Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Blog 18 - Answer 2


1. What is your EQ?

What is the most important skill a preschool teacher can teach her students to best prepare them for kindergarten? 

2. What is your first answer? (In complete thesis statement format)


The most important skill a preschool teacher can teach her students to best prepare them for kindergarten are social skills.

3. What is your second answer? (In complete thesis statement format)

The most important skill a preschool teacher can teach her students to best prepare them for kindergarten are motor skills.

4. List three reasons your answer is true with a real-world application for each.


Learning fine motor skills will improve kids' abilities to coordinate the small muscles in
   their hands and fingers. This helps them in assignments such as writing, drawing,
   painting, etc.  

Improving upon fine motor skills also helps when it comes to pencil grip. Coming into
   kindergarten a child will be expected to have a dominant hand and to be able to write
   their name, basic words, and numbers. 

Learning gross motor skills will improve a child's ability to move the larger muscles in
   the arms, legs, and torso. This helps with the physical activities they'll engage in when
   they are in kindergarten.


5. What printed source best supports your answer?

Research Check #16, Source #48 

Pica, Rae. "Why Motor Skills Matter." Naeyc.org. National Association for the Education of Young Children, Jul. 2008. Web. 10 Feb. 2016. <https://www.naeyc.org/files/yc/file/200807/BTJLearningLeapsBounds.pdf>

6. What other source supports your answer?

Research Check #15, Source #43:

Abramovitz, Renee. "Gross Motor Development." Schoolsparks.com. SchoolSparks, Dec. 2014. Web. 4 Feb. 2016. <http://www.schoolsparks.com/early-childhood-development/gross-motor> 

Research Check #15, Source #44

Abramovitz, Renee. "Fine Motor Development." Schoolsparks.com. SchoolSparks, Nov. 2014. Web. 28 Jan. 2016. <http://www.schoolsparks.com/early-childhood-development/fine-motor> 

7. Tie this together with a concluding thought.

Knowing or not knowing motor skills when entering kindergarten will have a significant impact on a child. A lot of the activities kids will engage in rely upon their motor skills. A child with these skills will breeze through, whereas a child without will experience some difficulty throughout the year as he picks up on the skill. 

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Blog 17 - Interview 3 Reflection


1. What is the most important thing I learned from the interview?  

I would say that the most important thing I learned from my interview was what skills are most important to bring into kindergarten. My interviewee, Bonnie, had mentioned that social skills are one of the most essential skills a child entering kindergarten can have. This was one of my answers to my EQ, and though I've researched on this for a while, I was able to get more insight on it. I also learned that coming into kindergarten knowing the letters of the alphabet and numbers has great significance as well. 
 
2.  How has your approach to interviewing changed over the course of your senior project?


I'm definitely a lot more comfortable during interviews now. At first, I treated it like it was just that, an interview. Not a conversation. I would ask my questions, maybe a few follow up questions, say thank you, and leave. It's a lot different now. I still, of course, ask my questions, but now I'm not nervous asking those follow ups and actually enjoy the conversation. After the interview, I stay a little longer to chat, whether it be about my senior topic or just anything. I go into my interviews now to have conversation, not just listen to what the person has to say. 

Audio:

https://soundcloud.com/kimramos56/interview-3

Transcript: 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1pZvpXe0ZT0wnBc2amTtXhhSNfsRdV5b0Ouxt6ewH8eE/edit?usp=sharing

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Blog 16: Independent Component 2 Approval


1. Describe in detail what you plan to do for your 30 hours.

I plan on volunteering for 30 hours. Instead of volunteering in a preschool classroom like I did on my first independent component, I plan on working these hours in a transitional kindergarten classroom instead to further my knowledge. 

2.  Discuss how or what you will do to meet the expectation of showing 30 hours of evidence.

I will post a log of my hours and also photos of my experience. These photos however, will not be able to show the students (unless you can't see their faces) due to confidentiality and liability issues. So, these photos can consist of the classroom and students' work. 

