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Teaching in Preschool

DIY cards for my students

For my second year of teaching, I worked as the Head Teacher of a small preschool. I handled a morning class that had four students and an afternoon class that had three students all aged between two to three years of age.

Lessons were based off of monthly themes; For example, October was united Nations month and for each week, we had imaginary voyages going to a country from a different continent. We learned a specific thing about their culture which could either be a dish, an art, or a literary piece while simultaneously learning about letters. Math, Science, Music and Arts concepts were incorporated in other lessons.

 

My student who displayed leadership attributes. He always reminded his classmates ‘to sit in a criss-cross applesauce style’ and ‘to listen to what teacher says.’

Because it was a small school, dismissal time meant being able to talk to my students’s parents who were enthusiastic to hear of their child’s performance, and had an open heart when it came to teaching techniques and practices which they can do at home.  This will help reinforce and further concretize their child’s newfound concepts learned at school.

I had a student whose finger grip was good when it came to gripping a crayon but needed to improve on coloring with control and inside the line and writing his name independently. I advised his mother to practice coloring and writing more at home and they did make it a fun bonding moment for them which helped my student have more confidence at school.

 

An expressive student who enjoyed talking about different kinds of trains. One time I was discussing the letter J and demonstrating the word ‘juggle’ for J, he said, ‘teacher you are not a clown! You are a teacher.’

For my student who displayed advanced communication skills compared to other classmates and had a good memory when it came to details of a story, I advised his parents to develop their child’s love for reading.

Putting sight word as labels to different items in the house such as furniture could be a good way for a child to foster reading and spelling skills in a fun way.

I was very proud to hear my student spell ‘table’ and ‘door’ perfectly.

 

My student who enjoys coming to class in different costumes and even plays the part of his character well!

 

Getting younger students to say goodbye to their moms when class is about to start could prove to be a challenge in the beginning. It was my duty to greet every student enthusiastically, to talk to them happily, and motivate the students to talk among each so that they can feel that school is a fun place where everyone is friendly and kind.

It also helps that my student’s parents do a good job of communicating to them that school is a fun place and they will be there after school to pick them up after a wonderful learning day. I especially like some parent’s techniques of giving a child a reward if they are able to relay what they did at school which also strengthens their speaking skills.

 

One of my youngest students who has a great sense of humor. She laughed when I deliberately put the wrong shape to a puzzle and nicely corrected me. When asked if her snack is yummy, she said ‘No!’ but smiled and finished it happily.

After playing with blocks, cleaning up, singing the ABC phonics song and the weather song, I ask my students to sit in criss-cross apple sauce style and play a game to catch their attention before lesson starts.

I begin by saying ‘macaroni and cheese, everybody freeze’ to get their attention and play a game of animal sounds. I would ask, ‘What does a cow sound like?’ and of course my very bright students go ‘Moo!’ and then I joke and say, ‘Doesn’t a cow go meow…meow…?’ and my students would burst laughing at the absurdity.

Incorporating jokes in learning is a good way to for students to recognize the contrast between what is true and what is ridiculous.

 

Sharing is caring and this exactly what my student practices during snack time. He is also good at saying, ‘please’, ‘thank you’, and ‘sorry’ at appropriate times.

Having good manners is one of the basic concepts that preschool students should be taught in order to develop good social skills and a clear understanding of what is an acceptable behavior from a behavior that should not be repeated because it is not kind.

I am proud that my student’s parents do a good job of reminding them to say polite phrases at home so that when they are at school, they exemplify respect and kindness toward their teacher and their other classmates.

A touching gesture that my student did as he bid be goodbye was to thank me and give a big hug before he went home. That was all it took to make my day.

Teaching in a small preschool enabled me to get to know my students and their parents well which made for a consistent learning experience through partnership. Constant communication with my student’s parents proved to be a great way to reach learning goals. I will forever be proud and thankful for my student’s learning milestones and the friendships I have gained.

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Water of a duck’s back

Panget na ‘to (This ugly person), uttered an older sibling in response to me wanting to accompany her to fetch our other younger sibling from school. I didn’t ask her if I could come and instead immediately changed clothes so I’d look more appropriate. I then went to her room and said, “I’m coming with you.” excitedly. She didn’t want me to go with her and asked why I was going, told me I’m not needed and finally said that I was ugly because she saw how persistent I was. I didn’t know that wanting to go out to walk with siblings would elicit such a harsh reaction so I quietly walked away, changed back to my home clothes, decided I won’t go anymore and my six-year-old self cried.

“Look at yourself, you look thin. Thin is ugly. People might think we are not feeding you enough,” said my grandma because I was thin especially in my elementary school days. I never ate more than what was offered to me at our table and we had a big family. Eating was a chore because either I don’t have the appetite to eat or I couldn’t finish the food on my plate. It didn’t help the motivation shoved at me was so I could look less disgusting to them.

