Reflection on Week 3 in New Zealand
A view of Hawke's Bay from up on Napier Hill
What
a busy week this was! From John with EA coming to visit on Tuesday, to the
Orchestra Festival in Napier all day Wednesday, to HNHS Open Evening all night
Thursday, it was a hectic yet exciting week in Hawke’s Bay. My teaching load is
starting to fill up pretty quickly already, but each day brings new
experiences, new challenges, and new rewards. Before I get into the details of
the week though, allow me to explain a bit about the schedule here at HNHS,
something I neglected to talk about last time.
The
schools that I’ve attended in Wisconsin have all operated pretty much the same
as far as scheduling goes. The same classes at the same time in the same place,
every day or every other day. Well, that’s not the way it works here at HNHS.
The school operates on a 9-day turntable, and each day is a completely
different schedule of classes. However, each time a specific numbered day comes
around, the schedule for that day is always the same. Days are numbered 1
through 9, and a specific day will not repeat until all the others have passed.
Every time it’s Day 1, the schedule will be the same. Every time it’s Day 5,
the schedule will be the same. But as if that’s not confusing enough, the days
are never in a set order. I’m sure there is logic behind the order they put the
days in, but to me as an outsider it seems completely random. Here’s what I’m
talking about (the actual schedule from the last few weeks):
Monday, March 5: Day 7 Monday,
March 12: Day 1
Tuesday, March 6: Day 8 Tuesday,
March 13: Day 5
Wednesday, March 7: Day 6 Wednesday,
March 14: Day 9
Thursday, March 8: Day 2 Thursday,
March 15: Day 7
Friday, March 9: Day 3 Friday,
March 16: Day 4
Monday, March 19: Day 6 Monday,
March 26: Day 9
Tuesday, March 20: Day 2 Tuesday,
March 27: Day 7
Wednesday, March 21: Day 8 Wednesday,
March 28: Day 5
Thursday, March 22: Day 1 Thursday,
March 29: Day 8
Friday, March 23: Day 3 Friday,
March 30: Day 4
Confused yet? =P
Actually,
I’ve found that once I figured it out, it’s actually nice having a different
schedule every day. It makes for a nice change of pace. Not every day is
franticly busy, nor is it a day to laze around. There are busier and lighter
days, but I think it makes for a much less stressful schedule over all when you
don’t have to worry about teaching every hour of every day.
Speaking
of hours, here’s how the everyday class periods break down:
Staff Briefing: 8:30-8:40am
Period 1: 8:45-9:45am
Period 2: 9:50-10:50am
Interval/Morning Tea: 10:50-11:10am
Period 3: 11:15am-12:10pm
Period 4: 12:15-1:10pm
Form Time: 1:15-1:30pm
Lunch: 1:30-2:25pm
Period 5: 2:30-3:25pm
Every
teacher that has a class during Period 1 is asked to read the daily notices
regarding all school events for the students. During the Interval there is
coffee and tea available for the staff at no charge. Form Time is the
equivalent of a high school homeroom back in the States. I’m sure you’ve also
noticed that lunch is rather late in the day. During my first placement in
Oshkosh at the elementary schools, we were eating lunch at 11am. Here, it’s
over 2 hours later. I don’t mind that so much, but it does force me to shove
down lunch during Form Time on Mondays and Wednesdays when we have concert band
and orchestra rehearsals during lunch on those days respectively. Overall, it’s
a pretty decent schedule and it hasn’t been that difficult to adapt.
Now,
finally on to the details from this week. Monday, personally, was a bit of a
rough day. The two classes I taught, Year 9s and Year 10s, simply listened to
me lecture and took notes for the duration of their classes. At times, I felt
unorganized and felt like I was fumbling for words to say. Mr. Cargill and I
evaluated the day after the last class and he agreed with me when I told him
those previous thoughts. He suggested creating an outline for both me and the
class to follow, and to write it up on the board ahead of time. Another
suggestion was to think of activities that the students can do that don’t
involve sitting in a chair and taking notes, i.e. performing on instruments or
getting up and moving around somehow. “It’s a music class, let them play some
music!” is something that Mr. Cargill said to me that really stuck. So, knowing
that I was to be observed on Tuesday, I really decided to kick my planning into
high gear and came up with some wonderful things for the students to do. I
arranged the famous Bach Minuet in G for the Year 10 class to play on their
major instruments to help study the concept of form. I had the Year 11s being
their Video Game Music and Composition lesson, for which I borrowed a resource
on Programmatic/Film Music from Mr. Cargill and adapted it for our study of
video game music. The class, while they were sitting and listening, were
actively engaged in the process and were thinking about what the music meant
and the images it put in their heads. The Year 9s rehearsed their class
arrangement of As Long As You’re Mine
from “Wicked”, which I had put together the weekend previous. Overall, Tuesday
was a marvelous day compared to Monday, and has probably been my most
successful day so far here in NZ.
On
Wednesday we spent all day up at Napier Girls’ High School for an orchestra
festival, sort of like the honors bands from back home, except this was open to
anyone who wanted to participate. The students were led by Ken Young, the
assistant conductor of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. What a treat for
them! He worked very well with them, and I used the opportunity to catch up on
my string pedagogy, an area that I am admittedly rather weak in. At the end of
the day, the orchestra performed a Michael Jackson tribute, an arrangement of
the song Everything I Do, I Do It For You
by Bryan Adams from “Robin Hood”, and simplified arrangements of the finales
from Tchaikovsky’s 2nd and Beethoven’s 5th Symphonies.
According to the students, a wonderful time was had by all!
The
last exciting event for the week was Thursday night’s Open Evening, which provides
Year 7 and 8 parents to visit the school and learn about the different programs
the school offers as their students head towards their secondary school days.
It was a really nice chance for us to kind of show off the different things we
do here. The parents were amazed by the school’s recording studio and use of
technology in every day classroom instruction. I can’t wait to really dig into
the composition stuff with the Year 11s so I can show everyone back home how we
do things with music technology here in New Zealand!
So
as you can see, things are still heading in a wonderful direction for me and
the future is bright! Teaching jobs are starting to pop up back in the States
so it’s time to do some applications! Until next week…
Cheers!
My goodness! At Laura's (my niece) recommendation, I am following your adventures with interest. Love that you are breaking the routine with a completely different teaching experience. What an amazing learning time for you, and it is enlightening for me to hear about the school days in New Zealand. Make Wisconsin proud by showing those students how dedicated you are!
ReplyDeleteThe "Open Evening" program sounded exciting for all!
DeleteI remember interval/morning tea and the late lunch break! Have you had Milo yet at interval? It's disappointing actually - looks like hot chocolate, tastes like not much. Haha. I also remember the weekly reflections... following your adventures brings mine back so vividly!
ReplyDeleteWhoops, posted on my teacher blog account! :o)
ReplyDelete