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At 1:40 p.m. the children were told to take their molecules apart. A student col-
lected the bags. The teacher asked if they now felt confident about writing for-
mulas. She discussed some of the difficulties she had witnessed, such as children
writing superscripts rather than subscripts or making the numbers rather than the
letters large. Finally, she distributed a worksheet and went over the terms.
Teacher: What are the two groups that would classify elements?
After a few wrong answers (charged, not charged; positive and negative):
Child: Metal and nonmetal.
Teacher: Elements are made of . . . .
Child: Atoms.
Teacher: Tell me about a nucleus.
After they
went through all of the terms, the children were given a brief
assignment that involved organizing the terms that had been covered.
This teacher had gone to a special program dealing with elementary leadership
in math and science for 3 weeks during the summer, and for 1 week the follow-
ing summer as well as meetings throughout the year. She said she got ‘‘state-of-
the-art’’ training in math. Then the principal asked her to teach science. At first
she was apprehensive: ‘‘The old district science curriculum was awful, and the
new one is just as bad . . . . It doesn’t follow any published curriculum, and no
support or materials are provided. The books are useless.’’
She started out borrow-
ing the fifth-grade books. She said that after attending the special program she felt
she was able to teach science and math in an interesting and constructive manner.
Individualized instruction.
Rockefeller Elementary was well known for the staff’s
efforts to individualize instruction. The teacher-made curriculum in mathematics
in this school is organized around nine topics, each of which is signaled by a dif-
ferent color (e.g., numeration (blue), addition (pink), subtraction (yellow), mul-
tiplication (green)). There are nine levels to numeration, six each for addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and division, and eight for mixed operations. Impor-
tantly, the levels have nothing to do with grade levels. For example,
second-grad-
ers will do levels three and four in addition. The central idea behind the approach
is that children work independently on what they need and where they are. The
‘‘Notes to Teachers’’ underscores this fact. This is a school ‘‘where individualized
instruction is a reality. Children’s needs come before a planned curriculum.’’ The
guide provides ‘‘materials developed for children by teachers who teach chil-
dren.’’
198
In the example below, there were 21 children in a 4th-grade class, although only
17 were present. Two ‘‘special education’’ teachers were also in the room, work-
ing one-on-one with two boys. A math resource teacher had just finished working
on factoring.
I am writing as she leaves and fails to notice the shift in to individualized
instruction.
The children have pulled out spiral workbooks and begun working. The regu-
lar classroom teacher sits with a small group of children (the
children are
grouped into clusters formed by having four or five desks pushed together)
and speaks softly with them. Throughout the session, she moves from cluster
to cluster but sits each time and looks over children’s work. The workbooks
are different colors. Yellow is the book on subtraction; orange is division, and
purple for mixed operations.
At 10:10 a.m., the teacher announces a multiplication speed test. There is
some movement and talking while forms are distributed. At 10:13 a.m., the
teacher asks if they have their names on their papers: ‘‘I’m getting ready. Are
you ready? GO!’’ The students have 2 minutes. After this time, the teacher
says, ‘‘STOP! Now count the number you did.’’ Some children are excited that
they did better than before, while others moan that there is no improvement.
Although it is true that the staff in this school subscribed
to an individualized ap-
proach to learning, there appeared to be a good deal of discussion about the
work, and periods of individualized instruction were balanced with other, still
more interactive sessions. Moreover, a critical component of math instruction was
what might be characterized as the thrill of competition with oneself (e.g., the
reference to ‘‘your personal best’’ above) or with another group (e.g., the ‘‘chal-
lenge’’ that one class made to another).
In sum, five types of teaching methods were observed during the course of this
study-lecturing, a type of question-and-answer interaction involving initiation, re-
sponse, and an evaluation (I-R-E) of the response by the teacher, group work,
‘‘hands-on’’
activity, and individualized instruction. The predominant mode was
the I-R-E sequence in which the teacher controlled the interaction, asking ques-
tions, evaluating answers, and frequently providing the explanation as well.
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