Ms Lovely

"Connecting to people, places, and passions that matter to you - that's where the magic lies, and the real work to finding your purpose begins." - Dr. Jody Carrington

3 Week Practicum

I had such an amazing first practicum experience! The students were wonderful, and I will miss working with them. Hopefully, during my time as an Educational Assistant throughout the year, I will see them again. They were so sweet throughout my practicum. From leaving encouraging “Thank You” notes on the whiteboard after some of my lessons to the thoughtful card they gave me to say goodbye on my last day. I learned so much from each and every student. We have spoken about the importance of connection and relationships throughout our teaching program, but I truly got to see how powerful those relationships can be. By making an effort to get to know the Grade 2 students over the six weeks I was in their classroom, I felt the impact it had on my teaching and their learning. I saw so much change within certain students, even over such a brief period of time. It was certainly eye-opening to the power of relationships. I loved teaching Grade 2 and it is something I hope I have the opportunity to do again in the future!

The inside of the card is the best part! So many sweet little notes, but there are lots of photos that include student’s faces so I will just post the front. 🙂
I came back from my lunch and this note was on the board. So sweet!

Professional Development

On Friday January 28th I was able to attend two professional development courses. The first one, was by Kevin Lamoureux, who spoke on Truth and Reconciliation. It was very beneficial to hear his insight on what reconciliation should look like for teachers in schools now and going forward. Mr.Lamoureux stated, “Reconciliation in its truest form comes down to safety for all children in schools – not only physically, but safety of identity and grief. We need to recognize that historically schools haven’t always been safe for children. What is essential is for every child to know that there is someone in the building who is absolutely crazy about them. Loving them and providing an opportunity for them to flourish. Reading, writing, and arithmetic are not the basics.”

I found this extremely helpful. As someone who will be teaching in an area that has a significant Indigenous population, I was unsure of what exactly was expected of me. I want to be a part of the solution and I need to be aware of what I need to do to accomplish that. Lamoureux’s workshop made me stop and think: How do I make sure that from the day kids step into my classroom they see themselves as someone who is capable of success? It wasn’t until I watched the second workshop put on by Katie Price that I had a clearer idea of how to do that. What really stuck with me from her workshop with building positive assessment culture in your classroom. To begin, there needs to be a conversation around assessment. A few examples of establishing a positive culture around assessment include: helping students set up authentic and meaningful goals, framing assessment in a way that is not intimidating for students but encourages growth and the language we are using surrounding assessment.

Life-Writing

Life-Writing as Transformative Praxis

My name is Brenna Lovely, and I am a White-settler Canadian female, born and raised in Chilliwack, B.C. I spent twenty-six years living, working, and attending school on the traditional, ancestral land of the StĂł:lĹŤ Coast Salish peoples. During my education journey in Chilliwack, my only experience learning anything to do with Indigenous culture was going to the First Nations Support Room and making dreamcatchers in grade one. This is the only example of any Indigenous teaching I can remember, even though a significant population of First Nations students attended the school and it was on traditional StĂł:lĹŤ territory.

My parents both grew up poor. They both had the mindset that if you worked hard and got an education, you would be successful. Thus, the importance of education was preached to me from an early age. My parents were very invested in my education from the very start. Before I attended kindergarten, my mom would spend every night after dinner teaching me how to read. I was reading chapter books by the time I entered kindergarten. It was important to her that I wouldn’t struggle, so she made sure I had a head start before entering the public education system. Because of my early ability to read, kindergarten was very easy (and boring) for me. In addition to teaching me how to read, she also taught me how to do addition and subtraction. We would practice doing flashcards together every night. Her dedication to helping me practice almost every day gave me a solid foundation, which made school much easier for me than it was for many of the other students who were learning many of these concepts for the first time.

Because of my privilege, all school was to me was a stepping stone. I grew up in an upper-middle-class family. We had a beautiful home in a quiet suburban neighbourhood. I had two loving parents who had good-paying jobs. We had healthy home-cooked meals every night and were in many extracurricular activities. When it came to school, I thought that I just had to show up, do the work to the best of my ability, and hang out with my friends. As I got older, I was utterly wrapped up in myself because every need of mine was met, so all I had to focus on were the things I wanted to do. I had the luxury to do that.

There was a lot of pressure on me to get straight A’s. I found I studied just to complete a test rather than absorb the material into a genuine understanding of the topic. I believed that we were at school only to learn the basics – English, math, social studies, and science. When I reflect on my public education experience, it consisted of standardized tests, letter grades, and pressure to be an “athlete.” I do value the education that I received, although I wish it could have been more dynamic. It was so heavily focused on academics. I wish it had been more holistic, experiential, and relational. I wish I had learned more practical life skills and interpersonal skills. That wasn’t my experience, but it can be for my students.

