Foundations | 10 Task 1.2 Think about a recent challenging or unsatisfactory
experience in your classroom. Go over it in your
mind’s eye. Tell someone about it if you’re not alone.
Then ask yourself (or have someone ask you):
What made it challenging or unsatisfactory? Which aspects
of it proved problematic? What did you see, hear and feel
that told you it was so?
Commentary Teachers experience many challenging situations when
things don’t work out as we would like them to, but, as with
successful situations, we don’t usually have the time to sit
and think about what happened and why. A first step to
doing this can be to think about what tells you things are
not going according to plan – in other words, the signs of
lack of success.
You have now reflected on one successful teaching
situations from Paula’s experience, one challenging
situation from Camila’s experience and two from your own.
We have used these situations to show how, by looking at a
situation closely, you can identify signs of success or lack
of it so that you come closer to understanding the situation.
In the next chapter we’ll start to see where you can go from
here – either expanding on success (as with case 1.1) or
trying to solve a problem (as with case 1.2). For now, though,
let’s think a bit more about the signs that come through
your senses about whether something is or isn’t working
and how you can collect information to understand different
situations better.
1.3 The need for information In the examples you read above, Paula and Camila ‘saw’,
‘heard’ and ‘felt’ certain things that ‘told’ them something
was working or wasn’t. In the task, we also asked you to
focus on what you saw, heard and felt since it is our senses
which tell us (teachers) what is happening in our classrooms.
When we ‘feel’ something, we are also using our intuition,
which is nurtured by years of teaching experience.
Seeing, hearing and feeling give us what we have called
signs which tell us whether a particular situation is
successful or unsatisfactory.