Tuesday, October 21, 2008

What can we learn from children?

As teachers we can learn many lessons from children each day. It can be something like connecting or learning something with a child through their writing as Ralph Fletcher does in the book Walking trees. I felt that he learned so much about himself through his students just by listening to their stories and letting them express their feelings on paper. I think that many of the other classroom teachers he describes in his book severely underestimate their students especially since many are from low socioeconomic backgrounds or come from poverty stricken areas. It is these teachers who can inhibit the growth and development of children because they refuse to actually take a step back and be open to learning from their students. In my own personal life I have actually learned more effective ways of teaching just by listening to my students needs and taking into consideration their feelings, concerns, and interests. Every generation of children is different from the next and futher still so is every school , classroom, and each individual child. I do not think anyone learns in exactly the same way as they next person which is why teachers need to be open and willing to learn from their students. We as teachers can better modify our own methods of effective teaching stategies based on students needs as opposed to our own.
We can also learn to not judge a student before we really know them. It is very easy to pick out a student and immediately make assumptions about them according preconceived notions. This is only negative for the students development because by doing so the teacher immediately puts a label on this student. This seemed to be the case many times in the classrooms that Ralph Flecther taught in. A teacher would label a student as incapable or incompetent and that child would only suffer because they wouldn't be receiving the right amount of attention needed to be successful. It was sad reading about some of the things that went on among the schools in New York that Fletcher was involved in. Some students would seem to be crying out for help as he noticed through some of their writings and it was just overlooked until he started taking notice. Society complains that test scores are not high enough and education needs to be reformed, but I really feel that it all starts in the classroom with the teacher and the students. It is the students that are being ignored that eventually get left behind or worse just skip through the system and graduate highschool with having never really learned anything. I think if we can open our minds and really listen to our students and help them as best we can, than the future of educating our youth starts to look a lot brighter.

1 comment:

shannonwalsh said...

I completely agree. I think a lot of teachers underestimate their students. I remember when I was in school we had a math class and the teacher would teach a topic and if the students didn't really understand it then she would say that we only needed to do one or two of the problems since we didn't get how to solve the problem. I thought she was just kind of "giving up" on us in a sense, instead of helping and trying to be more patient with us.