Tuesday, December 1, 2015

My Teaching Philosophy


"The man who can make hard things easy is the educator" Ralph Waldo Emerson

Teaching is a hard job. I do not mean that it is impossible. In order to become a good teacher, you should explain every single point in the book to students. However, to be an educator, you should facilitate learning process to your students. I want to be an educator. I seek for every mean that help me accomplish my goal. I believe that learning process would not be sufficient without the interactions and the cooperation between teacher and students.  

Developing students' productive skills (speaking & writing) and receptive skills (reading & listening), and facilitating learning the English language are my aims in order to foster students' inherent abilities. To do so, I tend to provide authentic materials that students need to develop their learning. My students and I share the responsibility of learning process. I do my best to encourage my students to become problem-solvers, critical-thinkers and be independent learners.   

Regarding my philosophy on teaching methods and approaches, my teaching style is a student-centered, and I prefer using different approaches because they enhance students' learning and create a competitive environment in the classroom. Such approaches are cooperative learning, communicative language teaching, and skills-based approach. For the cooperative learning, students develop their social and group work skills that they need inside and outside the classroom. As for communicative language teaching, students need to develop their communication skills in order to use them in daily life situations. The skills-based approach helps students develop the four language skills reading, writing, speaking, and listening.

Since the era now is the technological innovations especially in teaching, I take advantage to utilize any tools that are available in a place where I teach. The Computer as Assisted Language Learning (CALL) and multimodal assignments are essentials in my teaching philosophy. Employing CALL in classrooms encourages me to be an innovative teacher and enhances students learning. I regularly use PowerPoint Presentation, e-mail, Blackboard, Google Docs., Google Drive, YouTube, and authentic learning websites in my teaching. When it comes to assignments, I favor assignments that provide students the opportunity to be creative, imaginative, and to take advantage of their skills. In writing courses, for instance, Google Docs. and Google Drive are ones of the most useful tools that I employ. Moreover, multimodal assignments are enjoyable and beneficial, where students design and create a product (i.e. assignment) rather than just answering it. In a multimodal assignment, students have the abilities to use their imaginations instead of using textbooks to answer an assignment. I do believe that such these assignments are necessary since today’s students are considered as technology savvy, in which these assignments fulfill their needs and desire.


Relating to my philosophy on assessment, I should ask myself a couple of questions before I take a step forward to assess students’ performance. What do my students need? Do I allow my students to be part of the assessment process? When do I need to evaluate them? What are the elements of the assessment? In order to answer these concerns, students and I share thoughts, opinions, and recommendation before developing grading rubrics. I believe that students have to contribute to grading system. Honestly, I make efforts to be fair enough and assess my students based on specific elements. Such elements are students' participations and attendance in the classroom, to what extent their weaknesses are decreased, the developing of different skills, doing assignments and projects. As for the means, I assess my students by using different written and oral tests, rubrics, their participations (in a blackboard if it is online), term papers, portfolios, and assignments. Rubrics, in written and oral tests and assignments, help me measure accurately students' performance and to what extent the objectives have been accomplished. Term papers aim at developing the coherence and cohesion of students' academic writing while portfolio assesses the process of improvement skills, especially in writing. Assignments are used to ascertain some specific skills.

Project (3): Conducting an Interview

Rhetorical Situation:
This assignment assumes you will be placed in interviewing situations throughout your professional life. Interpersonal interviewing skills will be crucial to both securing a job and carrying out work responsibilities. Practicing interviewing skills will not only improve your professional communication skills, it will also improve your language, nonverbal, listening, questioning, and relational skills in your everyday life.
 Another situation you might encounter is when you are walking on campus, a street, stadium, or any other places. Someone might make an interview with you for several purposes such as asking about daily life events and preferences.

