Tws Setting and Context
Tws Setting and Context
designed to keep students abreast of their performance and on track with their education. The students
meet weekly with the same teacher throughout their academic career to go over their grades, discuss
avenues for improvement, and to seek assistance from content area teachers in subjects they are
experiencing difficulty with.
Based on input from faculty and administration at the school as well as from what I have been
able to observe first-hand, students at the school seem largely respectful and accepting of their fellow
classmates and instances of elevated conflict and bullying/teasing are rare. School, as well as personal
pride and mutual respect are principles that are interwoven into the students total educational experience
something that is instantly evident when observing students passing in the halls, gathering for lunch,
attending school functions and in the individual classrooms themselves. Students are encouraged to be
positively active in the community outside of the school as well, and the school sanctions many
community service initiatives throughout the year such as canned food drives, adopt a family,
Thanksgiving dinners, and two blood drives. The overall climate of the school feels and appears safe and
conducive of learning with a real focus on creating a community amongst the students and staff. The
school also welcomes parent involvement, offering several opportunities for participation such as:
building accountability committee, parent volunteer programs, school-to-career programs with parental
involvement, scholarship search, as well as three booster clubs. Despite these opportunities, and
according to information from my match-up teacher, Christy Goldberg, parent involvement at the school
seems a little low with between 10-15 parents (out of 90 students) attending parent-teacher conferences
for her regular English 11 classes, and only about 50% attendance for her AP classes. Most of her parent
contact, she admits, originates from herself and largely pertains to positive topics such as major
improvements in student work.
Demographically speaking, the student make up is fairly representative of the community as a
whole with 87% white, 11.27% Hispanic, 1-2% Asian and African American, and 1-2% being Native
American/Alaskan Native and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander; about 30% of the student body is eligible for
free or reduced lunch. The total enrolment for the 2014-2015 school year is just over 1,300 students
(approximately 54% male, 46% female) resulting in a student-teacher ratio of 23.5 to 1.
Americas history from the late 19th century through WWII (including an examination of our foundational
documents in this context) giving them a unique perspective by which to examine and consider our
current history. The ultimate goals of the course are to have students gain a critical understanding of the
important role that literature has played in the history of our country during the time periods we will be
studying and to be able to relate current events to those of our past by gaining an understanding of the
nature of cause and effect relationships through the close examination of historical events and literature.
Studying the narratives, poetry, and other forms of literature from these times will hopefully add a very
human side to these events; events that can often be hard to contextualize and relate to for the modern
student.
The units of this course follow and are broken up according to major events, conflicts, and
movements of American history rather than by the literary movements themselves. This makes the class
itself more relatable to students by structuring what we read around a more or less linear sequence of
cause and effect relationships providing significant background to the texts and contextualizing them in
such a manner as to allow students to see and understand the development and progression of different
literary movements and their distinguishable qualities and characteristics. The class covers five main
units, which are broken up by the following general themes:
WWI
WWII
Upon joining the class this semester, they had already completed their study of the first unit and were
in the midst of the first half of the second Turn of the century.
Despite the unique nature of the class curriculum, instructionally the class will be fairly traditional in
its literary analysis and critique. Students will come from Ms. Robinsons history class and at the
beginning of each new unit we will discuss what they are studying in history, both to provide a sense of
coherence with the two classes but also to inventory students background knowledge on each new unit.
Spending a class period on this with every unit is worth the time considering that depending on where
students interests and concerns are could affect what the class chooses that theyd like to read or focus
on. This in itself provides a form of differentiation through student choice, where class texts are tailored
to the students rather than being generally about the time were studying. Students will complete
relatively standard assignments over the course of the year, including but not limited to critical and
reflective writings of various size and scope as well as creative projects designed to allow for the
assessment of students critical understanding of the works we study in relation to the events surrounding
them and to their current lives and contemporary society as a whole.
This class design is therefore meant to create a way of thinking in students that a class not paired as
closely with American History could not one where they are able to see the ways historical and current
events change what people are writing, while also being able to see how the things people chose to write
about, and how they wrote about them, has too changed the world. Teaching English in this way will
help students that are on the ladder half of their high school career to finally piece together how all the
books they had to read in school are all tied to a specific time and work not only to shape that time, but to
inform our perspective of it and contribute to their own individual presents and futures. In a way, this
class is meant to teach a new social awareness of all the literature that has already happened, and that is
happening around us every day of our lives.
