Preview

Field study

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
453 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Field study
Field Study 4
Exploring the Curriculum

EPISODE 1
“Thermometer Check”

Name of FS Student: Rianne Karla M. Gandia
Course: BSEd English Year and Section: 3B
Resource Teacher/s: Mrs. E. Arroyo and Mrs. Beli Signature/s: ___________/___________
Cooperating School: Manuel S. Enverga Memorial School of Arts and Trade

Your Target

At the end of the activity, you should be able to describe through your reflection of how the school promotes partnership and dialogue.

Your Map For this process, go through the following steps:

Your Tools For these episodes, please use the Activity Forms provided for you below.

.

Your Analysis

1. Why is the classroom a miniature of a greater society?

Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world” as said by Nelson Madela. This statement explains why the classroom a miniature of a greater society because inside the four sides of a classroom, an individual gain knowledge and skills which are essential for building a productive citizen that will make a greater society, greater society which means that the materials that are significant for our daily living are present. Where strong buildings are skillfully build for the security and safety of every resident. The classroom is the place where the students learn values that they will display to their society, they also learn to communicate, participate and engage in different situation or task that will enhance their personal capability that is applicable to the society. By means of nurturing the students, the teacher’s role is to motivate and shape the mind of their students to become active to their society. Therefore, classroom is a miniature of a greater society.

2. What are found in the classroom that is similar to what can be

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    An education provides people not only with the academic skills required, but also the social skills such as having the self confidence and belief in ones self to achieve a fulfilling and happy life. It is every child’s human right to receive such an education from early years to higher, and therefore several stages in which they must travel for this to happen.…

    • 1487 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    a. Introduce a topic clearly and group related information in paragraphs and sections; include formatting (e.g., headings), illustrations, and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension.…

    • 2314 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    To promote a positive ethos in the school through encouraging a shared understanding of the values which underpin our school ethos…

    • 3253 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the classroom “making the atmosphere comfortable for students, trying to relate to students, being organized, and the activities engaging and hands on.” Through making the classroom a positive attitude and atmosphere she is able to effectively teach through encouraging her students. Making the classroom where students are comfortable to learn allows for students to participate in class and gain knowledge through asking questions when one may not understand. When she relates to her students she is able to teach to their understanding becoming effective in giving the knowledge to her students. Organization is a key to success of being a teacher so that way as the teacher one does not waste time because all the material is not organized. In order for the activities to captivate students attention the activities are taught in a learn by doing method allowing for the student to discover the…

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    |environment in which to grow and learn |Develops on appreciation that everyone has |students have strengths |Teaches socialisation and collaborative|…

    • 3809 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ethnographic Fieldwork

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Humans are naturally biased, we try to find comparisons with new situations and contrast them to our own environments. Ethnographic fieldwork involves, in a certain sense, dissociating from the comforts of our own cultures in order to immerse ourselves in the “comforts” of another. There are benefits and obstacles to this hands on course of field work. First, as stated above, Humans are biased. We will almost certainly hold our own cultural values as a standard, to which the culture we are studying will he held to. This can lead to a skewed collection of data, and an Etic viewpoint. Researchers will almost always have some degree of Etic in their conclusion in their research, but should devote the majority of research to keeping an Emic perspective, Finding that Emic perspective can be hard, as immersing yourself into a culture involves gaining the trust of the community you're trying to study. The…

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Field Experience

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Within the museum you’re exposed to over 30,000 artifacts and several exhibitions that were primarily set out for individual pieces of African American history. It made me feel like I was taking a closer encounter with history and the importance of the African American culture and life. Every exhibition had its own feel to it, and its own relevance, with each display and individual storyline, made it all the more very special. I think with every exhibition, the intention was to make people feel like they were truly once a part of that time and age. Although, it’s difficult to imagine any more of what lies in the roots of African American history and life, I…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    For students in the process of obtaining their BSW, I think the field experience is critical because without it, you just read about the field in a textbook. You have to go out and see things that are actually happening with your own eyes in order to really learn. I think it’s great that you included about the problems that people are facing nowadays. No matter what the cause, there are some people who are not able to manage things happening in their lives, which is where a social worker comes in. As we learned, the social worker is then able to connect them with community resources, and if they have a higher degree, can even offer counseling to the client in need.…

    • 123 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Field research uses both low and high constraint research methods to draw conclusions about the research topics. Observational research is a low constraint field research method in which observations are made in the natural environment of the participant. Observational research has been used by those seeking knowledge before the birth of modern science.…

