First off, I need to establish that I had not realized that the second blog post was due...last month. It somehow slipped my mind as I dealt with other classes and assignments. To be perfectly honest, the semester had kind of blended together in such a way that it's hard for me to even remember precisely what was going on that far ago.
Something that has caused me a bit of frustration with this class is the way that so much time is taken up by items that are outside of the teacher's control. Obviously, student disruptions can take up time, but that honestly is not too much of an issue in my current classroom. The students are fairly on task, if a bit chatty from time to time and there have been very few problems throughout.
However, despite the student's behaviors, there are often other interruptions caused by the school itself (and I have noticed this "problem" with the other schools I have observed and worked at in my Co-Op. Yesterday, due to a test that AVID students were having, we went from a class of about 22 students to one of 6 students. While I understand that this is because it is an honors classroom that this many students are leaving for AVID, other events have taken their toll as well. This upcoming Friday, there is another AVID event that is taking students out of class and there is also an orchestra, vocal, and band event. Unless we miscounted the number of students, this is going to leave the class with only 4 students, and very little productive material can be covered with such a small percentage of the class, so it ends up becoming a filler day, or the other students end up with extra homework instead (which happens to be the case for this occasion).
Also, we spent about eight class days on the district writing assessment and another two days on Aimsweb. Just between days like this and the other ones, that is at least two weeks of a 10 week class that the teacher does not have for her own instruction time. I am not trying to bash the district writing assessment or anything like that. I actually really liked the prompt itself, but I was surprised that that much time was taken away from teacher instruction/student activities. I do find myself a bit curious about how much time should have been allotted. My Cooperating Teacher seemed surprised that the class had taken that long.
Between all of these activities (and others that I'm sure come up), it seems like a lot of time is lost due to student extracurricular activities and other details that are out of the teacher's realm of control. I understand that time management and asking the students to be accountable can make a huge difference on whether or not things continue to get done, but I find myself wondering how a teacher is able to make up this potential lost time.
On this webpage about classroom time management, some general tips are given on how to improve in-classroom time:
http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/time-management . Although it is generally referring to elementary schools, it mentions that anywhere from 23%-40% of classroom time ends up unusable due to non-teaching duties and other activities such as breaks, recess, lunch, etc. It seems like the best way to deal with these classroom duties that are "outside my control" is to use the time that I do have wisely when the time comes.