Monday, November 29, 2010

Empowering Education (Connection)

  This article was a very long but interesting article. While reading this article I noticed a few points reminded me of articles we have read in class.
    
    As I was reading Finns and Oakes was the first article that crossed my mind. In those two articles the talk about tracking and how it teaches the "high" ability kids to think outside of the box while the "lower" performing students have to stick with tedious worksheets that don't force them to think outside of the box. It also talks about by putting students in tracking class rooms you are basically placing them for the outside world as well. In the article that we just read Shor talks about how we need the kids to look beyond what is right in front of them and classrooms should be doing this. "If the students' task is to memorize rules and existing knowledge, without questioning the subject matter or the learning process, their potential for critical thought and action will be restricted". We need to force kids to look beyond the text in front of them and look at the bigger picture. "Not encouraging students to question knowledge, society and experience tacitly endorses and suports the status quo".

 I also found that I could relate this article to Johnson. Johnson tells us to say th word and talk more about different things so that we can have a better understand of what is going on. In this article Shor begins by telling us how we should talk and question why we go to school. "You must arouse children's curiosity and make them think about school". "A school year that begins by questioning school could be a remarkably democratic and critical learning experience for students". By having your class do this it makes them think out side those four walls and it gived them a chance to have a better understanding of why they are there and not just becuase their parents force them to.

  In class I would like to discuss how to come up with fun creative ways to make students think outside of the box.

I found this article to be interesting.

 

 

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Promising Practice Conference

  At first I wasn't at all excited about this conference. I didn't really know what to expect. All I knew was that I had to get up extremely early on a Saturday morning. I was not at all thrilled about this. I went into Donavon and received my folder I noticed that for both the workshops I had received my first choice. I kind of forgot about which workshops I chose. When I was reading the information on the I became pretty excited. I really enjoyed the workshops.
  My first workshop was Horton: Digitally Organizing your thoughts. I was unsure what this workshop was going to be like when I signed up for it. But I knew the teacher Connie Horton, from the semester before she was my technology teacher. I really enjoyed her class she is very upbeat and teaches really well, I learned a lot from her. Her workshop was just as informative as I had hoped. She taught us how to create webs on the computer. She had us try organizing one on our own we had to organize our Sunday. She showed us the different tools you can use in Inspiration 8.This program creates different kinds of wed designs. I found this to be very useful. It's something I think I can use in my future classroom. It is very important to organize your thoughts before you sit down and write a paper. I really enjoyed this workshop. Here is the Slideshow she showed us in the workshop.
  I found my second workshop, Horwitz et al: Photovoice as a self-study research tool, to be very informative. In this workshop I learned that Photovoice is very important its an easy way for kids to express themselves. In Johnsons article he talks about how we must say the words.I think Photovoice is a way for people to show others tghe different issues going on because it's not easy to just talk about it. Kids often have a difficult time saying what they want to say and have a difficult time expressing who they are. Photovoice gives them this opurtunity to say what they need to say through a picture. I really liked this workshop because I love taking pictures and I love photography.This workshop did get a little dull at times she gave us some bachround information about photovoice. Then there were 4 students that got up and talked to us about their photovoice project. They had to go out around Rhode Island and take pictures about literacy. This is when the workshop bacame a little confusing. It was almost like they talked more about literacy and their projects then they did about photovoice. Besides that part I enjoyed learning about photovoice and how it is a very useful tool for students.
Here are two articles that explain more about photovoice and its impotance:
http://i08.cgpublisher.com/proposals/368/index_html
http://www.ivmproject.ca/photo_voice.php

  I found this conference to be an overall sucess. I really enjoyed the workshops that I attended even if it was extremely early on a Saturday morning. These workshops were very informative and I think they will be very useful in my future classroom.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Citizenship in School: Reconceptualizing Down Syndrome (Reflection)

