FS1 EP3 (Gregori, BEED 4-A)
FS1 EP3 (Gregori, BEED 4-A)
FS1 EP3 (Gregori, BEED 4-A)
School Environment)
Submitted by:
SHEINA O. GREGORI BEED 4-A
Submitted to:
MRS. LOVELY D. BACOLOD
OBSERVE, ANALYZE, REFLECT
OBSERVE
1. Find out the number of students. Gather data as to their ages, gender, racial groups,
religious, and ethnic backgrounds.
During class:
1. How much interaction is there in the classroom? Describe how the students interact
with one another and with the teacher. Are there groups that interact more with the
teacher than others.
2. Observe the learners seated at the back and the front part of the room. Do they
behave and interact differently?
3. Describe the relationship among the learners. Do the learners cooperate with or
compete against each other?
4. Who among the students participate actively? Who among them ask for most help?
5. When a student is called and cannot answer the teacher’s question, do the
classmates try to help him? Or do they raise their hands, so that the teacher will call
them instead?
Outside class:
Interview the teachers and ask about their experience about learners in difficult
circumstances. Request them to describe these circumstances and how it has affected
the learners. Ask about the strategies they use to help these learners cope.
Ask the teachers about strategies they apply to address the needs of diverse students due
to the following factors:
Gender, including LGBT
Language and cultural differences
Differences in religion
Socio-economic status
OBSERVATION REPORT
Name of the School Observed: Talave Elementary School
School Address: Proper Punao, Brgy. Punao, San Carlos City, Negros Occidental
Date of Visit: October 15, 2021
During class:
Based on my observation, the learners who are occupying the classroom were
approximately 37 students wherein there are 20 boys and 17 girls. Their ages are ranging
from 11-12 years old and most of them are Roman Catholics while some of them are Born-
Again Christians in terms of religious settings. Some of them are come from minority level
and there are others who were also reared by an average level family. Lastly, all of them are
purely Bisaya.
As I observed the Grade 6 students during class hours, I noticed the different
approaches of interaction by the students to everyone in the classroom. There are group of
students who are very participative and instantly response to the question which asked by
the teacher in a respectful and polite manner while on the other hand, there are some
group of learners who are just seated on their chairs and quietly listened to the discussion.
As I observed this practice, I found out that there is a boundary to the teacher and student
in a very nice way in which the students must use polite words when interacting to their
teacher for the main reason that their attainment in life are far enough. I also observed that
there are group of students in the classroom who act as a leader and a little teacher
wherein they are the one who volunteer to correct the mistakes of their classmates in a
nice way. Moreover, the learners feel comfortable with ease and with no hesitation to
interact with their classmates who are have the same ages and gender. It is quite good to
know that there is a learning and rapport established in the classroom in order to have a
meaningful and better interaction with one another.
Furthermore, while observing the learners who seated at the front and the back of
the classroom, I noticed they aren't behaving the same. During class discussion, most of the
students who are in front are the ones who show positive behavior wherein they raise their
hands to answer the teacher’s question and when they want to share their ideas and
insights during the subject matter. While learners at the back are just silently listening to
the discussion of their teacher and there are times that they conversing with their
seatmates since they are out of sight and attention of the teacher. So if the student is
misbehaving, the teacher calls the attention of the student and warns the student instead of
scolding it right away.
In addition, as what I perceived, the relationship among the learners is very light
and happy. They accept the ideas and thoughts of others and they also don't quarrel on
their different point of views and beliefs but rather accept and understand one another.
They also help with each other most especially during group works wherein every member
participates and shares their insights. Aside from that, if there are instances that they
compete with one another, it is just in a form of a friendly competition in which it will boost
the eagerness of the learners to be competitive with one another and will help in their
learning and developmental process.
Those students who participate actively are those that stand as class leaders in
which they are the ones who usually excel in the class. On the other hand, those who seek
the most for help are those who are at the back and side or corner of the class maybe
because they are far from the board that’s why they ask for more help and attention.
