2014-2015 Academic All-Canadian
Posted on October 17, 2015 Leave a Comment
I received this award for my great academic standing and my participation in Varsity sports at McGill University for the 2014-2015 academic year.
2013-2014 Academic All-Canadian
Posted on October 17, 2015 Leave a Comment
I received this award for my great academic standing and my participation in Varsity sports at McGill University for the 2013-2014 academic year.
This title is awarded to university student-athletes who maintain an academic standing of 80% or better (GPA of 3.7 or higher). For the 2013-2014 school year, 2864 individuals received this award. There are more than 1 280 000 university students in Canada.
Sources:
http://en.cis-sic.ca/academicAllCanadians/allcdns
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/tables-tableaux/sum-som/l01/cst01/educ71a-eng.htm
McGill Cross Country Most Improved
Posted on October 12, 2015 Leave a Comment
Award received at the end of my second year in the McGill Cross Country and Track and Field teams.
I received this award because I was the runner who improved the most during that year. I went from finishing eighth of the team at the previous year’s provincial championship to second of the team at the 2014 provincial championship.
There are only three awards that can be obtained in the Cross Country and Track and Field teams: MVP, Most Improved and Rookie of the Year.
McGill Track and Field Rookie of the Year
Posted on October 12, 2015 Leave a Comment
Award received at the end of my first year in the McGill Cross Country and Track and Field teams.
I received this award because I recorded some pretty good times on the track and kept improving them. I finished my season running a huge PB (personal best) of 8:50 on the 3000m. This constituted a great time for a rookie.
There are only three awards that can be obtained in the Cross Country and Track and Field teams: MVP, Most Improved and Rookie of the Year.
How to create Physical Education lesson plans based on the Progressions of Learning
Posted on April 25, 2014 Leave a Comment
In the Physical Education Methods class I followed during the 2014 Winter semester, I learned how to create Physical Education lesson plans based on the POLs (Progressions of Learning). It is an approach that is based on the said POLs, which are then reflected through the games we build around them. Here is a step by step guide on how to create a proper Physical Education lesson plan:
1. Use the same template for every lesson plan. Here are examples of lesson plans I created for my Peer Teaching Binder during the previously mentionned class jarry_francois_lessonplan2 jarry_francois_lessonplan3jarry_francois_lessonplan4. You can save them and use them as a template by simply typing over the information that must be changed and keeping the rest or you can also create your own prettier template based on this one’s overall structure.
2. Choose which competency the lesson will focus on. If it’s Competency 1: To perform movement skills in different physical activity settings, the lesson should focus on more individual activities like mimicking. If it’s Competency 2: To interact with others in different physical activity settings, it should be based more on team or duelling activities such as voleyball or different tag variations.
3. Within the Progressions of Learning Elementary document, find one progression for each category (Knowledge, Motor Skills, Strategies, Behaviours). If the lesson focuses on C1, then only find a progression for each Knowledge and Motor Skills category. It is possible to use multiple POLs per category but usually, it is recommended to focus on only one per category per lesson. Keep in mind that you will have to use or create activities that focus on these POLs so don’t pick some that are totally unrelated and couldn’t be used in a game or activity. If you want to create a lesson plan for Secondary students, you will have to use the Progressions of Learning Secondary document, which I was unable to find on the internet.
4. Once your POLs have all been selected, you have to write the student objectives, which are highly related to the POLs. These represent what you should see concretely from the students during the lesson. The easiest way is to simply copy the corresponding POLs and adapt them to the sentence. The Psychomotor aspect corresponds with Motor Skills; Cognitive with Knowledge or Strategies; and Affective with Behaviour (if working with C1, find a behaviour you would like your students to adopt like showing appreciation for their peers’ actions for example). If you’re feeling creative, you don’t have to copy the POLs, but the ideas you come up with should be related to the POLs the students should be working on.
5. For each lesson, you must come up with one Individual Professional Teaching Objective. That is an aspect of your teaching you really want to work on during this lesson. For example, if I know I had problems communicating instructions clearly to the students for the past lesson, I would write that my objective is to always speak in a loud enough voice and use demonstrations when giving instructions.
6. You can now decide what the focus of the lesson will be and design its schedule. In the Introduction, the focus of the lesson should be explained and it is good to provide them with cues, either through discussion or direct instruction. For the Warm-Up, choose an activity that will prepare the students for the actual Main Activity, which should make the students practice the selected POLs. Finally, for the Cooldown, find an activity that will make the students review what they learned during the lesson. It can be as simple as forming a circle and asking students what they have learned today, or can be slightly more complex like making them form groups and asking each group to demonstrate some or many things they learned during the lesson.
7. Once you have taught the lesson, you should reflect on it by hand-writing Post Lesson Comments. You should ask yourself 3 questions when writing them: “What went well?”, What did not go well?” and “What should I change to improve my teaching in the future?”. Think about whether or not you fullfilled your Individual Professional Teaching Objective. It is also recommended to write directly on the lesson plan for changes that should be brought to it in the future. For example, if the students got bored after 3 minutes of an activity that lasted 10 minutes, write it down directly on it and also write the changes you would bring to solve that problem, like adding more progressions to it.
Competency 8: Media, Technology and Education course
Posted on April 25, 2014 Leave a Comment
“To integrate information and communications technologies (ICT) in the preparation and delivery of teaching/learning activities and for instructional management and professional development purposes.”
First of all, I have learned about the ISTE standards for teachers and students which is a big step forward since I wasn’t even aware of their existence before taking this course. What I like about this class I took is that I have learned a lot about technologies that are very useful in a classroom setting like Google Drive and its Goggle Docs and Spreadsheets that allow to work in a team on the same document simultaneously, which is quite useful when you need to work with others from a distance. It is also very useful to witness the students’ progress in real time and to give them feedback, which is not efficient with Word documents that need to be saved and sent by the student and then saved with added feedback and sent again by the teacher to the student. Google Docs save a lot of time when it comes to working with others, may they be colleagues or students.
I also learned to create a website using WordPress, which is this ePortfolio. That can be useful to present yourself to the students and impress them by showing your talent in website creation. You can also publish tools to help the students on your website, like I just did with this one by publishing presentations that show how to research housings or how to use Microsoft Excel.
Overall, I learned to familiarize myself with the most recent and useful free technologies available on the web. I understand the concept of a Pecha Kucha, the objective it conveys; I know how to use Google Drive and all its components at their full potential; I know how to create lesson plans that answer general inquiry questions; and I am able to use screencasting softwares such as Jing to create tutorials for my students. I also am now more conscious about what is opensource with its ups and its downsides.
12 Professional Competencies
Posted on April 25, 2014 Leave a Comment
3.2 Core Professional Competencies for the Teaching Profession
COMPETENCY 1
To act as a professional who is inheritor, critic and interpreter of knowledge or culture when teaching students.
COMPETENCY 2
To communicate clearly in the language of instruction, both orally and in writing, using correct grammar, in various contexts related to teaching.
COMPETENCY 3
To develop teaching/learning situations that are appropriate to the students concerned and the subject content with a view to developing the competencies targeted in the programs of study.
COMPETENCY 4
To pilot teaching/learning situations that are appropriate to the students concerned and to the subject content with a view to developing the competencies targeted in the programs of study.
COMPETENCY 5
To evaluate student progress in learning the subject content and mastering the related competencies.
COMPETENCY 6
To plan, organize and supervise a class in such a way as to promote students’ learning and social development.
COMPETENCY 7
To adapt his or her teaching to the needs and characteristics of students with learning disabilities, social maladjustments or handicaps.
COMPETENCY 8
To integrate information and communications technologies (ICT) in the preparation and delivery of teaching/learning activities and for instructional management and professional development purposes.
COMPETENCY 9
To cooperate with school staff, parents, partners in the community and students in pursuing the educational objectives of the school.
COMPETENCY 10
To cooperate with members of the teaching team in carrying out tasks involving the development and evaluation of the competencies targeted in the programs of study, taking into account the students concerned.
COMPETENCY 11
To engage in professional development individually and with others.
COMPETENCY 12
To demonstrate ethical and responsible professional behaviour in the performance of his or her duties.
Google Presentation – How to use Microsoft Excel
Posted on April 25, 2014 1 Comment
Click here to open the presentation.
To view the lesson plan to which it is related, click here.
Google Presentation – How to research housings
Posted on April 25, 2014 1 Comment
Click here to open the presentation.
To view the lesson plan to which it is related, click here.
Recent Comments