Final Port
Final Port
Final Port
I. Introduction --------------------------------------
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VII. Final Demo Teaching---------------------
Teaching Competencies----------------------
Final Demonstration Lesson Plan----
CS Form 48------
Form 138-E Progress------------
DepEd Form 2--------------------
DECS Form 137-A Permanent Record-------------
DECS Form 18-A Report Promotion---------
DepEd Form I-------------------------
Class Record--------------------------
X. Appendices--------
Seminars--------
Resume---------------------
Sample of Application Letter-----------------------
2
3
T he purpose of this portfolio is the experience may fill-up or apply,
because it is very personal document which includes honest and
spontaneous account of an educator, to record faithfully the instant
thoughts and behavior as a reaction. It is handy for jotting down
quickly, thus capturing significant insights before it is forgotten at the end of the
day of personal experience.
4
Department of Education
Region VI-Western Visayas
Division of Aklan
District of Ibajay
Naisud National High School
Naisud, Ibajay, Aklan
Noted:
THELMA A. SITIOCO
Principal
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STUDENT TEACHING
he student teaching experience lasts about the length of a semester or quarter; long enough to
T fulfill the college’s assigned tasks. It is an unpaid internship. This experience gives the
prospective teaching professional an opportunity to teach under the supervision of a permanently
certified master teacher.
The student teacher is usually placed on a neighboring or participating school. The student teacher is
monitored by the cooperating teacher from the school, as well as a supervisor through the college. The
supervisor act as the liaison between the cooperating teacher and the head of the college’s student
teaching department.
The student teacher normally shadowsthe cooperating teacher for about one week, eventually gaining
more responsibility in teaching the class as the days or weeksprogress. Eventually, the student teacher
will assume most of the teaching responsibilities for the class including class management, lesson
planning, assessment and grading. Thus, the student teacher is able to more fully experience the role of
the teacher as the clasroom teacher takes on the observation role in the class. There is sometimes a
“phasing out” week when the student teacher returns the teaching role back to the regular teacher.
The purpose of student teaching is to give potential teachers real world experiences, ostensibly to make
sure they are choosing the rigth career for themselves. In addition, it can be added to an individual’s
resume, and might make him or her more likely to get hired if he really excelled at his work while he was
a student teacher. Some students collect letters of recommendation from these teaching experiences to add
to a file o resume, which can be instrumental when trying to get hired as a permanent job, or to begin
work as a substitute. Many teachers who have recently graduated will need to work as substitutes for a
while before getting a permanent position.
Student teaching is the last step in your journey to becoming a teacher. It prepares you for the time when
you will have the responsibility of a classroom full of students. Therefore, it is one of the most important
aspects in your training, and it is the foundation upon which to build your teaching experience.
S ince the student teaching nexperience is to be of high quality, it is important that the team
members share common overall goals and objectives.
6
Design active learning opportunitiesthat are appropriately adapted for various developmental
levels, and for learners with disabilities.
Become increasingly aware of the multicultural component of the classroom and demonstrate
skills for meaningful interaction among racial, ethnic, gender , and culturally diverse groups.
Strengthen skills required for creating, selecting and using formal and informal assessment
strategies to evaluate student progress and to improve teaching and learning.
Establish and maintain a positive, purposeful, and God-centered learning environment that
prmotes positive social interaction, active engagement in learning and self-motivation.
Communicate, collaborate and consult with teachers, students, administrators and parents clearly
and effectively in the educational process.
Develop and articulate an understanding of educational philosophy, history of education and
current trends and issues.
Demonstrate competence in all job responsibilities in the student teaching setting.
Develop strategies for enhancing personal areas of strength and weakness indentified during field
experiences and seek opporunities for professional growth and development.
Ingtegrate technology appropriately and effectively for communication and instruction.
7
HISTORY AND SCHOOL PROFILE
Naisud National High School
Naisud National High School site is in a 6,348.80 sq.m. in campus, strategically at the
center of Barangay Naisud, Ibajay, Aklan.
8
Economic status of the barangay places Naisud as agricultural rural areas with fishing
and farming as the main source of honey and bread. The barangay has a complete school. Such is
true to the adjacent barangay, San Isidro, Bugtongbato and Regador.
The situation that Naisud is 4 kilometers away from the Poblacion, it goes that the
nearest High School is more or less 4 kilometers away, the Melchor Memorial School and the
Ibajay Academy.
Economic constrain before the establishment of the school, produced a 50%-60% out of
school in the barangay and its neighbors.
The clamor for secondary education, the parents and the Barangay Council file their
request for the establishment of a secondary school in their community, supported by the
neighboring barangay. But due to some discrepancy in the documentation it takes 2 years before
the realization.
July, 1982 is the glorious day for the young people who thirst for education and the
triumph of the community and the fruit of the labor of the Barangay Council headed by Barangay
Captain Serapion G. Aguirre and some will meaning individual such as; Mr. Eddie Ureta,
Riquero Miralles, PTA President, Mr. Manuel F. Tumbocon Naisud Elementary School
Principal; and with the cooperation of Barangay Council of neighboring Regador, San Isidro and
Bugtongbato; as well as the cooperation of the PTA’s of the said barangay, Naisud Barangay
High School was born.
In July 1, 1981 a secondary school was opened with temporary permit No. 32, s. 1981,
under Republic Act 2706 with a first Year Curriculum of the 1973 Revised Secondary Education
Program. The enrollment was 14 boys and 10 girls with a total of 24 students. Said entrants
successfully graduated in March 30, 1985 with 100% rate of graduation.
In its first year of operation the parents of the students paying a meager tuition and the
barangay council and PTA of the School wholly financially supported the school. In July, 1981
an emergency teacher in the person of Miss Candasie Suan who later became Mrs. Candasie S.
Pelayo as one of the teacher adviser of the first year class assisted in the academics by some
elementary teachers and under the guidance and supervision of Naisud Elementary School
principal Mr. Manuel F. Tumbocon.
With the Nationalization Act of 1994 all barangay high schools were converted into
National High Schools then the school was named into Naisud National High School. For then
on the school grown reaching all-time high of 516 students in SY 2011-2012, with a staff of 14
regular teachers permanent teachers and 2 SEF teachers under the direct supervision of a
Principal, Mr. Hippocrates S. Motus the first autonomous School Head of the School.
9
PRINCIPAL FACULTY AND STAFF
10
Philosophy/Vision/Mission
Naisud National High School
Naisud, Ibajay, Aklan
VISION
Naisud National High School an educational institution, a venue of Basic Education for all
learners, under the assistance, guidance and direction of an effective Administration, efficient
teachers and participative stakeholders, molding the youth to be thankful to his creator,
productive citizen, apriciate and respect the human values, environmentally responsive, and
active participant in a global community.