 Purpose:
The interview provides students the opportunity to practice employment interviewing skills as an interviewer and an interviewee. It also exposes students to formal dyadic communication. The interview could aid students in the preparation of a professional resume and a cover letter. Students have the opportunity to develop questioning and presentation skills.
 Audience
·  Your classmates
·  Your teacher
 Task and Content:
You are asked to work with you partner to conduct an interview. One student has to act as an interviewer, whereas the other has to act as an interviewee. The interview can be formal or informal. For example, you might agree with your partner to conduct a formal job interview. Also, you might conduct an informal interview to discuss daily life situations and issues. Don’t forget to submit the questions of the interview.
The interview should meet one of the following requirements:
  • It has to be video recorded. The length is between 4-5 minutes. You may use any movie maker such as iMovie to edit the interview. The requirements of a high quality video, based on the rubric, include high quality shots. Video moves smoothly from shot to shot. A variety of transitions are used. Digital effects are used appropriately for emphasis. Be Creative when you design your video clip!
  • It has to be audio recorded. The length is between 4-5 minutes.
  • It has to be in a magazine or newspaper format if you prefer to do your interview for printable media. Be Creative when you design the layout!
 Final product (the interview) needs to be posted in your Facebook page or uploaded to YouTube or alike. Contact me if you have other media to post your promotion.
  Reflection:
After you successfully complete the assignment, you are asked to write a reflection (maximum 3 pages) about your experience in doing the assignment. The reflection should include why you choose a particular type of interview (i.e. formal, informal), why you choose certain medium or media, the process of doing the project, and your feedback on how to improve the assignment in the future.

Project (2): Multimodal Assignment


Rhetorical Situation:

You are asked to select a mall or a shopping center in your city, in which you usually go shopping. Examples include The Cottonwood Mall in Albuquerque, NM. Using both images you photograph with a cellphone camera or digital camera and free images you find from the web or other sources, develop a visual promotion that describes stores you prefer going shopping from and provide reasons for why you prefer shopping from these stores.

Purpose:

The promotion would help those who are new to the city of Albuquerque. This assignment is a visual guide and promotion about the malls and shopping centers in the city. For example, if you chose to present the Cottonwood Mall in Albuquerque, it would be an excellent opportunity for the audiences (i.e. students, visitors, new residents) to know about this mall or shopping center in Albuquerque, NM.

Audience:


              -  Your classmates
        - Your teacher
        - Visitors
        - New residents

Task and Content:

Your promotion should meet one of the following requirements:
  • A minimum of 10 images (two pictures for each store, if you choose to do 5 stores), half of which must be images you create yourself. Don’t forget to include pictures of inside and outside the store. Your images should be captioned to help frame your descriptions.
  • A short video clip (1-2 minutes) that describes the mall or the shopping center. Be Creative when you design your video clip!

Final product (the promotion) needs to be posted in your Facebook page or uploaded to YouTube or alike. Contact me if you have other media to post your promotion.


Reflection:

After you successfully complete the assignment, you are asked to write a reflection (maximum 3 pages) about your experience in doing the assignment. The reflection should include why you choose a particular mall or shopping center, why you choose certain medium or media, the process of doing the project, and your feedback on how to improve the assignment in the future.

Project (1): Digital Literacy Narrative

In this assignment,
You will create a digital text detailing how you came to use technology in your life and in your field (i.e. Business).
What are your goals for using technology in your field (i.e. Business)?

Description

For this assignment, you have the opportunity to argue for a particular understanding of literacy by telling a literacy story and then justifying that story’s academic rigor.

Literacy narratives, as the Digital Archives of Literacy Narratives explains, are stories about reading (books, cereal boxes, music, websites, magazines, signs) and composing (letters, Facebook pages, songs, maps, blogs, papers) in any form or context. Literacy narratives often include poignant memories that involve a personal experience with literacy. Digital literacy narratives are the same kinds of stories told through the use of digital media (iMovie, Movie Maker, Sophie).

Academic rationales are writings written within the context of the academy, or the university. They invite something or someone—a given time, a particular phenomenon, a certain mood, a specific person—into the academy by framing that something or someone as complex, important, and worthy of rigorous study.

This assignment requires you to do four things:
1.       Develop an understanding of literacy.
2.       Compose a story which forwards that same understanding of literacy.
3.       Digitalize your composition.
4.       Explain, in writing, how your digital composition forwards your understanding of literacy.

Purpose

·       To introduce you to narrative argument.
·       To familiarize you with three classical rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, and logos).
·       To develop your analytical thinking about digital media, literacy, and composition.

Audience

·       Your classmates
·       Your teacher

Format for the Digital Literacy Narrative

·       23 minute Digital Video Composition that includes audio and visual.
·       Composed with some multimedia software iMovie, MovieMaker, Sophie, etc.
·       Made accessible by being:
§  Compressed and uploaded to YouTube

Format for the Academic Rationale

  • 3-­(Maximum) doublespaced pages of text