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The Teaching Profession
                                    by Nadine C. Matondo, MAIS


 The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession
  (adopted from Ontario College of  Teachers)

The Purposes of the Standards of Practice for the
   Teaching Profession are:
1. to inspire a shared vision for the teaching profession
2. to identify the values, knowledge and skills that are 
   distinctive to the teaching profession
3. to guide the professional judgment and actions of the 
   teaching profession
4. to promote a common language that fosters an 
   understanding of what it means to be a member of the 
   teaching profession.
The Standards of Practice for the
Teaching Profession are:
                                         Commitment
                                        to Students and
                                            Student 
                                            Learning




          Ongoing                                                        Leadership in
         Professional                                                      Learning 
          Learning
                                       Standards                         Communities


                                           of
                                        Practice


                         Profession                       Professional
                         knowledge                          Practice
The Standards of Practice for the
Teaching Profession are:
Commitment to Students               Leadership in
and Student Learning                 Learning Communities
 Members  are  dedicated  in         Members  promote  and 
  their  care and  commitment          participate in the creation of 
  to  students.  They  treat           collaborative,  safe  and 
  students  equitably and  with        supportive        learning 
                                       communities. They recognize 
  respect  and  are sensitive  to 
                                       their  shared responsibilities 
  factors  that  influence             and  leadership roles  in 
  individual student  learning.        facilitating  student  success. 
  Members  facilitate  the             Members  maintain and 
  development  of students  as         uphold  the  principles of  the 
  contributing  citizens of  the       ethical  standards  in  these 
  society.                             learning communities.
The Standards of Practice for the
Teaching Profession are:
Professional Knowledge                 Professional Practice
 Members strive to be current in       Members  apply  professional 
  their  professional  knowledge         knowledge  and  experience  to 
  and recognize its relationship to      promote student learning. They 
  practice.  They  understand  and       use  appropriate  pedagogy, 
                                         assessment  and  evaluation, 
  reflect on student development, 
                                         resources  and  technology  in 
  learning  theory,  pedagogy,           planning  for  and  responding  to 
  curriculum,  ethics,  educational      the needs of individual students 
  research  and  related  policies       and  learning  communities. 
  and  legislation  to  inform           Members        refine    their 
  professional  judgment  in             professional  practice  through 
  practice.                              ongoing  inquiry,  dialogue  and 
                                         reflection.
The Standards of
Practice for the
Teaching Profession
are:
 Ongoing Professional
 Learning                Members  recognize  that  a 
                          commitment  to  ongoing 
                          professional  learning  is 
                          integral  to  effective  practice 
                          and  to  student  learning. 
                          Professional practice and self-
                          directed  learning  are 
                          informed  by  experience, 
                          research,  collaboration  and 
                          knowledge.
The Ethical Standards for the
Teaching Profession
 The Ethical Standards for the Teaching Profession represent a 
   vision of professional practice. At the heart of a strong and 
   effective teaching profession is a commitment to students and 
   their learning.
 The Purposes of the Ethical Standards for the Teaching 
   Profession are:
1. to inspire members to reflect and uphold the honour and 
   dignity of the teaching profession 
2. to identify the ethical responsibilities and commitments in the 
   teaching profession 
3. to guide ethical decisions and actions in the teaching profession 
4. to promote public trust and confidence in the teaching 
   profession. 
The Teaching Profession
Chapter  1– You, the TEACHER, as a PERSON in SOCIETY
Objectives:
  With varied activities, at the end of the session, the 
  students are expected to:
1. define what is a teacher operationally;
2. tell their own perspective on teaching profession;
3. formulate their own philosophies in life and education;
4. identify their responsibilities as a Person;
5. summarize five philosophies of education and draw 
    their implications to teaching-learning; and,
6. create a personal learning journal.
The Ethical Standards for the Teaching Profession
are:
                 • The ethical standard of Care includes compassion, acceptance, interest 

  Care             and insight for developing students' potential. Members express their 
                   commitment to students' well-being and learning through positive 
                   influence, professional judgment and empathy in practice. 



                 • Intrinsic to the ethical standard of Respect are trust and fair-

Respect
                   mindedness. Members honour human dignity, emotional wellness and 
                   cognitive development. In their professional practice, they model 
                   respect for spiritual and cultural values, social justice, confidentiality, 
                   freedom, democracy and the environment. 