MISSION
Naisud National High School is task to provide the venue in honing and developing the inherent
talents of the youth through basic education transforming them to be active, disciplined,
productive, appreciative and consciously responsive individuals for his Creator, Country,
Humanity, and Environment and for the competitive global community.
11
12
MY FAVORITE TEACHER IN ELEMENTARY
E
lementary is the foundation of education. Every one of us must pass this
stage. In this stage of learning, you start to how to write, read, compute etc.
I owe everything to this woman. She’s the one who mold me as a responsible,
reasonable and as what I am now a fully developed person who’s also dreams to become a
molder and a model of the students in the next generation.
Every day that we go together, she always remind me to study well so that I can
get the high grades that I want to be. She teaches us how to write, to read and to
compute. Even though we are in our home and its weekend she guide me how to
read the words that I can’t read it correctly. I’m felt so sad. When there are times
that if I want to read and she hasn’t time to correct me.
I would say that my teacher/ have a big part in my life. It’s because in the first
place she has always time to teach me how to learn somethin
13
My Favorite Teacher In High School
igh school day are very memorable days to me. It’s because in this stage I learn
H
am now.
something more than I learn in my elementary.
My high school life will not be completed without this woman who cultivated as what I
In all teachers that I have in my high school Ma’am is the one who spend time to teach us how to
compute/solve the solving problems. In other subjects, one lesson is good for one day but in
Mathematics one lesson discussed for one week. It’s because my other classmates are slow
learners and can’t solve without the help of calculator. Second, they cannot understand the
English explanation. They wanted to translate it in binocular language. There are times that I am
irritated to Ma’am because the lesson that she discussed already she discussed it again for my
other classmates who didn’t understand.
She was the teacher that I always remember. She was my Mathematics teacher. Her named was
JENNIFER JAVELLANA. I receive more benefits from her.
If there’s no teacher like my favorite teacher, I could say that I wouldn’t be like the subject
Mathematics. Because in my elementary grade, I didn’t understand well the lesson that my
teacher discuses. Yes! I am listening but I can’t solve it correctly, there’s missing always in my
work. Unlike in my high school days, I can help my classmates who are slow learners in
Mathematics and I can explain the lesson that my teacher discussed.
14
ollege life is like high school life but not as the same at it was. College times are harder
If in my elementary and secondary days I have what we called favorite teacher, in college I have
too. She helps us to learn and love her subject by giving rewards. She motivate us to learn more
like if you answered her question and you got correct she give you a reward/souvenir like pens,
key chain etc. My favorite teacher in my college named Ma’am Melvi Mae Candari because all
module that she provide to us there’s an animations.
I love her as my teacher in college in the since that I am a visual learner, I learned by the help of
things that I saw or pictures.
15
As a teacher we can’t avoid that we have a favorite student
in a class. Marc Miralles, he is my favorite student during
my off campus. He’s my favoirite beacause during our
dicussion I saw him trying her best to pursue to become a
honor student. Marc Miralles is the rank 1 in their class.
He is always listening during my dicussion and he was also
got the highest grades in Mathematics subject. Sometimes
Marc help his classmate that are slow learner. I’m so glad
that I have a student like him.
16
My very own supportive mentor Mr. Joseph Sallador B.
Simera. He is the one who taught and mold me to become a
dedicated teacher someday. I’ve learned a lot from him. During my
off campus teaching he gave a chance to handle two classes every
day. When I’m having classes, he’s always there to guide me and
gave some strategies that are suited to my lessons. He also gave
some pieces of advice and those help me to improve my teaching
strategies.
17
M
y college journey considered one of the hardest parts of the
studies, there are lots of challenges and hardships, I
encountered but all of that was just little things compared to
the things that I have experienced and gathered. I owe everything in
one person. He was a teacher, who molds students to become like
him
The man I am referring to is no other than our Mr. Jerby J. Paderes.
We are now going to live the ASU CHARRM-IBAJAY CAMPUS, but one
thing for sure. I will never forget him, wherever I am in the future,
he will always be in my mind and in my heart, he always be my Sir
Padz!. I will never forget the line that you always said “ Bugto gid ing
pagtubo kakun”, whenever I heard this line I already know who is
he.I am so proud that I have experienced to be in his class, listening
and get inspired with his lectures and advises.
Every day in his class was full of motivations and smile, I knew that
you want us to be like you, but Sir, I knew also that we can imitated
you but we can never be duplicated you! Simple as, you’re have your
own brand and style, you’re the best among the rest!
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“Experience is the best teacher”
_Urch_
I
am learning by doing, exploring and experiencing one thing than sitting
and listening to the discussion.
In this subject I learned more. I learned what the works of being a teacher
are; being a teacher you must have an attitude like long patient.
Practice teaching teach me how to become a teacher, not just a teacher but a
teacher within, it also teach me how to manage my time every day I go to
school, how to handle the students that are very noisy, a class with a 48
students and also the lower sections, how to socialize with other teacher. I
can’t believe that I can handle this kind of situation. You can feel that you are
studying but you have your freedom, no more pressures and memorizing
words for exam, just let your ideas to share your knowledge to your students
and let them know you according to what is the real you. That is why this is
my favorite subject in College EDUC 24 (Practice Teaching).
19
Theories in Psychology that I applied in My Off-Campus
Student Teaching
"L
on later
rely solely on the effects of their own actions to inform them what to do.
Fortunately, most human behavior is learned observationally through modeling:
from observing others one forms an idea of how new behaviors are performed, and
occasions this coded information serves as a guide for action."
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-Albert Bandura, Social Learning Theory, 1977
Attention:
In order to learn, you need to be paying attention. Anything that detracts your attention is going
to have a negative effect on observational learning. If the model interesting or there is a novel
aspect to the situation, you are far more likely to dedicate your full attention to learning.
Retention:
The ability to store information is also an important part of the learning process. Retention can
be affected by a number of factors, but the ability to pull up information
later and act on it is vital to observational learning.
Reproduction:
Once you have paid attention to the model and retained the information, it is time to actually
perform the behavior you observed. Further practice of the learned behavior leads to
improvement and skill advancement.
Motivation:
Finally, in order for observational learning to be successful, you have to be motivated to imitate
the behavior that has been modeled. Reinforcement and punishment play an important role in
motivation. While experiencing these motivators can be highly effective, so can observing other
experience some type of reinforcement or punishment? For example, if you see another student
rewarded with extra credit for being to class on time, you might start to show up a few minutes
early each day.
Final Thoughts
In addition to influencing other psychologists, Bandura's social learning theory has had important
implication in the field of education. Today, both teachers and parents recognize the importance
of modeling appropriate behaviors. Other classroom strategies such as encouraging children and
building self-efficacy are also rooted in social learning theory.
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
"Pavlov's dog" redirects here. For other uses, see Pavlov's dog (disambiguation).
"Pavlovian" redirects here. For the Pavlovian Upper Paleolithic culture, see Pavlovian culture.
21
Classical conditioning (also Pavlovian conditioning or respondent conditioning) is a
kind of learning that occurs when a conditioned stimulus (CS) is paired with an unconditioned
stimulus (US). Usually, the CS is a neutral stimulus (e.g., the sound of a tuning fork), the US is
biologically potent (e.g., the taste of food) and the unconditioned response (UR) to the US is an
unlearned reflex response (e.g., salivation). After pairing is repeated (some learning may occur
already after only one pairing), the organism exhibits a conditioned response (CR) to the CS
when the CS is presented alone. The CR is usually similar to the UR (see below), but unlike the
UR, it must be acquired through experience and is relatively impermanent.
Classical conditioning differs from operant or instrumental conditioning, in which a
behavior is strengthened or weakened, depending on its consequences (i.e., reward or
punishment).
A classic experiment by Pavlov exemplifies the standard procedure used in classical
conditioning. First Pavlov observed the UR (salivation) produced when meat powder (US) was
placed in the dog's mouth. He then rang a bell (CS) before giving the meat powder. After some
repetitions of this pairing of bell and meat the dog salivated to the bell alone, demonstrating what
Pavlov called a "conditional" response, now commonly termed "conditioned response or CR.
In conditioning the CS is not simply connected to UR. For example, the CR usually
differs in some way from the UR; sometimes it is a lot different. For this and other reasons,
learning theorists commonly suggest that the CS comes to signal or predict the US, and go on to
analyze the consequences of this signal.Robert A. Rescorla provided a clear summary of this
change in thinking, and its implications, in his 1988 article "Pavlovian conditioning: It's not what
you think it is."
Edward Thorndike
Edward Thorndike (1874 - 1949) is famous in psychology for his work on learning theory that
lead to the development of operant conditioning within behaviorism.
Whereas classical conditioning depends on developing associations between events, operant
conditioning involves learning from the consequences of our behavior. Skinner wasn’t the first
psychologist to study learning by consequences. Indeed, Skinner's theory of operant
conditioning is built on the ideas of Edward Thorndike.
22
Law of readiness-a quality in responses and connections that result in readiness to act. Thorndike
acknowledges that responses may differ in their readiness. He claims that eating has a higher
degree of readiness than vomiting, that weariness detracts from the readiness to play and
increases the readiness to sleep. Also, Thorndike argues that a low or negative status in respect to
readiness is called unreadiness.] Behavior and learning are influenced by the readiness or
unreadiness of responses, as well as by their strength.
Identifiability- According to Thorndike, the identification or placement of a situation is a first
response of the nervous system, which can recognize it. Then connections may be made to one
another or to another response, and these connections depend upon the original
identification. Therefore, a large amount of learning is made up of changes in the identifiability
of situations. Thorndike also believed that analysis might turn situations into compounds of
features, such as the number of sides on a shape, to help the mind grasp and retain the situation,
and increase their identifiability
Availability-The ease of getting a specific response. For example, it would be easier for a person
to learn to touch their nose or mouth than it would be for them to draw a line 5 inches long with
their eyes closed.
s a teacher, our best aim is to enable our students to acquire knowledge and learn from
A it. And it’s our responsibilities to impart the knowledge that they need to learn. One
way to make students participate in the learning process is by providing time with the
proper instructional materials and strategies in teaching. Remember that students learn
by doing and our task is to engage the students in the learning process.
Doing this, the teacher should think n effective methods and strategies to enable the students to
participate and motivated to engage in the teaching process. As for me, I found it hard in
motivating some of my students to learn strategies and to participate during class discussion.
23
Some of my students are too shy to stand in front or even read a text or part of a selection
because they weren’t trained to. I got a hard time convincing them all that they should set aside
their shyness and will develop their self-confidence instead. And I was glad knowing that some
of them did have built and develop self-confidence.
Faculty Checklist
When are grades due, and when do students receive grades?
Is there a college or departmental grading policy?
Is there a departmental course syllabus, course outline, or statement of goals and objectives
available for the course?
Are there prepared departmental handouts?
Are there prepared departmental tests?
What is the library book checkout procedure? What instructional support aids are available?
What are the supply / book store policies?
Is there a department and / or college attendance or tardiness policy?
How do I get my copy of the text and supportive materials for teaching the class?
Where do I get instructional aid materials, films, videotapes, etc. and what is the lead-time for
ordering.
24
What is the name of the department chairperson, dean, department secretaries, learning resource
and other support staff, and significant college officials?
Introduction to Teaching
Most professions are heavily content oriented. With a mastery of subject matter, theory,
application, and execution and a considerable amount of devotion and hard work, one can
succeed in one’s profession. In the world of teaching, those factors, while necessary, are useless
without the additional qualities of having a pleasing personality and possessing the ability to
communicate with other human beings. Thus, to be an effective teacher, it is necessary that one
be multitalented and multidiscipline.
Basic characteristics of good teaching are:
Knowing one’s subject content
Knowing and liking students
Understanding one’s culture
Classroom communication
An important ingredient to professional teaching is the ability to communicate clearly. In a
classroom situation communication is more than talking and lecturing, Communication involves
eye contact, physical gestures behavior traits classroom presence proper media and blackboard
usage and other non-verbal activity that may be overlooked in other social situations.
It would be well for you to become acquainted with some non-verbal communication indicators
in our culture and above all to be conscious of behavioral traits that you may possess which may
be offensive or distracting to students. At the same time you should be conscious of your
strengths and positive traits that add to a happy classroom. The positive actions of an individual
are the same in the classroom as they are in social situations; thus, you may examine and reflect
upon your most positive features and mannerisms and incorporate them into your teaching
strategies.
The three R’s of teaching are repeat, respond, and reinforce. Very simply, they mean that student
comments and contributions, if worthy of being recognized in a class are worthy of being
repeated, responded to and reinforced by both verbal and other techniques at the command of the
teacher.
I and technological pressures to be more responsive to students' needs and more concerned
about how well students are prepared to assume future societal roles. Faculty are already
feeling the pressure to lecture less, to make learning environments more interactive, to
integrate technology into the learning experience, and to use collaborative learning strategies
when appropriate.
Some of the more prominent strategies are outlined below. For more information about the use of
these and other pedagogical approaches, contact the Program in Support of Teaching and
Learning.
25
Lecture. For many years, the lecture method was the most widely used instructional strategy in
college classrooms. Nearly 80% of all U.S. college classrooms in the late 1970s reported using
some form of the lecture method to teach students (Cashin, 1990). Although the usefulness of
other teaching strategies is being widely examined today, the lecture still remains an important
way to communicate information.
Used in conjunction with active learning teaching strategies, the traditional lecture can be an
effective way to achieve instructional goals. The advantages of the lecture approach are that it
provides a way to communicate a large amount of information to many listeners maximizes
instructor control and is non-threatening to students. The disadvantages are that lecturing
minimizes feedback from students, assumes an unrealistic level of student understanding and
comprehension, and often disengages students from the learning process causing information to
be quickly forgotten.
Case Method. Providing an opportunity for students to apply what they learn in the classroom to
real-life experiences has proven to be an effective way of both disseminating and integrating
knowledge. The case method is an instructional strategy that engages students in active
discussion about issues and problems inherent in practical application. It can highlight
fundamental dilemmas or critical issues and provide a format for role playing ambiguous or
controversial scenarios.
Course content cases can come from a variety of sources. Many faculty have transformed current
events or problems reported through print or broadcast media into critical learning experiences
that illuminate the complexity of finding solutions to critical social problems. The case study
approach works well in cooperative learning or role playing environments to stimulate critical
thinking and awareness of multiple perspectives.
Discussion. There are a variety of ways to stimulate discussion. For example, some faculty begin
a lesson with a whole group discussion to refresh students’ memories about the assigned
reading(s). Other faculty find it helpful to have students list critical points or emerging issues, or
generate a set of questions stemming from the assigned reading(s). These strategies can also be
used to help focus large and small group discussions.
Obviously, a successful class discussion involves planning on the part of the instructor and
preparation on the part of the students. Instructors should communicate this commitment to the
students on the first day of class by clearly articulating course expectations. Just as the instructor
carefully plans the learning experience, the students must comprehend the assigned reading and
show up for class on time, ready to learn.
Active Learning. Meyers and Jones (1993) define active learning as learning environments that
allow “students to talk and listen, read, write, and reflect as they approach course content through
problem-solving exercises, informal small groups, simulations, case studies, role playing, and
other activities -- all of which require students to apply what they are learning” (p. xi). Many
studies show that learning is enhanced when students become actively involved in the learning
process. Instructional strategies that engage students in the learning process stimulate critical
thinking and a greater awareness of other perspectives. Although there are times when lecturing
is the most appropriate method for disseminating information, current thinking in college
teaching and learning suggests that the use of a variety of instructional strategies can positively
enhance student learning. Obviously, teaching strategies should be carefully matched to the
teaching objectives of a particular lesson. For more information about teaching strategies, see the
list of college teaching references in Appendix N.
Assessing or grading students' contributions in active learning environments is somewhat
problematic. It is extremely important that the course syllabus explicitly outlines the evaluation
criteria for each assignment whether individual or group. Students need and want to know what
is expected of them. For more information about grading, see the Evaluating Student Work
section contained in this Guide.
26
fact, it is a separate strategy that encompasses a broader range of group interactions such as
developing learning communities, stimulating student/faculty discussions, and encouraging
electronic exchanges (Bruffee, 1993). Both approaches stress the importance of faculty and
student involvement in the learning process.
When integrating cooperative or collaborative learning strategies into a course, careful planning
and preparation are essential. Understanding how to form groups, ensure positive
interdependence, maintain individual accountability, resolve group conflict, develop appropriate
assignments and grading criteria, and manage active learning environments are critical to the
achievement of a successful cooperative learning experience. Before you begin, you may want to
consult several helpful resources which are contained in Appendix N. In addition, the Program in
Support of Teaching and Learning can provide faculty with supplementary information and
helpful techniques for using cooperative learning or collaborative learning in college classrooms.
Integrating Technology. Today, educators realize that computer literacy is an important part of
a student's education. Integrating technology into a course curriculum when appropriate is
proving to be valuable for enhancing and extending the learning experience for faculty and
student. Many faculties have found electronic mail to be a useful way to promote student/student
or faculty/student communication between class meetings. Others use listserves or on-line notes
to extend topic discussions and explore critical issues with students and colleagues, or discipline-
specific software to increase student understanding of difficult concepts.
Currently, our students come to us with varying degrees of computer literacy. Faculties who use
technology regularly often find it necessary to provide some basic skill level instruction during
the first week of class. In the future, we expect that need to decline. For help in integrating
technology into a course curriculum contact the Program in Support of Teaching and Learning or
the Instructional Development Office (IDO) at 703-993-3141. In addition, watch for information
throughout the year about workshops and faculty conversations on the integration of technology,
teaching and learning.
Distance Learning. Distance learning is not a new concept. We have all experienced learning
outside of a structured classroom setting through television, correspondence courses, etc.
Distance learning or distance education as a teaching pedagogy, however, is an important topic
of discussion on college campuses today. Distance learning is defined as 'any form of teaching
and learning in which the teacher and learner are not in the same place at the same time' (Gilbert,
1995).
Obviously, information technology has broadened our concept of the learning environment. It
has made it possible for learning experiences to be extended beyond the confines of the
traditional classroom. Distance learning technologies take many forms such as computer
simulations, interactive collaboration/discussion, and the creation of virtual learning
environments connecting regions or nations. Components of distance learning such as email,
listserves, and interactive software have also been useful additions to the educational setting.
All learning enters the brain through the senses. The subconscious mind needs to be on automatic
pilot to process the enormous amount information from the world available through all the
senses. Neuroimaging studies provide support for classroom strategies that operate on the brain’s
first sensory filter, a thin strip of brain tissue low down, just above the spinal column that
determines what captivates attention. This primitive intake filter, called the reticular activating
27
system (RAS), admits less than one percent of the sensory information available to it every
second.
Here are a few tips to help you arrange your classroom into a cozy, attractive...
Much like other mammals, the human RAS favors intake of sights, sounds, smells, and tactile
sensations that are most critical to survival. The RAS is a virtual editor that grants attention and
admission to things that have changed in the environment with priority to changes that signal
threat. When threat is perceived, the RAS automatically selects related sensory input and directs
it to the lower, reactive brain where the involuntary response is fight, flight, or freeze. If the
change is assessed as not threatening, the RAS focuses on sights, sounds, movements, smells,
and other changes that provoke curiosity or are recognized as potential sources of pleasure.
If a Star Wars movie is popular put up a sign, “TWENTY FOUR HOURS UNTIL THE FORCE
ARRIVES.” The next day when you discuss forceful or powerful opening sentences for essays,
centrifugal force, or forces of nature, you’ll have created anticipation, and that will harness
attention.
What’s New?
Change the seating arrangements, put up photos of last year’s students doing an activity your
students will be doing, light a candle, put a new exciting poster relating to the new unit under the
one that has been hanging and when you walk by, “inadvertently” bump into the wall so the old
one falls down and the new one is suddenly revealed.
Play a Song...
when students enter the room to promote curiosity, hence focus, when you tell students there will
be a link between some words in the song and something in the lesson.
28
That Doesn’t Make Sense.
