Scope magazine is either a great teaching tool or the downfall of modern education. I have seen this publication used in two ways: the first is to read, discuss, and use an article as a platform for a larger project that generally includes some type of writing- this works for me and is an effective use of the publication; the second is to read the story and then fill out the accompanying worksheets. Been there, done that, not effective!
This is where we get into Buehl's idea that "the activity and the context have a tremendous impact on classroom learning." How many of us sat in class as kids, read a text, and then answered a list of questions at the end of the selection? This girl right here did! I often think to myself, "But I went to school in the '80s and '90s and things were different." Guess what?...not true!
David Gourley Elementary School was where I began my education. Yep, I was a David Gourley Panda (I can even still sing you our panda song, and I'm old)- and I was a Panda that loved to read!!! I read every book in the school library including the entire 1982 edition of Encyclopedia Britanica! My mom loved to read, my grandma loved to read, my dad always had great books on the back of the toilet (that's how I was introduced to Shakespeare and learned how refrigeration works), and I don't remember having a teacher in Elementary school that didn't love to read and encouraged me to do so. However, in the '80s the biggest reason you read books was to write book reports. I wrote a LOT of book reports and liked doing it- it was my thing. But I had friends that often told me I had problems- book reports were dumb. Although the free $0.39 hamburger that you got from Hardees for reading 10 books was a great prize, this was definitely not the most effective way to get kids excited about reading. For me it was natural- I loved to read- but that all stopped when I was in 8th grade.
In 8th grade my English teacher also required x number of book reports each term- great! I was good at book reports. The trick was that we had to read from multiple genres. I was also ok with this, it wasn't my favorite thing, but it was manageable. I read the entire The Work and The Glory series and used it as just 1 of my book reports. I then read books from other genres and wrote reports accordingly. My teacher gave me an A-. The grade really wasn't the end of the world like I thought it was, but I had done everything that she asked me to do even though I was starting to get bored with the whole book report thing. I had actually read triple the number of required pages. She gave me the A- for the term because I was "reading entirely too much LDS literature." That's it...that was her excuse. It crushed my little 14 year old self and I wasn't the same reader again until my senior year.
This experience has made me understand how important it is to not just focus on context and content- it means nothing without some type of activity to really bring it home. If you don't enjoy what you are doing you are never going to love it. We are all that way. Take a student that has loved history his whole life and put him in a class where all he does is read his text book and answer the questions at the end of the section, and guess what? He may just learn to hate history! OR take a student who hates math- put her in a class that is engaging where she can discuss how math effects finances, hold onto shapes as she figures out their volume and area, and take her outside to teach her how to find the height of the flagpole using another student in the class, his shadow, and the shadow of the flagpole and guess what? She might just learn to love math!

I spent the next 3 years of my 9th-11th grade English classes reading some of the most incredible books ever written... The 3 pictured here are just a small selection of what we were given to read. BUT the English teachers I had for those 3 years were obviously not aware of the correlation between activity and context. These were straight forward 1- read the book, 2- write a paper, 3- take an exam years for me. I was bored. And because I was bored I remember very little about these wonderful books. The height of activity when it came to these great texts was when we "watched the movie" after we "read the book." I still remember that I quite liked Gary Sinese in The Grapes of Wrath, but I don't remember anything that happened in that classroom. As a matter of fact I'm not sure whether I read the book my sophomore or junior year, and I can't tell you the name of even one of my secondary school English teachers from 7th-11th grade.
So what did I read during these years that I remember? Math and Physics books. That's right- I was one of those nerds. I had these teachers my junior year that team taught AP Physics and Pre-Calculus together. We were on a block schedule where I had these classes for 3rd and 8th period so I went to the class every day. My teachers were Mr. Duncan and Mrs. Kuehl, and they were AWESOME!!! We did labs, we came up with scenarios, we built what we had read about, and we learned how it worked. That's right- I was completely engrossed by my math and physics books. And you know what- it was all about the activity and the context. Sure we wrote down our problems and did text work, but we didn't just read the problem and write the answer, we built it, moved it, tested it, broke it, built it again, and then wrote about it. I knew what a tangent to a curve was because of the force it created on the ball I was swinging on the end of a rope. Then I could do the math to show what was happening and explain what the math meant! It was engaging and I loved it.
Finally my senior year came. I was in AP Calculus and still had an amazing math teacher, Mr. Esplin, who kept me enthralled with what I was learning. But I also had Coach Cullimore. Cullie was my 400+ pound football coaching AP English teacher who had shoulder length red hair that grew everywhere but on top of his head, a messy and stubbly beard, and a large array of what I can only describe as large MC Hammer pants. He also made me love reading again. We had to read 18 books that year and I would be lying through my teeth if I told you that I read every one of them- I actually only read 2 or 3- I relied on cliff notes to get me through the others, but I learned a lot about those books. By that time I was disenchanted with reading novels and had been for some time. I had learned that I had a gift for writing and could "wing it" when it came to writing essays. But Cullie made books fun again. He would get in these crazy, engaging discussion with us about books like 1984- a book that I honestly didn't give a flying fart about- but he made me realize that I could still appreciate it and find a way to relate it to myself and society, and learn from it in the process. In that class I learned to love books again. The funniest thing about it was that we wrote a lot of papers- some people may even call them book reports- but they were better than that to me because I enjoyed every word. A lot of discussion and effort went into those reports and I loved that class!
This is Cullie wearing his party hat for his 60th birthday a few years ago- he is my high school hero! Without even knowing it he taught me how I want to teach...
I will teach English and Math when I grow up (hopefully next year)- or maybe I'll teach my kids without growing up. But I know what kid of teacher I want to be. I want my kids to want to come to class because they can't wait to see what we're going to do that day. I want them to feel like they learned something even if they tried their hardest to hate the subject that we're learning. I want my students to read and write, but I also want them to discuss, learn from each other, build things and ideas and take them apart again until they know how things work and understand what they're thinking. I don't want my students to write a blog 20 years from now and be the teacher whose name and class they couldn't even remember.


What a great picture of Cullie! My "Cullie" was "Ms. LeBaron," my AP European History teacher who also taught me how to teach. She understood the importance of activity and context as well. In her class, we did everything, from painting the Sistine Chapel to moving little plastic army guys across a life-size map of Europe that she had created. Yes, even GREAT books can fall flat when all you do is read the book and write an essay. What Ms. LeBaron taught me was that variety is important in teaching...maybe writing an essay is good sometimes, but it is better in the context of putting the character on trial, or holding a debate, and so forth. For instance, in "To Kill a Mockingbird," students could write an argumentative essay on whether Tom Robinson should be convicted from the perspective of different characters. Still an argumentative essay, but more interesting than just repeatedly writing essays with no voice and no audience other than the teacher.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Scope, are you familiar with the mathematical version of it? Looks like this month's version addresses the "math of minecraft." A few months ago it was Justin Bieber. Who knew mathematics could be Bieberized? Or Bieber could be mathematicized? Either way, another good way to make the "context" more engaging could be to incorporate popular culture into the classroom.
Here are a few good links:
http://math.scholastic.com/
http://www.amazon.com/Bring-Class-Unpacking-Practitioners-Bookshelf/dp/0807750611/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1422902327&sr=8-1&keywords=margaret+hagood+popular+culture