 Trust
                 • The ethical standard of Trust embodies fairness, openness and honesty. 
                   Members' professional relationships with students, colleagues, parents, 
                   guardians and the public are based on trust.




                 • Honesty, reliability and moral action are embodied in the ethical 

Integrity          standard of Integrity . Continual reflection assists members in 
                   exercising integrity in their professional commitments and 
                   responsibilities. 
Let’s know ourselves first… 
Are you excited? Not? Bored? Not interested? Uh-oh…
I hope this following activity will excite you!!!
Let’s value our selves first.

    Please get a piece of
          paper.
Take your time with this and you 
        will be amazed. 
Just answer 4 questions 
and the answers will 
surprise you.
Warning ! !
Be honest and do not cheat. 
The mind is like a parachute, it works best when it 
  is opened. 
This is fun to do, but you have to follow the 
  instructions very closely. 
Do not cheat.
MAKE A WISH 

BEFORE BEGIN!
A warning!
Answer the questions as you 
 go along. 
There are only 4 questions.
 This is an honest questionnaire which will 
  tell you a lot about your true self. 
Give an  answer for each item.
 The first thing that comes to mind is 
  usually your best answer.
Remember – no one sees this but you.
YOU HAVE YOUR WISH 

          RIGHT?
(1) Put the following  5 animals in the 
    order of your preference:

   Cow, Tiger, Sheep, 
   Horse, Pig
(2) Write one word that describes 
 each one of the following: 
 Dog, Cat, Rat, Coffee, Sea.
(3) Think of someone, who also knows you and is 
  important to you, which you can relate them to 
  the following colors. 
  Do not repeat your answer twice.
  Name just one person for each color:

 Yellow, Orange, Red, White, Green.
(4) Finally, write down your 
 favorite number, and your 
 favorite day of the week.
DONE ?
Please be sure that your answers are what 
                    you 

            REALLY WANT.
Look at the interpretations below: 

            But first!


     REPEAT your wish.
ANSWERS:
(1)
This will define your priorities in your life.

 Cow Signifies CAREER

 Tiger Signifies PRIDE

 Sheep Signifies LOVE

 Horse Signifies FAMILY

 Pig Signifies MONEY
(2)
Your description of dog implies your own
 personality.
Your description of cat implies the
 personality of your partner.
Your description of rat implies the
 personality of your enemies.
Your description of coffee is how you
 interpret sex.
Your description of the sea implies your own
 life.
(3)
Yellow: Someone you will never forget
Orange: Someone you consider your
 true friend
Red: Someone that you really love
White: Your twin soul
Green: Someone that you will
 remember for the rest of your life
(4)
You have to DO THE SAME to as many
 persons as your favorite number and
 your wish will come true on the day that
 you recorded.
This is true, even if you are not
 superstitious. Please do this. It is
 fascinating.
0-4 TIMES: Your life will improve slightly
5-9 TIMES: Your life will improve to your liking
9-14 TIMES: You will have at least 5 surprises in the next 
  three weeks
15 or more : Your life will improve drastically and all 
  that you wish will come true
Lesson 1: You, the Teacher, as a
                             Person

 John Donne said in Meditation XVII: No man is an island...
  "All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man
  dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a
  better language; and every chapter must be so translated...As
  therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the
  preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell
  calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the
  door by this sickness....No man is an island, entire of
  itself...any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in
  mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell
  tolls; it tolls for thee.“
 The idea that people are not isolated from one another, but 
  that mankind is interconnected.
You, the Teacher, as a Person
 How are you going to view MAN? Nature of Man?
No Man Is an Island
Artist(Band):Joan Baez
  No man is an island,           I saw the people gather,
  No man stands alone,           I heard the music start,
  Each man's joy is joy to me,   The song that they were singing,
  Each man's grief is my own.    Is ringing in my heart.

  We need one another,           No man is an island,
  So I will defend,              Way out in the blue,
  Each man as my brother,        We all look to the one above,
  Each man as my friend.         For our strength to renew.

                                 When I help my brother,
                                 Then I know that I,
                                 Plant the seed of friendship,
                                 That will never die. 
Lesson learned…
 We don’t live in a vacuum. We live in a society. We 
  are part of society. Our thoughts, values, and actions 
  are somehow shaped by events and people we come 
  in contact with. We, in turn, help shape society-its 
  events, its people, and its destiny.
 In the context of your life as a teacher, we would say: 
  “No teacher is an island. No teacher stands alone”
 Indeed, YOU can’t become a TEACHER alone!
Why do you want to become a
         Teacher?

