Sunday, September 13, 2015

Week3-4: Teaching Philosophies

Based on your teaching philosophy (which may change over time), what are types of assignments which you would include in a FYC syllabus?

I am sorry to assault my dear readers with a teaching philosophy badly in need of editing to a single page. I wrote the following teaching philosophy when I earned my TESOL certification. Though I have many changes to make, my foundational values remain the same. My methods include individuation, collaboration, communication, social constructivism, and balance.

As we worked through Berlin and Fulkerson this week, I was struck by the balance in each of their value structure models. I have taken several courses in the teaching of composition and TESOL, so these methods are review -- I'm looking for new layers of meaning as I enrich my foundational experience and refresh my professional development.

Berlin's model presents balance with two sets of opposing value structures. Within each set resides balance, and between the two sets resides balance:
Neo-Aristotilian values of deductive logic, sterile, fact-based Truth
versus Neo-Platonist Expressivist values of subject viewpoints and voice, create truth in individual validation.
Positivist (previously known as Current Traditional) values of arrangement, style, and grammar, implications of perfection and Truth
versus New Rhetoric or Epistemic values of truth residing in society as the collective says

Fulkerson presents a well-balanced triad:
Cognitive-psychological values mental processes, planning, translating, revising, problem-solving, and assimilation
Expressionism values activists' voice, agency, and motivation
Socio-Epistemic values truth as relative (e.g. political spin)

As we discussed which values we hold most dear, I was reminded of the beauty of the Gestalt -- Neither carries more weight in a well-rounded education. Anthropology taught me to value people in both individual and collective forms that we can observe and study with numbers, yet we avoid interfering or affecting transformation. Marketing taught me to value the bottom line and connecting with the audience. Technical communication has taught me the value of mediation, translation, problem-solving, and relativity. Is it not true then, as an instructor I might accept both Berlin's and Fulkerson's models in their Gestalt form of a single functioning philosophy individual in model and complete in concept? This philosophy is demonstrated in my daily lesson plans in FYC.

I:
  • open my instruction with a friendly greeting followed by a personal anecdote. I'm working the crowd, gaining followers, marketing my persona
  • relate the anecdote to the previous or upcoming lesson to create relativity.
  • ask directed questions about the homework and students' understanding of materials to problem-solve. In this process, I also mediate, clarify, and translate the university's expectations.
  • use my own writing to model "good" writing I expect my students to strive for.
  • ask students to journal, to express their individual voices in a sheltered and guided context.
  • engage students in small group, large group, pair, and individual activities.
  • provide multi-modal forms of communication on each activity -- reading, writing, listening, and speaking.
  • provide +1 information to keep my swiftest students from fading into the crowd.
  • provide multiple copies of the information to engage my least interested students.
  • laugh at myself and encourage my students to laugh at themselves and at me in a respectful way.
  • encourage the inclusion of visuals to support written essays.
  • allow room for improvement by allowing students to rewrite assignments after receiving my feedback.
  • provide feedback in a timely fashion to accomplish the previous.
  • provide a balance of love and tough love for assignments late and assignments too late
  • explain the purpose and interconnectedness of every activity
  • accept various opinions
  • encourage risk-taking
  • lead by example
  • provide concrete examples
  • admit my own failings
  • seek to empower every student because she will take every skill in this class beyond these walls to build her own Truth or truths within the context of her very complicated life.
Teaching Philosophy: Inspiring with compassion
"In my experience, every individual is a student. We all ask questions to learn about our environment. When something interests us, we seek further information by observing through the senses and by asking questions. In the same vein, we are all teachers. We are always offering answers and advice; sharing information. Those of us who wish to teach professionally are those who recognize their own desire to be a part of something bigger, to share their knowledge professionally, and to motivate others to seek knowledge as we have done ourselves. Effective instructors learn from their students then refine their teaching approaches to the needs of the students.

