Teachers do their homework
As a former martial arts instructor, Chris Manning believes in
control. The Ensign Intermediate School history teacher describes
himself as a free spirit much of the time, but in the early weeks of
a new school year, he’ll keep smiling and joking to a minimum.
“When kids come in, if you present an attitude that’s calm and
businesslike, they’ll learn to respect you,” Manning told a classroom
full of new secondary school teachers during the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District’s orientation week. “If they see the teacher laughing
and giggling and telling jokes, they think, ‘Well, I can turn to my
friends and laugh and giggle and tell jokes.’”
A few blocks away at Newport Harbor High School, Karin
Nieto-Chaney had her room decked out as if she were preparing for a
child’s birthday party. The walls of her ninth-grade science
classroom were lined with construction paper and anything else
colorful; each desk had a chocolate wrapped in foil. Scattered around
the room were helium balloons containing classroom rules written on
slips of paper. This was the standard back-to-school setup for
Nieto-Chaney, who believes in teaching with a little panache.
“As infantile as some of these procedures may sound, o7usef7
them,” she told the incoming teachers shortly after they had left
Manning’s room.
Establish your authority. Act like your students’ friend. Be
stern, and don’t smile. Laugh, and pass out candy. All the lessons in
Newport-Mesa’s teacher orientation week added up to one overriding
rule: When it comes to leading a classroom, there is no one right
method.
“That’s where personality comes into play,” Manning admitted.
This fall, Newport-Mesa will have nearly 200 new teachers joining
the district -- some moving in from elsewhere in the state, some
never having taught a class before. To ease the transitions all
around, Newport-Mesa held its annual orientation this week for new
employees, leading them in workshops and busing them to schools
around the district.
Apart from serving as an introduction, the orientation week also
aimed to provide enough resources to make teachers feel secure in
their jobs. Friday, the new secondary instructors visited Ensign and
Newport Harbor and met with two teachers at each site; the elementary
group visited College Park Elementary and Davis Elementary.
Throughout the year, experienced teachers will continue to serve as
mentors to their younger colleagues.
“It’s a profession that has a high attrition rate, and the reason
is lack of support, not salaries,” said Christine Jurenka, staff
development coordinator for Newport-Mesa.
When the school year begins Sept. 6, a significant portion of
Newport-Mesa’s faculty will be new faces, although most of them have
at least some experience in the classroom. For Gary Robinson, a new
history instructor and basketball coach at Newport Harbor, teaching
is a family tradition: His father, Joe, has taught at the school
since 1969, and his sister, Sara, previously worked there as a
classroom assistant.
Robinson said that having a familiar name didn’t pose too much of
a problem last year, when he worked as a student teacher and coached
freshman basketball.
“The kids call me Mr. Robinson Jr. or the young Mr. Robinson,” he
explained. “My dad calls me the handsome Mr. Robinson.”
His own style of teaching, he said, was to be loose and
approachable.
“My philosophy is to be yourself and establish a rapport of
respect, and the kids will go with you,” he explained.
Paige Prescott, another incoming Newport Harbor teacher, had
logged one year of experience at Tustin High School while earning her
teaching credential at Cal State Fullerton. This year, she will be
leading an English class for members of Newport Harbor’s Da Vinci
science academy and another for college preparatory students.
Prescott, also a cheerleading advisor this year, said she was
looking forward to the challenge.
“Whenever I say I teach high school, I get this sort of look like,
‘God bless you,’” she said. “People think of young adults that age as
really unruly and chaotic, and they can be that way. But if you treat
them with respect, you’ll find they’re really amazing.”
Among the most experienced teachers in the orientation was Keisha
Lee, a 23-year education veteran who has taught at every level, from
preschool through college, in the Inland Empire. Lee will teach
eighth-grade algebra this year at TeWinkle Middle School, a campus
with a high percentage of English-learner students and one of the
lower-scoring sites on this year’s standardized tests.
“I’m used to working with kids who are at risk,” Lee said. “I’ve
taught hundreds of kids, thousands of kids, so this will be a cinch.”
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