 What is a Teacher for you?
 Knows the SM
   Has limited knowledge of teaching 
    methodologies
   Relies mainly on explaining or lecturing
   The students are only listening, 
    occasionally answering questions, making 
    notes, not personally involved or 
    challenged
   The students often get practiced by doing 
    individual exercise after a lecture




The explainer
 Knows the SM
      Is familiar with teaching
       methodologies
      Uses appropriate teaching and
       organizational procedures and
       techniques to help students learn
      Involves students actively and puts a
       great deal of efforts into finding
       appropriate and interesting activities 



The involver
 Knows the SM
      Knows about methodologies
      Has the awareness of how individual 
       students and groups are thinking and 
       feeling within the class
      Builds effective working relationships  and a 
       good classroom atmosphere
      With an active personality and attitudes to 
       encourage student learning
      Develops the conditions that enable and 
       thus students to learn how to learn and 
       thus become  life-long learners




The enabler
It is therefore, no joke to become one!
 Why? Many a time the teacher is blamed for the many ills 
  in society. There are lot of demands and much is expected 
  from you.
 Your influences on your students and on other people 
  with whom you work and live are greater. But these 
  influences depend greatly on your Philosophy as a Person 
  and as a Teacher. Thus, Your Philosophy of Life and your 
  Philosophy of Education serve as your “window” to the 
  world and “compass” in the sea of Life. Within your 
  personal Philosophy are your Principles and Values that 
  will determine how you regard people, how you look at life 
  as a whole. They govern and direct your lifestyle, your 
  thoughts, decisions, actions and your relationships with 
  people and things.
Teachers are expected to . . .

   CARE



                not to sCARE
CARE
 look straight in the eyes

 gentle touch/pat on the back

 acknowledgement
s CARE
 name calling

 ignoring one’s capacity

 belittling students
Buzz session
 Group activity: For 20 minutes
1. Why do you want to become a Teacher?
2. For you, what is meant by “No teacher is an island. 
   No Teacher can stand alone”.
3. Think and share… what are your different 
   Responsibilities as a PERSON? (example: To God, 
   family, friends, community, nature, parents, brothers, 
   sisters, classmates, enemies, etc.)
Journal Entries
Activity #1: All About My Self (describe in detail all about you)
Activity #2:  What is your understanding of the saying “No man is 
  an island, no man can stand alone.” Would it be different if it 
  will be written this way :“No Teacher is an island, no Teacher 
  can stand alone?” Explain. 
Activity #3: My Responsibilities as a Person
  Think of the many people who are helping you and influencing 
  you to become a teacher in the future? In what way do they 
  affect your life? With creativity, construct anything that will 
  show your different responsibilities as a person. To each 
  responsibility, code it with a specific color and explain why you 
  choose that particular color and what it represents to.
Lesson 2: My Philosophical Heritage
To philosophize is so essentially human-and in a sense to philosophize means living a
                              truly human life --J. Pieper