Is it possible to teach to each student’s individual needs? Yes. Psychologist Lev Vygotsky and Linguist Stephen Krashen understood that in language acquisition, a student’s cognitive and linguistic competence is based on the amount of information to which he/she is exposed. Beginning with students’ background knowledge, an effective instructor evaluates the present student expectations and then helps to reshape those expectations to merge with those of the administrative body of the educational institution and those of the instructor so that the three meet inside the nexus of learning. Teaching language with passion requires passion for language and a deep desire to share that passion with others. Excellent language instruction embodies the intuitive understanding of the student, recognizing the spark within the student and the natural human desire to learn, embracing these aspects, and igniting those sparks. Excellent instruction engages those who might appear unreachable. Teaching with passion is providing not only answers but posing further questions for thought which increase the students’ desire to learn and to seek further learning. Teaching with passion is transferring knowledge, sharing knowledge, and employing a variety of methods: lecture, collaborative reasoning, media, and simple-to advanced technology. These methods merge the objectives of the learning institution with the objectives and motivations of the students. Teaching with passion is dynamic and pragmatic teaching to a variety of learning styles. Some styles may be familiar, while others are new and innovative, but all of them present repeated information for retention and new information for further exploration.

My experience in visual communication, marketing, technical communication, and anthropology has taught me that people seek information through various means. Visual students look for imagery, including the imagery of textual and graphic communications. Auditory students learn through direct lecture and subconscious auditory observation. Kinesthetic students learn through touch and motion. Social students learn through collaborative reasoning, peer dialogues and discussion groups. To teach to only one learning style is to perform a disservice to the institution and every student. Scaffolding for all learning styles through lecture, repetition, drill, collaboration, seriousness, humor, hypotheses, and using visual, auditory, and tactile lessons provides opportunity for every student to learn within his/her comfort zone as well as to expand his/her knowledge including the knowledge of possible learning approaches. Students don’t always know what their primary learning styles are. Students who have been exposed to only one learning style might find themselves intrigued and engaged by familiar techniques enriched through nuance. Successful teaching is opening already open doors wider by building upon students’ background knowledge with new information in order to foster communicative competence. Very young children and adults of all literacy levels have experiences in life from which a good teacher can build, and then open, doors to exploration of new knowledge.

Effective teaching builds a solid foundation that supports a variety of scaffolds. When we look at Edgar Rubin’s optical illusions, do we see faces or the vase? There is no “right” or “wrong” answer because the image depicts both. Untrained minds may not have learned to look for both. A new world opens when students who only see faces learn to see the vase. My passion for teaching is seeking that moment when the student’s mind opens to allow him/her to see what was previously obscured. My experience in business and marketing has taught me that people must be sold on the idea that they can learn difficult materials. The first step in marketing is establishing confidence in the individual, recognizing and increasing student motivation. After a student is exposed to a variety of learning styles and becomes comfortable with him/herself as a capable learner and communicator, discourse competence emerges naturally as the student’s knowledge carries over into a variety of genres and circumstances. Well-scaffolded teaching based on planned, structured, and organized approaches sets an example for student organization. Concrete teaching leads to concrete learning.

Though learning is never a completed process, effective assessment can be used to determine whether the student has achieved course objectives and is prepared to advance to the next level. What about the student who isn’t prepared to advance? Learning from the successes and failures of ourselves and others provides us with the opportunity to improve our teaching. I believe I will never be a perfect teacher -- I will always be learning from my students, myself, and others. Continually drawing inspiration from others makes me a humble and eager student. Drawing from the experiences of author-instructors such as Danling Fu, Robert Hayes, Guadalupe Valdés, and others -- teachers who have experienced successes and embraced failures with inspirational positive attitudes to make changes in the educational system and in the way we teach and learn -- leads me to believe that I am a great teacher who knows she will always make a difference no matter how challenging the circumstances.

My strength, like those who inspire me, is my ability to see the principles of gestalt required for effective instruction. Macro objectives are composed of a complex network of micro factors, interwoven and interdependent. The minutiae of complexity create an organic and tangible beauty of something greater -- education and knowledge. This is the legacy with which I wish to inspire, to breathe into students the passion for learning."

10 comments:

  1. Dang, Brandy!!!!!

    Really thorough post, and I appreciate that you took the time to give an overview of the models we discussed in class. While I've taken a CompTheory course, I would still consider my composition knowledge fairly limited, so it's great to see some supplemental knowledge provided by very generous classmates!

    While I don't have much to expressly comment on, I enjoyed reading your assignments and teaching philosophy. I think that incorporating multi-modality is critical in designing composition courses for a student demographic that is increasingly "digital native." It's reflective of today's job market context as well, which is important to consider when we think about external student motivators.

    Reading your list was informative and helpful, thank you for sharing!