3.  Explain how this component will help you explore your topic in more depth.

My EQ is, "What is the most important skill a preschool teacher can teach her students to best prepare them students for kindergarten?" I feel that in order to help better my answers for this question, I will need a hands on approach. So, volunteering in a transitional kindergarten classroom will help me see what it is like in a real classroom. Research and interviews do help with exploring answers, but I feel that the best way to answer my question is to get out there, observe, and gain experience. 

4.  Post a log in your Senior Project Hours link and label it "Independent Component 2" log.

Done

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Independent Component 1

Independent component is done! 
  • LITERAL
    (a) Write: “I, Kimberly Ramos, affirm that I completed my independent component which represents 30 hours of work.”
    (b) My independent component involved me coming into the classroom and completing extra hours, so there isn't a source that I can site that helped me complete it. Everything I did to complete it was done by physically being there in the classroom. If anything you can email my mentor Bonnie at bonnie.e.avalos@gmail.com to confirm that I have done my 30 hours worth of work. 
  • (c) Blog updated. 
  • (d) Over the course of 2 and a half weeks, I came into the classroom whenever I could for about 3-4 hours a day. For the first week I would mainly observe what the children were doing in class and just clean. After that first week I became more involved in the classroom and began helping out the kids with assignments and problems here and there. I had more of a presence in the classroom and got more comfortable with the kids and they got more comfortable with me. I did a lot of cleaning and office work (like making copies). 
  • INTERPRETIVE 
    My work was extremely significant in regards to my project because it really gave me the idea of what it's like to play teacher and student. It let me know about what typical things you see in a classroom and how children learn and act. It demonstrates 30 hours of work because thats the amount of time I took to help out in the class. You can access my log, which shows 30 hours or work, here:
    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1F1AFBqeQn_IbC2zvGoswvhPwuPLNCh15sebWG3NPYWk/edit?usp=sharing
  • APPLIED
    This component helped me understand the foundation of my topic better by getting a fuller understanding of how the typical day in preschool is. Even though I was only there for the second half of the day, I know how the first half went through discussion with my mentor. The day was separated into sections which included music, arts and crafts, reading, writing, play, nap time, story time, circle time, etc. The routine really helps out the kids by making learning easier and getting the students to feel more comfortable. 

Lesson 2 Reflection


Me after finishing my presentation.

1.What are you most proud of in your Lesson 2 Presentation and why?

I am most proud of making time. I witnessed some of my peers falling short on time and it made me worried about not making it myself. I feared that out of nervousness I would talk too fast and be under time. Fortunately, I was able to keep calm, speak at a normal rate, and make time at the end. Once I realized that keeping up with the clock wasn't an obstacle anymore, I became more confident in myself and my presentation.


2.a. What assessment would you give yourself on your Lesson 2 Presentation (self-
       assessment)?


P

   b. Explain why you deserve that grade using evidence from the Lesson 2 component
       contract.


I think I deserve a P on my presentation for Lesson 2 because I met all the requirements necessary to earn a P. I feel that I worked to the best of my ability and for that I would give myself a P. 

3. What worked for you in your Lesson 2?


I think what really worked in my Lesson 2 Presentation was talking talk about experiences from mentorship. That was able to grab a better hold of the audience's attention and keep them engaged. It also gave me a bit of comfort being up in front of the class knowing that my audience was interested in what I had to say. 

4. What didn't work? If you had a time machine, what would you have done differently to improve your Lesson 2?


What didn't work as well as I could have liked it to be was my activity debrief. I said what I wanted to say but I completely forgot to make the class present on what they did/learned in the activity. So if I could go back, I would change that little detail that way my audience could get a better understanding of my activity. 

5. What do you think your answer #2 is going to be?


At the moment, I feel that my answer #2 will be that the most important skill a preschool teacher can teach her students to best prepare them for kindergarten are fine motor skills. But that answer could change after completing more hours and working on my independent component 2.