Cognitive dissonance or discrepant events promote attention when students see or hear
something that is contrary to what they think they know or expect.
You can promote RAS admission of lesson on estimating by overfilling a water glass until it
spills. When students question or comment about what you did, respond, “I didn’t estimate how
much it would hold.” What you say next will be granted passage through the filter.
Radishes
There will be several minutes of curious excitement when your students enter the classroom and
find a radish on each of their desks, but this time will be paid back – literally with interest. They
will be engaged and motivated to discover the reason the radishes are there.
For young students, learning the names and characteristics of shapes, the radishes can become a
lesson to develop the concept of roundness and evaluate what qualities make some radishes have
greater “roundness” than others.
The lesson for older students might address a curriculum standard such as analysis of similarities
and differences. The RAS will respond to the color, novelty, peer interaction of evaluating these
objects, that are usually disdained when found in their salads, as they develop their skill of
observation, comparison, contrast, and even prediction as to why the radishes that seemed so
similar at first, become unique as they become detectives using magnifying glasses.
You can even spark interest in square roots when they guess the meaning of the radishes and
someone predicts, “Radishes are root vegetables, I bet we’ll learn square roots!”
The multisensory, novel radish experience has a greater chance of becoming long-term memory
as your students are likely to actually answer parents’ often-ignored queries about, “What did
you learn in school today?” Students will summarize the day’s learning as grateful parents give
them the positive feedback of attentive listening. The impact of the radish as a novel object, and
something they’d never expect to hear described by their child, now alerts their own RAS, and
the stage is set for family discussion of the lesson beyond the doors of the classroom.
Once you have their attention, you empower your students to become engaged in their learning
process. Using wonder (discrepant events), humor, movement, change, advertising, and
provoking curiosity capture students’ attention. They will be ready to focus on the sensory input
(information) in the lesson that relates to the radish, form connections and relationships,
and achieve the ultimate goal of adding new knowledge into their memory storage centers.
A radish on students’ desks today will reward you when students are captivated and focus on the
lesson attentively. The even greater rewards come months later when they remember the lesson
on their year-end tests, and years later when they use the memory of that lesson to find creative
solutions to new problems and develop interests that sustain curiosity for lifelong learning.
And you’ll probably never see a radish again and think of it as just a root vegetable.
Top of Form
Think about how you remember something:
When you want to remember a phone number, do you repeat it to yourself several times until you
get the whole number dialed?
When you get to the grocery store and want to remember four items, do you hold up four fingers
to cue yourself to remember?
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When someone asks you about a wedding you went to a few years ago, how do you call up the
memory? Some people may first think of the food. Others may recall the bride's dress. Still
others may recall the décor. Once you have a hook into the memory, each recall seems to trigger
additional aspects of the event.
What do you do to remember an important phone call you must make as you're driving home?
You know that when you enter the house the dog will be barking and your children will each
have something urgent to tell you. You don't have any paper to write a note. Some people may
sing a little song or chant: "call so-and-so, call so-and-so." Others may visualize an association
so that when they walk into the den to put down their package, that action will trigger a reminder
to make the call.
Using strategies intrinsically mean slowing down when you do something. It's a process of
deceleration so you can exercise quality control.
Motor images
Neurons that fire together, wire together.
To understand a motor image, think about struggling to remember a phone number.
You may move your fingers in the pattern of the phone number as if dialing it and find that this
helps you recall the number.
Repetition and practice trigger neurons (brain cells). When a set of neurons fire together, they
develop a "habit" of firing together again. Habits as well as academic learning occur this way.
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Use multisensory strategies so your child simultaneously sees, hears, and touches or moves with
the information.
Did you ride a bicycle when younger? Did you learn to ride your bicycle by reading a book about
it? No, you needed to actually practice riding. With enough repetition, you retained a motor
image of the procedure. Would you be able to now get on a bicycle and ride with relative ease?
Most people will answer yes to this question. Why is that? Our muscles remember information or
procedures that were practiced many times. Muscle memory is a powerful learning tool!
As an example, students may use motor images of the direction of the letters b and d by using a
hand pattern or "Fonzie fists" (named after the character Fonzie in "Happy Days"). Have your
child hold his hands facing his body and make a fist with each thumb sticking straight up (figure
6). The left-hand is similar to a b and the right hand is similar to d. Your child can recall the
sequence by saying the alphabet "a, b, c, d" (Richards, 2001, p. 86).
Practicing letter form or spelling words is enhanced by using air writing, another technique to
create a motor image for the student (Richards, 1999, p. 163). Air writing (figure 7) involves
writing the letters in the air (creating a motor image) while also imagining seeing the letters
(creating a visual image). The student should simultaneously say the letter as she writes it in the
air (creating an auditory image).
Other motor image examples for spelling words are also easy to incorporate into a homework
session: fist tapping and arm tapping. In fisting, the student taps each syllable of the word to be
spelled using the side of her fists. She then spells the word syllable by syllable, this time tapping
their fist to each sound within the syllable as she spells it. In arm tapping, the student follows the
same procedure of first identifying each syllable and then identifying every sound within each
syllable. This time the student uses two fingers of one hand to tap on the forearm of the other
hand. These simple strategies involve muscle memory while also helping the student proceed
systematically. These two aspects create a very powerful memory enhancer.
Many math strategies for finger calculation, especially multiplication, take advantage of motor
images or muscle memory. Examples are found in other publications such as LEARN (Richards,
2001, pp. 93-97) and The Source for Learning & Memory Strategies (Richards, 2003, pp. 161-
164).
Songs that reinforce academic concepts are also available commercially, such as Science
Explosion, Sing The Science Standards and Best of Schoolhouse Rock.
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Humor and silliness are valuable to use along with other strategies because our brains prefer to
remember unusual information. A short sentence or a sequence of letters can be used to aid in the
memory, with or without pictures or actual items. Remember, it is critical that your student
understands and knows the information prior to using these mnemonics, the purpose of which is
to serve as a trigger to bring up information. Following are examples of useful mnemonics.
Demystification
Henry Winkler has written several books describing his experiences as a student. This series of
children's novels are called Hank Zipzer: The Mostly True Confessions of the World's Best
Underachiever. The books are available on audio tape, and students who struggle gain much by
listening to the tapes. Hearing someone else, especially a famous person, describe frustrations
with learning helps to validate students' own experiences. The books also describe lead character
Hank Zipzer's many strengths and gifts. Students who struggle with reading benefit much more
from listening to books such as this than from reading them.
In the Hank Zipzer story, Niagara Falls, Or Does It? Hank is in the process of trying to write an
essay for class. He complains,
I'll never get out of my room. I hate my room. I hate my assignment. I hate my brain. Why
couldn't I think or write or spell or add or divide? Forget about multiplying.
It's not like I don't try. I do. I go over and over and over my times tables and my vocabulary lists.
