Ed403 - Fieldwork Notes
Ed403 - Fieldwork Notes
Ed403 - Fieldwork Notes
EDUC 403
Fieldwork Notes
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/heterogeneous-literature-circles-uncut
- 1:54 - The teacher begins by reading aloud and switches into having students read to
their tables.
- 3:10 - The book the students are reading is in English with some Spanish dialogue. →
- 6:59 - The questions include “Who is somebody that you are grateful for?” and
- 9:10 - Each student has a specific role in their group. The teacher reviews each “reading
- Summarizer
- Word-searcher → finds keywords from the chapter -- Key words connect to the
main events and main feelings of the chapter as well as new/interesting words
(10:13)
did a literature circle. He asks the students to read their feedback aloud to their table so
that the person who is currently in that role can learn from it.
- 13:24 - All students with the same role meet up at the same table to discuss the main
- 18:20 - The students return to their original tables and discuss in the order of their roles.
They then move into a more general discussion. Students have specific prompts and
- 19:24 - Discussion directors use a phone or recording device to record their discussion
- 27:23 - After literature circle discussions, the teacher announces aloud good things that
he has seen the different tables doing during the discussion, such as asking many
connections
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/teaching-complex-poetry
1. See Mr. Beadle engage student interest as they act out poems and then move into deep
analysis of key elements. How do students compare and contrast the two poems?
b. 10:28 -- The students compare and contrast different ways of reading the same
read. They discuss which pace works best for the poem, based on its content.
c. 23:23 -- The teacher explains that while the first poem began with a fast meter
and switched to a much slower meter, the second poem does the opposite.
Students can hear this through the recitation of the poems paired with the
drum-beat.
a. The students point out whether their classmate’s reading of the poem this the
“right” way to read it, and if so what makes it right (e.g. pace; 5:57). The second
time they recite the poem, students work with partners to recite the poem to a
slow beat, made by clapping (8:22). They then do the same while clapping
quickly. The teacher recites the poem for a third time to a drum-beat and pace
b. 13:00 -- The class recites the poem several times to see how the meter of the
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/pinwheel-discussion-complete-lesson
1. Why are the first 6 minutes important to the success of this activity?
a. The first 6 minutes are important to this lesson because they introduce the
students to specific ways in which they can form discussion questions. By using
these methods of forming questions, the students will be better able to discuss
the texts they have read. In the first 6 minutes, the teacher also reminds students
2. What facilitation strategies did Ms. Wessling use to make the pinwheel discussion an
a. 4:47 -- The teacher asks students to come up with their own discussion questions
quote textual evidence. She provides students with three examples that work as
templates for discussion questions and notes questions should include active
verbs.
b. 13:51 -- One of the groups of students are the provocateurs. Their role is to ask
the other groups “the kind of questions that get people to think deeper and more
c. 15:48 -- The teacher tells students that this discussion is not a debate; it is a
conversation. Students can disagree with each other, but they are not debating.
d. The teacher writes on the board whenever a student asks a follow-up question,
makes a connection, adds new ideas, or uses textual evidence. This encourages
have been discussing the characters’ different ideas of success and how one can
questions as the different characters can help students explore the characters’
beliefs and more fully understand the arguments Arthur Miller is making through
these characters.
May 5, 2021 - Teaching Channel Video: “A Closer Look at Toni
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/a-closer-look-at-toni-morrisons-beloved
- 0:33 -- QPA (Quick Passage Analysis) → Students write based on a specific passage --
helps them focus on character, context, and the author’s art/writing strategy
- 4:23 -- For now, the teacher chooses the passages students use in their QPAs, but
eventually, the students will be able to choose their own passages to analyze
- 8:47 -- The teacher asks students to signal with their hands if they understand the
concept. He then cold calls on a student who doesn’t fully understand and asks him, “If
you had any question to ask about this, what might it be?”
- 13:10 -- The teacher hands out the questions and passage the students will be close
reading. The passage has spaces between the lines where the students will be able to
- 14:00 -- The teacher reminds students that when they close read, theyre not just
underlining; they should be looking for point of view, metaphor, figurative language,
- 15:00 -- By the end of the activity, students will each have an individual QPA paragraph,
but students are expected to collaborate during the analyzing process to hear others’
point of view.
- 16:01 -- The teacher asks students ways in which they will show that they are
collaborating (e.g. asking clarifying questions, note taking, etc.) → Helps students know
- 20:40 -- The students work in groups to read a passage and decide what
- 39:39 -- The teacher walks around to facilitate the discussions of different groups
- 55:01 -- Students write their individual QPA paragraphs on Google Docs and share it
with not only the teacher, but also their group members. The teacher tells the students to
read the paragraphs that their group members wrote and comment on them. →
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/teaching-shakespeares-othello
1. Why do students perform lines from Othello prior to reading the play?
a. 00:40 -- The teacher has the students perform lines from the play before reading
to introduce them to the play in an active, memorable way and to spark curiosity.
