Not only did we reflect at the end of each day, we also
wrote reflections at the end of each unit and at the end of each year. The students wrote reflections on what they
learned, and I wrote reflections on the strengths and weaknesses of each unit
as well as the skills I saw students mastering and those that would need
re-teaching, depending upon the individual class and/or student(s).
To get my students started for an end of the year
reflection, I utilized the following quote often attributed to Albert
Camus: Life is a journey not a destination—as long as you continue on that
journey you will always be a success.
Students then wrote about each of the units we studied, applying the
quote to each unit as well as applying the quote to their growth in class. We thought about where we were going with our
learning, where we were at the moment and how we would meet our goals.
However this post isn’t intended to be about exit or
reflection slips. This post is my six
month reflection on blogging at Learning
to Muse. I started this
blog on 2 January 2012 as a way to encapsulate my musings, readings, and
conversations about teaching and learning.
What I’ve learned
·
As an
over analyzer, it’s important for me not to overanalyze everything I blog
because otherwise I would never post.
Just as I mentioned in that first post—learning is a journey.
·
As an educator, it’s essential for me to follow
other educators to be connected and to continue learning.
·
As a reader, it’s vital for me to keep reading
anything I’m in the mood for—fiction, nonfiction, poetry, videos, images, anything
that catches my interest each week.
·
As a mom and wife, it’s fun to reflect on family
life and how it helps me maintain balance in my life but also how it connects
to my education musings.
·
As a writer, it’s necessary for me to journal,
to blog, to create, to read, to explore, and to listen. Listening and exploring inform many of my
musings here.
·
As a National Board Certified Teacher (NBCT), it’s
crucial for me to reflect, to learn, to analyze results and outcomes—this informs
decisions I make.
·
As a blogger, I need to link to other people,
blogs, websites, resources, organizations, anything that connects to the
content and livens up the text.
My favorite parts
of blogging so far
·
Noticing
that people from all around the world have read my blog (See image above)
·
Sharing my musings with as many or as few people
who read
·
Establishing my digital footprint
·
Reading comments from readers (There haven’t
been many so far, but the ones I’ve read have been meaningful to me)
·
Sharing two posts with guest blogger, Gwyn Ridenhour, who is fabulous
and passionate about education
·
Keeping my personal commitment to blog weekly
My blogging goals for
July-December
·
Continue
posting at least once per week
·
Redesign the background template to something
more interesting
·
Learn how to add video clips
·
Invite guest bloggers
·
Explore ways to connect more with other bloggers
·
Peruse websites and blogs of others to learn
from them about design & content in the online world
~~Thanks for reading~~
Renee