I had a teacher once tell me that
when I teach to give feedback in a positive-negative-positive fashion. Well I
had a friend describe his IM swim event as an Oreo cookie with the cookies
(which are the butterfly and free style) being the solid/pristine strokes and
the gooey middle (which are the back and breast) as the messy/inconsistent
strokes. I love this analogy that the start and finish should be solid positive
things and the gooey middle is the part that needs work and want to apply it to
my feedback practices. Thus I will tackle responding to this assignment using
the “Oreo cookie method”.
The first chocolate cookie of this
edTPA is that it makes writing the TPA very structured. I especially like the
extra questions that could be addressed under each category. The titles in each
category are bold and direct which makes it easy to look at and find what you
are looking for.
Now I will discuss the gooey part
of the cookie that either needs work or I do not understand. I understand the
need for a lesson plan but this one is so detailed that it seems ridiculous. If
you only teach the lesson once then this would be somewhat okay, but if you
teach this lesson more than one period everything could change by the end of
the day. My cooperating Teacher uses sticky notes in her calendar because
NOTHING is ever set in a middle school classroom, you have to be flexible. Anyone
that has ever been in a classroom knows that the first time you teach something
you learn would you would do differently and the next class period you adjust.
This happens even if it isn’t the first time you teach the lesson, different
class periods have different dynamics that could make how you teach the lesson
significantly different. All those details are just busy work, I propose a
lesson plan with bullet points or a universal check list so teachers can look
at their lesson and make sure it has everything it needs. The teacher needs to
be flexible in order to meet the students’ needs and thus a detailed TPA is not
so flexible. One thing I don’t understand is that this says it is a lesson plan
but is not used in any of the schools I have been too/observed in. So why are we doing it specifically? Another
confusing thing about the edTPA is how repetitive it is. Sure, there are none
of the same exact questions but they are reworded in disguise (which isn’t a
very good disguise because I found Waldo). For example, “how will students
demonstrate this? Describe observable and measurable actions” and “what type of
assessment will you use to measure student learning” and “describe how you will
gather information and data from students that inform you of their knowledge of
the learning targets” which are all from different categories but are asking
how will you assess them.
Finishing the cookie on a good note is the fact
that it makes teachers responsible for aligning the lesson with objectives. In
some classes I think why am I doing this and making the teachers review their
EARL’s and targets/goals helps (or it should) keep the “busy work” at bay.
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