2. How do the pre-reading activities help students remain engaged with the text?
a. Having the students recite selected lines from the play with various emotions
helps engage the students by calling attention to how the lines might be delivered
b. The activity in which students examine the iambic pentameter (or lack thereof) of
their lines helps them to examine authorial choices and learn how iambic
pentameter is used before they actually begin reading the play in full. They’ll now
have this understanding going into it, and they’ll be able to get more out of the
play.
and acting.
collaboratively write their own lines of blank verse based on ideas related to the
emphasis on emotion.
d. 22:46 -- The handkerchief activity, in which the teacher gives the students a little
bit of context and the students have to examine the handkerchief and try to come
up with the story behind it/how it “destroyed a great general” helps make this
keeps the students thinking in a creative but also analytical way. The
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/teaching-difficult-poetry
1. How does Ms. Mortlock's script help students understand the poem?
a. 1:07 -- Ms. Mortlock’s script present the poem for the students in a more clear,
understandable way, so that when they get the original poem, they’ll be better
2. How can you use these strategies when teaching other pieces of literature?
a. This strategy can be used with a number of more difficult texts that students are
expected to read. When I taught Hawthorne to my students, I found that they had
a lot of difficulty understanding the language of the text. Presenting the story first
thinking about the story and characters before jumping into the original text could
have been a really good way to introduce the more difficult language in an
a. Small group discussion allows the students to discuss their understanding of the
story and allows the teacher to check for this understanding. Through their
discussion, the students think more specifically about one character who is not
present in the text and write dialogue for her, allowing them to fill in the gaps of
the script.
5/9/2021 - Teaching Channel Video: “More Ways into Shakespeare’s
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/teaching-shakespeares-othello-2
1) Why does Ms. Broadbent expose students to small parts of the play before reading the
entire text?
a) Exposing the students to small parts of the play before they read the whole text is
plot points, which could be confusing if they were to just jump into the play
2) The props are for more than entertainment and engagement. What is their impact?
a) The props help students visualize characters and plot points. For example, the
teacher uses the three caps (3:56) to explain the conflict between Othello, Iago,
and Cassio. They also help the students role play as the characters (4:55; 19:17).
a) The pre-reading activities prepare the students for the reading itself, and it gets
as they are able to dive into and play around with the language and diction (for
example, 12:11) more than they would be if they were presented with the full text.
It also helps them learn concepts like the way Shakespeare uses stage directions
(24:58).
5/10/2021 - Teaching Channel Video: “Passage Analysis from Toni
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/passage-analysis-from-toni-morrisons-beloved
students to volunteer to share which element has been effective for them or has helped
- He asks the students how specific strategies help students understand parts of
the text
Placement/order; 5) Theme
- 7:35 → Students are in groups, and each group has a different passage to annotate and
close-read.
- 9:33 → The teacher asks a student what collaboration means to her and he repeats her
answer that collaboration is furthering your thinking based on others’ ideas. He then asks
students what strategies they will use to be good collaborators. → Helps students know
- 15:46 → The students have 15-20 minutes to discuss and then 15-20 minutes to draft
- 17:56 → Students preview their passage before reading and discussing it.
- 20:17 → The students work together to discuss and annotate their passages, building on
- 26:26 → The teacher sits with different group of students and asks them to elaborate on
- 32:35 → The teacher notes to the students how focusing on one phrase has led
them to a whole discussion of meaning even though they have only read two
lines of the text → Shows students the importance of word choice and
- 41:10 → Before the teacher leaves a group, he gives them a question/topic to think
about. A student asks him, “What are you thinking about it, or what are you trying to lead
us towards?” The teacher responds that while he has his own perspective on the
passage, he’s not trying to lead the students to any specific interpretation. He only gives
his interpretation when a student asks for it and says they will build off his opinion when
- 1:01:02 → The teacher hands out notecards and has students reflect on the day’s class,
write down the first sentence of their QPA, and write down an appreciation for someone
in their group and a specific thing their group member did that helped them. →
- 1:04:15 → The teacher has students comment on each others QPAs using Google Docs
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/challenge-book-whats-your-perspective-uncut
b) 12:01 → The teacher gives students time to answer a question by writing silently.
Then the students share with their groups, and the teacher tells them not to read
c) 12:36 → The teacher asks for students to volunteer to discuss their answer, but
she specifically asks for students who have not spoken in class yet that day.
d) 26:18 → During small group discussions, one student struggles with taking any
meaning out of a children’s book, as she just sees it as a simple story about
dinosaurs. The teacher encourages her and her group to discuss by reminding
them that it is the reader that brings meaning to a book. She tells them to think
a) It is important to have students challenge books so that they can see the different
perspectives that different readers can have about the same work.
3) How will the children's book prepare students as they read their selected book?
a) 21:14 → The teacher uses the children’s book to model how to challenge a book
and how to think about a book from multiple perspectives. This helps the
students prepare for when they begin to challenge the books they are reading.
children’s books. This gives the students guided, collaborative practice in a way
that they wouldn’t be able to do with their self-selected books. It is also
Link: https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/realistic-fiction
a) 2:33 → The author says that she writes about these topics because they are
things that children may experience, and reading about these experiences will let
the children know that it is okay to feel sad, grieve, and feel empathy.
a) Realistic fiction can be integrated into social studies by having students read
realistic fictional stories that were written in or take place in the time periods they
are learning about. This will help students to see the people and events they are
learning about as more human and less distant, which in turn, will help them
3) How might you use the rich language of realistic fiction to build vocabulary?
a) Students will be able to read rich vocabulary through realistic fiction, and
teachers can encourage them to look into and use this vocabulary in their own