When a student is called and can’t answer the teacher’s question, some of his or
her classmates try to help him or her by whispering the correct answer. There are also
instances that the one who knows the answer will automatically help his or her classmates
by merely raising his or her hand to call the attention of the teacher just to be able to save
them. This only shows oneness or unity of the class and their concern towards their
classmates which is good because they care for one another.
Outside Class:
During break time, the students group themselves usually by gender and age
because I think they are more comfortable being with their peers with the same level of
thinking and same interests. Based on what I saw, there are group of students who are all
girls wherein they have the same likes like playing girly things. There are also group of
students who are all boys wherein they share same interests like war craft and action
games while there are also mixed social groupings wherein even that they are different
gender, they still have the same ideals like for example a group who loves to play indoor or
outdoor games because they share common likes.
Learners interact with each other freely and with no rules to follow wherein they
just talk about what they want without any restrictions. Most of the groups I observed are
those who talk a lot about today’s trending topics like the latest drama happenings on the
television, computer games, newly upgraded gadgets, hottest celebrities, and other stuffs
they want to play.
Some of them plays to be a class leader wherein they are the one whom
facilitates and control the noise level and regulates their classmates when the
teacher is not around. In other words, they intend to organize according to what
is good. On the other hand, those who are overactive are considered to be a
mascot or joker because they usually balance the class. They make the
atmosphere active and happy when the class gets too boring by cracking some
jokes. There are also attention seekers in the class wherein they will surely get
the attention of the teacher by doing different acts even though some of this acts
are not good anymore. There are also little teachers in the class wherein they
correct their other classmates' mistakes and teach them when they didn’t
understand the lesson. For me, these learners are very caring and have the
heart to help others. While there are also doubters or pessimist in the class who
easily gets disappointed and stop working on a certain activity when they find it
very difficult or hard.
What makes the learners assume these roles? What factors affect their behavior?
ANSWER:
The learners that makes assume these roles are based on how their classmates
perceived them in class. And of course, the environment also influences their
behavior on how they act, communicate and interact with one another. In other
words, they present themselves based on the environment in which they live in.
2. Is there anyone you observed who appear left out? Are students who appear
“different?” Why do they appear different? Are they accepted or rejected by the
others? How is this shown?
ANSWER:
There are few students who feel isolated and prefer to be with someone who has
the same thinking and interest possibly because they are not the type of
students who are constantly in contact with their friends and other people. It is
also due to their minority level and background wherein they are comfortable
to communicate and hang out with those peers who are also belong to a poor
family like them. However, they are accepted by everyone despite the fact that
they are not those typical students who are willing to interact with others. In
fact, their other classmates make them join to their group to let them feel that
they are united.
What does the teacher do to address issues like this?
ANSWER:
Of course, a teacher who truly cares for his or her students must not tolerate
such kind of behavior like this. Instead, as teachers, they must regularly
imposing restrictions on their students, lecturing them on the importance of not
bullying others and teach them on how to respect other people regardless of
ethnicity, gender, religion, culture and background they belong or have.
3. How does the teacher influence the class interaction considering the individual
differences of the students?
ANSWER:
The teacher that influences the class interaction considering the individual
differences of the students by showing a fairly values inside the classroom. The
teacher doesn't discourage their students whenever they are responding a
wrong answer from the question but instead, they just says thank you for the
answer then provides answer after. They do not discriminate the students based
on their physical appearance, beliefs and cultural inclination. The teacher
doesn't show biases according to what the students' performance and routine
when they were inside the classroom but instead, they must be treated equally
so that they will feel that they are all the same. The teacher also knows how to
discipline the learners when they are misbehaving. And most of all, the teacher
must be a good role model with a great sense of humour and a good value so
that the students are not afraid to interact with them.
4. What strategies does the teacher use to maximize the benefits of diversity in the
classroom? How does the teacher leverage diversity?
ANSWER:
I think the factors that influence the grouping of learners outside the classroom
is their common interests because it is normally consider that being an
individual, you will automatically go with the group that you will feel the sense
of belongingness wherein you can share your likes and dislikes. At the same
time, as you join a certain group, this reflects of who you are as a person. It
gives you a different vibes. And this is what I had noticed to the group of
learners when they are outside the classroom.
