Observation Assignment 3
The Met School, Providence, RI
When
I arrived for my assignment the students were already in their room. Time was 12:30 and I believe that had just
returned from lunch. The room was very
warm. So you have a very warm room with
15 teenagers that have all just eaten which normally equals to someone falling
asleep. The students were sitting at a long oval conference table. The table is
actually several smaller tables put together so that all may sit together as
one group. The teacher who goes by the
name “Ed” shakes my hand and tells me to take the comfortable chair near the
computers. He explained that this was a
math class. He mentioned that the class
was 1.5 hours long and that he normally starts with algebra and then does
geometry.
The
students were sitting all with their Chrome books open working on problems
online. Fifteen students and three
adults myself included and this room was silent. Ed told them to finish up and to grab a
worksheet from the folder on the wall.
Again classroom is silent. The
principal walked in for an unannounced observation. No one skipped a beat. His TA asks a student where another student
was so I’m assuming this is their version of an attendance record. Ed begins his lesson. About ten (10) minutes in two (2) students
arrive late and take their seats. They’re
told nothing but seemed to move like robots taking the worksheet from the
folder on the wall and sitting down.
One
of the students that arrived late seems to have a distraction issue. Not only with herself but distracting other
students as well. Ed prevailed not
missing a beat and he dealt with the student in a quiet manner after the class
was dismissed. While Ed taught everyone
participated except for the one student with the distraction issue.
Towards
the end of the class session is the only time the class needed to be quieted
down so that Ed could discuss the homework.
He collected the worksheets completed in class before the students
left. At the end, I thanked him for
allowing me to sit in with this class and he explained to me that classroom
management is dealt with at the first week of class and normally not dealt with
again. He said “these kids know what’s
expected of them and know that if their end of the bargain isn’t kept they’re
gone.”
These
kids worked like a well-oiled machine.
Even though they were all sitting at one giant conference table they
were still sitting with their group. I
noticed on the wall there were team leader names and then other students under
those names. I asked Ed about that at
the end of the session and he said they all sit with their groups and help each
other out with homework, group work or if one of them is asked a question by a
teacher and don’t know the answer. They
encourage group effort. Teaches them how
to work with others which is important once they get out into the real world.