I moved from Chilliwack to Terrace in January 2020 and began working as an Education Assistant in School District 82. What I thought I knew about education and my lens were expanded entirely when I started working up North. It has been an eye-opening experience based on what school was to me as someone who lived a life of immense privilege. I saw that education is no longer about making perfect grades or being some star athlete. It is about getting kids into the building where they are safe, feeding them (sometimes breakfast and lunch), cleaning their clothes if needed and dealing with an overwhelming amount of social-emotional learning. It is about meeting kids where they are, figuring out what they need first, in order to even begin starting to learn about math, literacy or new skills. I have had a paradigm shift in what I thought education looked like, what being an educator is, and the expectations of students. I realize that school isn’t about getting perfect grades – it’s about genuine learning.

Working in this place, I can see that if I worked in such a setting and expected the things from my students that were expected of me during my schooling, that both they and I would be in for a lot of unmet expectations and disappointment. I want my students to achieve their greatest potential academically. Still, I have come to see that my experience is unrealistic for many people and an unhealthy way of viewing school and education. Instead, I see the value of beginning with a foundation of holistic learning, based on the First People’s Principles of Learning. Teaching students first and foremost to be good people, to treat others with respect, and to be leaders who do the right thing even when no one else is around. With such a foundation put in place, learning in other areas can then occur in a more realistic, targeted, and meaningful way than the “learning for the sake of learning” approach that I took with my education. I would rather graduate a class of “good people” who try their best but struggle academically than a group who can ace every test and treat those around them with disrespect. Teach them to be good people, work as hard as possible on literacy and numeracy. If the popsicle-stick replica of a Hudson Bay Company Fort never gets made because the class spends time learning about how to be a decent person, that’s a sacrifice I’m willing to make.

During my entire educational experience, I felt as though I needed to fit in a box. If I made good grades, was a good girl, and participated in some sport, I was doing things “right.” There was no room to explore my own identity and decide who I was and what was important to me. Of course, I was a child and therefore didn’t have a ton of independence, but I had no encouragement to find out what was unique about myself and what made me special. The First Peoples Principles of Learning state that “learning requires exploration of one’s identity” and “it involves patience and time” (n,d). I wish I had been aware of this as a child and think is crucial for our future students. Encouraging them to think about what sets them apart, what they love about themselves that may be different from others and showing them that their uniqueness is valued.

References
FNESC. (n.d). First Peoples Principles of Learning. [Poster]
Retrieved from http://www.fnesc.ca/first-peoples-principles-of-learning/

Bulletin Boards

I am really proud of this birthday bulletin board that I made for a grade four class. I love bees and think it is valuable to teach students about them.

Role of Assessment in Elementary Education

The role of assessment in elementary education has many roles. First, it is used to identify what students know and how much they know. Assessment is used to identify areas that students are struggling with. Teachers can analyze the data they collect from evaluations and see if there is a trend in student deficits in learning. This may lead them to identify an area that they didn’t teach very well and need to go back and re-teach or use a different approach to explain it in the future. Assessment shows teachers and students what students can do and how well they can do it. In some cases, it can diagnose learning disabilities. 

Formative assessment can be instrumental in elementary education because it gives teachers a timely response to how students are doing with specific material. Formative assessment can also be used to show teachers how students feel about their work. For example, in a math class, a teacher can ask for a hand signal to check in with student comprehension at that moment. It allows students to check in with their understanding and enables the teacher insight into what they may need to explain for more clarity. Overall, assessment is used to improve student learning. 

About Your Blog Posts

Blog posts are intended to be formative and used as a means for self-reflection.

Most of the resources in this e-portfolio are arranged in [Pages].  This entry is a [Post]. So DO NOT “edit” the page. Add a “new” post instead.

Some of the key differences between posts and pages are:

  • Posts are timely content part of a series of posts in a blog. Pages are static documents which are not tied to the blog’s reverse chronological order of content
  • Pages can be hierarchical, which means a page can have sub pages, for example a parent page titled “About us” can have a sub-page called “Our history”. On the other hand posts are not hierarchical.
  • By default posts in WordPress can be sorted into taxonomies Categories and Tags. Pages do not have categories or tags
  • WordPress posts are displayed in RSS feeds while Pages are excluded from feeds.

Posts are a great way to record short reflections on a particular topic.  When you are ready to start adding posts to your ePortfolio delete this post and add your own.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén