2008-09 Class Schedule

May 28, 2008

Last week, I received my “tentative” schedule for the 2008- 2009 school year, and I’m still excited so I thought I’d share:

(We run on an alternating block system - blue classes one day; gold the next)

Blue Day

  1. U.S. History
  2. Prep
  3. AP Psychology
  4. Psychology

Gold Day

  1. Prep
  2. AP Psychology
  3. AP Psychology
  4. Psychology

What this means is that I’ve picked up another section of AP Psychology! Now, if I can just pick up one more section of Intro Psychology to bump out that last freshman history class …

:D

Ninety-Five Percent of AP Students Taking Exam

March 28, 2008

Each year, my Advanced Placement Psychology students are given the opportunity to take the AP Exam for college credit in Psychology. This year, 57 students took my class. Of them, 54 are taking the exam.

5th Block AP Psychology - 2007-2008

Advanced Placement is a product owned by the College Board - the same organization responsible for the SAT. The test that my students will be taking is a national achievement test established to gauge understanding of Psychology. It costs them $82.00 each, but the benefit is that most colleges and universities offer college credit for decent scores.

Last year, I had a number of students who could have done well enough to receive college credit not take the test due to their own insecurity. I want all students who make it through my class to take the AP Exam. Why do all the work and not get the reward?

This year, I added the incentive of an automatic ‘A’ on the class final exam to all students who take the AP Exam. My logic in doing so is that the AP Exam is our class exam. Since I won’t be able to see their scores on that exam until sometime in July, I have no way of assigning them a grade for their exam before the year ends. Therefore, they get an ‘A’.

And, I’m happy to say that it worked: ninety-five percent of them are taking the exam.

Now, I just need to get them to study!

First day of school is always rough ….

September 4, 2007

I don’t know why, but I can never sleep the night before the first day. Last night, I stayed up later than I should have (11:30), I tossed and turned throughout the night, and then awoke at 4:12am unable to go back to sleep. So, I got up. I drank coffee. I downloaded some music. Then, I grabbed the iPod and was out the door by 6am.

I just don’t function well on such little sleep. I’m a real active sort of guy. I teach as if I’m a rugby coach, for crying out loud. My mojo doesn’t work when I don’t get my z’s! Rather, I stutter, stammer, and my mind traverses every corner of my mind. “Am I going too fast? Am I going to slow? Should I be covering all this on the first day? Should I be covering more? Why are they all staring at me? Ahhhh!!!!”

I’m not like that when I’m rested.

Anyway, it is done. The school year has begun, and I have been introduced to all of my classes. Let the fun begin.

Crazy School Dreams = Summer is Almost Over

August 14, 2007

Last night I had a dream that I was teaching my first AP Psychology lesson this fall when I noticed a student turn to share an instant message with the person behing him. Then, all of the sudden, I realized that every student in my AP class was in my Freshman U.S. History class last year and they were all very uninterested in my lesson! So, every one of them started talking, texting, and pulling out iPods.

I ran around the room yelling at them about how AP Psychology requires so much more discipline than U.S. History, and that they weren’t freshmen anymore, and every other thing that a teacher yells when he is losing control. I grabbed cell phones, iPods, and Trapper Keepers as I flew around the room. I even threw one cell phone at the wall, crushing it to bits.

Then I woke up. Anxious. Never more relieved that sophomores are not allowed to take AP classes.

The school year is too near. Far. Too. Near.

Academic Rigor

November 7, 2006

Rumor around school is that my AP Psychology class is somewhat difficult. I like that. The older I get, the more I start to appreciate the teachers and professors I had throughout the years who made my life feel like hell. When I think about it, those are the individuals who forced me to learn.

3rd Block AP Psychology

I see myself as a single voice amidst a sea of stimuli in my students’ lives. On a consistent basis, they have to decide whether to think about my class or the opposite sex, sports, video games, television, myspace, their job, or their family. Considering that my class is no match for any of the other above mentioned stimuli, it is easily understood how a student can “forget” to read, do an assignment, etc.

A typical student sits in my classroom three to four-and-a-half hours each week on an alternating schedule (3 hours one week, 4.5 the next). I recognize that this is not nearly enough time to really teach them everything I expect them to learn. Therefore, what they learn in my class is largely dependent upon their commitment to learning, not my ability to teach.

Many teachers come to this same conclusion - that students have busy lives that appear to conflict with their own expectations of what is academically necessary. As a result, I feel, many teachers lower their expectations. It’s tough to give bad grades to good students; it’s much easier to simply lower the standard. The consequence has been, in my opinion, a watered down education system in America.

Writing this, I realize that my expectations are conspicuous considering my laid-back nature and “diverse” academic past. Nevertheless, it is my job to teach students. The word teach implies that someone is learning. I spend 8 to 12 hours some weekends working on; reading about; researching psychology. If I am not as tough on my students as I am on myself academically, I’m simply not doing my job.

Granted, students are in a naturally passive role: sitting through class after class, listening, and taking notes. I can’t expect them to devote the same amount of time that I do to my subject - that would be absurd. However, I can expect them to master all of the material I present - and I do. If I teach it, they should learn it. If they don’t learn it from me (perhaps because I used a vague example), they should continue their learning elsewhere (the Internet, textbook, etc.).

I tell students on the second day of class that I am not the most important person in the classroom - they are. I am merely a facilitator of classroom activities. This stance, along with highly comprehensive tests, has given AP Psychology the reputation of being a tough class.

The bottom line is that I am certain that students who take my AP Psychology class will leave knowing a lot about psychology. For this, I am satisfied. My job has a purpose beyond entertainment.