One of the best parts about teaching is that each year you start over with a new group of students, new challenges, and new opportunities to make a difference. Each year, you have the chance to grow and perfect your craft as a teacher.
Each year when state testing is over, benchmarks are complete, permanent records are filed away, and the sun is shining, I start reflecting on the year and contemplating the changes I want to make for the next year. I think this end-of-year reflection for teachers is key.
In this post, I will share the simple questions I ask myself each year to reflect and grow as an educator. I like to ask these questions and reflect right at the end of the year while it is still fresh on my mind.
teaching is that each year you start over with a new group of students, new challenges, and new opportunities to make a difference. Each year, you have the chance to grow and perfect your craft as a teacher. Check out this post for ideas for end of year reflection to make positive changes and celebrate the positives of the school year." width="550" height="824" />
I always start with the positives and think about what went well during the school year. I think about these overall areas but I also try to be really specific with what aspect of that area went well. Here are some examples of areas I reflect on when I am thinking about the positives:
By reflecting on the positives first, I am putting myself in the right mindset to then start thinking about the areas I want to change or modify.
Once I have some positives reflected on, I start thinking about what did not go so well in each area. From that reflection, I then choose 2-3 areas to focus on the next school year. I try to only choose a couple of focus areas because I really want to perfect those areas. If I choose too many areas, I get overwhelmed and wind up not doing any of them well.
Once you choose your focus area, here are some ideas to make some positive changes for the next school year:
Now, that I have the obvious areas that went well and did not go well, I like to specifically reflect on the following areas.
Ask yourself: Which procedures will I keep? Which will I change? What new ones do I need?
Also, think about which times of the day or transitions were the most frustrating and challenging. Think about a way to create a procedure to avoid problems or minimize the problems.
Once you have reflected, make a list of procedures you want to make sure you implement the following year. Save the list so you can refer to it at the beginning of the year.
I break this reflection into two areas: Rules and Consequences
In regards to rules, ask yourself:
For consequences, ask yourself:
Organization has never come easy to me so I always spend a lot of time reflecting and making new plans for the next year. Here are some questions to guide your reflection:
At the end of the year, I always make a quick labeled sketch of my classroom. Then, I make quick notes on my sketch of what went well that I want to keep and what I want to change. I then make a few new drafts of my classroom to play around with new ways to set it up my classroom for the next year. I usually tape the final sketch on the marker board to help me remember how I wanted it at the first of the next year.
I reflect a lot as the year is going on about my curriculum and my instruction, but I also like to spend some time at the end of the year reflecting overall. Here are some questions that guide my end of year reflection:
One of the most important parts of teaching is the relationships we build each year. I like to spend some time reflecting by asking these questions:
And there you have it! Those are the questions and areas I go through each year as I complete my end-of-year reflection. What do you reflect on each year? What would you add to the list? Let me know in the comments!