Saturday, December 7, 2019

Module 4_Muro


What stood out to me the most this week, was the section on Collaboration and Cooperation in chapter 10 (398).  This section talked a lot about how much companies value how well their employees are able to work well together.  “Most corporations are looking for employees who are not only good at the mastery of a particular set of academic skills but who also have the ability to work harmoniously with a wide variety of coworkers as a cooperative team, to demonstrate initiative and responsibility, and to communicate effectively.” (E. Aronson, 2000, p. 91) (398).  I wholeheartedly agree with this.  I believe it is very important for people who work together to share a mutual understanding of the greater good.  A shared objective or improvement in which all parties are working together to reach.  For teachers in a school, I feel this is even more critical considering there are children who rely on those teachers to maintain an environment for them full of safety and stability.  I do believe the students feel safe at the school that I work at.  As far as stability goes, I have to say that I am not so sure.  The climate of my school does not reflect a climate that revolves around healthy and positive relationships amongst the adults. 
Not all of the adults are focused primarily on their responsibilities as an educator.  Some are more concerned with petty squabbles with their colleagues.  Instead of supporting each other, they are too busy trying to tear one another down.  Far too often, I have witnessed teachers whose priorities are not what they should be and rather than engage their students meaningfully, they choose to place a Chromebook in front of them so that they can focus on other more unimportant issues.  This brings me to my next topic, Technology and Learning (410).  I have always had mixed feelings about technology in the classroom.  Yes, I do believe that technology can and has drastically improved student’s education on so many different levels.  I also believe that technology in the wrong hands can have a negative effect on a student’s overall education process.  Many teachers rely too much on technology to take on the role of teacher.  There really is no substitution for the real thing.  “Like any teaching tool, computers can be effective if used well, but just being on a computer will not automatically increase academic achievement” (410).
One last and vital component in learning is how a student views their own self-efficacy as well as their own self-concept and self-esteem.  How these three concepts are perceived can have a lasting effect on a student’s education as well as the roles they will be assigned to by their teachers, their peers, or even themselves.  I have been around students that I know are more than capable of understanding and accomplishing a particular lesson or assignment, but due to their own self-worth, they almost always shy away from taking on more assertive roles in the classroom.  “Most people assume self-efficacy is the same as self-concept or self-esteem, but it isn’t.  Although these terms refer to self-beliefs, they differ in important ways. Self-efficacy refers to a “context-specific assessment of competence to perform a specific task” (Pajares, 1997, p. 15). Self-concept, on the other hand, has historically referred to a more global self-perception. One’s self-concept is judged by both external and internal comparisons, using other people or other aspects of the self as frames of reference (Marsh, Xu, & Martin, 2012). But self-efficacy focuses on your ability to successfully accomplish a particular task with no need for comparisons—the question is whether you can do it, not whether others would be successful. Also, self-efficacy beliefs are strong predictors of behavior, but self-concept has typically shown weaker predictive power" (Anderman & Anderman, 2014; Bandura, 1997) (434). Adults also have to deal with these same concepts in their lives.    



3 comments:

  1. Hi,
    I also wrote my blog about Collaboration and Cooperation because I understand how important it is in real life. My only concern is how to effectively teach cooperation to all students especially when grades are assigned. In every group you will have a student that is happy receiving a “C” or “D” and another student that will settle for nothing less than an “A” or “B”. This situation gets more stressful in the high school years were grades can determine were or if a child goes to college. Many children need scholarships, which are mostly given depending on GPA. This is just my current thought but as I continue my coursework, I am interested to see if my viewpoint will change.

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  2. David, I agree with you one hundred percent about communication and working as a team. I feel even if you as a team don’t see eye to eye with everything but still have a line of respect and communication you can still run an efficient classroom. I work in a school were a majority of the staff gets along which is nice because it is a smaller school and a very challenging school to work at. Sadly there are a few select staff that does not communicate and you can really feel the tension not only in the classroom but when staff has to interact with that specific staff. Unfortunately, I know what you’re talking about when adults can’t act or handle their own personal opinions and or personal problems with others. Meaning I see kids losing one on one time and even instructional time because staff is fighting about something that has nothing to do with students or teaching. Also, I see what you are talking about when you mention self-worth students do tend to believe they aren’t capable of doing things when they are far more capable than they believe. We also have a student because she is so mentally sick staff has to step back on class work to work on behavior and I feel as if she is being denied of her abilities for her academics.

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  3. I can entirely relate to the first half of your blog, even though I do not currently work in a school. My corporate setting is the same way - lots of gossip and distraction from the work at hand, and from keeping everyone focused on the greater good. I do believe that it is essential to a company's success (and definitely to a school's) to have the ability to work together cross-functionally and collaborate with one another. In my world, this currently means it does not matter if you work in finance, sales or marketing.. we all need to work together to get a job done, because we're all striving for the same success. We're only a strong as our weakest link, and we forget this all the time. We often try to make others look weak, so that we can get ahead and get that promotion we've been striving for. This is not sustainable, and ultimately hurts the company as a whole. Same goes for teaching, in my belief. If we compete against one another in an unhealthy way, we're forgetting our main purpose is to do what's best for our students, and that often means working together to do so.

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