REFLECT
How did you feel being in the classroom? Did you feel a sense of oneness or
unity among the learners and between the teacher and learners?
When I'm in the classroom, I feel that I am very welcomed because the teacher is so
accommodating and the class showed respect upon introducing me to them. And by that I
already feel that I’m completely a teacher.
Within my mind I could also feel the sense of oneness and unity among the learners
and the teacher because the learners intermingled positively to their teacher. It is intact to
them the value of unity or the connections that keep them stronger through helping each
other learned together without having one of their classmates left behind. When their
teacher asks a question, they automatically respond to it instantly without any hesitation
and qualm to themselves. This is only shows that the student like them has a self-
confidence and trust to themselves even if they are not as good as others. Indeed, unity
implies uniformity and harmony and the class I visited portray this kind of characteristic.
ACTIVITY Observing the differences among learners with
dissabilities, giftedness, and talents
OBSERVE
Use the observation guide provided for you to document your observations.
Read the following carefully before you begin to observe. Then write your observation
report on the space provided.
The learners who are performing well are mostly those who are seated in front of
the class, the average is in the middle, while those with a slower rate of learning are found
at the back corner of the class.
I asked Mrs. Palabrica about the learners which might have a learning disability.
According to her, some students have very short attention span, can't follow simple tasks
and directions and have weak reading comprehension.
As what I have observed, the fast learners are the ones who actively participate in
activities and show much interest than the others. The slower learners on the other hand,
are those who spent most of their time through playing, conversing with their seatmates
and have showed signs of short attention span.
The teacher knew this very well that every learner learns at their own rate. She told
me that it is normal for a class to have vast differences in learning rates in terms of
different subject areas because of the common interests of the learners in particular. In this
case, it is very important to used different teaching methods in order achieve a good
learning rate among the students. So, as a teacher, she continuously devised ways to cope
up with this situation in order to give the learners as well as herself to adjust and make
learning effective in the best possible way.
ANALYZE
1. Did your observation match the information given by the teacher?
Yes, my observation really did match the information provided by the teacher.
2. Describe the differences in ability levels of the students in the class? What
practices or strategies are done or should be done to differentiate instruction
to meet the needs of the learners?
The different ability levels of the learners in this class are their ability to interpret
and follow instructions, attention span, and lack of interest in subjects because they
focus mostly on playing. The strategies for this in order to meet the needs of the
learners is first, the teacher must devise a technique for designing lessons that are
based on the learning styles of the students in order to cater their needs, interest
and intelligence level. Second, the teacher must group the learners through shared
interest, topic or ability for assignments so that they can cooperate with others as
well as to alter their focus. And lastly, the teacher should administer the classroom
with a safe and supportive environment in order for the learners to learn and
engage more in every discussion.
2. What dispositions and traits will you need as a future teacher to meet
the needs of the learners?
As a future teacher, I will need the following dispositions and traits to respond to
my learners’ needs:
OBSERVE
Use the observation guide provided for you to document your observations.
If your are watching videos you searched, instead of actually visiting a school, have
these question in mind as you are watching the videos. You can try get in touch with
the creator of the videos and interview them too.
1. Before you observe, read about the specific IP group in the school you will visit.
Know their norms and customary greetings. This will help you blend in the school
community and interact with respect.
2. Observe and note the different parts or areas of the school environment. How are
learning spaces arranged?
3. What activities do they do in these different areas of the school?
4. Who are the people who manage the school? Who are involved in teaching the
learners?
5. Observe how the teaching-learning process happens. Describe the learning activities
they have and the teaching strategies the teacher uses.
6. Describe the interaction that is taking place between the teacher and learners,
among the teachers, and in the school in general.
7. What instructional materials and learning resources are they using?
8. Interview the teacher or principal about the curriculum. Find out the curriculum
goals. You can use the questions found on the Analysis part of the activity.
Write your observation report here.
The main goal of IP students in Capas, Tarlac on why they want to pursue learning is
that they want to learn so they cannot be deceived by other people.
