Rules For Posting To This Blog and Weekly Blog Question

1. Only use your first name (no last names, addresses, IM screen names, etc.)
2. Show respect and consideration of others when posting and commenting. This includes individuals, students, organizations, political parties, colleagues, etc.
3. Check all posts for spelling and grammar errors before posting.
4. Protect the privacy of others. Gain permission from other people before you write about them. Avoid sharing someone else's last name. Use job titles or pseudonyms when writing about experiences with your co-workers or students.
5. Watch your language. Use politically correct and non-offensive language.
6. Make sure you write about things that are factual.
7. Keep your postings education-oriented. Avoid discussing plans for the weekend, etc.

FINAL BLOG POST - OUR "DAILY TRIPLE" (DUE 12/1).
This week I would like you to use your imagination. You have just won the lottery and will leave your teaching post immediately to travel around the world. As you leave your keys you meet your replacement. You are asked to give this new teacher just ONE piece of advice. What would that be, and why? Enjoy your world expedition!

Blog Post - Week 7
This past week in my own teaching I felt a little disconnected which prompts my question to you, "What was the moment (or moments) when I felt most disconnected or disengaged as a teacher - the moment(s) I said to myself, I'm just going through the motions here?"

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 6
For the past couple of weeks you have experienced asynchronous online learning (doing modules by yourself). Previously this semester you have experienced synchronous online learning (all together in the Collaborate room). Which do you think is more effective and why do you think that? Which do you like better, and why?

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 5
This week we have what we call "open mic." You can write a post about anything related to your teaching that you would like responses from your classmates.

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 4
Here is this week's question: "What was the event that most took me surprise this week - and event that shook me up, caught me off guard, gave me a jolt, or made me unexpectedly happy?"

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 3
Please write a post about the following question, "In thinking about my past week teaching what is one thing I would do differently, and why?"

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 2
Please write a post about the following question, " In thinking about my teaching activities this past week, of what do I feel most proud? Why?"

Fall Semester 2016 Blog Post - Week 1
Describe something you used in your program in the first weeks of school that you learned in the summer NTI program. How did it work? Did it get you off to a stronger start than last year?

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Disappointment and Failure - Casey 10/6

"You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don't try."

As a perfectionist, I know I disappoint myself frequently because I know that out of my failures, I do have some successes. The problem, for me, with failure is that it affects me negatively and causes stress on myself. My husband gets so frustrated with me because I often don't see myself the way coworkers see me. I administered the 8th grade final exam last Friday and the results were not nearly what I anticipated them to be. I was nearly to the point of tears and doubting my teaching career by the time I went home. After I regrouped myself, I looked at how my 7th graders did on their final exam and realized that they did pretty well. I decided at that point that my teaching can't be the problem. Perhaps, I didn't teach exactly what I should have, the right points, or the test could even not have been clear. I spent several hours over the weekend reconsidering my lesson plans, and I rewrote most of a 15 day unit during that time. When I returned to school, I apologized to my students and posed the changes I plan to make for my next term to them. I even had a few raise their hands to ask if they could come back to my class because the changes seemed so exciting to them. Yes, I was very disappointed in my failure because I truly feel like I have found my calling and it hurt badly. If I didn't have the failure, I wouldn't have tried to improve; therefore, I would be missing out on a great teaching opportunity (improvement), and my students would be missing out on a great learning opportunity. This quote was just what I needed to see today because it is so relevant to my life and helps ease some of my feelings of inadequacy. 

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Casey I am right there with you in how you are feeling! I care so much and am so passionate about what I am doing that I think I take things too personally. I have to remember these are teenagers we are working with and I shouldn't take it personally if they are behaving or reacting the way that I think they should. This is a learning process for both of us.

Unknown said...

I can relate to what you are saying about evaluating yourself and wondering did you teach all of the valuable points to students. It is very hard to gauge how well you are teaching based on student scores. I have noticed that students can be spoon fed and still not be able to give us the answer when we want it, but rather when we least expect it they show us what we have taught them. We must continue to do our best even when the students seem to disappoint us and cause us to feel like we have disappointed ourselves.