    • 350 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We are using the problem posing education. The teachers doesn’t always play the major role in class, learners are able to engage in dialogue with the Supreme Being, interaction and exchange of knowledge becomes an everyday process. The teachers is also learning from the learners and learners are expanding their knowledge as the teacher clarifies and gives better explanation and adding to their previous knowledge. “Problem -posing Education” respects the experiences of the participants and builds on this experience in the educational process. It is education that is intended as a part of the process of groups working for change. It is education that serves to de-mystify political and economic systems in order for people adversely affected by those systems to better understand what is happening and to be more able to determine their own vision and make that a part of a more just and equitable world.” (The Highlander Research and Education Center 1997). Our education is on the right path to building an in destructive educational system. If the young men of the country are empowered and given the chance to use their minds for change, rest assured that society stands a great chance to be transformed. For education opens up minds and critical thinkers are born. More minds working together for a better solution rather than having one sole mind being the only hope of an…

    • 518 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fieldwork Observation

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages

    For this fieldwork report, I had the privilege of observing my high school Radio and Broadcasting teacher. I graduated from Piper High School in 2013 and I had Mr. Jon Farley as my Radio and Broadcasting teacher for two years. Radio and Broadcasting provide students with instruction in radio broadcasting and management. Piper High School is one of the few schools that allows students to run a live radio station. According to the course syllabus, “WKPX is a real live radio station broadcasting to all Broward County and part of Dade and Palm Beach with 10,000 plus listeners. The radio program gives students the opportunity to help run a live radio station”.…

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Fieldwork

    • 284 Words
    • 2 Pages

    At my research site I plan on taking notes my in a small notebook so I could easily jot down notes as I see/hear things occur. On my notes I will make sure to include date, time, specific facts, numbers, sensory impressions and summaries of conversations. I will just jot down phrases or words to remember what I saw or something to easily trigger my memory. The elongated notes I will write them as soon as possible and if time doesn’t allow it then I will do the elongated notes as soon as I leave my fieldwork site. I want to be able to write down everything that seemed interesting because I want good data. The activities I will pay more attention to is when the teacher goes around the class and works one on one with students. I want to see how she reacts towards the student’s inability/inability to answer a question. Does the teacher handle her class well? Is she open to diverse cultures and ideas? I also want to pay attention to how the teacher greets the class at the beginning of the day. How is she able to get the class settled in. Is there a certain method she does to make the students get in their seats and began to do class work? The obstacles that I fear might get in my way are that I might not be able to take notes during my fieldwork site. I’m afraid that I might have to remember everything and then as soon as I leave fieldwork have to jot everything down and once I have time I would write my elongated notes.…

    • 284 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The concept of whether or not I want to become a teacher also directly leads to my next possible sign of conceptual change. Like I said before, my eyes have been opened to many aspects of education that I was ignorant to before. My field placement has definitely been the main source of these eye-opening experiences as the semester has continued. Before I went into field placement, my concept of children was that they were all the same. My concept was that children came to school to learn and be respectful to the adults that were trying to help them become successful in their lives. Obviously I understood not all students feel the exact way about school, but not to the level I saw as I went out into schools. As I reflect, this concept I had about children is very similar to one of the assumptions Kelley listed off in his article. The assumption I related would be, “we assume that the child goes to school to acquire knowledge” (Kelley, 1947, p. 17). During many times, I did not get this impression from the students I observed at Scott High School, my field placement. The school was unlike anything I have ever seen in my entire life as a student.…

    • 1433 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fieldwork

    • 2117 Words
    • 9 Pages

    When an anthropologist takes under the task of doing fieldwork he or she is taking on an overwhelming amount of obstacles one must overcome in order to record accurate information regarding a specific civilization. He or she must overcome many obstacles such as language, race and culture in order to even start a study on a specific culture. In the films "Shock of the Other" and "Margaret Mead and Samoa" we, as the viewer get to see how these fieldworks are done from a perspective myself, as a student, have never gotten to see before. In both of these films quite "famous" anthropologists the first, Margaret Mead, an American journeyed to the South Pacific territory of Samoa in 1925 to do her fieldwork. The other anthropologist David Maybury-Lewis who was born in Hyderabad, Pakistan in 1929 and immigrated to the United States in 1960 was the primary anthropologist in the film "Shock of the Other" traveled to the Amazon River Basin in order to study the drastically primitive civilizations such as the MaschoPiro who basically remain hidden from the outside world.…

    • 2117 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Classroom Management Plan

    • 2116 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Outside of their parents, the teacher is the next adult figure with the most influence in their lives. I must take every student under my wing and guide them through the year. In order to do that, the environment of the classroom I create will comprise of me taking a sincere interest in students and see them as unique individuals. I will be notice if they play any sports, or participate in any clubs and connect with them at that level. I will also build lasting relationships that inspire and encourage students to be confident with whom they are. Every single student in my classroom will be recognized for the diversity they bring to the community and I will never allow them to think they are less significant than someone else. I want a community classroom that is structured with independence, encouragement, an open-mind, and student cooperation. Cooperation and communication are vital in establishing a classroom because it considerably limits negative situations.…

    • 2116 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics