Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Interesting, Fun Website

I received the link to this website in my inbox the other night, and thought that I would share it.

The URL is www.freerice.com

Not only can you expand on your vocabulary, but for every word that you define correctly 10 grains of rice is donated by the United Nations! It's not much, but it's better than nothing ...

I do warn you, it's addictive! (which is not necessarily a bad thing, all things considered)

Monday, November 19, 2007

The First Thanksgiving















In the spirit of historical accuracy, I thought you might enjoy a 30-second promo for the History Channel's docu-drama, Desperate Crossing, which tells the story of those who journeyed across the Atlantic on the Mayflower. I tried to link to it directly, but couldn't get it to work. To view it, go to www.youtube.com, type "What is Thanksgiving" in the search bar, and then click on the first result that pops up. The promo basically asks the question: "What if the traditional elementary school Thanksgiving play told the real story?"

And in the same spirit, what kinds of activities/lessons/celebrations are you seeing in your schools this week focused on Thanksgiving? Any little Pilgrims with buckled hats and shoes? Or any "alternative" looks at the Thanksgiving story that go beyond the traditional approach?

Friday, November 16, 2007

"How to teach Controversial Content and not get Fired"

Today during class I discussed this article with my group. I meant to bring it up to the whole class, but we never got to this article. I was hoping someone might help clarify things for me.

The teacher explains how she taught a unit on the civil rights movement and her students wrote and prepared a class play. The class presented it at the school's February assembly, which was a "black history" theme. Isn't that a little contradictory to teach about such an important topic, expecially for blacks, during black history month? Doesn't that send students the wrong message? I remember talking about in class how in February schools might teach about important African American figures, but only during that time. We discussed how we should be teaching these things throughout the year, because otherwise we are showing our students we only care about blacks during February. I was just wondering what other people thought about this.

I was also wondering about something she said at the end of the article. I asked as teachers, should we expect ourselves to integrate social justice perspective in every thing we teach and teach about specific issues of justice within everything as much as possible? Is this the same as having a multicultural classroom? Is it either all there, or it doesn't exist? We were talking about integrating it within everything and how teachers are expected to do this with their math and science curriculum. We felt Social Studies, Literature, art, and music were all great opportunities for this but we weren't sure how to do it all the time.

Thanks for your opinions!

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

"Putting Compassion Into Action"

As Mary Cowhey states in her chapter, "Compassion, action, and change," the typical model of the school food drive should be looked at critically. It wasn't until I read this article that I thought about how food drives "inadvertently reinforce stereotypes about poor people, oversimplify the problem and the solution, fail to teach an understanding of the causes of poverty or local effort to improve conditions, and further stigmatize low-income children in the school." It was truly eye opening for me as I was reading everything that she did NOT want children to believe because she was describing everything that I always believed. I believed many of the things she described children should NOT believe because when it came to school food drives, I was never given an explanation beyond "We're collecting food for poor people because they deserve a nice dinner/holiday, too." What's more is we were only encouraged to collect food and clothing around the holidays. I was completely left in the dark about "the complex reasons why people go hungry or cannot afford housing." I was also blind-sighted to the fact that poverty-stricken people lived in my neighborhood 365 days a year; it wasn't just a seasonal thing. My concern is that if I never truly understood the complexity of poverty growing up, then obviously many others did not either.

From here, we move to taking action today. I really liked the idea of reimagining food drives, and putting children into the driver's seat as far as taking action beyond simple collection of items. Also, I felt "The Giving Tree" would be extremely beneficial for families within the schools and families in the community. Is it possible for us to take some of Cowhey's ideas and integrate them into the schools we're currently working in? As student teachers, or even first and second year teachers, what are some ways we can help students understand the complexity of poverty and put our "compassion into action?"

Monday, November 12, 2007

Addressing the issue of gangs in our classrooms

We had talked about the issue of gangs in class a while ago now. In my second phase, the issue was a little more prominent with our students. We had some students whose parents were openly involved in gangs and some students who had the potential of getting involved within the next few years.

How would you begin the discussion in your classroom about gangs without sounding naive or causing some students to get mad? Is it likely for the students who are already involved to become more offended and pull away? Or could it have the opposite affect?