 An Exercise to Determine Your Educational 
  Philosophy
      Find out which Philosophy you adhere. To what 
  extent does statement apply to you? Rate yourself 4 if 
  you agree with the statement always, 3 if you agree 
  but not always, 2 if you agree sometimes, 1 if you don’t 
  agree at all.
Five Philosophies:
 Existentialism (Karl Jaspers, Martin Buber, Maxine 
  Greene)
 Perennialism (Allan Bloom)
 Progressivism (Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner)
 Essentialism (William Chandler Bagley)
 Behaviorism (Ivan Pavlov, B.F. Skinner, Edward Lee 
  Thorndike, John B. Watson, Gestalt)
Normative philosophies or theories
of education
 "Normative philosophies or theories of education may make use 
  of the results of [philosophical thought] and of factual inquiries 
  about human beings and the psychology of learning, but in any 
  case  they  propound  views  about  what  education  should  be, 
  what  dispositions  it  should  cultivate,  why  it  ought  to  cultivate 
  them,  how  and  in  whom  it  should  do  so,  and  what  forms  it 
  should take. In a full-fledged philosophical normative theory of 
  education,  besides  analysis  of  the  sorts  described,  there  will 
  normally  be  propositions  of  the  following  kinds:  1.  Basic 
  normative premises about what is good or right; 2. Basic factual 
  premises about humanity and the world; 3. Conclusions, based 
  on  these  two  kinds  of  premises,  about  the  dispositions 
  education should foster; 4. Further factual premises about such 
  things  as  the  psychology  of  learning  and  methods  of  teaching; 
  and  5.  Further  conclusions  about  such  things  as  the  methods 
  that education should use
Read the following aloud:
   This is this cat
   This is is cat
   This is how cat
   This is to cat  Now go back and
   This is keep cat read the third
   This is an cat    word only, in each
   This is idiot cat line from the start
   This is busy cat
   This is for cat
   This is forty cat
   This is seconds cat
In a short role play or comical skit or whatever method you
like…Explain how you will react to the given situation. What
advice will you give?
 Essentialist group – students are not interested in the 
  lesson
 Perennialist group – students want to become skilled 
  in certain fields of sepcialization
 Progressivist group – Parents questiion students’ 
  community immersion for it poses certain risks
 Behaviorist group – Teacher tells students from the 
  slum areas this: “If there’s a will, there’s a way. 
  Poverty is not a hindrance to success.
 Existentialist group – A colleague asks you to decide 
  for her fear that she may make the wrong decision.
Formulating your Own Philosophy
 I believe that LIFE is …
 I believe that CHILD is …
 I believe that SCHOOL is…
 I believe that TEACHER is…
Research on other Philosophies with Proponents
and indicate Why Teach? What to Teach? How to
Teach? In a tabular form:
   Idealism                      Rationalism
   Realism                       Empiricism
   Scholasticism                 Confucianism
   Pragmatism                    Epicureanism
   Analytic Philosophy           Logical positivism
   Postmodernism                 Phenomenology
   Social Reconstructionism      Stoic Philosophy
   Montessori                    Hindu philosophy
   Waldorf education             Buddhist philosophy
   Democratic Education          Christian philosophy
                                  Paolo Freire’s philosophy
Journal entries:
 Activity #4: My Philosophical Heritage. Write Learning insights.
 Activity #5: Formulating My Own Philosophies
Complete the unfinished sentences:
  I believe that LIFE is …
  I believe that CHILD is …
  I believe that SCHOOL is…
  I believe that TEACHER is…
 Activity #6:  Educational Philosophies That Interest Me
  Put your research outputs here regarding the other 
  philosophies that you have researched.
Thank you!!! That’s
all for today…
See you next meeting..
Thanks for coming….
References:
 Bilbao, Purita P., et.al. 2006. The Teaching Profession. 
  Lorimar Publishing Inc.
 2. Corpuz, Brenda B. and Gloria G. Salandanan. 2007. 
  Principles of Teaching 1. Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
 3. Zulueta, Francisco,  2006.  Principles and Methods of 
  Teaching.  Manila: Navotas Press.
 4. Salandanan, Gloria G. 2005. Teaching and the Teacher. 
  Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
 5. Lucas, Ma. Rita D. and Brenda B. Corpuz. 2007. 
  Facilitating Learning; A Metacognitive Process. Lorimar 
  Publishing, Inc.
 Seminar topics&presentations
 Internet websites

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The teaching profession.pptx[1]

