Introduction

This site is designed as a reflection about my experiences of lectures and tutorials in EDFD472 (June/September) and my 10 week internship. Like any reflection, the purpose is to take a step back from what I am doing during my internship and critique how I can further develop my skills and understanding as a teacher and take note of different practices of which I found useful in my teaching.
This site and its content are all original and shall not be modified after the 7th October, 2011 @ 4:00pm.

About Me

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I am in my final year at ACU (Australian Catholic University) studying to become a Visual Arts/History Secondary Teacher. I have been studying for six years now which is the equivalent of doing High School all over again! Before coming to ACU I studied Fine Arts at Kingswood TAFE which first confirmed my love for teaching art to others. I wnat to be able to build in young people an understanding of where we are today based on the actions of the past, a value true to both History and Visual Arts, the two are intertwined with the past, the present, and the future. Good teaching is more a giving of right questions than a giving of right answers. (Josef Albers)

Blog post 2

Experience: Printmaking demonstration with Year 9 Visual Arts
Teaching Standard: 5.1.4. Provide clear directions for classroom activities and engage students in purposeful learning activities
Students have been creating collagraphs (collaged pieces of card which can be printed multiple times) based around their theme of ‘Art and Text’ and have previously had a demonstration on how to make a collagraph and wrote down the instructions on how to make and print a collagraph. During this lesson, I demonstrated to the class the process of printing their collagraphs using a printing press.
Students seemed to listen and watch the demonstration attentively as they were able to explain the process based on the notes they had written in a prior lesson. Students presented themselves as engaged with the demonstration and ready to practice for themselves. Students were then retested by myself when it came to printing their own works as I asked them different questions about the steps involved in the process, reflecting back on the demonstration. As students were able to confidently follow the same directions that I demonstrated, I feel that the directions were clear.
A few possible ways to improve this lesson:
·         Refocus a bit more on the notes students had taken (get them to draw diagrams for each step or add more information to their notes.). This would ensure that all students are reflecting on their notes and also shows consideration for different ways of learning (visual, written, auditory, and kinaesthetic).
·         Rewrite keynotes on the board to emphasise each step and have a tangible set of notes to help students recall the process when they are printing.
·         During the next lesson, a pop quiz with a small prize or praise could be used at the beginning of the lesson to check students have understood the directions and reinforce their engagement with listening to directions.