So, I'm reflecting on this last semester of teaching, and how I've been implementing WBT.
I work in a middle school, teaching self-contained class. So I teach 6th and 8th grade science, social studies, math, language arts, and electives (right now I'm doing technology). I'm getting rid of the elective, somehow, during third quarter, because I don't have a prep period when I do it.
Right there, in the WBT manual, it says, you gotta plan to do this. My problem is, I don't have enough time to plan all of this! I don't even know half of the social studies and science content I'm teaching, so I spend every night reading the textbooks myself to learn what I'm supposed to be teaching the next day, I'm doing mapping for five middle-school subjects, and that takes up my whole weekend.
Basically, I spend hours and hours every week planning, and I rarely actually get to the stage where I'm mapping out a lesson, because by the time I even have the day-to-day objectives done, I'm beat. And since I'm not a content expert in almost all the contents I teach, I spend the rest of the time learning it myself, not planning how to teach it.
What this has led to is that I pretty much only implement WBT stuff in Math, where I'm the most comfortable with the content (do have my cert for GenEd in this area), but since I have the same students all day, it's weird for me to just do it for one hour, so I can never build momentum, and with these kids (emotionally disabled), momentum is everything.
I'm sitting here planning for when we come back from break, and I feel like after every break I'm ready to go again and get all of this going full-time, but I can never get it to stick because I get bogged down just staying afloat. I've been using WBT for two years, and it's been amazing for me and for my students, but I feel like the demands of this position are keeping me from excelling.
Advice? Comments? Thanks!