Over the four years, I attended seminars and took classes toward a Master’s degree in Special Education to learn how to better serve my students. I develop and two year series of curriculum units that were individualized for each student. Most importantly, I included what Wilhelm calls enactment strategies. While simultaneously teaching a drama class, my first year, I learned to use many of the same activities with my gifted students. In the gifted curriculum, the highlight of the 2 year series was mock trials. These real life reenactments of a court room, taught me and the students so much as the court system. Because I entered the gifted education world as a novice I was more apt to learn from the students. I honestly felt like I had nothing to teach them. In fact, I constantly asked them to show my how things worked. These students had been in the gifted education program for much of their lives. I saw my job as an opportunity to guide them to be the best people they could be with the gifts that they had.
Enactments are used in teaching to get kids involved in the learning. Teachers even learn better this way. When a teacher is taught how to do something they will understand it, but it makes so much more sense when it is "discovered in concert with teacher practice" (Wilhelm, 2002). This idea of learning while doing is very similar to Gee's theory of Discourse and the process of enculturation when learning a secondary Discourse. In all things, I believe one can learn in a classroom, but it is always more fun and easier to learn by doing. That is the idea behind using enactment strategies in the classroom. Enactments help the teacher to "explicitly guide [students] to do new things" (Wilhelm, p.20) instead of simply delivering information at them. Wilhelm continues to explain how good teachers learn along with their students; to "teach them in an area in which teacher and students can play, and build, and learn together" (p.20). Wilhelm uses Lev Vygotsky to base much of his theory for using enactments. Vygotsky bases his theory on the idea of a zone of proximal development in which students can do something with the proper assistance. The ZPD is very similar to a dominant Discourse that Gee explains in his Discourse theory.
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