As teachers, we
never stop learning. Every Saturday, we attend a precious workshop that can
provide us with the efficient tools that can be applied in the class room.
These workshops can qualify the teachers to do their jobs in the best possible
way. We work together as a team, in other words, as a family. We discuss with
each other what is useful and what is not. Also, we try to choose wisely what
fits students’ needs, levels, abilities, and interests. That work shop was
about learning through the projects. We discussed what we know about that
concept, and we revised what we took last session with Dr. Amal Farhat. During
that session, we discussed teacher’s role and learner’s role too. We were
divided into groups to work. We presented our work on a poster, and we
discussed it with Dr. Mohammad Assaf in front of the teachers. That workshop was
really fruitful; it opened our eyes on new things maybe we didn’t realize
before. I really enjoyed attending such work shops; every time I can add
something new to my educational repertoire.
In this blog, you will find students' published work (Grades 3,4,and 5)and some educational posts and beneficial reflections
About Me
~ Don’t give up on your dreams just because you: encounter a few bumps on the road, someone tells that you are not good enough, who are they to tell you that? you don’t have all you need, life has been unfair, it’s taking too long to accomplish. You were born for a great purpose. Keep your dreams alive. See on the flip side of life ~ Eston Swaby. This quote clearly my Beliefs in life. I am 21 years old; I teach at Rawafid school. I am an English teacher. . I graduated last year from LIU.
It would be nice to include different educators from different schools within such education discussions, because having teachers from different school contexts can help enriching the discussion with different attitudes, practices, and even pedagogic methods that would be nice to be shared among schools for an enhanced more unified educational system
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