Since being in the classroom, students have shown an interest in women rights at the turn of the
century. This has coat tailed into heated discussions about civil rights, especially after the recent events
in Jefferson County. The students are aware of what is going on around them but often are hesitant to
make public their opinion on said events. The classroom community is warm because Goldberg keeps the
class vibe light hearted. However there are also many small sections where students have almost divided
the classroom into three different permanent groups. In this way its hard to get students to collaborate
with anyone than those they sit directly next to. Students know that daily they will be asked to complete a
warm up grammar activity but other than that every class looks different depending on what Goldberg
wants to do.
Physically, the classroom can at times hinder learning because it faces some students at the front
of the class, some directly to the side of the room, and the side facing row pushes one group of students
into the farthest corner of the class, where a good amount of side conversations and distractions stem
from. Mrs. Goldbergs desk is a kind of off-limits area to students and they seem to respect that. The
room is fairly sparsely decorated with a few examples of student work on the back wall, and a few posters
relaying educationally-inspirational sayings. In the back corner of the room, opposite the teachers desk
is the sole book shelf which holds textbooks and other reference materials (such as dictionaries) as well as
a surprisingly small selection of fiction that serves as the class library. Lastly, the Smart Board in the
front of the room supplements a lot of Mrs. Goldbergs activities not only by getting students up and
moving to come write on it, but also by providing a visual representative and recorder of her spoken
instruction. Students seem to enjoy the opportunity to come to the front of the class and interact with the
board, but participation appears to be limited to a small portion of the class with some students
consistently contributing while others consistently refrain.
Overall, the class seems to be an enjoyable and comfortable experience for all the students. There
appears to be a well-established sense of community and the students are respectful of each other and the
teacher. They know what is expected of them in regards to behavior and rarely ever deviate (and never
for long) from conducting themselves according to the expectations that have been established.
Additionally, since the class is taught in conjunction with the Modern America history course during the
period directly before, the students spend a large amount of time together which I anticipate greatly adds
to the sense of community and inclusion that is evident in the classroom.
Classroom Diagram:
English 11 at Thompson Valley looks different from the average English class, due to the fact that the
English curriculum for this course is paired with eleventh grade American History. This courses
collaboration with American History allows students to familiarize themselves with literature and literary
movements that come out of the events in Americas history that they already have learned about from
World History courses in years previous, or through their American social indoctrination.
Studying current events is a practice often associated with social studies classes. By narrowing the
historical scope that we ask students to consider, to only Americas history, students are given a
manageable sample set with which to compare, write, and think critically about events that have taken
place in their lifetime. For instance, except for students coming from another country, we can assume
students will know and likely have an opinion on the September 11th attacks. However, something many
students have likely not done is compared their own feelings about global conflict to those of individuals
from different parts of American history up to World War II. Studying the narratives, poetry, and other
forms of literature from these times will hopefully add a very human side to these events; events that can
often be hard to contextualize and relate to for the modern student.
The units of this course follow, and are broken up according to major events, conflicts, and movements of
American history rather than by the literary movements themselves. This makes the class itself more
relatable to students by structuring what we learning in terms that both students and teacher are familiar
with, rather than having the teacher be the class content master and the student having to constantly
contextualize material. The class covers five main units, which are broken up by the following, according
to Christy Goldberg:
WWI
WWII
Unlike the unique nature of the class curriculum, instructionally the class will be fairly traditional in its
literary analysis and critique. Students will come from Ms. Robinsons history class and at the beginning
of each new unit we will discuss what they are studying in history, both to provide a sense of coherence
with the two classes but also to inventory students background knowledge on each new unit. Spending a
class period on this with every unit is worth the time considering that depending on where students
interests and concerns are could affect what the class chooses that theyd like to read or focus on. This in
itself provides a form of differentiation through student choice, where class texts are tailored to the
students rather than being generally about the time were studying.
This class design is therefore meant to create a way of thinking in students that a class not paired as
closely with American History could. One where they are able to see the ways historical and current
events change what people are writing, while also being able to see how the things people chose to write
about, and how they wrote about them, has too changed the world. Teaching English in this way will help
students that are on the ladder half of their high school career to finally piece together that all those books
they had to read in school and all the music they listen to is all tied to a specific time and work to shape
that time. In a way, this class is meant to teach a new social awareness of all the literature that has
already happened, and that is happening around us every day of our lives.