Friday, December 8, 2017
Teaching Styles
- Pros: This style is acceptable for certain higher-education disciplines and auditorium settings with large groups of students. The pure lecture style is most suitable for subjects like history, which necessitate memorization of key facts, dates, names, etc.
- Cons: It’s a questionable model for teaching children because there is little or no interaction with the teacher. Plus it can get a little snooze-y. That’s why it’s a better approach for older, more mature students.
The Demonstrator, or coach style
- Pros: This style gives teachers opportunities to incorporate a variety of formats including lectures and multimedia presentations.
- Cons: Although it’s well-suited for teaching mathematics, music, physical education, arts and crafts, it is difficult to accommodate students’ individual needs in larger classrooms.
The Facilitator, or activity style
- Pros: This style trains students to ask questions and helps develop skills to find answers and solutions through exploration; it is ideal for teaching science and similar subjects.
- Cons: Challenges teacher to interact with students and prompt them toward discovery rather than lecturing facts and testing knowledge through memorization. So it’s a bit harder to measure success in tangible terms.
The Delegator, or group style
- Pros: Guided discovery and inquiry-based learning places the teacher in an observer role that inspires students by working in tandem toward common goals.
- Cons: Considered a modern style of teaching, it is sometimes criticized as eroding teacher authority. As a delegator, the teacher acts more as a consultant rather than the traditional authority figure.
The Hybrid, or blended style
- Pros: Inclusive! And enables teachers to tailor their styles to student needs and appropriate subject matter.
- Cons: Hybrid style runs the risk of trying to be too many things to all students, prompting teachers to spread themselves too thin and dilute learning.
What you need to know about your teaching style
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Experiences in HFC3M: Fired Up!
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Experiences in HFC3M: Iron Chef MLIS Dalian Via MLIS "Canadian Food Court"
The team from Tianjin will be arriving Friday and departing on Sunday as Satuday is the name event day. Over the weekend we are hoping to combine staff, students, and patrons of the restaurant in our audience as students race to finish their 1 hour of cooking using mystery ingredients.
The talk of future events has brought hopes to include not only Food and Nutrition students but other areas in which students are developing their cooking skills as well as academics. Furthermore there was hopes of cooperation with the public schools in Kaifaqu as well.
Winners are recognized and awarded a small prize that commemorates their abilities in the kitchen as an MLIS Student and esteemed cook. Nominations are made by the teachers of the classes and the judges panel will consist of a teacher from each campus as well as either the chef or manager of the restaurant that the event takes place in.
Experiences in HFC3M: How important are vocational studies?
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Post Thoughts and Goals as Foods Teacher In China
To any incoming or newcomer teachers, I would sincerely recommend ensuring yourself a spot in this department. There are countless opportunities to do many things in life but how often do you have a chance to inspire the love of food in students who may have never even boiled an egg before!?
When I began teaching the "Food and Nutrition 11/12" course (presently Culinary Arts 12), I was replacing a teacher who had left abruptly and shadowing another who was soon to be leaving. After shadowing and getting tread in the course, I was joined with an experienced teacher who had a love of eating, and was excited about this opportunity. This new teacher to the program was the replacement Department Head and then left the following year.
Fast forward to third year, I am the Department Head of Culinary Arts and Planning 10, teaching alongside an experienced foodie with a home flavour style of teaching. I have been blessed with opportunity and there have been obstacles, head butting in different areas but in the end, this experience has been one worth the extra work.
The course began as a hybrid between what is now Food Studies and Culinary Arts, but was originally a healthy balance of academic researching and practical student cooking skills. The course will always include health and safety as well as vocabulary enhancement (especially being in an ELL school). The goal I have though is to move the program into program that moves into Food Security, building not only cooking skills and a love cooking in students but a sense of purpose in cooking. I want to build a course in which the end goal is not just cooking, but "cooking to conjure change".
This newfound inspiration began when I was travelling through Southeast Asia and found myself mingling with impoverished locals who even though they had nothing, wanted to give you everything. Food is love, respect and essentially life. Sharing food is probably one of the biggest signs of respect since the beginning of time and has been proven as such through a famous idiom still commonly used to this day "Breaking bread with..."
This experience of living and adapting into cultures as an outsider builds a sense of awe and wander. Some people lose this, others don't understand it and over indulge; but I hope you can find the healthy balance and use it to change the world.
Saturday, April 15, 2017
Modified Philosophy of Ed. (2017)
Carmelo S.J. Bono’s
Statement to Philosophy of Education and Pedagogy (c. 2022)
To Whom it May Concern,
Being a
person of faith (Catholic), my values strongly surround the beatitudes and
principles that are reflected in the ten commandments. Law is law, no matter
where in the world one may be, and to say one does not know, is bliss. As a
teacher, I take a stand in the things I do and say to/for my students as an
advocate. The responsibility to act as a care provider during a field trip or
class time is not a responsibility I take lightly.