My sister tests me, and I know everything. But then comes the test, and I can't remember them.
It's like my mind is a chalkboard and the words just slide off it in the time it takes to walk from
my apartment building to school, which is a block and a half away. It makes me so mad that
sometimes I hit my head with my fist, hoping I'll start everything working again.
Hank doesn't need to hit his head. He needs someone to explain to him how memory works and
why he is struggling. He needs demystification. For example, someone might say to him, "Your
memory is like a closet with a sticking door. It's hard for you to remember things in school
because the door keeps getting stuck. We have to figure out how to make the door open more
easily!"
The way to help Hank, and other students facing a similar challenge, open the door to his closet
is by using the tools in the RIP Toolbox.
Another book for students that describes learning challenges and the confusing mix of gifts and
struggles is Eli, The Boy Who Hated to Write: Understanding Dysgraphia. In the conclusion, Eli
ponders,
Maybe I'm not so different after all. I realize that everyone was different in his or her own way. I
finally understand what it meant when people tell me, 'We have all kinds of minds.' We're not all
the same.
I begin to agree. Yep, it is good to have all kinds of minds - because we really are all different. It
keeps life interesting.
EducationWorld is pleased to present this professional development resource shared by Dr. Jane
Bluestein, an expert in relationship-building, positive school climate and effective instruction.
No one knows better than a first-year teacher that the beginning of the school year bristles with
anticipation—and not just for the kids. Yet, despite the excitement, the weeks before school are
often filled with unsettling thoughts: “Will I ever be able to fill all those hours until lunch?”
“What if a parent comes to meet me and can only say, ‘You’re the teacher?!” “Am I going to be
able to keep the vows I made to myself to treat my students in a fair and loving way?”
There can be many scary feelings to face just before your role as “teacher” becomes real. To put
those worries in perspective, take a moment and fantasize; picture your idea of a perfect first
year. Imagine how you want to feel, the climate you create in your classroom and some of the
ideals you have set for yourself. This vision can be a big help in your personal goal-setting
process.
For example, most beginning teachers want to be competent and creative in a classroom where
students are inquisitive and on task. They envision themselves as flexible and fun, enjoying their
job, respected by parents and looked upon as a valuable addition by their school staff.
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These are great expectations—and important ones. But it is also important not to let your
expectations put undue pressure on you! Here are some suggestions to turn your beginning
teacher’s dreams into achievable goals
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Even your own enthusiasm and creativity can be a problem at times. One of the best things about
new teachers is the excitement, creativity and enthusiasm so many of them bring to their work.
And after collecting ideas and materials during your teacher training, it’s hard not to want to try
everything at once. Nonetheless, being sensitive to the students’ needs and energy
can pay off in a big way. High levels of enthusiasm may, at times, be too much for your kids to
handle. On days when children seem hyper, it may help to tone down your energy or soften your
voice. Be careful to avoid the tendency to present too much too soon, offer too many activities at
once or make too many changes before your kids can handle them. Save some of your more
incredible activities for slower times, when they’ll be appreciated and when your students have
mastered the routines and logistics they’ll need to succeed. You don’t want to run out of steam in
the first week!
Start slowly and simply. Establish a daily routine your kids can handle. Leave room for some
student decision-making, but be careful to not overwhelm. Your students may not have much
skill or confidence with decision-making yet so avoid offering too many choices, or choices that
are too open-ended, at least in the beginning. Responsible decision-making and self-management
requires certain skills and trust, which may take some time to develop. Once you and your class
feel comfortable with one another and have some of the basics down, you can expand available
options.
Remember too, that you will always run into events you simply cannot plan for or control. As the
newcomer on staff, you may be the one who has to cope with major changes, including the
possibility of room changes or even being moved to a different class or grade level a few weeks
into the school year. At the very least you will have to accommodate new students, transfers,
pullouts, equipment failures and last-minute schedule changes. This demands confidence,
flexibility and, most important, a sense of humor. Nobody likes these inconveniences, even
seasoned veterans. Hang in there and don’t hesitate to ask others to share their specific strategies
for coping with these problems.
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have been very negative and critical, and many people assume that we need to be this way or
kids won’t learn or take us seriously. Not true! In fact, a consistent focus on errors and
omissions, or a tendency to shame or humiliate students (even in the misguided interest of
improving their performance or behavior) will undermine your attempts to provide emotional
safety and can ultimately restrict growth in all students, not just in the one being criticized.
Focusing on the positive, even when it seems as though a student has done just about everything
wrong, allows you to build on the student’s strengths—whatever they are! This approach can
have an extremely positive impact on the climate of your classroom.
When a child has turned in work that you know can be better, how about telling her it’s a “great
first draft,” rather than scolding her for sloppy work? When another turns in a story with many
misspellings, punctuation errors, incomplete sentences and no capital letters, how about noting
the one thing he got right (perhaps excellent handwriting or an interesting title) instead of
wearing out the red pencil marking every error? Then defy tradition by using the mistakes as a
basis for your instruction—instead of a bad grade! Start with what they’re doing well and teach
them the rest! You may really have to look for good points sometimes, but your positive focus
will be tremendously encouraging and appreciated.
10 Tips for new teachers (expect to make ‘hideous’ mistakes, etc.)
By Valerie Strauss
This was written by educator Nancy Flanagan for her Education Week Teacher blog, “Teacher in
a Strange Land.” She spent 30 years in a K-12 music classroom in Hartland, Mich, and was
named Michigan Teacher of the Year in 1993. She is National Board-certified, and a member of
the Teacher Leaders Network. She is now an author and consultant.
1) Listen to advice (your mentor, teachers in the lounge, books for new teachers) -- but
trust your gut. Your goal is becoming an authentic teacher, one with autonomy, mastery and
purpose. You will inevitably build a practice by stealing ideas from hundreds of people. The
concepts you retain and embed into daily work are those that align and resonate with your core
beliefs about education, which will change over time. Learn to trust the little interior voice that
tells you what “works” for your colleague — her behavior rewards system based on Jolly
Ranchers, say -- may be totally wrong for you, in spite of the fact that her class walks quietly in a
straight line and your kids are straggling and blabbing.
2) Don’t wear your really cool clothes to school. Don’t read articles like this, either, which
suggest it’s easy or essential to find discounted designer items for your stylin’ school wardrobe.
Your go-to daily wardrobe will consist of items that are comfortable, have pockets, do not reveal
flesh (attractive or unattractive flesh) and are impervious to all bodily fluids and getting snagged
on the pencil sharpener. Shoot for: neat, clean, kind of boring. Avoid: sexy, luxe, casual chic.
Corollary: never store your designer purse in your desk drawer.
3) You’re the adult in the room. Don’t get into power struggles with students, where you feel
compelled to come out ahead by cracking down (this applies to first-graders as well as seniors).
