys in our program, Jake is one of them! hahaha! We met up and went to a high school basketball game. Let me tell you...high school basketball is VERY different from a elementary basketball game! On saturday we spent the day and a spay and neuter clinic. My heart was melting the whole time!! I was specifically in charge of caring for two two-week-old puppies. They had reason to believe that the two dogs had polvo :( It was truly an amazing experience, and we are hoping to do it again in February! Sunday, Abi, Jake, TJ and I took a road trip to Telluride, Colorado! (Or as Jake says Tugaloo!) We spent majority of the day driving through the Rocky Mountains, but got to walk around and enjoy the town. I was very tempted to hit the ski slopes; they looked very inviting! 
Monument Valley
Hovenweep!
As you can see, so much is already going on! I will keep updating whenever I get a chance!!! 
xoxo <3 -Kailey :) 
p.s. missing my friends Kaitlynn and Brooke like crazy!