Below you will find a final reflection over my 27 hours of service learning this semester. Everytime I complete field experience I learn more about my varying strengths and weaknesses, allowing me to make goals for the future.
Using the Try-Angle
“In math you use many angles, but always use the try-angle.” This quotation describes what I learned during my math service learning this semester as I was at the Chandler Boys & Girls Club and in the resource classroom at
This semester I was a more active participant during classroom activities. The students made me feel like a teacher, allowing me to have more confidence to jump right into various teaching situations. I worked daily one-on-one with a boy named Clint. We focused on using a calculator, counting to ten, and adding low, single-digit numbers. At times I would begin to lose patience because he would lose focus after completing only a few problems on the worksheet. After checking with the teacher, Mrs. F, I created my own reward system for Clint. He loved Nintendo Game Boy, so I allowed him to play a game of Super Marion after he completed his math. This made him work faster and a lot better than the teacher had ever seen before. I was glad to know that I was involved enough to have designed a method that worked for the teacher and for Clint. By the time I left this class, he had learned all his numbers up to ten, could work the addition sign on the calculator, and could add a few digits without the use of the calculator. I was glad to know I was making a difference in his life because I was engaging in the mathematical activities without hesitation. In the future, I want to continue to be an integral part of the classroom as I take more initiative to work with the students.
I enjoyed the experiences I had at the Chandler Boys & Girls Club and in the resource classroom at
*Graphics
Math Blaster graphic from the website: www.amazon.com
Photo of myself from personal collection
All other graphics from Microsoft Office Clip Art