STUDENT TEACHING SEMINAR |
A seminar through which students exchange information, share reflections, and document observations and activities prior to and during student teaching. Note: This is a four-week in-class course taken during the same semester as, but prior to, student teaching.
WARNING: Associated with this course is one or more NSTA-mandated summative performance assessments linked with Professional Studies' Exit from Student Teaching gateway. Failure to adequately demonstrate the required competencies in a timely fashion will result in the teacher candidate being ineligible for graduation. . Required LiveText submissions (weekly reflections) must be completed and uploaded by the specified dates.
Instructor:
Name: Ken Wester, Coordinator
Physics Teacher Education Program
Office Location: Moulton Hall, Room 322
Office Hours: drop in or by appointment
Telephones: (309) 438-2957 (office); 309-660-9902 (c)
e-mail address: kwester@phy.ilstu.edu
The class will meet once weekly for one-hour seminars immediately following PHY 312 on Monday evenings for the first four weeks of spring semester.During this four-week period students will perform pre-student teaching clinical experiences at their future student teaching sites, and these experiences will be discussed in seminar.
Pre-professional clinical experiences give the teacher candidate a chance to grasp more fully the educational dilemmas and opportunities presented by the educational process. Students will bring experiences and reflections to bear in a seminar as they exchange information derived from clinical observations and teaching activities made at their student teaching sites prior to and during the student teaching practicum. This seminar will culminate in the creation of a student teaching clinical experiences documentation folder and a student teaching portfolio. The heart of the student teaching portfolio will be based primarily upon NSTA Science Teaching Standards and Teacher Education's conceptual framework, Realizing the Democratic Ideal.
This course will have a learning environment that is student centered, knowledge centered, assessment centered, and community centered. This course will be student centered to the extent that the teacher builds on knowledge students bring to the learning situations. This course will be knowledge centered to the extent that the teacher helps students develop an organized understanding of important concepts in the physics teaching discipline. This course will be assessment centered to the extent that the teacher makes students' thinking visible so that ideas can be presented and verified. This course will be community centered to the extent that the teacher establishes classroom norms that learning with understanding is valued and students feel free to explore what they do not understand.
In this course, as in other Physics Teacher Education courses, emphasis will be placed on an Assessment-for-Learning policy. That is, assessments of student performance will be used not only to assign grades, but also to improve student performance. Unsatisfactory work will be returned to the student for improvement. A student's score can be improved following appropriate revision and resubmission of "unsatisfactory" course projects, so long as all deadlines are met.
IPTS STANDARD | Assessment |
1C, 1K,4M, 5M, 8E | 353 C |
1F | 353 F |
8A. 8E | 353 A |
9C | 353 B |
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Dates: |
Topic |
Assignment / Follow-up Activity |
1/11 Tues | Introduction and Orientation; Complete STT Info Sheet; Introduction to Practical Pointers for Teaching |
Start pre-STT experiences #1, # 5, #9, #13, #17, and #21; begin work on determining needs and identifying help (steps 2 and 3 of Social Context Project); read Implementing inquiry-based instruction in the secondary science classroom: A model for solving the improvement-of-practice problem; start work on Safety Plan; read RTOP article and review assessment instrument. |
Discussion of RTOP article and assessment instrument; Situations #1 - #6 and Justifications #1 - #3; What's missing from _d_c_t_ _ n? PowerPoint; School Libraries - invited talk by Milner librarian and former physics teacher Julie Murphy (10:45-11:15 a.m. Friday) |
Start pre-STT experiences # 2, #6, # 10, #14, #18, and #22; continue work on determining needs and identifying help (steps 2 and 3 of Social Context Project); review Minimizing resistance to inquiry-oriented science instruction: The importance of climate setting; conduct RTOP analysis as appropriate; read and act on (as necessary) Practical Pointers for Teaching. | |
Situations #7 - #12 and Justifications #4 - #6; Recruiting the Next Generation of High School Physics Teachers; Motivating Students |
Start pre-STT experiences # 3, #7, # 11, #15, and #19; continue work on determining needs and identifying help (steps 2 and 3 of Social Context Project); review A Framework for Teaching the Nature of Science; conduct RTOP analysis as appropriate. | |
Situations #13 - #18 and Justifications #7 - #9; Professional Development; ISBE PowerPoint: Applying for your Teaching Certificate (can complete process only after graduation) |
Start pre-STT experiences # 4, #8, # 12, #16, and #20; conclude work on determining needs and identifying help (steps 2 and 3 of Social Context Project); conduct RTOP analysis as appropriate. | |
Situations #19 - #24 and Justifications #10 - #12; Ethics for Student Teachers; Orientation to Student Teaching - STT 399.72 |
Finish and turn in all observations and reports prior to the beginning of student teaching; failure to do so will result in the student being barred from the teaching practicum; complete and turn in RTOP analysis. | |
Student teaching begins; all in-class assignments must now be turned in. | ||
End Week 1 | Some time during or shortly after student teaching be certain to take and pass the ICTS Assessment of Professional Teaching test. The test is quite broad, and includes questions about "foundations, characteristics, and assessment; planning and delivering instruction; managing the learning environment; collaboration, communication, and professionalism; language arts; and educational technology." An online test framework is available to help you prepare. | Weekly Reflection #1 Due |
End Week 2 | Weekly Reflection #2 Due | |
End Week 3 | Weekly Reflection #3 Due | |
End Week4 | Weekly Reflection #4 Due; complete midterm self-assessment prior to third site visit by Supervisor | |
End Week 5 | Weekly Reflection #5 Due | |
No spring break reflection due (date approximate) | ||
End Week 6 | Weekly Reflection #6 Due | |
End Week 7 | Working breakfast meeting, 10:00 a.m., Moulton 307-B | Weekly Reflection #7 Due |
End Week 8 | Conduct STT Course Evaluation as appropriate; conduct NOSLiT and ScInqLiT post-tests in classes as appropriate. | Weekly Reflection #8 Due; complete final self-assessment prior to fifth site visit by Supervisor |
End Week 9 | Warning: All 3 required LiveText submissions must be online seven days prior to the start of finals week. | Weekly Reflection #9 Due; |
End Week 10 | Student teaching ends | Weekly Reflection #10 Due |
Finals week; Make-up week for any missed STT days (50 required). | Summary Reflection Due |
353A: SOCIAL CONTEXT DOCUMENTATION FOLDER (40% of course grade) - Note: This item must be completed prior to the start of student teaching.
