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Education Trends, Uncategorized   |   Nov 1, 2010

10 years ago, I believed…

By Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

10 years ago, I believed…

By Angela Watson

I was recently reflecting on how much my understanding of best practices has changed since I was a new teacher. I used to believe that:

  • Teaching in small groups is a waste of time because you end up repeating yourself for every group.
  • Kids can’t be trusted on computers because they’ll mess up all the settings and get a ton of viruses.
  • Centers are the best use of kids’ independent work time.
  • Misbehavior should be addressed with respectful dialogue and problem-solving techniques.
  • Parents who don’t show up for conferences don’t care about their kids’ education.
  • Arranging kids’ desks in groups means they’ll be focused on each other and won’t learn anything.

Now, I think that:

  • Teaching in small groups makes it easier to keep kids focused and helps you differentiate instruction.
  • It’s worth the time it takes to train kids to use computers independently–and it doesn’t take that long.
  • Reading [engaging, ‘just right’, self-selected] books is the best use of kids’ independent work time.
  • Sometimes you just need to give the teacher look and keep it moving.
  • Parents who don’t show up for conferences still want to be good parents and still love their kids.
  • Arranging kids’ desks in groups means they’ll be focused on each other and learn a lot if they’re taught how to work collaboratively.

I wonder how these perceptions will change over the next 10 years…

How has YOUR thinking about education changed since you started teaching?

Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Angela is a National Board Certified educator with 11 years of teaching experience and more than a decade of experience as an instructional coach. She started this website in 2003, and now serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Truth for Teachers...
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Discussion


  1. Angela,
    Could you please blog on some “how-to’s”–such as what you’ve described in this post? For instance, how do you teach students to sit/work in groups collaboratively, how you teach students to use computers, and assure that students choose “just right” books? I know how I do these things, but I would like to hear another viewpoint. Thanks! 🙂

  2. Thank you for these thoughts. I’m up for NBCT renewal and you helped me get my focus back. I just wrote down what I believed ten years and go and wow, things have changed. I will visit this blog often. Happy Teaching

  3. Just came across this post…I like this list. And I really agree about the independent work time. Having classroom time to read is SO important! Centers have become so integral to so many teachers/schools- but a lot of the time centers do not engage a student in the same way reading a book does.

    And yes, the teacher look works and doesn’t take as much instructional time as other behavior management solutions.

    A couple things I’ve learned:
    -teaching a small group can be more challenging than teaching whole-class
    -For improving comprehension- kids need to talk a lot about the books the read.
    -Read Alouds are essential- they provide a motivation for non-readers to read
    -planning makes a BIG difference
    – but you have to be willing to improvise
    -teaching is a lot like performing
    – kids usually need to have some connection/relationship with their teacher to do well
    -ELL students tend to know a lot fewer vocabulary words than you may asume

    …okay that’s it for now, but I feel like I could keep going on. Thanks for getting me to reflect on my practice

    1. What a fabulous list! I agree with everything you mentioned. The part about performing especially rings true. I didn’t understand in the beginning that I needed to ACT like a calm, collected teacher even when I didn’t feel like it, and get super excited about topics and activities that I wasn’t all that thrilled about. The teacher’s attitude is totally contagious, and to ‘infect’ students with enthusiasm, you have to be a performer sometimes!

  4. It’s kind of embarrassing to compare the way you used to do things and why you thought the way you did. I was gung-ho on teaching whole group direct instruction; mainly because I could maintain control and know students received the information. Accountability was easily attainable with this method. However, years later I realize I was not reaching my student’s many levels of learning. Although there can be a bit of repetition, if you’re differentiating correctly, you’ll never ditto a lesson to a T. This reflection was scary but great to realize I changed my course to better fit my student’s needs. I’ll never go back!! Thanks for this! -G

    1. You’re welcome! It’s extra embarrassing for ME to think about how I used to do things, because it’s all over the internet and in my book! I am working on a second edition of The Cornerstone to reflect these new changes. 🙂 There are subtle changes in my philosophy that I’d like to explain and express in more detail.

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