While visiting Central Falls High
school I was asked to make some observations on the students. I am an English major so I decided to
visit Ms. Garces’ class. She is one of
the teachers that the school rehired after the No Child Left Behind Act went
into full effect. She was also my ninth-grade high school English teacher. Ms.
Garces is of Colombian descent and speaks both English and Spanish. She graduated from both the University of Rhode Island and Central Falls High school.
Ms. Garces has many years of teaching under her belt although she appears very young.
The students in the class I was observing were sitting in rows and were taking an exam.
Immediately as I walked in I could feel the relaxed atmosphere she had
built. She had posters plastered on the
wall, which explained main ideas of novels they had read, inspirational quotes and the class agenda. Her class although
occupied by many desks seemed very organized.
Ms. Garces started off the class by explaining the exam they were going to take. She made sure to
go through the exam front to back and made sure to ask students if they had questions after every section. Once Ms.
Garces handed out the exam the students immediately began. It was based off
the book To Kill a Mockingbird. The
students were allowed to listen to music on their headphones and use the novel to answer questions on the exam. I could tell
that the students were engaged because their eyes were either inside the book or
writing down responses. Ms. Garces was
not the only teacher in the class, there was another teacher walking around and
making sure everyone was doing their work - her name was Ms. Cataldo.
Ms. Garces later told us that the class had some special needs students and that the Ms. Cataldo was there as a supplement to make sure the special needs students had
an equal advantage. She also made it
clear that we would not be able to pinpoint whom the special needs students
were but that the supplemental teacher was open to helping any of the students.
The
classroom was made up of primarily Latino students and a couple of female Caucasian
students amongst them. Although the
school is known for being occupied by low-income families the students were
all dressed casual/urban but in a neat way.
Cliques or groups of students were not obvious to the naked eye but that
may have been that way because they were taking an exam.
There were twelve students in total and all the seats were filled. A couple of students whom had questions raised their hands; I could tell
that Ms. Garces had built a relationship with the students in the class. I can say that because the students joked
with her and were not scared of asking questions. She also kept the students controlled and the
students knew when joke-time was over and exam time had started.
In summary
my first observation was a pleasant one.
Ms. Garces seemed very organized and the students were comfortable with
her. Ms. Garces kept the classroom under
control and you could tell that the students looked up to her. As far as having a supplemental teacher in
the class I thought it was such a big help especially when there are special
needs students scattered in a classroom.
The Second Time Around:
In my
second observation I continued to observe Ms. Garces’ classroom. I
walked into the classroom and the class was formed into a big circle where I
could tell discussion was going to take place.
There were roughly 10-11 students in the classroom this time. Each student was holding a Lord of The Flies book and they all had a worksheet in
front of them. The students were quiet and were waiting for Ms. Garces to start instruction. Also, this time around none of the students had phones out or were listening
to music. Another observation I made was that Ms. Garces had a big poster on
the board, which had the words “Leader, Reader, Reporter and Recorder.” Each word was colored in a different color
and had a description below it.
The second
time around I felt the same relaxed atmosphere that I entered into last
time when the students were taking an exam.
Although this time I could see the cliques within the classroom. There were a set of three boys along the back
of the class and two groups of girls faced each other. Although there were cliques I did not
witness any conflict among them. Ms. Garces started her lesson off by talking about how she had had a dream about her students. The students were in a zombie apocalypse and
only her class had survived. She pointed
out which of her students wouldn’t be able to survive without a hairbrush and
who would take charge of the group in order to survive the apocalypse. The students laughed along with her and
either agreed or disagreed. She tied in
this zombie apocalypse with the setting of the book The Lord of The Flies where
the groups of boys are stranded on an island.
I thought this was an effective way of stating the main idea and opening
the class. Not only did she get the
whole class into a big discussion but also she started to get her students
minds working towards the setting of the actual book.
Her class
was engaged and by the sounds of the discussion I could tell the students were
very comfortable with expressing their ideas.
After the zombie apocalypse scenario she proceeded to talk about what
inferences and facts the students could make from looking at the cover. She made a couple of examples by using
student pregnancy rates within the school as a fact and using why the student
pregnancy rate is going up as an inference.
Everyone was joining in on the class discussion when she spoke about those issues. It was interesting to see how she used real
life Central Falls student problems to teach.
The whole class was interested in what she was saying, although there
was one student who kept exclaiming how the conversation was “boring” and
“useless.” Eventually the student
started to be involved because Ms. Garces would stop talking midsentence. He knew that when she stayed quiet it was
time for him to stop talking as well.
Eventually it worked because he began taking notes and was giving short
responses to what could be an inference and what could be a fact.
There were
a couple of students who were late but they all did have passes and she made
sure to ask them where they were. Same as my last observation there were 2 teachers in the classroom Ms. Garces and the supplemental
teacher, Ms. Cataldo. From this observation I can
make an educated guess that the rowdy male student was one of the special needs
within the class. Ms. Garces was
speaking aloud to the class meanwhile the supplemental teacher wrote on the
board. It was an effective way of teaching because Ms. Garces was keeping an eye on the whole class and the supplemental teacher got a chance to write down everything for the students who needed visuals.
From having
Ms. Garces as a freshmen year English teacher I knew that I wanted to observe
one of her classes for sure. Even when I
was a student at Central Falls she made sure to make real life connections in
reading materials. She also made sure to
have a comfortable but authoritative relationship with her students. As a freshman I remember being very comfortable
with asking her questions. From this
observation I think I have come to the conclusion that students are comfortable
around teachers who have gone through the same struggles they have gone through. Ms. Garces was a student at Central Falls
High school as well. In my opinion when
students see her they feel the inspiration to pull forward and they see the
success she has attained. Seeing a
person come from a low-income neighborhood and be able to go to college is
important for students. Sometimes throughout
high school the vision of college becomes more and more obscure and unattainable in a low income neighborhood. Ms.Garces has survived the madness and has a career now, she makes a great role model for the students of Central Falls.