Remind yourself: you’ve already won--you’re the teacher. You can afford to be magnanimous, to
decide on outcomes that benefit all kids (even kids you
don’t like), rather than gratifying your ever-present sense of control / retribution. You’re the
adult. Repeat three times.
4) Watch other teachers teach. You will probably have to arrange this yourself. But do it, even
if it means taking a fake sick day in November to watch colleagues in another school. Do it
during your planning period, too. Good teachers will be flattered when you ask permission to sit
in their classes for a half-hour. Once you watch a dozen other teachers, you’ll have a baseline for
measuring your own successes and screw-ups, plus a basket of field-tested techniques.
5) Most important people to get on your side first: custodians. Make cleaning up at the end of
the day a habit for students and yourself — out of genuine respect for custodians and their work.
Keep your room tidy, and extend honest friendliness to cleaning staff. It’s good karma--and it
means the custodian will hustle to your room when someone throws up.
6) Stuff is not teaching. I knew a teacher who had 25 pre-laminated, super-cute bulletin boards--
which she kept filed, by month, in color-coded rolling crates. She did all her Xeroxing before
school started. Her book baskets had perky bows and her door had gingham curtains. And her
teaching was rote and sterile.
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7) Don’t patronize teacher stores. Nobody needs expensive bulletin board borders or retail-
priced “Good Job!!” stickers. Anything you find at a teacher store can be purchased for less,
elsewhere — without cloying commercial images of school. Invite kids to answer questions on
your (chart paper-covered) walls. Snag 75%-off calendars in February, then cut them apart as
artwork displays. Buy Dora the Explorerbandaids to acknowledge emotional boo-boos or
outstanding work (even HS freshmen love them), dollar-store scissors and remnant-bin books.
Be funky, creative and cheap when stocking your classroom.
8) Set aside a weekly prep time. Extremely disciplined teachers might choose Friday afternoon,
but the advantage of waiting until Sunday evening is that you can work with a glass of wine in
hand, feet up in a recliner and awesome music playing. In 31 years of teaching, I never
abandoned the Ritual of Sunday Night. The planning and prep work you do may evaporate by
Tuesday, but knowing you’re all set when you arrive at school Monday morning is priceless.
9) Just as broken bones are stronger where they heal, fractured relationships with students
can turn into improved communication with your whole class. You will undoubtedly have it
out with certain students, over time. You’d be surprised how often they minimize incidents that
haunt you for days. You’d also be surprised at how much they want to be on your good side,
once you offer them the chance, in public--and how their classmates will respect your forgiving
nature.
10) Expect to make hideous mistakes. Expect to have crushing disappointments. Expect to feel
like quitting, at least a dozen times. Expect to anticipate vacations with pathetic longing. And
know that veteran teachers also experience these things, Just ask them.
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Type of Test I am using in My Student Teaching
A true/false test seems easy. It is essentially a two-choice item in which one is the correct
answer. The items consist of a declarative statement that is either true or false. All you have to do
is read the statement and decide whether the statement is true or false. At the very worst, you
have a 50-50 chance of being right. But would you be pleased with a test grade of 50? Of course
you wouldn’t. True/False test are a lot more difficult than they seem to be. They test very factual
knowledge, there are some guidelines you should follow to make sure you demonstrate your
knowledge.
Problen Solving
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Christmas Party
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Opening Salvo
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Dep-Ed Night
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Municipal Parade
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Street Dancing
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Valentines
Celebration
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Final Demonstration
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Exit Party
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Making Melody In My Heart song
By Georgy
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Move your body,
Come on now everybody.
Move your body, move your body.
Everybody come on now everybody.
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I’ve got melting melting in my feet
And I’m melting melting to the beat
I’ve got melting in my toes, melting in my knees
And when the music stops everyone freeze
“Hello Song”
by Cathy Bollinger
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Wake Up!
Listen & Learn
CHORUS
CHORUS
Chorus
Everybody move with me, get ready to start
You can let your body be a punctuation mark
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Curve both arms over a little way
Jump for the dot in a question mark
When a sentence asks a question
(Chorus)
Oo, oo oo. Ah, ah ah. Ee ee ee.
Oo, oo oo. Ah, ah ah. Ee ee ee.
Oo oo oo. Ah, ah, ah. Ee, ee, ee.
Oo, oo oo. Ah, ah ah. Ee ee ee,
swinging in a tree.
Hey, Mr. Monkey livin’ up in a tree.
A coconut is what I see.
Climb to the top and what do you think?
Crack it open and take a drink.
Scratch your head and scratch your chin.
Stick out your tongue and pull it in.
Scratch your side. Oh, what could it be?
You're turning into a chimpanzee!
Bridge:
Livin’ in the circus. Livin’ in the zoo.
Livin’ in the jungle. Livin’ true blue.
Livin’ in the trees is the best thing yet.
I wish that you could be my pet!
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Raise Your Hand Song
J. W. Snyder
(Spoken)
Now in the classroom there’s something you gotta do.
So here’s a song written just for you.
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Instrumental (Dance time!)
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Teaching
Competencies
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AKLAN STATE UNIVERSITY- IBAJAY CAMPUS
TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAM
Ibajay, Aklan
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A Detailed Lesson Plan in Mathematics-Grade 7
I. Objectives
At the end of the lesson, students are expected to:
1. enumerate the steps and solve a given problem using the FOIL Method; and
2. show interest in solving problems in the real life situation using the FOIL
Method.
(Varied Answers)
How do you feel today?
4. Drill
( Logical-Mathematical Intelligence)
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us? Answers may vary.
5. Review
(Verbal Linguistic and Logical
Mathematical Intelligence)
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How about this mystery gift class? Do
you know how to open it? In order to
open this mystery gift, each group must
have a representative to answer the five
questions that I will be giving. The
chosen representative must go at the
back. A representative who got a correct
answer, shall move one step forward
then the group with the highest points
gathered will have a chance to open the Yes Ma’am!
gift. Is the instruction clear?
Questions:
1. What is an algebraic expression Answers:
with two terms? 1. Binomial
2. Method used in getting Product 2. FOIL Method
of Binomials. 3. Product
3. What do you call the result in 4. First and Outer Terms
multiplication? 5. Inner and Last Terms
4. In the acronym FOIL, F and O
stand for?
5. I and L stand for______.
C. Developmental Activities
1. Presentation of the Lesson
To the winning group let’s give them a
round of applause. Open the gift and
read what is inside.
The mystery we have found is Special Product.
What is the mystery word you’ve found?
2. Discussion
(Logical- Mathematical Intelligence)
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(2x+4) cm
(4x-3) cm
AR =(2x+4) (4x-3)
=(2x)(4x)+(2x)(-3)+(4x)(4)+(4)(-3)
=8x2-6x+16x-12
=8x2+10x-12
Now, look at the four terms. What can The (8x2) is the product of the first terms of the
you notice about the first term (8x2)? two binomials. F
Very Good!
