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Steve:
Just completed my
third full week teaching English at Al Ittihad.
Presently I have three fifty-five minute sections, each meeting seven
times a week for a total of 21 classes.
In actuality, the periods are more like fifty-minutes because though a
bell klangs to end the period, there is nothing to usher in the new class so
students wander in at all times intermittently those first fifteen minutes. This lack of punctuality proved at first
unsettling for a former German teacher. But
I’m beginning to understand how flexibility in this culture is key, and might
work to my advantage. Each of my three
weeks we have had a different schedule.
The first week, school dismissed at 2:45; the second week at 2:30; last
week at 2:10. By December I figure there
will not be a need for me to report.
Each morning starts with
an all-school assembly in the courtyard.
Students, teachers, and administration stand at attention to an old
recording of the strident UAE national anthem, a message from the Qur’an, and
pithy educational jeremiads. Reminiscent
of Boy Scout camp at Osceola, MO circa the Bicentennial.
Attached is a video from a visiting band,
which used bagpipes and Arabic flutes: Healthy parent
brag: daughter Etienne (and former
Central Eagle band member) is a better twiller than the guy with the miter.
At this point, I have
learned about 95% of the students’ names.
No small feat here as one may have a class with four Ahmeds and three
Abullahs. I do have a Buddy
Holly-bespectacled student who shares his name with the heavyweight-boxing champ
formerly known as Cassius Clay. No
Abdul-Jabbars, however, nor Bobby Moores.
Presently I’m working on second names to distinguish Mohammed Khalid
from Mohammed Fahed.
On the topic of names,
students call me Dr. Brock, so not to confuse me with another “Steve” in the English
department. Most assume Brock is my
first name because they are already familiar with that famous Minnesota WWF
wrestler/MMA fighter/behemoth Brock Lesner.
Surprisingly, fewer are aware of the oeuvre of the outstanding black
actor in “To Kill a Mockingbird” Brock Peters.
My two eleventh-grade
classes are working on the theme of health.
Fortunately during my stint with the Jesuit Virtual Learning Academy, I
composed an online course for health.
Class began with the topic of healthy diet (so it was a bit ironic
after-school Thursday when I saw my student Zayed eating a super-sized Big Mac
at the nearby McDonald’s; I soon followed him with the same order, though with
extra onions). My upper-level class enjoyed
their flipbooks; the lower-level group seemed to have issues with the paper
construction. No doubt, poor instruction
on my part. This week our attention turns
to exercise.
For my lone tenth grade
class, the theme is Emirati heritage.
Students have a large summative project at the end of the tri-semester
they are already working on. The project
includes some research and interviews.
As I know little of Emirate culture at present, I am now examining
contemporary film. Students here like
the same films as teens in the US; in fact, “Fast and Furious 7” is to begin
filming here next month when the weather dips below 100 F. I told the class I have been signed to play
Vin Diesel’s smarter brother. My class
has, nonetheless, compared Arab and
Western foods, and dress through Venn diagrams and other graphic organizers.
In general, students
are friendly, but would rather chat than listen to each other or me. Even as engaging as I am. Here are a couple to teaching techniques which
seem to be stemming the tide of insubordination: 1) Standing:
Students who interrupt get to stand.
They do not like to stand, especially for prolonged periods. 2) Points:
Students can be awarded positive or negative points. After ten points, they get a free pass on an
assignment. I whip out the IPhone to
award points post haste.
Alison:
My placement has changed three times since I arrived. All three have been cycle 2 - grade 6
science. Truth be told, the third was
only because the new facilities were not ready and my students were still being
housed at Al Lulu, which is their previous cycle 1 (elementary) school. Al Lulu is lovely.
The principal and vice-principals are skilled
and lovely people. In most cycle 2 (middle)
schools, teachers do not have their own room and science lab time needs to be
scheduled. I am fortunate: I have the
science lab for my classroom. My students
come upstairs to the lab for class!
Bell-to-bell the length of a class is 45 minutes. There is no passing time, which means in
actuality my classes are about 35 to 40 minutes on a good day. I love my girls. Their English is still very limited so I am
employing all my ELL skills and knowledge.
They have not had much exposure to lab skills or hands-on science. We have started the year with learning
process skills, observation skills, and lab equipment. One of the girls commented that my class was
really hard because I kept asking them to think! I do a lot of modeling on
journaling and respond to our big questions (essential questions). They struggle on extrapolating of information
from multiple sources and making connections between investigations. WE WILL GET THERE!
The cycle 1 students wear pink jumpers with white blouses
under them and my 6th graders wear blue jumpers with white
blouses. Each morning the day begins
with a 15-minute assembly. The girls
recite a prayer, and then sing the National Anthem. Next several girls are selected to recite
from the Qur’an. Messages, reminders,
and announcements are made. About once a
week, I am required to do a uniform check – clean uniform, black shoes, hair
pulled back, and clean short nails. I
have now 7 abayas to wear to school. I
have to say they are very comfortable.
The two that I just had made are actually beautiful. It is not a requirement, but more
practical. If I choose to wear a skirt
it has to be to my ankles and the top must be at least ¾ sleeve. On Thursday, I did not have my new abayas and
the current ones needed cleaning, so I had to wear a skirt and blouse. I felt uncomfortable. I will post pictures of me in an abaya
soon.
At 10:30 to 11:00 the girls have a break to eat. The canteen is open and many students
purchase snacks and water. We are
working on better processes and encouraging the girls to clean up after
themselves. We have started using the 6th
grade girls to help “encourage” the younger girls. They love the responsibility!
This week we have given benchmark and skills tests. I have been helping out the elementary
teachers to give the reading inventories.
I sit with each student and have her read to me for accuracy and
fluency. It has been interesting to watch
the progression from grade 1 to grade 5.
Once those assessments are evaluated I will be working with teachers and
students supporting math. I am also
working with the Student Support Team to put in place better processes and
procedures. That is one of our SIP
goals. I have been asked to facilitate 2
SIP priorities (goals) committees (Note to Ann Mausbach: I was channeling you last week and your
analogy for writing a SIP.) My
experiences both in Montgomery County and Counsel Bluffs are serving my
well.
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