The road test is daunting, even for someone who is used to taking apart computers! I was not able to see the entire test, but from what I heard, the students must've had a very full thirty minutes. I believe it is a good idea to have the students put together their dream computer and present it in class. Even though some incorrectly identified some parts in some roles (optical drives for example), it gets the students thinking outside of the standardized text book, and into more of a space where they would feel more comfortable (I want to make a gaming rig, I want to use it for animation, etc.)
I'm still unsure of how much time the students get to physically manipulate the computer materials in preparation for their road test. I would imagine that the time would have to be great given the thoroughness of the test.
Additionally, it was good to get to know the students a little better, and to be able to answer some of the questions that they had. Even if their practical jokes need some work, they're a great group of students to work with.
It'll be nice to observe different sessions, but in particular during this lull between training weeks...it'll be good to train on many of the other things ITA teaches, and not just how to put together a computer.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Reflection - Training Session
One thing I notice is that the new hires, myself included, seem to be different in relation to the current ITA staff. For the most part, the workers for ITA are undergraduates, whereas we are most definitely not. I don't say this as a detriment, but I do think it'll be interesting given our backgrounds (drama performance/history, french lit, media studies/ed tech) how we fit into the current ITA dynamic. I must also insist that I don't think undergrads or grads of the ITA as instructors is a bad thing, I just am merely curious.
The training sessions are good for us to get an idea as to what the ITA is about. What I think would be good in the future is to have the training session scheduled in between the class, that way we could observe for a hour or two, then come back and to reconcile what we've seen with what we're being told.
Perhaps also, a required amount of observation hours would make the training experience that much more beneficial for us trainees. Not sure if this is the best, but it would be nice to have a guideline as to how many hours may equal an ITA trainee getting a good idea as to how a class is made up and how to conduct oneself in the session.
The training sessions are good for us to get an idea as to what the ITA is about. What I think would be good in the future is to have the training session scheduled in between the class, that way we could observe for a hour or two, then come back and to reconcile what we've seen with what we're being told.
Perhaps also, a required amount of observation hours would make the training experience that much more beneficial for us trainees. Not sure if this is the best, but it would be nice to have a guideline as to how many hours may equal an ITA trainee getting a good idea as to how a class is made up and how to conduct oneself in the session.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Hey look at that - first full session
I think it's good to have the ITA trainees attend hour periods with which to observe the students, I do. However, I think that a lot of what we may miss in those hour sessions is largely contextual, and therefore for us to gain a better understanding of the ITA and how their classes work becomes somewhat dependent on being able to observe the full class time.
On Tuesday, I had my chance to sit in on a class for the entire period. First, it was good to get an idea of the class dynamic, who seemed to be the ones who would be the most talkative, the most social, the less social, etc. How the class reacted to one another was great, they all appeared to get along for the most part, even the quiet ones were afforded their separate time from the group without the threat of intimidation for doing such. There were a few students I could pick out which were genuinely interested in the instruction material, and a few that seemed to be simply going through the motions.
Not sure whaty ou can do about those students just yet, the only thing I can think of is personalizing the material a little bit more "why does this matter?" "well you see here..." but am not even sure if you can do it within the time period. There appears to be so much compacted into the lesson that there is little time for synthesis of the material or breathing room. Not sure if that is the standard or not, but I will definitely have to take a look at the lesson plan, develop one of my own and start to figure out where to go with everything.
At one point, AJ encouraged me to go and talk to the students, as I was surprisingly feeling a little out of place with the students and the teaching staff, probably because most of them graduated from the program, and until last week I had no idea who most of these people were, if any.
Fact: Students do not bite or maim.
Setting up a LAN network in the classroom provided me the opportunity to get into contact with the students and at the very least have some surface-type discourse for both of us to become at least familiar to one another. I will definitely feel more comfortable the next time I go in there to give a lesson...I have no idea when that will be. Hopefully sooner than later.
On Tuesday, I had my chance to sit in on a class for the entire period. First, it was good to get an idea of the class dynamic, who seemed to be the ones who would be the most talkative, the most social, the less social, etc. How the class reacted to one another was great, they all appeared to get along for the most part, even the quiet ones were afforded their separate time from the group without the threat of intimidation for doing such. There were a few students I could pick out which were genuinely interested in the instruction material, and a few that seemed to be simply going through the motions.
Not sure whaty ou can do about those students just yet, the only thing I can think of is personalizing the material a little bit more "why does this matter?" "well you see here..." but am not even sure if you can do it within the time period. There appears to be so much compacted into the lesson that there is little time for synthesis of the material or breathing room. Not sure if that is the standard or not, but I will definitely have to take a look at the lesson plan, develop one of my own and start to figure out where to go with everything.
At one point, AJ encouraged me to go and talk to the students, as I was surprisingly feeling a little out of place with the students and the teaching staff, probably because most of them graduated from the program, and until last week I had no idea who most of these people were, if any.
Fact: Students do not bite or maim.
Setting up a LAN network in the classroom provided me the opportunity to get into contact with the students and at the very least have some surface-type discourse for both of us to become at least familiar to one another. I will definitely feel more comfortable the next time I go in there to give a lesson...I have no idea when that will be. Hopefully sooner than later.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Second Training Session - Observations
The second training session was definitely a lot more hectic than the first session. Seemed like there was way more scheduled and that there will definitely be an uptake in the amount of learning and work that will need to be done before my first teaching session. Some things I took away.
- Novell is a pain.
- Powerpoints have to be far more scaled back. Although my visual style in presentations is minimalist in nature, the content, especially for a high school audience will have to be as well.
