Reflection
Reflection
Reflection
Nate Martinez
Schmer
EDUC340
1 May 2014
Reflection
When I first began attending grade school, I was placed in the third
grade because my age corresponded with the age of a normal third grader.
However, my reading level and language arts skills were probably at a
kindergarten level. My first year of grade school was extremely difficult as I
had trouble comprehending much of the content in all of my subjects
because my reading skills were not up to par. It was not until I greatly
improved my reading and language art skills that I was able to move forward
with progress in school. All teachers are teachers of reading, I believe, is
one of the truest statements ever spoken, because if any teacher, no matter
the subject, wants to be successful at their job they must incorporate reading
in one form or another to better educate students enrolled in their course. I
have personally experienced that poor reading skills can lead to a large
amount of struggle in all subjects of school, while improvements in reading
can lead to improvements in nearly every subject in one way or another.
However in many subjects of schooling, incorporating reading means much
more than having students simply read and understand the content,
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or methods because the more ways something is learned, the more memory
pathways are built (3). If there are more memory pathways then the
students will be able to more readily remember that certain information.
These teachers also implement multiple stimulations to create better
memory, as well as enriched classrooms and curriculum. With these
strategies teachers have become memory enchanters rather than simply
information dispensers (5). Teachers in every subject should be trying to
interest their students in the lesson of the day, as well as using strategies to
help students to store and retrieve their information.
The class at Colorado State University and the classes at Preston
Middle School taught me too many things to count, and many of the
strategies and activities I learned can most definitely be applied to a history
classroom that I will be teaching in the future. In my class I will make sure
that students understand the basics of the content I am trying to teach
before then using activities to promote content literacy, spark interest in a
lesson, and help improve memory storage and retrieval. One such technique
that I could use in a history class, is the RAFT activity. The RAFT activity
,which stands for role, audience, format, and title, is basically a writing
assignment that lets the students choose what perspective they are writing
from, and who they are writing to. I could use the RAFT strategy in a history
classroom by allow students to pick a side of a conflict such as the cold war,
and address the other side in a format of their choosing, such as a text
message or letter. Another strategy that I could use in my history class is a
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matter. It has been my personal experience that classes that are more
focused around reading and comprehension strategies are far more effective
than classes that simply exchange information. If I have learned anything
this semester from the students and instructors of this class, it is that in
every subject incorporating literacy strategies and reading into the
curriculum benefits both the educator and the learners.
Works Cited
McKenna, Michael C., Robinson, Richard D. (2011). Building Prior
Knowledge. Pearson Custom Education EDUC340: Literacy & The learner.
(91-110). Boston, MA: Pearson Learning Solutions
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