  • 1. The Teaching Profession by Nadine C. Matondo, MAIS  The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession (adopted from Ontario College of  Teachers) The Purposes of the Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession are: 1. to inspire a shared vision for the teaching profession 2. to identify the values, knowledge and skills that are  distinctive to the teaching profession 3. to guide the professional judgment and actions of the  teaching profession 4. to promote a common language that fosters an  understanding of what it means to be a member of the  teaching profession.
  • 2. The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession are: Commitment to Students and Student  Learning Ongoing  Leadership in Professional  Learning  Learning Standards Communities of Practice Profession  Professional knowledge Practice
  • 3. The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession are: Commitment to Students Leadership in and Student Learning Learning Communities  Members  are  dedicated  in   Members  promote  and  their  care and  commitment  participate in the creation of  to  students.  They  treat  collaborative,  safe  and  students  equitably and  with  supportive  learning  communities. They recognize  respect  and  are sensitive  to  their  shared responsibilities  factors  that  influence  and  leadership roles  in  individual student  learning.  facilitating  student  success.  Members  facilitate  the  Members  maintain and  development  of students  as  uphold  the  principles of  the  contributing  citizens of  the  ethical  standards  in  these  society. learning communities.
  • 4. The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession are: Professional Knowledge Professional Practice  Members strive to be current in   Members  apply  professional  their  professional  knowledge  knowledge  and  experience  to  and recognize its relationship to  promote student learning. They  practice.  They  understand  and  use  appropriate  pedagogy,  assessment  and  evaluation,  reflect on student development,  resources  and  technology  in  learning  theory,  pedagogy,  planning  for  and  responding  to  curriculum,  ethics,  educational  the needs of individual students  research  and  related  policies  and  learning  communities.  and  legislation  to  inform  Members  refine  their  professional  judgment  in  professional  practice  through  practice. ongoing  inquiry,  dialogue  and  reflection.
  • 5. The Standards of Practice for the Teaching Profession are: Ongoing Professional Learning  Members  recognize  that  a  commitment  to  ongoing  professional  learning  is  integral  to  effective  practice  and  to  student  learning.  Professional practice and self- directed  learning  are  informed  by  experience,  research,  collaboration  and  knowledge.
  • 6. The Ethical Standards for the Teaching Profession  The Ethical Standards for the Teaching Profession represent a  vision of professional practice. At the heart of a strong and  effective teaching profession is a commitment to students and  their learning.  The Purposes of the Ethical Standards for the Teaching  Profession are: 1. to inspire members to reflect and uphold the honour and  dignity of the teaching profession  2. to identify the ethical responsibilities and commitments in the  teaching profession  3. to guide ethical decisions and actions in the teaching profession  4. to promote public trust and confidence in the teaching  profession. 
  • 7. The Teaching Profession Chapter  1– You, the TEACHER, as a PERSON in SOCIETY Objectives: With varied activities, at the end of the session, the  students are expected to: 1. define what is a teacher operationally; 2. tell their own perspective on teaching profession; 3. formulate their own philosophies in life and education; 4. identify their responsibilities as a Person; 5. summarize five philosophies of education and draw  their implications to teaching-learning; and, 6. create a personal learning journal.
  • 8. The Ethical Standards for the Teaching Profession are: • The ethical standard of Care includes compassion, acceptance, interest  Care and insight for developing students' potential. Members express their  commitment to students' well-being and learning through positive  influence, professional judgment and empathy in practice.  • Intrinsic to the ethical standard of Respect are trust and fair- Respect mindedness. Members honour human dignity, emotional wellness and  cognitive development. In their professional practice, they model  respect for spiritual and cultural values, social justice, confidentiality,  freedom, democracy and the environment.  Trust • The ethical standard of Trust embodies fairness, openness and honesty.  Members' professional relationships with students, colleagues, parents,  guardians and the public are based on trust. • Honesty, reliability and moral action are embodied in the ethical  Integrity standard of Integrity . Continual reflection assists members in  exercising integrity in their professional commitments and  responsibilities. 
  • 9. Let’s know ourselves first…  Are you excited? Not? Bored? Not interested? Uh-oh… I hope this following activity will excite you!!!
  • 10. Let’s value our selves first. Please get a piece of paper.
  • 13. Warning ! ! Be honest and do not cheat.  The mind is like a parachute, it works best when it  is opened.  This is fun to do, but you have to follow the  instructions very closely.  Do not cheat.
  • 17. YOU HAVE YOUR WISH            RIGHT?
  • 18. (1) Put the following  5 animals in the  order of your preference: Cow, Tiger, Sheep,  Horse, Pig
  • 20. (3) Think of someone, who also knows you and is  important to you, which you can relate them to  the following colors.  Do not repeat your answer twice. Name just one person for each color: Yellow, Orange, Red, White, Green.
  • 23. Look at the interpretations below:  But first! REPEAT your wish.
  • 25. (1) This will define your priorities in your life. Cow Signifies CAREER Tiger Signifies PRIDE Sheep Signifies LOVE Horse Signifies FAMILY Pig Signifies MONEY
  • 26. (2) Your description of dog implies your own personality. Your description of cat implies the personality of your partner. Your description of rat implies the personality of your enemies. Your description of coffee is how you interpret sex. Your description of the sea implies your own life.
  • 27. (3) Yellow: Someone you will never forget Orange: Someone you consider your true friend Red: Someone that you really love White: Your twin soul Green: Someone that you will remember for the rest of your life
  • 28. (4) You have to DO THE SAME to as many persons as your favorite number and your wish will come true on the day that you recorded.
  • 29. This is true, even if you are not superstitious. Please do this. It is fascinating.
  • 31. Lesson 1: You, the Teacher, as a Person  John Donne said in Meditation XVII: No man is an island... "All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated...As therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the door by this sickness....No man is an island, entire of itself...any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.“  The idea that people are not isolated from one another, but  that mankind is interconnected.
  • 32. You, the Teacher, as a Person  How are you going to view MAN? Nature of Man?
  • 33. No Man Is an Island Artist(Band):Joan Baez No man is an island, I saw the people gather, No man stands alone, I heard the music start, Each man's joy is joy to me, The song that they were singing, Each man's grief is my own. Is ringing in my heart. We need one another, No man is an island, So I will defend, Way out in the blue, Each man as my brother, We all look to the one above, Each man as my friend. For our strength to renew. When I help my brother, Then I know that I, Plant the seed of friendship, That will never die. 
  • 34. Lesson learned…  We don’t live in a vacuum. We live in a society. We  are part of society. Our thoughts, values, and actions  are somehow shaped by events and people we come  in contact with. We, in turn, help shape society-its  events, its people, and its destiny.  In the context of your life as a teacher, we would say:  “No teacher is an island. No teacher stands alone”  Indeed, YOU can’t become a TEACHER alone!
  • 35. Why do you want to become a Teacher? What is a Teacher for you?
  • 36.  Knows the SM  Has limited knowledge of teaching  methodologies  Relies mainly on explaining or lecturing  The students are only listening,  occasionally answering questions, making  notes, not personally involved or  challenged  The students often get practiced by doing  individual exercise after a lecture The explainer
  • 37.  Knows the SM  Is familiar with teaching methodologies  Uses appropriate teaching and organizational procedures and techniques to help students learn  Involves students actively and puts a great deal of efforts into finding appropriate and interesting activities  The involver
  • 38.  Knows the SM  Knows about methodologies  Has the awareness of how individual  students and groups are thinking and  feeling within the class  Builds effective working relationships  and a  good classroom atmosphere  With an active personality and attitudes to  encourage student learning  Develops the conditions that enable and  thus students to learn how to learn and  thus become  life-long learners The enabler
  • 39. It is therefore, no joke to become one!  Why? Many a time the teacher is blamed for the many ills  in society. There are lot of demands and much is expected  from you.  Your influences on your students and on other people  with whom you work and live are greater. But these  influences depend greatly on your Philosophy as a Person  and as a Teacher. Thus, Your Philosophy of Life and your  Philosophy of Education serve as your “window” to the  world and “compass” in the sea of Life. Within your  personal Philosophy are your Principles and Values that  will determine how you regard people, how you look at life  as a whole. They govern and direct your lifestyle, your  thoughts, decisions, actions and your relationships with  people and things.
  • 40. Teachers are expected to . . . CARE not to sCARE
  • 41. CARE  look straight in the eyes  gentle touch/pat on the back  acknowledgement
  • 42. s CARE  name calling  ignoring one’s capacity  belittling students
  • 43.
  • 44. Buzz session  Group activity: For 20 minutes 1. Why do you want to become a Teacher? 2. For you, what is meant by “No teacher is an island.  No Teacher can stand alone”. 3. Think and share… what are your different  Responsibilities as a PERSON? (example: To God,  family, friends, community, nature, parents, brothers,  sisters, classmates, enemies, etc.)