- I should train on as many things as humanly possible. As I have iterated before in the previous posts, there is a lot that I feel like I do not know, and a lot that I will most certainly need to know if I'm going to be good at my job. Training in Flash, Illustrator, Linux is a great plus, especially since I wanted to learn these apps anyways.
Right now, I'm trying to figure out how my teaching styles will change from my work with ITA and the game design course for CAP. I have a feeling that this Summer I'll be doing more of the learning than my students.
- Novell is a pain.
- Powerpoints have to be far more scaled back. Although my visual style in presentations is minimalist in nature, the content, especially for a high school audience will have to be as well.
- I should train on as many things as humanly possible. As I have iterated before in the previous posts, there is a lot that I feel like I do not know, and a lot that I will most certainly need to know if I'm going to be good at my job. Training in Flash, Illustrator, Linux is a great plus, especially since I wanted to learn these apps anyways.
Right now, I'm trying to figure out how my teaching styles will change from my work with ITA and the game design course for CAP. I have a feeling that this Summer I'll be doing more of the learning than my students.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
First Class Thoughts
2:03 - Think I just walked into the middle of the lesson. Actually, I know I walked into the middle of the lesson. From what I gather, it's about Linux, which I used once.
2:05 - Are these students part of the four year program? Are they only here for the Summer session? I wonder because they're incredibly focused and on task.
2:09 - I think it would have been better to observe the entire class rather than just the hour of time.
2:12 - It's a good setup. Looks like Felipe is leading the class with Chou and AJ providing assistance? I may be wrong on this, but I'm working with the fact that Felipe is sitting at the front facing everyone.
2:15 - AJ talks about GUI in Linux. I'm a little unclear about the lesson, but it's probably because I'm the person in the class who knows the least about Linux.
2:18 - I need to learn Linux.
2:19 - I like the open forum for discussion. The students seem genuinely interested and are asking questions.
2:21 - Are they quizzed on any of this?
2:23 - Went to break, gives me an opportunity to sign up for more classes, I have a feeling I'm going to need it.
2:37 - Break ends, talking about using Windows XP "ubuntu will always be free, windows will never be free"
2:44 - I'm guessing installing XP is leading up to them making comparisons between the two operating systems. I would like to try Linux sometime but it's very angry at games.....and well, I'm a gamer.
2:46 - Lots of the students seem to be comically broken up over deleting Ubuntu, it's hilarious.
2:52 - Got some answers to the questions I had compliments of AJ. These students are actually part of the four year program, the Summer courses are part of the deal. In addition to these classes, these students also have internships. In the end if they go through all of this, they get a free scholarship to Madison. Crazy.
2:54 - The long installation time for XP allows for discussion with the students over the differences they have so far observed. "loads longer" "looks intimidating" "not free" "no preview option"
2:57 - Someone has to re-install XP all over again. Yikes!
2:58 - In general, the students are very attentive. I would definitely like to sit in on the computer assembly demo.
2:05 - Are these students part of the four year program? Are they only here for the Summer session? I wonder because they're incredibly focused and on task.
2:09 - I think it would have been better to observe the entire class rather than just the hour of time.
2:12 - It's a good setup. Looks like Felipe is leading the class with Chou and AJ providing assistance? I may be wrong on this, but I'm working with the fact that Felipe is sitting at the front facing everyone.
2:15 - AJ talks about GUI in Linux. I'm a little unclear about the lesson, but it's probably because I'm the person in the class who knows the least about Linux.
2:18 - I need to learn Linux.
2:19 - I like the open forum for discussion. The students seem genuinely interested and are asking questions.
2:21 - Are they quizzed on any of this?
2:23 - Went to break, gives me an opportunity to sign up for more classes, I have a feeling I'm going to need it.
2:37 - Break ends, talking about using Windows XP "ubuntu will always be free, windows will never be free"
2:44 - I'm guessing installing XP is leading up to them making comparisons between the two operating systems. I would like to try Linux sometime but it's very angry at games.....and well, I'm a gamer.
2:46 - Lots of the students seem to be comically broken up over deleting Ubuntu, it's hilarious.
2:52 - Got some answers to the questions I had compliments of AJ. These students are actually part of the four year program, the Summer courses are part of the deal. In addition to these classes, these students also have internships. In the end if they go through all of this, they get a free scholarship to Madison. Crazy.
2:54 - The long installation time for XP allows for discussion with the students over the differences they have so far observed. "loads longer" "looks intimidating" "not free" "no preview option"
2:57 - Someone has to re-install XP all over again. Yikes!
2:58 - In general, the students are very attentive. I would definitely like to sit in on the computer assembly demo.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Reflections of a Training Session
So...what I'm excited about..
Never heard much about the ITA program until recently. I did not realize that it's a four-year program for high schoolers with the promise of a full ride once they've completed their requirements. It will be fantastic to be a part of such an ambitious and rewarding process, but from the little experience I have teaching...I know it'll be fantastic and exhausting at the same time.
My concerns are primarily in designing an adequate enough lesson plan so that the students will remain engaged during the entire class period. If anything, I'll refer to a lot of the previous literature the ITA possesses on the topic, hopefully being able to add some of my own insight where needed.
Another plus, training on software which will be important to the ITA will be paid. Graduate students need to eat too.
Never heard much about the ITA program until recently. I did not realize that it's a four-year program for high schoolers with the promise of a full ride once they've completed their requirements. It will be fantastic to be a part of such an ambitious and rewarding process, but from the little experience I have teaching...I know it'll be fantastic and exhausting at the same time.
My concerns are primarily in designing an adequate enough lesson plan so that the students will remain engaged during the entire class period. If anything, I'll refer to a lot of the previous literature the ITA possesses on the topic, hopefully being able to add some of my own insight where needed.
Another plus, training on software which will be important to the ITA will be paid. Graduate students need to eat too.
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