F O I L
= 8x2 +10x – 12
Combine like terms
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Steps:
1. Multiply the first terms of the
binomial.
2. Multiply the first terms of each
binomial by the second term of the
other. Add the product if possible.
F O I L
=(7x)(4x)+(7x)(-8)+(4x)(5)+(5)(-8)
=28x2 – 56x +20x + 40
=28x2 – 36x + 40
(3x+9) cm
(x+2) cm
Student does the activity.
AR=Length x Width
AR=(3x + 9)(x+2)
F O I L
=(3x)(x)+(3x)(2)+(x)(9)+(9)(2)
=3x2 + 6x + 9x + 18
=3x2 + 15x + 18
3. Generalization
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( Verbal Linguistic Intelligence)
The acronym FOIL stands for? The acronym FOIL stands for FIRST, OUTER,
INNER and LAST.
4. Application
(Verbal Linguistic, Interpersonal, and
Logical-Mathematical Intelligence)
Happy Face
Find the area of a rectangle.
Use the FOIL method to find the answer.
(2x+7) cm.
(2x-3) cm.
Group 2
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Big Smile
Create a poem about the product of
binomials using FOIL Method.
Group 3
Heart Smiley
Find the area of a square.
.
(3x+2) cm
Note: A=s2
Group 4
Hugging Emoticon
Explain how to find the solution using
graphic organizer.
Group 5
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ways.
IV. Evaluation
A. Use the FOIL Method to find the answer
1. (2X+3)(3X+2)
2. (x+2)(x+5)
3. (x+7)(3x+1)
4. Find the area of a table given its length (3x+2) cm. and it’s width (2x+3)cm..
5. The length of the book is (3y-3)cm. and its width (2y+4)cm. What is its area?
V. Assignment
Study our next topic about the Square of a Binomial on pages 212-214 of your book.
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TEACHER… A HERO
by: Clarissa B. Caper
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The Best Teachers
by: Joanna Fuchs
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The future depends upon our Teachers
Of various branches of Knowledge,
They develops our skills and aptitudes
Our civic, social and moral life.
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IM PROUD
IM A
TEACHER
by: Dollie Gonzales-Franche
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Excuses, Excuses
by Joyce Armor
I couldn't do my homework.
I had asthma and was wheezing.
I had nosebleeds, measles, heat rash,
with some very painful sneezing,
and itchy skin with blisters-
oh so blotchy red and hivy-
malaria and toothaches,
and a patch of poison ivy,
eight spider bites and hair loss,
and a broken leg with scabies,
Rocky Mountain spotted fever,
and a full-blown case of rabies.
I suffered-it was awful-
but I'm feeling better now.
Could I have done my homework?
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Falling Asleep in Class
by Kenn Nesbitt
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Forget the myths of ancient Rome.
Forget to bring your books from home.
Forget the words you learned to spell.
Forget to hear the recess bell.
Forget your homeroom teacher's name.
Forget the after-school game.
Forget which team's supposed to win.
Forget to turn your homework in.
Forget the distance to the moon.
Forget how many days in June.
Forget the capital of France.
But don't forget to wear your pants!
I Am a Teacher
By: Andrea Gastmeier
A Book
by Emily Dickinson
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This traverse may the poorest take
Without oppress of toll;
How frugal is the chariot
That bears the human soul!
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Thank you Lord for another day that you’d given to me, for the
grace that i received every day and for the knowledge and wisdom that
you’d showered.
Give me patience with those who are slow to learn, and even with
those who refuse to learn. When I have to exercise discipline, help me to
do so in stemness and yet in love. Keep me from the sarsactic and the
biting tounge, and help me always to encourage those who are doing
their best, even if that best is not very good.
Amen.
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To my beloved Family,
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the last stage of my college life, all of you are their to support me
morally & financially. To my mama, for all the sacrifices you did in
order to fulfill my needs. Day & night you’re working for us was
really hard to you. To my mama neng, for being always their when I
need money. To my papa eventhough sometimes I’m disappointed whenever
I need financial support but still I love you. Sometimes I’m shy to
tell when I’m short with my allowance. To my mommy ena, for the school
supplies that you gave me since I was in day care especially for the
support when I’m in high school. Yo’re are their during my prom & all
the activities I am joining. To my nanay magz for inspiring me that I
can be a teacher someday. To may tatay poldz,now that you are gone I
Love You still.Tatay, you are now one of my guardian angel. Even
though I was not there on the hardest part of your journey, I want you
to know you will be FOREVER in my life.
When I’m writing this letter I’ve realized that I have many
shortcomings. To make this letter short I’m sorry for all the mistakes
that I’ve done and thank you for all the things that you’ve sacrifice
to fulfill my needs. I LOVE YOU ALL.
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teaching. Three years was a short period of time, but if depends upon to
a person on how she will use her/his “WISE” skills to become
successful. I have a lots of ambition especially to my family, I love
discover new things, and I want to be called Teacher, a person with
dignity, moral and one of the best people in the whole world.
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JEAN MARIE G. LACSON
Centro Este, Libertad, Antique
09164880125
[email protected]
PERSONAL DATA
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Citizenship : Filipino
Religion : Roman Catholic
Mother’s Name : Libinia G. Lacson
Father’s Name : Jerome G. Lacson
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
SEMINAR ATTENDED
Leadership Training
Aklan State University – Ibajay Campus
August 15, 2014
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Hon. Berting Raymundo Jr.
Municipal Mayor
Libertad, Antique
131
Jean Marie G. Lacson
Centro Este, Libertad, Antique
09164880125
jean [email protected]
Octoober 12, 2015
Leah Noblezada
Principal
Libertad National Vocational School
Centro Este, Libertad, Antique
Dear Ma’am,
I am interested in applying for a teaching profession on the secondary level, in your school. As
my resume reveals, I am graduate from Aklan State University – Ibajay Campus with BS degree in
Secondary Education Major in Mathematics. I have a student teaching experience on the 7th grade levels
in urban school district of Ibajay, Aklan.
My student teaching experience afforded me the opportunity to assume all the responsibilities of a
secondary teacher. My student teaching experiences include teaching varied levels of learners in 7th
grade levels. I was challenge to become creative, resourceful, and most of all patients in dealing varied
learners.
I feel confident and qualified to take on the challenges that teaching offers. I am eager to
demonstrate my talents and skills within a school that is committed to high standards in education of
students. It is my goal to combine my range of experience with my ability to be compassionate,
enthusiastic, intelligent teacher who make positive contribution to your school.
I look forward to an opportunity to meet with you and further discuss my qualifications. In the
meantime, should you need to reach me, please feel free to text or call me at 09164880125.thank you for
considering my application.
Sincerely,
132