Students
are the future of the world; they are going to be the doctors who we go to when
sick; the policy makers who decide whether or not taxes go up or down; our
students are some of the most important people in society. I do not believe in
handing out answers, but building opportunities for learning through supporting
students through their signature strengths.
While
studying to become a teacher, a document “Growing Success” was considered the
most sacred educational document in Ontario as it offered guidance through a
crucial shift in assessment and evaluation of Ontario’s practices in education.
Students are not eligible to score a zero, unless the course ends and nothing
is handed in, but every student deserves an opportunity to succeed and surpass
their expectations of their abilities. Ontario asks teachers to focus their
practices on assessments for learning rather than of learning in order to
support growth mindsets in classrooms. Students are not expected to be held
back. If a student is “held back”, it means the teacher failed somewhere along
the line, or the supports are not in place at a school to offer the
accommodation needed to support that student’s learning difficulties. I spent so
many years teaching abroad with the British Columbia Curriculum because of the
adjustments it made on a provincial level to accommodate learners who come from
different cultures. I wanted to be apart of that change witness first hand how
far that change could branch out. The high stakes provincial exams were
disheartening to overseas students (to say the least) because of the disconnect
of cultural references students would be exposed to on an exam.
As a
classroom teacher I teach to success. Working with students to build writing
skills, critical thinking competencies and reading abilities are some the ways
I know I can help them achieve their goals in an academic English classroom. In
some cases though a teacher needs to be able to work with students by listening
to them and acknowledging their concerns. My strategies to enhance critical
thinking apply to active learning models such as cooking with students in
kitchens (using English as well as comprehension skills); participating in
school showcase events with materials that are specific to the engagement of
the student body in a related topic/subject area; as well as classroom communal
learning in say “murder mystery”.
A teacher
is not only a teacher though, I where many hats. I offer post-secondary education
advice to my students (as a portion of rapport), when discussing progress and
or goals of their learning; coaching advice on sports teams (Ball Hockey and
Volleyball most notably); as well as support in areas of interest such as comic
book clubs and charity fundraisers. I offer my evenings to school events while
trying to balance my family life. I sacrifice my body and spirit for the sake
of my student’s education continual participation in “Teacher Pi Day”,
“Movember’s Shave a Teacher Day” and “Three Time Champion of the Charity Show’s
Eating Contest” (That has been Jiaozi and Baozi-no hot dogs fortunately).
The Power of "Now" (Not the New Age Spiritual Stuff)
Integrating Aboriginal Culture into the Rest of ON
Why not learning about another culture, language or peoples? Really? I mean, without saying that its quite the same as when a teacher takes it upon themselves to become a member of a Catholic School Community or non-native french speaker integrates themselves into a French Immersion School Community. On some level I feel there is a moment where education needs ensure that teachers have the training they need to meet the needs of their students.
To be frank, I thought it was a mandatory course through my concurrent education year. I must say that it was extremely helpful with experiences after during teacher's college.
Students in public schools and Catholic schools of ON are living in a bubble when it comes to the foundations and history of Canada. The Social Studies curriculum begins preparing them for what is to come in the high school history education but by that time the students have already developed a conception that Canada is and always was a culture mosaic. To extent “Canada” itself has always been, but it was what came before that which is important.
The curriculum that is offered now begins to tie up the loose ends of the past educational curriculum but needs to offer more than a bit of knowledge to help students truly understand where Canada came from. The native people lived by a simple philosophy in life and once the Europeans arrived, things became complicated. A modern world mingling with a world that didn’t want to remove itself from what had always been. Not unlike today, there are many traditions that these cultures (we call the First Nations) have many beliefs that offer more than animism and theism in general. Their teachings offer a fundamental respect for all living things and that is what kept their cultures alive for the amount of time it has.
This fundamental belief of respect for one another (including the earth itself) is a crucial teaching that applies further than simple religion and language but also into the basic science elementary school students learn. Biodiversity, food chains, etc.
The reading of culture and tradition is poetry in itself. The Ojicree practice chanting that offers teachings and stories in many different respects. The students we teach in our schools are indeed learning English but why can’t they also be observing another language’s translated chants or scripts of dialogue, etc. This allows students to view a text from a different viewpoint. The teachings of cultures are applicable to language arts on most levels. Yes, they would most likely need to be translated but its not as if they are not already.
Overall, the idea of learning about indigenous studies is a matter of developing understanding of the world around us, and respect for not just fellow Canadians, but other humans. This is not just an English world, or a French World, is multi-cultural and just as we show willingness to work closely with one culture, we certainly should for all.