As I made a virtual visit online particularly through YouTube videos, I was able to
learn about the Aeta-Magantsi's culture, tradition and educational system. According to the
video I'd recently watched, Flora Primary School in Maruglu, Capas, Tarlac is a school
exclusively for Aeta-Magantsi students or commonly known as Negritos. There are more or
less 50 students in the school with only 3 teachers. With the travel conditions, the contact
hours of students with their teachers are exactly 4 days.
The school was well-constructed using concrete materials for the safety and
comfortability of the students. Although every classroom is not spacious enough but the
teachers are helping together to support the needs of the learners such as providing
instructional materials for better learning and engagement of the lesson.
Each classroom has mixed of different grade level students. One classroom is
composed of Grade 4 and Grade 5 students due to the lack of teachers and the facility.
However, the interaction between teachers and students are bound by respect where
students are paying attention attentively and teachers letting them experience what they
are teaching hands on. Learners are very determined to learn amidst the inadequacy of
learning materials such as books. One student said that they are using Grade 4 textbooks
instead of Grade 5 textbooks due to the rainy season that hinders the delivery of the books
to their school.
Teachers are also resourceful and creative with their instructional materials. Even
though they find it hard to teach using chalk and board only, they still find ways on how to
teach the lesson effectively. There is this one teacher who shares his idea that he uses
pebbles from the river to teach addition and multiplication since they are also adhering to
the indigenized curriculum. One teacher also shared his challenge in teaching alphabets
based on the words that we commonly associate with the letter. Instead of teaching letter
"A" using apple, he uses those words that are more familiar to the students.
The challenge in the curriculum is also a factor that affects the progress of the
students' learning. Indigenous Peoples Education Curriculum Framework is not utilized in
this school because it is not yet distributed to them. So, they follow the Old Curriculum
Framework instead. But the time frame in this curriculum is not applicable with the IP
students' ability level because sometimes, one topic covers 3 days.
No matter how eager and effective a teacher is, the problem with the lack of
resources affects the students' performance in the school which makes it hard for teachers
achieve their objectives in order to help the IP students learn better.
ANALYZE
Curriculum Design, Competencies, and Answer each question based on your
Content observation and interview data.
1. Does the school foster a sense of One particular example on how the school
belonging to one’s ancestral domain, foster the sense of belonging to Aeta's belief
a deep understanding of the and practices is when, one of the teacher is
community’s beliefs and practices. teaching the Aeta's tradition and the teacher,
Cite examples. as part of the school, demonstrated an
example of deep understanding of what the
Aeta value in their culture.
2. Does the school show respect to the Yes, the school shows respect of the
community’s expression of community's expression of spirituality by
spirituality? How? respecting each other's unique and
traditional beliefs and how the way they live
because they strongly believe it has its own
beauty and spirit.
3. Does the school foster in the Yes. The school shows a deep appreciation of
indigenous learners a deep Aeta's identity through encouraging the
appreciation of their identity? How? students to learn their own traditional
practices and helping them value their
culture through integrating such concepts in
the discussion.
4. Does the curriculum teach skills and According to one of the teachers, they are not
competencies in the indigenous adhering to the IPED curriculum but they use
learners that will help them develop the old curriculum framework instead. This
and protect their ancestral domain means that the skills and competencies that
and culture? the learners need to develop are more
generalized and do not specifically
emphasize their tribe's ancestral domain and
culture.
5. Does the curriculum link new Yes because even if they are using the old
concepts and competencies to the life curriculum but it still link new concepts and
experience of the community? competencies to the life experience of the
community. The old curriculum still promotes
and teaches the importance of one's culture,
traditions, beliefs and practices to have a
better understanding to one's identity and
race.
6. Do the teaching strategies help Yes, as the mode of teaching is formal, the
strengthen, enrich, and complement "indigenized" strategies that the teachers
the community’s indigenous employ in teaching the topics also
teaching-process? complement the Aeta's teaching process
which makes the learning more effective and
compelling.
7. Does the curriculum maximize the Yes. One particular example on this aspect is
use of the ancestral domain and the integration of cultural dances and
activities of the community as practices of Aeta in classroom activities that
relevant settings for learning in highlights the concept of preserving and
combination with classroom-based valuing their own culture, tradition and
sessions? Cite examples. identity.
