Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The End of the Year....Finally!

We have five and a half days of school left. I have made it through another year of school. There are many reasons that this is significant to me.

From a curriculum standpoint, I am in the middle of the experimental end of the year portfolio project with my Algebra classes. So far I think it's going really well. The portfolio works like this:
  • I gave the kids a list of all the topics we have covered this year and a list of alternate assessment activities that they could do - everything from writing a letter to a friend who was absent to writing a rap to performing a puppet show to making a news broadcast.
  • The task is for the students to match different topics with different activities. All the activities are worth different numbers of points. Some of them are 10 points and some are 20 points. The students have to pick a combination of activities that add up to 100 points.
  • If they want extra credit opportunities, I have a list of extra activities that they can do separately like write a math autobiography, or research a famous mathematician, or make a collage of pictures from magazines or newspapers or the internet that demonstrate math in the real world.
I never know how these types of projects will go, but right now it's going very well. I have received email submissions of PowerPoint presentations and websites that students have created already on certain topics. They have been quite good and not plagiarized. Overall I think the students are having fun because they get to pick the activities that interest them. I like it because it's low maintenance for me and an easy way to wrap up the year.

From a "wrap up the year" standpoint, our school will be graduating 20 students. 20 STUDENTS! We only have 55 students and every single senior that we accepted will be graduating. Some of them are graduating with a 28 credit diploma and some are graduating with the special 22 credit diploma, but they are all graduating!

We as a staff are very proud of them and the work they have done. On a personal note, I am very proud of the students, but I'm also extremely proud of the work that all of the staff has done to help these students. While the students are the ones that earned the grades, these kids were so far behind and had so much to do that it would have been impossible without the tireless efforts of this special staff. Everyone here comes in early and stays late almost every day. It's a very special crew of people at this school. I've been extremely grateful to be a part of it.

From a personal standpoint, I have made it through the year in one piece. I have not quit or been discouraged about my teaching or given up on the system. This is significant because I have been timid and gun shy since I left Mississippi. I thought I never wanted to teach again. I felt like a failure, but I wasn't.

I have just proved that not only am I a good teacher, but I make a difference with kids where it counts. The kids that I teach every day really do need me. They are the forgotten ones...the ones who fell through the cracks...the kids that no one else could handle. I have not reached every single one, but I have reached a significant number of them.

And 20 of my students are graduating from high school.

I simply want to say to all those in Mississippi who were angry with me for leaving or mad at me for "giving the program a bad name," what would you say now? Would you write me off like you did before? Could you finally admit that possibly the problem wasn't me leaving, it was the situation I was put in and the lack of support I received?

I am not a failure. This is my redemption. No matter what happened in the past, my kids are graduating, and I had a part in that success.

2 comments:

  1. It's nice to hear a positive story by a teacher. I also had a negative teaching experience many years back, and I feel that I am having a positive impact now. It's just a matter of finding the right place and having the necessary support.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Zabe,

    Congratulations! It sounds like you're now in a place where you can better use all your (myriad) teaching talents. Too bad they were wasted in MS.

    I love reading your updates and ENJOY your summer break.

    miss you,

    Amy Keel

    ReplyDelete

 
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