·
Assessing Student Engagement and
Learning:
o Describe student willingness to
participate in the 2nd VTS discussion.
When I began the class and told them we would do VTS and took a video,
they said “Oh, no”. I thought maybe they want to do some painting at this time.
But when they saw the picture I showed them, they quickly became excited and
have many ideas.
o What did students notice about the
featured artwork?
They noticed people were walking and playing outside first, and then
they figured out what they were playing. In additional, they found one person
got hurt because there’s an ambulance. Even more, they noticed someone were
looking out of window, a mother was holding a baby, someone was writing on the
ground with white chalk, a little girl got lost. They also listed some items
like buildings, bridge, cat, trashcan and a police car.
o Did students list or interpret their
observations? (Why do you think that occurred?)
Sometimes they just listed the items, maybe these things can not be
easily connected with other things. But most of the time they inferred
something from what they had seen and even made up a story. I think kids all
like story, they have a rich imagination.
o Describe student interactions during
the discussion. How did this impact
group meaning-making?
They often build some narratives together by connecting others’ ideas.
It make the discussion deeper and more interesting, and help the meaning-making
about the image. For example, one saw someone got hurt and an ambulance, and
another will connect it to the roller-skating he had found before, then they
made up a story that when playing roller-skating, someone lost balance, so he
got hurt, the ambulance was to bring him to the hospital.
o How did the discussion
conclude?
I noticed them can hardly find anything new and I checked the time, it
is around 15 min, so I thanked them to participating VTS and appreciated their
job.
o What do you think students learned
from this discussion?
They really observed a lot of thinks and give many reasons by finding evidences
in the image. I think they can know how to draw a scene that people are
playing. And they also learn to listen to others and build ideas together.
o What did you observe that makes you
say that?
They connected others’ ideas and
make new meanings and narratives. They almost found everything in the image.
·
Reflecting on Practice:
o How did the VTS discussion feel and
what did you learn by facilitating this lesson with your students for the
second time?
I think I am more natural this time but still a little bit nervous,
maybe because I always care about the video. I learn to listen to their ideas
carefully and sometimes take part in the discussion.
o Were you able to use the questions
and prescribed teacher behaviors comfortably? If you omitted or changed one,
what impact did it have on the discussion?
Why do you think that occurred?
Yes. The three questions are very useful to lead the discussion.
Sometimes I will say “why” instead of “What can you see makes you say that”. I
think the reason is sometimes I am just so curious about what they said, I want
to know the reason, so I can’t help to say “why”. I think it is not good to act
like this, the question should related to the image.
o Were there any surprises? How will these impact your practice moving
forward?
They can find so many details and can give reasonable interpretations
according to the image. I will choose images have more details to give them a
challenge.
·
Planning:
o
What do you want to work on as you plan for future VTS lessons?
I will choose images carefully to
follow their step and ability.
I also want to let them learn
something painting methods from VTS, such as today we VTS a picture that many
people are playing outside, I want them learn how to express the same topic
when they create their own painting.
o
How do you think you can accomplish that?
I will work hard and
focus on selecting the image

Wow! It seems like these children came up with some wonderful narratives from looking at this image. It is such a good one! There is a lot to see and infer! It also sounds like you are using VTS to motivate art making. We are doing the same in our research with the boy writers. We find that the discussion gives them confidence for making art and the art gives them confidence for writings. It is as if they have rehearsed their ideas twice by speaking and then art making before they write, so they have solidified their ideas for writing. Good job!
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