Project CSL
Project CSL
Spring 2012
warm and inviting to students, families, and substitute teachers. It has three levels, with almost 450 students. The classrooms are straight graded, meaning they do not have combined grade levels. The vivarium, or indoor nature enclosure, houses turtles, hermit crabs, fish, and is a definite highlight of our schools entryway. They have an old gym and a new gym with the old gym acting as a cafeteria and the home to our Before and After School Program, Central Cares. PE classes and most assemblies happen in our new gym. Our school has a library with a computer lab. In addition to PE and Library, children attend Music and Art classes weekly. Other activities include a Band and Orchestra, Student Safety Patrol, Student Council, and Cougar Chorale. Students at Coralville Central are expected to follow PBIS (Positive Behavior Support) expectations, which are taught at the beginning of the year and revisited throughout. Reach for the stars! Be the best you can be! is the school motto. I came across the opportunity to volunteer at this school through my Math Methods professor, at The University of Iowa. His classroom teacher contacted him about the need for a tutor to give him a little extra help in Math. It was the perfect opportunity. I was able to incorporate what I was learning in my Math Methods course in this experience. Sam* was at a math level of a 4th grader when I met him. His first experience in the public school setting was in fourth grade, and he has been working very hard to catch up in all subjects and aspects of school. My job was to meet with him for 30 minutes everyday and teach him Mathematics, that will help prepare him for Junior High.
We started out with learning how to subtract. He understood the basics about subtraction, but was beginning to learn how to subtract three and four digit numbers. Conveniently, the week I started with Sam*, was the same week I started learning how to teach subtraction in my math methods course. I was able to incorporate what I was learning in class to teaching Sam. After we mastered subtraction, we moved on to Multiplication. He is still currently trying to multiply any number of digits by 2 digits. It is a difficult concept to grasp when the numbers get so large. Again, it worked perfectly teaching him multiplication, because we were beginning to learn how to teach multiplication around the time we moved on to multiplication. First we learned our basic multiplication facts, and then we began to multiply any number of digits by one digit numbers. He has mastered that much so far. Now we bounce back and forth between fractions and multiplication. He gets frustrated and uninterested if we stay on one topic to long, so switching it up allows him to work better. Fractions were a whole new ball game for Sam*. He had no background knowledge of them so they have been the toughest concepts for me to teach. Using the bread model (shown left) my professor has taught me, gave me a jump-start in helping Sam start to understand fractions. The biggest issue we have is that he wants to know everything right now so he can be caught up with his class, and struggles with taking time to learn. He just wants to know how to do it and move on. Because of his urgency to understand, it would sometimes cause issues between us. He wanted to speed up. I wanted to slow down. Though we had our trials with learning to understand each other, we ended up being quite the perfect pair. As the days went on, he was more and more eager to get to work. 3
Service Learning:
Three reasons why we should incorporate service learning/ community service into our curriculum:
It gives students a sense of pride in helping others. Helping others gives one joy.
Because it will continuously teach students something new about people, about cooperation, about compassion, and about themselves. It allows students to get closer to their region and/or community. They will get first hand experience of what it is like.