Monday, September 22, 2008

How will your study influence your future practice?

Even though I am not teaching kindergarten this year I will still use some of the techniques that I used during my action research. The most important is that I will continue using partners. I learned that partners help my teaching in a number of ways:
  1. I have half as many people to call on (I have 10 groups instead of 20 students).
  2. I can listen is while they are whispering with partners so that I know which students in each pair are understanding and which students are not.
  3. Students are able to help each other.
  4. Shy students only have to whisper to one student instead of speaking up in front of the whole class.
  5. Students get to know each other. I change partners about once every six weeks so students get to know a number of different classmates throughout the year.

3 comments:

LothLorien Stewart said...

I agree with all of the reasons your listed for using partners and I like that you assign and then rotate partners during the year. That's an organized approach to partnering that I have not yet developed. What do you do when a pair is just not working well together? Do they stick it out? Or do you make changes as needed?

Sarahg18 said...

If I have students who are not working well together I encourage them to work through it. I also offer prizes at the end of the six-week period to partners who work well together and I remind students of this. I have not yet reassigned partners but I think that if students are really not getting along then I might change sooner than planned.

Shawna said...

I am intrigued by your pairing of students. No time is lost “finding” a partner and they grow familiar and comfortable with one person. What a nice way for students to engage in dialogue with each other -I think this is lost in many classrooms nowadays. I also like your six week rotation schedule. You are meeting students’ academic and social needs.