Thursday, April 25, 2013

IPad

Every teacher should have an iPad. Really. So that you can facebook instagram and check email in class. Haha no just kidding.

It's so uber convenient. When you are teaching new words, you don't need to prepare flashcards. Just google search. Children will enjoy looking at the ipad more than at flashcards too. Even though its the exact same picture. You don't need to print and laminate. You can enlarge the picture easily. Children have spontaneous questions? Just look it up online!
Teacher, what does a mango tree look like?
Wait ah, let me find the pic.
Wham, immediately you get the pic!

The apps are amazing and cheap. The kids and I are enjoying Letter School. Sometimes, we do it one by one, or two by two. Sometimes I use it as a whole class activity. They clap and cheer and are so excited to see the animations!

The iPad is the best gift I've gotten :)

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Imagination

Children don't need expensive toys. They just need open ended materials and their imaginations!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Art

There's time for structured work, where everyone has the same end product.
And there's time for open ended art. The kids painted using cotton buds today. I think it's beautiful :)

Letter writing

I purchased my first apple app today...Letter School! It's educational, so it's ok. Haha. I downloaded the lite version first and let my students try it and they absolutely love it. Even I look forward to see what the animation will be. So I decided to buy the full version. It only costs 3 dollars, which is about RM9, and I think it's a good buy. I really believe that this is the new era of education and we must move forward and change our ways of teaching. This is definitely a really really fun way of learning how to write.

Which brings me to another point...how strictly should we follow the rules of letter formation? I realized that different apps sometimes show different letter formation, eg. when writing letter d, do you start with the line or start at the curve? What I learnt in college is the proper way is that you start at the curve.

Some books teach two separate strokes for a letter, eg. for letter a, you write the c first, and then lift up your pencil and draw the straight line, whereas what I learnt in college is that you do not lift up the pencil when writing.

When my lil bro saw my playing the app, he said, 'eh like that one meh? I write another way.' He writes capital letter E with the vertical line down first, then the bottom horizontal line then the top horizontal line, and finally the middle horizontal line.

At first I thought, yer, your teachers didn't teach you one meh. But then i pondered..does it matter??

Does it matter which 'y' you use? The curvy one? Or the straight one? Is one wrong and the other right? At the end of the day, children are bound to see both in words around them.

Does it matter whether you lift up your pencil or not? Some teachers say its easier for children to learn when it's in two strokes. At the end of the day, when children begin to write, they will write faster and naturally they will stop lifting up the pencil, right?

If they do not catch the proper formation, so what? In the end, you will still be able to see the letter, right? And isn't that the purpose of writing?

Of course, I will teach the 'proper' way of writing letters, but sometimes, if they lift up their pencil and write the letter in two strokes, I just close one eye. I think the children have more important things to do.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Laws of a Teacher

Stop growing today,
Stop teaching tomorrow.

Teaching that impacts is not head to head,
But Heart to Heart.

Old thinking: Practice makes Perfect
New thinking: Well Guided Practice Makes Perfect

Old thinking: Experience is the best teacher
New thinking: Properly evaluated experience is the Best Teacher

Old thinking: We learn by Doing
New thinking: We learn by Doing the Right Things

Kid-spiration

Children are not just blank pieces of paper, but also painters: having the ability to learn & have plenty of ideas!

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Creativity

In a school which I teach (Shall not mention which), I was required to write lesson plan for my arts & crafts lesson. I could not think of any objectives for my lesson. (Objectives have to start with "at the end of the lesson, children should be able to..." and the assessment has to be linked: "children are assessed on their ability to...") I was at a lost. My objective was to let them just explore and have fun! That's it!!

Then I was told, the objective of an arts and crafts lesson is to let children train their fine motor skills. Through pasting and painting. they train their fine motor skills. I agree that through arts and crafts, children develop their fine motor skills, but shouldn't the MAIN objective be focused on creativity? Do they need to be assessed on creativity?? Hello, children are waaaaaaay more creative than you, and it is these kind of highly structured close ended "ART" that we prepare that is squashing their creativity.

http://www.janetlansbury.com/2010/04/a-childs-creativity-how-i-learned-to-shut-up/

Learn to shut up, adults.

Just venting.

P/S: I have a huge stack of blank paper in class for children to JUST DRAW ANYTHING. They draw little lines and circles and can tell me what they've drawn. I label their artwork. And they love it! :)