My biology students surprised me today. I mean really surprised me. Shame on me.
My students just started a chapter on Mitosis (cell growth and division). As we were discussing the cell cycle, I asked them to examine the picture of the cell cycle and infer information from the picture. They were asked to determine which phase was longest. During the direct instruction, I explained to the students that Gap 1 and Gap 2 are like red/green checkpoints. I gave them two questions to review for the next day: (1) What has to occur for Gap 1 to turn green and allow the cell to move to Synthesis; and, (2) What has to occur for Gap 2 to turn green and allow the cell to move into Mitosis.
Then I asked the students, “what would happen if the cell keeps replicating and doesn’t stop”? Some students in my four classes went right to cell overgrowth and Cancer. However, some of the students did not make the connection right away. So, I followed up asking, “What if you have brain cancer and it is benign, should you be concerned? and Why”? I had the think.pair.share symbol up. So they thought about it, shared with their neighbor, and then we shared out. The students were right on the money, telling me it is something to worry about because even if benign, a constantly growing mass in your skull will quickly damage the brain as it encroaching on its real estate.
A little background: I teach two different courses. I have four Biology classes full of Freshmen and Sophomores. I also have two Anatomy & Physiology courses full of Juniors and Seniors. I have already created both classes’ finals. Both groups have a one hour written final. Both also have a one hour AVID Socratic seminar. The topic for Biology is Human Genome Sequencing. The topic for Anatomy is two articles about Cancer. I made this assessment choice because the Lexile reading score for one of the Cancer articles is in the 1200-1300 range, and would likely be difficult reading for my Freshmen, Sophomores, IEP, and/or EL learners.
As I recognized how “into” the topic my Biology students were during the discussion, I decided to give them a choice. I like to do this because they are teens, growing into adults and should be making responsible academic decisions. I explained to them my rationale behind choosing the articles for the two different classes. I even told them I had to look up a few words. The students knew this meant it was not an easy read. Despite this, all four classes really impressed me by voting for the more interesting, if difficult articles. There were some students who voted for the assignment they “perceived” to be easier, but the majority won out.
So often, as teachers we strive to get “true” student engagement. Not compliance, not I just want a good grade, but the real deal. When it happens, it is like a bright light clearing out all of the darkness in the world. Hope reigns supreme. It is not just the faith I have in my students, which is unending. These students shine on and on and I see real evidence and potential for them to continue shining, hopefully becoming life-long learners.
I am so incredibly proud of my Biology classes. Of course, I will be scaffolding and reviewing the articles with each of the classes. This is the first time I walk them through critiquing an article and preparing a claim, and text evidence to support their position.
The students often ask me why I became a teacher. Sometimes, I get comments like, “I could never be a teacher, how you are so patient?” The truth is, I will never give up on my students; every day is a brand new day; a fresh start; a new beginning. I just have to figure out what turns my students’ lights on and how to keep them on.