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    1. Thanks, Leah! That was my study tactic this week.
      When I wrote this, I had recently worked with some Iraqi Fulbright scholars and an amazing instructor Dr. Gina Mikel Petrie learning communicative teaching methods (Communicative Language Teaching / CLT). One of the major issues we discussed was how to incorporate CLT and multi-modality into classrooms of 90+ students. I have helped edit a few Saudi grad students' theses on incorporating multi-modal technologies in the classroom. The concepts are innovative and require creative solutions in large classrooms. We are very lucky in U.S. universities to have composition classes of 19-35 students!

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  2. Very thorough post, Brandy, a model for others. I'll be sure to mention that others should read your post as they prepare next week's blog post, the teaching philosophy. To get something out of next week's blog opportunity, maybe you can think of something to write about in terms of others' philosophies, or perhaps the DALN/literacy narrative database. Would your philosophy change knowing what you know about how composition is taught in different states or with different emphasis and ideological values? There is a nice balance with Fulkerson and Berlin. I believe we do a little of everything, actually. We value each of Fulkerson's values. I think there are some things that need revising. For instance, your first statement seems a little obvious, doesn't it? That we are all students. Good notes regarding your daily lesson plan approach. Good to review that every day one teaches, really. Read and re-read your philosophy to revise for your experience. Make it resonate as teacherly. Rather than focusing on not being a perfect teacher, how about working to be a reflective teacher every day.

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    1. Thank you, Rich. There are a lot of things I want to change, and this philosophy was hastily written as I finished my TESOL certification. I agree with your criticisms and I will follow up on the leads. My main criticisms are thus:
      - It's too long. For application abroad, I really need to stay under 1 page
      - It's too disparate. I need to focus on 3 main topics. There's no need to cover everything.

      I really enjoyed this assignment because it prompted me to go through everything I wrote in my TESOL and composition coursework. (It pays to save everything.) I'm really enjoying adding to that foundational knowledge with the new perspectives and resources -- an opportunity to revise these works in progress.

      I just finished reading "The Necessity of Teaching Intercultural Communication Competence in Literacy Classes" too (for other readers, by Dr. Rich Rice TTU, and Zachary Hausrath ELS Language Centers). Something that recurred to me was that my own student engagement was triggered in a community college course on Intercultural Communication. I knew at that point I had to continue on to a 4-year program studying intercultural issues. In many ways, my literacy narrative led me to have many of the similar issues with enculturation and culture shock the ESL/EFL case studies elucidated. That's a bit divergent, though the article resonated with me. I spend a lot of time considering how I might really engage my students in the hope that for at least one person per term, my course encourages them to engage with the entire system and continue their education.

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  4. You may be interested in reading Chapter 2 at http://wac.colostate.edu/books/eportfolios/ , which connects the hypermediated syllabus assignment with teaching philosophies.

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    1. Aye. I will re-read it for context in this course.

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  5. What a comprehensive post, Brandy! I really like the way you summed up Berlin's and Fulkerson's ideas. I should thank you for sharing your teaching philosophy. Apart from Dr. Rice's teaching philosophy and the example that he shared on 5060 website, I can now learn so much from your teaching philosophy. I really appreciate the idea of a teacher being a student and the concept of learning throughout one's life. It definitely resonates with my own views on learning. I am also impressed with your lesson plan. It is pragmatic and fun! I think I shall borrow heavily from your lesson plans when I start teaching.

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    1. Thank you :) I'm honored by your feedback! I have had some most excellent instructors whose scholarship is reflected here. I hope one day to approach their excellence.

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  6. I'm not going to repeat everyone's opinions, because it goes without saying that your philosophy so far has concrete arguments. The quote "everyone is a student" struck me most of all, because everyone in the whole world is a student. Every day we're learning something new that we never really were aware of before. Even those who teach classes still don't really have a complete education. That is one reason why the collaborative groups you mentioned would be important: so that teachers can easily learn from the students as the other way around. Another reason for Socratic discussions is to let the student open up and actually be himself or herself. Being a good teacher means to remove all barriers between you and your class, meaning that you must make your students open up to you completely or else things will remain distant. I have expressed this better with my own philosophy, but I think you get the point. All I can say now is good job with this, and that I would be open to any new developments on this philosophy. After all, the works of writers and teachers alike are never done, because they just got re-evaluated and changed up for the twentieth time this week.

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