Secondary Internship Information

Your actual internship assignment will be done by your program coordinator at the beginning of your internship semester. Information about your public classroom assignment will be available only when you begin attending your EDC 370S course next semester, and not before.

The Education Services Office does not have information on any individual student's internship or apprentice teaching placements. Students must contact their program coordinator or university facilitator for this information.

During your apprentice teaching semester, you will be under the supervision of a program coordinator who oversees all the UT apprentice teachers with your same teaching field, or area. Below is a list of these program coordinators. Upon completion of your internship semester, and when you register for your apprentice teaching course, EDC 650S, you will begin to work very closely with your assigned program coordinator.

Subject Area Program Coordinator
(Click on his/her name to send an e-mail)
Office Phone Number
Art Fred Woody ART 3.406 471-5410
English/Language Arts Joan Shiring SZB 436B 471-4381
Foreign Language Elizabeth Glidden
SZB 406 471-5249
Foreign Language: Latin Only Tim Moore
Bill Nethercut
WAG 14CA
WAG 123
232-4161
471-5742
Kinesiology Tere Ramirez
Dolly Lambdin
AHG 107
AHG 125
471-1539
471-1540
Music

Bob Duke

Jacqueline Henninger

MRH 2.208

471-0972

471-0779

Social Studies Cinthia Salinas SZB 428G 232-3539
Special Education Anne Fuller SZB 306 471-4161
Theatre Joan Lazarus
Alma Chapa Moore
WIN 1.162 471-5793

MATERIALS

Please review the following Word documents,and use them as needed throughout your internship.

Suggestions for Observations in the Secondary Classroom

Focus on:

  • praise behavior
  • questioning techniques
  • type of questioning (e.g. high order-critical thinking vs. low order-facts)
  • discipline techniques
  • types of classroom disruptions
  • apprentice-teacher interaction (primarily one-way, two-way, mix)
  • techniques used to motivate student participation
  • classroom setting
  • teacher's movement about the classroom
  • use of audiovisual aids and technology
  • time management
  • wait time
  • varied teaching strategies
  • varied assessment strategies
  • multiculturalism
  • mainstreamed or inclusion students
  • classroom management (used here as a broader concept that also includes discipline techniques, classroom setup, established classroom procedures, ambiance of classroom, etc.)
  • student interaction
  • student social groups (cliques)

Note: The purpose of the observation is not to criticize your cooperating teacher. There are dynamic forces at play, when a teacher is teaching, that you may not be aware of because of your past experiences and lack of pedagogical knowledge. For instance, a teacher makes approximately 3,000 decisions during a teaching day. The teacher may base those decisions on prior experience, pedagogical knowledge, subject matter knowledge, knowledge about their students, etc. Therefore, observing a teacher in action, as well when he or she is preparing for action may assist you in observing those forces at play. Reflecting on those actions and on what you learned in class may provide you with experiences that will gradually transform you from student to teacher.

Last updated on February 6, 2008


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