Monday, April 30, 2012

Change… Professional

30/04/2012

 In Sweden at this moment are working with a new curriculum, so it has been great to see this working within the classroom over the last couple of weeks.

Our curriculum seems to never stop changing back home. But I feel that the current curriculum is on the right lines. As it still has some focus on the main subjects but now with a more student centred approach. In Sweden they do not seem to have PDMU as a subject but more as just a way of life in the classroom, if one of the students wants to talk about something they are not happy about they talk about it and sometimes as a whole class approach. My teacher Lasse says he always tells the children not to say ‘not’ and so far they don’t. They never seem to moan about the work they have to do they just seem to get on with it.

Also a thing I have noticed within my classroom, I cannot say about the whole school, but there seems to be no bullying everyone helps everyone. My teacher told me that at the start when he first had the class that he makes them do different exercises to show that some people are better at different things than others but that they all have their individual strengths. I think this is something that I feel very strongly towards as I hate when a child thinks they are bad at something or insecure about themselves because others have made them feel like that. I feel it’s our jobs as teachers to enforce that each child is an individual and that they can do and be what they want. As a child’s happiness within the classroom is essential if they are going to learn.

There are only 16 students in my class and you can see the different groups of friends within that class but everyone gets on. I noticed it most when I had to pick pairs for some group work and no one complained about who they were with. This is something I always notice back home when there is paired work some of the children complain who they are working with and that is not nice for anyone to feel unwanted. So I have really come to see how passionate I am about the actually happiness of the children within my classroom and for each of them to feel and have a vital part within that. Pastoral care could be the module I will pick next year.

Until next time Hej då

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Adjö..... professional

25/04/2012

So I am finally back on school placement again after having quite sometime of and having to orgainse it myself, but I am just glad to be back in the classroom.

Since i have been in the classroom a bit longer now i have started to see a few more differences with in the Swedish school system and the Northern Irish school sysytem. One of the largest differences i have noticed with in the class is that phyical contact with the children is alot less strict. So far i can see the reasons behind it and the reasons for doing it and so do the children which i feel is good.

I mostly notice this when it comes to Fridays within my classroom. On Fridays my teacher wears a tie (usually it is just normal clothes) and he ask me why he did this, he told me its to let the chldren know its hugging day. So every Friday they hug before they go home. The children seem to enjoy the close rapor they have with their teacher. Futhermore on Fridays the children give each other back rubs. The teacher says they do this to help bring postitive feelings towards each other in the classroom and helps to reduce bullying withn the classroom and school as it lets the children have contact in a non violent way.

I think that in Northern Ireland we have taken no contact with children to the extreme, that of a child gets hurt or is upset we can really do anything to comfort them. I feel that children are going to start growing up with issues of contact as from a young age in school if they fall or are upset they have to deal with it themselves. I also am a bit confused as the Northern Ireland makes us as teachers teach PDMU, which is about feeling and difficult issues, but at the same time don’t let children react they feel is normal when they are hurt especially at Foundation stage and Key 1. I understand that it is for our own protection as teachers but I think we miss the point sometimes. 

Maybe Sweden is too comfortable but I think they have a better idea about it than us in the United Kingdom. 

Until next time Hej då

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Vaxjo spring...Personal

19/04/2012


Spring has arrived in Växjӧ and the weather has begun to get warmer….finally. This week the weather was particularly warm with the temperature rising to 20°C. So people were out in numbers with their shorts and t-shirts on ready for a BBQ. Our friends decided that we would all chip in and buy a proper BBQ together rather than keep spending the money on the disposable ones.

During the day before the BBQ we decided that we would go down and enjoy the sunshine beside the lake. I had told my friends previously that I would love to swim in the lake and jump of the bridge into it, so I decided that today would be the day. We enjoyed the sun for a while and I change and went for a swim in the lake. The water was so cold but so nice at the same time, really refreshing with lots of fish around me. I decided that I would head round to the bridge to see if I could jump in as I wasn’t sure if it was going to be deep enough. I got back in the water and swam out to the middle and tested the depth, but it wasn’t deep enough and I didn’t want to risk anything stupid.
Me and the BBQ

It’s great when the sun comes out over here as you just start to realise how many Swedish students there are as every grass area is just filled with people sunbathing, barbequing and playing games. It starts to bring that community feeling around campus that I have missed from home.

Vasa Stockholm
We have enjoyed some of the spring night by having camp fires down by the lake. I have to say I love making camp fires; I always do it at home so it was nice to have one over here. My friends at home make fun of me for being a bit of a fire bug and it didn’t take long for my friends over here to pick up on that.
Campus is beautiful at the minute with the beautiful weather, just hope it stays.

Until next time Hej då

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Seeing Sweden....cultural

12/04/2012

Since I finished some of my classes early on I had a bit of spare time before starting my placement so I decided to travel and see Stockholm the capital of Sweden.
The white boat is our hostel

Stockholm is a beautiful city with lots of beautiful architecture, shops and history. I was only going to be there for the weekend so I wanted to make the most and see as many of the different sites as I could. So I got up early the next day to go watch the changing of the guards. I have been to London and seen the changing of the guards there so I was kind of expecting the same. When it was nearing the time for it to star we could see some of the guards starting to gather. I was taken back a bit when I see some of them smoking and chatting with each other joking. I thought because of it being something to do with the Royal Family that it would have been more serious. However this seems to be the running trait within Swedish culture, laid back and relaxed not taking things to serious apart from themselves.
Changing of the Guard

I got a guided tour around the Royal Palace; it was beautiful inside and was great to hear a bit more about Sweden’s history. The next day I went to the Vasa museum; which is the history of a boat that was built to big and on its maiden voyage sank in the harbour. It was just amazing to see and how the boat had been preserved in the water by the silt.

Stockholm
I really enjoyed my time in Stockholm walking around seeing the sites; I wish it had been a bit warmer as it was bitterly cold. It is a great city but it is so expensive so I would not want to stay too much longer, I still find the price of things difficult and don’t understand how the Swedish don’t realise how expensive things are but I suppose if it’s your culture and what you are used to you do not see it as expensive.



Until next time Hej då

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Money, Money, Money....Personal

03/04/2012

So I have been in Sweden a good while now and been living the Swedish life and I have to say it’s a fairly expensive lifestyle. At the start I didn’t really notice it too much but after being here a while I have started to realise things that I would normally buy back home have become luxuries over here. Simple things like meat and coffee, but it’s not that they are really bad just enough to put me of buying. There just is no point in lifting out 10 pounds in Sweden as it hardly lasts. It’s a thing I have found difficult and at times annoying because I do have to look after my money more, and be more disciplined with it.

However on the good side it has made me more disciplined with my money. My mum always told me money burns a hole in my pocket, which was probably true to a certain extent but it wasn’t always spent on me. I have just had to be more careful with it, being able to budget for that week and especially when I am on trips somewhere for the weekend, as I found it was too easy to just buy lunch and dinner. So I am glad I have come across this problem as this is meant to be a learning experience both positive and negative and I am happy to learn both.

Another thing I have found difficult is living with someone in such close proximities. I live with a guy called Javiar who is really nice but he is just so quite compared to me so he only talks to me if I ask him how he has been or what he has been at. They are usually just a couple of word answers. I am a really outgoing guy and easy to get on with, but I still need my own space at times and I don’t get that at all unless I leave the room. Simple things like talking on Skype with my family and girlfriend has to be done in front of him if he is in which is just a bit annoying at times. Again this is something I have had to get used to over the last few months, and I have to say it is something I looked forward to having when I get home.

Until next time Hej då