For me, here are my suggestions regarding the knowledge systems and practices and rights
of indigenous peoples in the Flora Primary School:
The DepEd Division of Tarlac must ensure that the IPED curriculum is distributed in
remote schools most especially those schools that are exclusively for IP students.
They must arrange effective methods and techniques for teachers who are struggling
to travel to the mountain schools without sacrificing the contact hours of students
with their teachers.
They should hire more teachers to teach indigenous people and give them exact
compensation.
They must provide textbooks for the learners as well as modern instructional
materials for the teachers to use.
The curriculum for indigenous framework should emphasize valuing of culture and
tradition of the indigenous peoples through integrating real-life concepts in every
lesson.
REFLECT
Reflect based on your actual visit or videos that you watched.
2. What did you appreciate most from your experience in visiting the school with
indigenous learners? Why?
I really admire the teachers in Flora Primary School in terms of their dedication and
determination to teach the IP learners no matter how hard the situation is. I
appreciate their effort to travel more than 5 hours just to educate the students and
they never give up on helping their learners to achieve their dreams in life. For them,
teachers are the only heroes that will help the students claim their rights to
education.
3.2. Uphold and celebrate their culture, beliefs and practices by integrating
celebration of culture activities in every lesson and maximizing the use
different teaching methods that recognizing diversity and inclusion among
students.
With the principle of individual differences in mind, what methods and strategies will
you remember in the future to ensure that you will be able to meet the needs of both the high
and low achievers in your class? Make a collection of strategies on how to address students'
different ability levels.
Here are my methods and strategies in the future to ensure that I will be able to meet
the needs of both the high and low achievers in my class:
1. Invest time to get to know personally each of my students through focusing on their
strengths, weaknesses, interests and objectives so I can easily build rapport and
respond to their needs.
2. Lessen the pressure impose to them but rather make activities that is enjoyable and
motivating to them.
3. Allow the use of Filipino, English and Mother Tongue dialect for oral recitations or
even small inquiries so that all the learners will be given a chance to share their ideas,
learning's and opinions.
4. Modifying the subject related activities and tasks into individual, group and pair work
so that students have a chance to interact, learn, communicate and form relationship
from their classmates.
5. Pay close attention to the low achievers in class and conduct a counselling to discover
their problems, difficulty and even hindrances why they aren't focus in learning to be
able to address it.
6. I will use different learning resources like written and digital materials and actual
experiences such as visiting museums and field trips.
7. Provide an inclusive learning environment for all the students to feel that they are
belong and cared despite of their individual differences.
As a future teacher, it is important to ask, do research and read existing studies about
handling effectively diverse students. If the students are excelling, then continue to improve
and use the strategies, but if they didn't succeed, work again on task to understand well their
varying abilities.
LINK Theory to Practice
Directions: Read the items given below and encircle the correct answer.
A. Compare students.
B. Make use of a variety of teaching and assessment methods and activities.
C. Do homogenous groupings for group activities.
D. Develop different standards for different student groups.
5. All are best practices in using learning resources for indigenous learners, EXCEPT
___________.
6. All are best practices for assessment in the Indigenous Peoples Education
Framework, EXCEPT _____________.
7. Read the following comments by the teacher. Which of these comments will most
likely make a child try harder, rather than give up?
A. The teacher groups the learners by their ability level and makes the groups work
with the same but assigns a different task appropriate for each group to
accomplish.
B. The teacher divides the class into three heterogenous groups and assigned the
same activity for each group to work on.
C. The teacher groups the learners by their ability levels and assigns each group a
different task on the groups to work on.
D. The teacher groups the learners by ability levels and assigns each group a
different task on the same topic, and then requests three different teachers, each
to assess one of the groups.
A. Allowing children to show that they learned the stages of mitosis in a way where
they feel most comfortable.
B. Allowing children to show that they learned the stages of mitosis in a way where
they feel most comfortable except by learning.
C. Preparing two different sets of examination, one for the fast learners and
another for the slow learners.
D. Applying two sets of different standards.