As I begin this quarter in the teacher education program, I find myself reflecting on my own school experiences. Who were my favorite teachers and why? Who were my least favorite teachers and why? What were some of the challenges, both academic and non-academic, that I faced in school? What are some of the challenges in today's classrooms that might not have been a factor while I was going to school? So, since this is my very first blog, I would like to share some of my school experiences with you, not only so that you might gain some insight into my background as I continue to post, but so that I myself may be able to reflect on some of things I liked and didn't like as a student.
I must admit that I don't really remember much before 5th grade. The summer before 5th grade my family and I moved from the very large
I felt, and still do feel, that I had some really great teachers in late elementary and middle school. I remember dissecting owl pellets and reading as a class the BFG (Big Friendly Giant for those of you not acquainted with Rahl Dahl) with Mr. Mitchell in 5th grade. Mr. Hansen was everyone's favorite teacher in 6th grade. He loved to joke with us and always had a stash of jelly beans that he was willing to share with students. Then came 7th and 8th grade. I attended a school that went K-8th so we didn't have an actual middle school, which I was slightly disappointed about at the time. However, the more I read about the pressures and stresses that occur when one is thrown into a new school with new people, at the height of all these physical and emotional things happening to your body, the more I am thankful that I remained at the same school for my middle school years.
In 7th and 8th grade you had one group of people who you moved from class to class with. We had different teachers for different subjects, some of whom were great and others who were not so great. My least favorite teacher was my science teacher and I wasn't too thrilled about science as a subject either. ( Ironic, since I am now pursuing a teaching certificate with an endorsement in science!) He made science very uninteresting. I don't remember doing a single lab or experiment in that class. Mostly we read out of our textbooks and answered questions on a worksheet. Boring! My math teacher, Mr. Kamps was one of my favorite teachers of all time. (That says a lot, because I really didn't like math too well either.) I remember building an exact replica of my house in that class as well as designing and creating a bridge out of toothpicks. Mr. Kamps was a lot of fun too. He was very active and came into the gym before class every day to play a basketball game called "bump" with us. He also designated Friday afternoons for a soccer match between the two 8th grade classes.
Another interesting thing about our school was that we had no cafeteria. We had what was called a lunch cart that went around to each classroom when it was time for lunch. I loved this way of eating lunch, both as a student at the time and looking back on it now. Cafeterias are complete chaos and whenever I sub at a school, I dread Cafeteria duty. With lunch cart we were able to eat at our own desks or go out into the hall to mingle and eat with kids from the other class next door. In this way there was no "popular table" or "nerd table". Everyone pretty much talked and chatted with everybody else.
I know that I am extremely lucky in having such a comparatively easy time throughout my elementary and middle school years. I am well aware that this is not the case for most people, both back then and still today. Please feel free to post any school experiences that you remember, both good and bad. I think we can all benefit from sharing what we loved about school and our favorite teachers as well as what we did not like or what we would change. I look forward to exchanging ideas and growing as a cohort together!
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