One of the greatest surprises I have encountered in the first grade classroom in which I am currently placed has been the incredibly high level of expectations our dyad teacher has for her young students. I am always impressed by the classroom management skills of primary teachers -- how they keep those wiggly and energetic little bodies all moving in the same direction throughout the day -- but what I am seeing extends far beyond behavior expectations. Our dyad teacher has great academic expectations for her students -- all of her students. This month our first graders are doing a unit on spiders. As you would expect, the room is decorated with spider webs and painted pumpkins, black cats and, of course, plenty of spiders, large and small. What I was surprised to see is the depth to which our teacher takes this study and the level of academic vocabulary she uses. She and another first grade teacher have raided every library in the area it seems as they have stacks and stacks of non-fiction fact books on spiders for the children to look at and read. She frequently reads one aloud to them pointing out text features such as the table of contents, index, glossary, bold-faced type , information bubbles, etc. and modeling how to use these features in order to find information they are looking for. She has a huge sketch of a spider on the wall which they are drawing ”together.” As they find out more information as a group, the teacher adds the details and labels. You can imagine my surprise when I walked into the classroom last week and saw labels such as arachnid, spinneret and cephalothorax!! Her high expectations extend beyond vocabulary and non-fiction skills. This extensive spider unit which also includes almost daily art projects and lots of writing activities including a spider fact book that the class is writing together (they compose it as a group, but each child has their own personal copy that they must copy the text into as they go) is completely teacher-created and above-and-beyond the required curriculum. In other words, our teacher is not required to teach any of this spider related material or do any of these fun October art projects but she wants to expand her students’ worlds by exposing them to science, art, the features of non-fiction, challenging vocabulary and so much more. All along the way, she expects high quality work from each and every one and explicitly states her expectations at the beginning of each activity. The students come from a wide range of backgrounds and possess a wide range of skills, so they cannot all meet her great expectations, but I think they are better off for having a teacher who is stretching them to their fullest potential.
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Spider Diagram (a work in progress) |