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Atheist's teen daughter fights Illinois' moment-of-silence law

After discussing in class about whether or not it is wrong to say the Pledge of Allegiance in class, I automatically thought about a local issue in the Wheeling school district and Buffalo Grove High School that deals with the same issue. For those of us teaching in Wheeling, or have heard about Rob Sherman, we know that he is an Atheist father whose children are very outspoken about including anything religious within the school. I found the following article, written on October 26 in the International Herald Tribune, a newspaper in France. I was shocked to see that this issue was so global. Let me know what you think!


Atheist's teen daughter fights Illinois' moment-of-silence law
The Associated Press
Published: October 26, 2007

CHICAGO: A 14-year-old girl and her outspoken atheist father filed a federal lawsuit Friday challenging an Illinois state law requiring a brief period of prayer or reflective silence at the start of every school day.
The lawsuit asks the court to declare the law unconstitutional, said attorney Gregory Kulis, who represents Dawn Sherman, a freshman at Buffalo Grove High School, and her father, the atheist-advocate and radio talk show host Robert Sherman.
Kulis said the law is an attempt to inject religion into public schools in violation of the First Amendment. The suit also seeks a temporary restraining order to halt schools' obeying the law until the case is decided. A judge will consider that request at a Monday morning hearing.
The lawsuit names Gov. Rod Blagojevich and local school officials as defendants. The governor's office and state attorney general's office had no immediate comment Friday. School district spokeswoman Venetia Miles said schools will continue to comply with the law.
The suit also names high school teacher Binh Huynh, who according to the lawsuit is the teacher responsible for ensuring the girl prays silently or reflects quietly on the anticipated events of the day.
"What we object to is Christians passing a law that requires the public school teacher to stop teaching during instructional time, paid for by the taxpayers, so that Christians can pray," Sherman told The Associated Press.
An Illinois law called the Silent Reflection and Student Prayer Act already allowed schools to observe a moment of silence if they wanted. The new measure changed just a single word: "may" observe became "shall" observe.
Sherman said he went to court after he asked the school board to ignore the law and was rebuffed.
It is not Sherman's first church-and-state lawsuit and not the first to involve one of his children. He has sought removal of religious symbols from city seals and a ban on Boy Scout meetings at public schools.
In 1989, he sued challenging a state law requiring public-school children to recite the Pledge of Allegiance. Sherman's then 7-year-old son, Richard, appeared at a news conference that year, dressed in a blue blazer and red-and-blue striped tie. The boy recited the pledge without the phrase "under God."
"How can I raise Ricky to be a good little atheist when he's required to say the words 'under God' at the start of each day?" Sherman said at the event.
In 1998, Sherman was convicted of beating Richard, by then a teenager, and later was sentenced to jail for failing to complete domestic violence counseling. He claimed at the time he hit his son twice because he refused to baby-sit his sister, making Sherman late for his radio show.
On Friday, Sherman told The Associated Press he is "the best-known atheist activist in the Midwest."

Friday, November 9, 2007

Jonathan Kozol's hunger strike and NCLB

I recently read , in the announcements on icampus of all places, something that I found particularly interesting. The announcement was about Jonathan Kozol and his recent action taken in regards to No Child Left Behind. Since July, Kozol has been on a hunger strike to protest the federal No Child Left Behind Act, which is now up for reauthorization. He is 71. Although I do feel that his cause is a noble one, and that NCLB is an act worth protesting, I cannot help but wonder if Kozol will net a result from his actions. Throughout his career, Kozol has written many eye-opening accounts on the reality faced by many children in America's inner city public schools. His most recent being Letters to a Young Teacher and The Shame of the Nation. His writing is both honest and surreal and allows you to see into the lives of the children who are experiencing unequal educational opportunity in this country. I feel that is impossible for Kozol's activism through his writing to go unnoticed.

It is safe to say that many people have had their disagreements with NCLB since its reenactment in 2002 and that many of these people have voiced their arguments throughout the years. Educators, administrators and parents alike have voiced their opinions in regards to such issues as accountability, funding, etc. Is it possible for Kozol to make more of an impact by going on a hunger strike? And, in general, can one person really make a difference?