Reflection Paper: To Teach The Journey Of A Teacher

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It all started this one fine Thursday morning when I attended my very first IDS 2013 course. In a very typical and obvious format, Professor Antuna had started the course off by going over the syllabus. It all sounded normal when he went over the office hours and the book requirements but then he transitioned over to what we will be covering throughout the semester. Reading the syllabus with all the assignments that needed to be completed every week had frightened me. I was unsure of how I will survive this course, but I was certain I would have to. Our initial assignment was to read out of “To Teach the Journey of a Teacher” written by William Ayers. The pages we were assigned to read were later scheduled to be discussed within our groups …show more content…

In my Educational History paper, I had talked about my experience as a student and what I learned from my teachers. I had also made note of my experience towards each teacher and their methods of teaching. I had noticed how much of what I wrote in my Educational History assignment about my teachers had linked to how I am learning how to become one today. It all connects through learning about the obstacles we face as teachers and why certain teachers have a particular behavior towards the students. Being given Educational History as an assignment had encouraged me to look back to how education has changed drastically throughout the years. It also shows how teaching methods have changed for the betterment of providing the students with the best knowledge. This assignment had given me a lot of ideas as to how I will be conducting as a teacher in my future classroom. The more thoughts and ideas we receive from the experienced mentors, the better for us to …show more content…

What I find to be the most crucial content of becoming an educator is knowing which educational philosophy you would follow and instill in your class. After researching and presenting on perennialism, I know for sure I would not be able to instill that philosophy in my future classroom as it is fully teacher centered and old school. It has a lot to do with educating yourselves from the books directly. In perennialism, the teacher just gives out the answer without giving the students a chance to understand where they went wrong and how they can rectify their

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