This week I did the furniture assignment in my
classroom. Instead of an activity, though, I tested how changing the furniture
affected group work and note taking. Normally all students face forward to take
notes and then we will do group work where they are allowed to move around a
bit. As is normal in a high school classroom, even when they are facing forward
they do get distracted. But, for the most part, they are quickly writing down
important information and watching the lesson intently. Group work tends to be
a bit more hectic and requires checking in with each group to make sure they’re
on task. Often when they are free to move around as they please, many students
will just work on their own and ignore their group (which defeats the purpose
of group work) and others will ignore the material. The way I changed this week
was by putting the groups into squares with their desks at the beginning of
class. Instead of everyone facing forward in rows for notetaking, they were
facing their groups. Also, for group work, they were in a set group formation.
I noticed a lot more chatty during the note taking portions of the lesson which
is to be expected, but I also observed students discussing what I was teaching
and making sure they understood what they were writing down. As for group work,
there was more collaboration and discussion which could have been spurred because
they were already discussing the notes they were taking. It is really
interesting how such simple changes in orientation of furniture can make such a
big impact on learning.
I was asked to share with you guys about how MOXI has
affected my classroom teaching: After being offered a long-term sub job at San
Marcos High School, I had to think about what would be best for my future –
continuing exclusively at MOXI in the MAPs program, doing only San Marcos, or
balancing both. After the first few weeks of doing both, I am confident that I
made the right decision. I have noticed so much of MOXI spilling into my
classroom techniques. I think it can be hard to see what we are learning in the
program and out on the museum floor sometimes because it is all within one area,
but doing this has helped me realize that we are learning a lot! I think my
students get frustrated with it sometimes, but in the end, the facilitation
strategies I’ve learned in MAPs are helping me be a better classroom teacher
and create lessons where the students are forced to investigate rather than be
told an answer.

Go Stephanie! So glad to hear you're making it work and being a dynamic teacher at SMH. The grouped seating results there are really interesting, not what I would expect. Do you think that you'll continue using that format of grouped desks goping forward, return to the previous format, or keep experimenting? -Sam
ReplyDeleteSo will you move desks back for lecture portions of the class?
ReplyDelete