Skip to main content

Caution: Full Course Load

Week 7 of student teaching was one of those weeks that felt like it was going slow each day, but now that it has past, it felt like it flew by. This is officially the end of my first week teaching a full course load. I know am teaching Vet Science, Intro to Ag Mech, Horticulture, and Food Science, with Food Science being the latest course I pick up. The week was full of trial and error, projects being almost completed, and a few half-days to plan for!

The Into to Ag Mechanics students wrapped up their plumbing projects this week, which completed the unit! They each got to test their creations that took weeks to complete for each of them. Their plumbing squares included pex, cpvc, copper pipes, galvanized pipes, and polyethylene and then at the end they tested to see if their square would have any leaks in them. It was a successful testing day and no none had any leaks! This was such a fun project to work on and I can confidently say that this will be one of my favorite things that I did while student teaching at Pequea Valley. 


The Horticulture class capped up a week of learning about cleft grafting, whip and tongue grafting, t-bud grafting, patch bud grafting, and air layering. They performed each of these tasks with Twizzlers, pretzels, and posters! It was a lot of fun watching them create these grafting techniques using foods, and I also got to see them create very creative and interactive posters for the t-bud and patch bud grafting. There were many things that I would change about these in the future, but it was an overall fun activity for me and the students. 

We wrapped up the week with one of my favorite classes - Vet Science. This is the class that I am teaching for the entire time that I am at Pequea Valley and right now we are working on the fetal pig dissection. We made it through the digestive system and the respiratory system (for the most part) and are now transitioning into the circulatory system. The students have been working on the dissections for weeks, and even the students that were terrified to dissect are loving it! Groups are helping each other learn about the organs found in each system, which I love to see. We only have a few more days left with our fetal pigs and in the Animal Anatomy & Physiology Unit unit we move on, but before we do we will be taking a closer look at the brains!
This week was so much fun, and while I still have a lot to work on and areas of improvement, I can feel myself growing in other areas. @PSUAGED21 are you at a full course load yet? I would love to hear about how things are going for you and ways that you are working to improve your teaching methods!


Comments

  1. Michaela,
    It looks like you had a great week! What are some of the assessment strategies that you used throughout these units? It looks like there were many great opportunities for students to "show what they know"!
    -Dr. Ewing

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Michaela - I am also teaching a full coarse load and have a Food Science class. What is your class learning right now? I love how you implemented not just the plumbing project, but testing it! So important! How did you troubleshoot with students if they saw a leak in their project? I can't help but thinking this would be a great project/opportunity for students to do a self-evaluation!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Fully Embodying the 3-Circle Model of Ag Ed!

Each week of student teaching seems to go by faster than the last. As I spend my Friday reflection on week four of student teaching, I can't help but to smile at all the activities, meetings, and observations that took place. Thus far, I have only been teaching Agricultural Mechanics and Veterinary Science and they both have been going great. I will soon be adding Horticulture to the mix!  My highlights from the week include:  A soldering demonstration Preparing for a fetal pig dissection An FFA Officer Team meeting My first SAE visit (to view this blog, click here) #GLAG21 On Tuesday, I started teaching Ag Mechanics with a soldering demonstration so that the students could watch and ask questions about soldering before they practiced for themselves. Unfortunately, time got the best of me and my demonstration ended up taking an entire class period. If I could do this differently, I would try to condense this demonstration or set up stations so that the students could start pra...

All Good Thing Must Come to an End

This week was my very last week student teaching at Pequea Valley High School and a fun one to end on. Right now, I am only reaching one class and it is the class that I taught the full 14 weeks. We had a HUGE event take place that I felt very fortunate to be a part of and there were many sad goodbyes and thank you's.  Vet Science was the class that I had from start to finish, so naturally, I began slightly attached to every part of this class. We had the fetal pig dissection, animal restraints, bandaging, suturing, and more! Every step of the way was pushing myself outside of my comfort zone and learning new content areas. This week, the focus was on suturing, which is one of the topics that I was most excited to learn. While we only spent a few days on this, I learned so much about knot tying and techniques. For this lesson, I performed a demonstration on how to tie a knot for suturing and then students practiced on rulers. It was a fun lesson overall, and the students were pros ...

Well That was a Blur

As I am writing this blog and reflecting on this past week of student teaching, I'm left wondering what even happened. It was one of those weeks where one day you woke up and it was week 5 of student teaching and by the end of the day it is already week 6! This past week started with no school on Monday, and ended with a snow day and a virtual learning day (because of the snow). So with only one full in-school session and another half day of in-school learning, I don't have many days to reflect on, but I do have so much to look forward to! Recap of Week 5: Students are still working on soldering in Intro to Ag Mechanics, and I am realizing how hard it is to have students in completely different places in the shop. I know that most of that has to do with COVID, but I also know that this could happen any year with sicknesses, sports, etc. It is hard to manage students in a shop that are ready to move onto the next project, and still have some that need a demonstration to start th...