Despite a home life that stressed me out, at school I excelled. I remember winning journalism competitions in the feature writing category back when I was in 4th grade to 6th grade and I when I’d get home to tell my grandma or cousin about the good news, I didn’t get any congratulations or any happy response. It felt like no matter how good I did in school, I wouldn’t be good enough for them. It kept me humble but it made me second-guess my capabilities.

School was one one of my means of escape. I had classmates who would have crushes on me and I thought to myself at a young age that, ‘my family must have been lying to me’ because some people saw me as attractive. The only  compliments I got were from classmates and I remember it was my P.E. teacher, Ms. Sardon who complimented me in front of class and told me that I had a beautiful smile. Having an adult validate my appearance meant a lot and gave me the  confidence that I never got from family members.

Now a practicing teacher, I do my best to give encouragement and motivation to each and every one of my student. The simple act of greeting them, praising them when they have performed wonderfully, and the manner with which I communicate to them would make them feel valued and respected as an individual. If a student is confident, they will continue to do well in their academics and display good behavior too

Although my insecurities are still lurking, I do all I can to stay positive by doing Ashtanga yoga, reading inspiring literature and content, and surrounding myself with people who bring out the best in my capabilities. This helps me practice what I  preach to myself. I become kinder to myself.

I am learning to let negativity slide off of me like water of a duck’s back. Criticism especially non-constructive ones are just words which will not change who I am as a person. I  won’t let the water drown me but I’ll use it to help me be afloat and negative people can stay in the darkness of the ocean floor and not matter because I know I am a good and caring person and I am beautiful in my own unique way.

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My First Year of Teaching

Fresh from completing my certificate in Professional Teaching, I immediately applied for a teaching post at several small schools  within my subdivision. In spite of the 2016 April heat, I felt determined and held on to my daydreams of being able to be of walking distance to my future workplace and fervently used this as my main motivation as I submitted my resumés.

In narrowing down my choice of school, I seriously took into consideration the proximity of the school. By proximity I mean the school being a minute away from my home. I was signed into a contract of one academic year and little did I know that it would be a roller coaster of an experience as a preschool adviser.

I was assigned as the preschool adviser of two Kinder 1 classes. My morning class was at 8 am – 11 am which had 14 students. The afternoon class was at 1 pm – 4 pm and had ten students. Inside the classroom, I was blessed to have an assistant teacher, Teacher Jeri who taught Mathematics, and our teaching aide, Ate Rose.

Weekly lesson plans were to be submitted every Friday and I had to turn in two lesson plans every week: one for my Reading subject and the other for my Language subject. Teacher Jeri, lucky her only had to submit one because she only handled Math.

My lesson plans for Reading heavily involved teaching my students to recognize the letters of the alphabet, being able to produce the sounds of the letter, having to write both the uppercase and lowercase of letters (or mommy and baby letter as we would term), identifying the beginning letter of easy words, recognizing and sight-reading the seven primary colors, sight-reading and matching rhyming words, and knowing the sequence of events.

Lesson plans for Language entailed speech development by being able to introduce themselves, knowing the members of the family and community, learning descriptive words like big and small, tall and short, learning different pronouns, demonstratives, and prepositions.

For the second and third quarter of the year, apart from the student’s academics, our preschool deparment had clubs and this allowed them to interact with the different preschool levels: Kinder 1, Kinder 2 and Prep. I handled the reading and acting club with the help of Prep adviser, Teacher Pau. There was a science and experiment club handled by my assistant teacher, Teacher Jeri together with Prep assistant teacher, Teacher MC. The last club was all about being resourceful and making art through recycled materials headed by our preschool coordinator.

Another task for us preschool teachers was to take pictures of each student in several class activities because these photos were to be attached to the quarterly progress reports of each student. In the quarterly progress report, the students’ skills in communication, mathematics, social and emotional learning, motor learning and academic grades were recorded. As an adviser I also had to give constructive comments for each student so that their their performance may be validated, and so that they can improve in areas they need to with the help of their parents. On card day, these tediously done progress reports will be presented to their parents one by one, alongside the students’ quarterly worksheets.

Memorable events  we organized for the year are the Linggo ng Wika (National Language Month), nutrition month, a field trip to Hospicio de San Jose and watching the Annie: The Musical at Resort’s world Manila after, poetry competition, and the last day party.

These were my rich experiences in my first year of teaching. At times it was draining due to the stress of the workload, but oftentimes it was rewarding especially when I see students learn a concept I taught, when I see them enjoy the activity I worked hard to prepare, when I see them be fascinated with the teaching materials I creatively crafted until the wee hours so that learning will always be fun for them. My students’ little achievements was my big achievement and I couldn’t have asked for more.