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353B: SAFETY PLAN (15% of course grade) - Note: This item must be completed prior to the start of student teaching.
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353C: CPS Lesson 0% of course grade) The student will make a one-day classroom observation of the class the lesson will be presented. The date will be established and the class will go as a whole. Reflections of the observations will be submitted not more than one week after observations.
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353D: TEACHING ANALYSIS USING RTOP (5% of course grade) - Note: This item must be completed prior to the start of student teaching.
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353E: edTPA Teacher Candidate Information Release From (0% of course grade) - Note: This item must be completed prior to the start of student teaching
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353F: WEEKLY AND SUMMARY REFLECTIONS (40% of course grade)
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353H: CLASS PARTICIPATION (0% of course grade)
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All required Student Tasks/Assignments MUST be completed and/or turned in by the Friday prior to student teaching. There will be no exceptions to this rule without a substantial grade penalty. In the advent that work is not completed and submitted in final form by the due date, the course grade will be lowered by one full letter grade.
The final course grade will be determined on the basis of a
composite score according to the following schedule:
A > 90% |
82% < B < 90% |
74% < C < 82% |
66% < D < 74% |
F < 66% |
Students are expected to be honest in all academic work. A student's name on any in academic exercise shall be regarded as assurance that the work is the result of the student's own thought and study. Offenses involving academic dishonesty include, but are not limited to the following: cheating, computer dishonesty, plagiarism, grade falsification, and collusion. For more information about this important topic, visit the Student Dispute Resolution Web Site.
SAAMEE: A Model for Academic Success
Caution: Keep in mind as you progress toward student teaching that as a student teacher your students will have an interest in finding out about you. This will lead them to Internet searches. Don't put anything on a web page, uTube, Facebook, MySpace, etc., that you wouldn't want students, parents, teachers or administrators to see.
Disposition Concerns: The College of Education, in an effort to ensure top quality graduates, provides faculty members and interested others with the opportunity to provide input into the teacher preparation process. One of these inputs is in the area of disposition concerns. Education faculty, in particular, are encouraged to bring to attention of CECP any significant problems associated with the following major areas. If three or more filed dispositions concerns have not been resolved, the teacher candidate will be blocked from advancing in Professional Studies.
To be admitted to student teaching, every teacher candidate must demonstrate each of the following competencies at a B level or above: | Course Objectives |
Correlated Assessment |
(1) demonstrate in writing and prior to student teaching a deep knowledge of the public school setting which has been developed through 20 interviews with teachers as well as conferral, referral, and administrative personnel, and by working directly with students in at least 5 different settings. | 353A |
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(2) develop a safety plan that reflects the realities of the student teaching environment. | NSTA # 8 - Environment and Safety | 353B |
(3) access and use resource information to improve teaching and learning in a diverse setting through the creation of a lesson plan that addresses, at least in part, pertinent conceptual framework elements (#1, #4, and #6) and makes the subject matter and learning experiences meaningful to a diverse population of students; complete, teach, and submit in a timely fashion a meaningful multicultural/diversity lesson plan via LiveText. | ISU Professional Studies Requirement NSTA # 2 - Nature of Science NSTA # 4 - Issues NSTA # 6 - Curriculum NSTA # 7 - Science in the Community |
353C |
(4) analyze the cooperating teacher's classroom practice over the course of at least three days using the Reformed Teaching Observation Protocol to see how well it aligns with the science teaching reform movement. | 353D |
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(5) document and submit via LiveText the fact that (s)he teaches within the framework of Realizing the Democratic Ideal | ISU Professional Studies PBA Requirement | 353E |
(6) complete in a professional and timely fashion weekly clock hour reports and 10 weekly reflections and, at the conclusion of student teaching, an 11th "summary reflection." | 353F |
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(7) complete and submit via LiveText in timely and professional fashion a final reflective essay | 353G |
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(8) demonstrate an ability to include students with exceptionalities. | ISBE | 353H |
(9) participate fully in class discussions (including Situations and Justifications of the Day) and activities. | 353I |