  • 45. Journal Entries Activity #1: All About My Self (describe in detail all about you) Activity #2:  What is your understanding of the saying “No man is  an island, no man can stand alone.” Would it be different if it  will be written this way :“No Teacher is an island, no Teacher  can stand alone?” Explain.  Activity #3: My Responsibilities as a Person Think of the many people who are helping you and influencing  you to become a teacher in the future? In what way do they  affect your life? With creativity, construct anything that will  show your different responsibilities as a person. To each  responsibility, code it with a specific color and explain why you  choose that particular color and what it represents to.
  • 46. Lesson 2: My Philosophical Heritage To philosophize is so essentially human-and in a sense to philosophize means living a truly human life --J. Pieper  An Exercise to Determine Your Educational  Philosophy Find out which Philosophy you adhere. To what  extent does statement apply to you? Rate yourself 4 if  you agree with the statement always, 3 if you agree  but not always, 2 if you agree sometimes, 1 if you don’t  agree at all.
  • 47. Five Philosophies:  Existentialism (Karl Jaspers, Martin Buber, Maxine  Greene)  Perennialism (Allan Bloom)  Progressivism (Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner)  Essentialism (William Chandler Bagley)  Behaviorism (Ivan Pavlov, B.F. Skinner, Edward Lee  Thorndike, John B. Watson, Gestalt)
  • 48. Normative philosophies or theories of education  "Normative philosophies or theories of education may make use  of the results of [philosophical thought] and of factual inquiries  about human beings and the psychology of learning, but in any  case  they  propound  views  about  what  education  should  be,  what  dispositions  it  should  cultivate,  why  it  ought  to  cultivate  them,  how  and  in  whom  it  should  do  so,  and  what  forms  it  should take. In a full-fledged philosophical normative theory of  education,  besides  analysis  of  the  sorts  described,  there  will  normally  be  propositions  of  the  following  kinds:  1.  Basic  normative premises about what is good or right; 2. Basic factual  premises about humanity and the world; 3. Conclusions, based  on  these  two  kinds  of  premises,  about  the  dispositions  education should foster; 4. Further factual premises about such  things  as  the  psychology  of  learning  and  methods  of  teaching;  and  5.  Further  conclusions  about  such  things  as  the  methods  that education should use
  • 49. Read the following aloud:  This is this cat  This is is cat  This is how cat  This is to cat  Now go back and  This is keep cat read the third  This is an cat word only, in each  This is idiot cat line from the start  This is busy cat  This is for cat  This is forty cat  This is seconds cat
  • 50. In a short role play or comical skit or whatever method you like…Explain how you will react to the given situation. What advice will you give?  Essentialist group – students are not interested in the  lesson  Perennialist group – students want to become skilled  in certain fields of sepcialization  Progressivist group – Parents questiion students’  community immersion for it poses certain risks  Behaviorist group – Teacher tells students from the  slum areas this: “If there’s a will, there’s a way.  Poverty is not a hindrance to success.  Existentialist group – A colleague asks you to decide  for her fear that she may make the wrong decision.
  • 51. Formulating your Own Philosophy I believe that LIFE is … I believe that CHILD is … I believe that SCHOOL is… I believe that TEACHER is…
  • 52. Research on other Philosophies with Proponents and indicate Why Teach? What to Teach? How to Teach? In a tabular form:  Idealism  Rationalism  Realism  Empiricism  Scholasticism  Confucianism  Pragmatism  Epicureanism  Analytic Philosophy  Logical positivism  Postmodernism  Phenomenology  Social Reconstructionism  Stoic Philosophy  Montessori  Hindu philosophy  Waldorf education  Buddhist philosophy  Democratic Education  Christian philosophy  Paolo Freire’s philosophy
  • 53. Journal entries:  Activity #4: My Philosophical Heritage. Write Learning insights.  Activity #5: Formulating My Own Philosophies Complete the unfinished sentences: I believe that LIFE is … I believe that CHILD is … I believe that SCHOOL is… I believe that TEACHER is…  Activity #6:  Educational Philosophies That Interest Me Put your research outputs here regarding the other  philosophies that you have researched.
  • 54. Thank you!!! That’s all for today… See you next meeting.. Thanks for coming….
  • 55. References:  Bilbao, Purita P., et.al. 2006. The Teaching Profession.  Lorimar Publishing Inc.  2. Corpuz, Brenda B. and Gloria G. Salandanan. 2007.  Principles of Teaching 1. Lorimar Publishing, Inc.  3. Zulueta, Francisco,  2006.  Principles and Methods of  Teaching.  Manila: Navotas Press.  4. Salandanan, Gloria G. 2005. Teaching and the Teacher.  Lorimar Publishing, Inc.  5. Lucas, Ma. Rita D. and Brenda B. Corpuz. 2007.  Facilitating Learning; A Metacognitive Process. Lorimar  Publishing, Inc.  Seminar topics&presentations  Internet websites