  I found this article to be very interesting I feel like I learned a lot and I also feel like I can relate to this article. I don't have a learning disability but I do have a physical disability so I know what its like to feel like someone is judging me. "people without disabilities are judging us". I have CMT which causes weakness in the muscles in my lower legs and hands because of this disability I sometimes have to wear leg braces. I am always very self conscious of this of people staring at me or judging me just because I am a little different.
    "Community requires a willingness to see people as they are different perhaps in their minds and in their bodies, but not different in their spirits or in their willingness and ability to contribute to the mosaic of society". People have a way of judging before they truly understand. People with disabilities are some of the strongest people anyone will ever meet. They are fighting a battle everyday that they can overcome and get past to be able to be accepted in society.
   I also understand what it feels like to be singled out at school because of my disability. Because of my disability I couldn't do all the activities like everyone else. When I went to high school I remember a gym teacher yelling at me because I wouldn't do jumping jacks but I was embarrassed I didn't want to tell her why I couldn't do the jumping jacks in front of the whole class. My cousin was in that class and he knew exactly why I wasn't doing what I was suppose to in class so he basically yelled at the teacher telling her I couldn't do it and the teacher stoped. At the end of the class I told the teacher the reason I wasn't doing everything I was suppose to. I never wanted to be singled out I wanted to be treated like I was normal. All I wanted was for the gym teachers to be aware of this so they wouldn't single me out. In elementary school I did have to take a "special" gym class but that didn't last very long. I also didn't like that I was being singled out. I feel that kids with disabilities should be able to be in a regular classroom with everyone else. They just might need a teachers aid to give them a little more attention but its good for the kid to interact with kids without disabilities and it is also good for the students without disabilities to interact with them so they can understand a little better about what their peer is going through and wont jump right away to judgement.

 In class I would like to talk more about if it's a good idea to put a student with disability into a class where kids don't have disabilities.

If you want too know more about CMT 

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Oakes and Finns (quotes)

  I found these two articles to be very informative. They really made me think. Like in the article by Oakes I never really thought about seperating kids in "low ability classes" and high could be an issue for kids.


 "Students who need more time to learn appear to get less; those who have the most difficulty learning seem to have fewer of the best teachers".
 
    This quote really stood out to me. I actually had a converstaion about this with my friends. This actually happens at RIC. For example the kids who are undeclared dont have a set advisor. These are the kids that need the most guidence and here at school they are recieving the less. The students who have a major have a set advisor. Those students already know what they want they don't nees as much guidence as the students without a major and who are unsure of what they want.

  "If students of all abilities are to benefit from being taught together, classrooms will probably need to be organized differently, providing a diversity of tasks and interactions with few "public" comparisons of students ability".

   This quote explains that if they were to mix students with different abilities the teacher would have to mix up their ways of teaching particular things to make sure that everyone understood what they were being taught. It could be a good thing to mix students in a different class the students with a low ability could be motivated by the students with higher abilities. If the students were to be mixed though it would be a lot of work for the teachers. So this could go either way.

  "Most public displays are well-enough meant; good work shown as a matter of pride, intended to motivate and provide examples for others. But too often they are convenient and irresistable oppurtunities for comparison".

  Teachers tend to compare students to others, by showing kids works when they do well and praising them. This can be damaging to the kids that do poorly. This could bring them down instead of motivating them to do better which could be their intention.

In class I would like to talk more about if its a good thing to seperate students or can it be damaging to the students with lower abilities.

Grouping kids by ability

Monday, November 1, 2010

Gender and Education (Hyperlinks)

    Gender Gap for the Gifted in City Schools
   This article is very interesting. I have heard that girls tend to do better in school than boys do and this website says that they are unsure why this is, they only have theories. One of their theroies is that the standarized tests favor the girls. "Among the most popular is the idea that young girls are favored by the standardized tests the city uses to determine admission to gifted programs, because they tend to be more verbal and socially mature at ages 4 and 5 when they sit for the hourlong exam." Because of this not many boys are places in the gifted programs. "A 2002 study by the National Academy of Sciences reported that boys were “overrepresented in programs for learning disabilities, mental retardation and emotional disturbance, and slightly underrepresented in gifted programs,” Girls and boys tend to learn in completly different ways and the standarized tests tend to favor the girls.
 
       Geneder Gap in Education
     This article is about how girls and boys use different senses and learn by different ways. And schools generally teach their students certain ways that tend to be more suitable to the girls than the boys.  "The researchers found that while girls can easily process language in the abstract, boys depend more on their senses. The upshot is that boys may need to be taught both visually and verbally, while girls can learn equally well through either means and presumably have an easier time with learning because of it."





      This youtube video is very informative. Towards the end of the video they talk about a solution to teaching boys and girls differently. It also talks about why it is that boys and girls tend to learn in different ways.


   In class I would like to talk about what we as future teachers can do to make sure our lesson plans are suitable for both boys and girls.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Brown v Board of Education and Wise video

    Last year I had to read Brown vs Board of education for my political science class and the different things we talked about in that class I found to be interesting.So, I learned a lot about these different cases like what I viewed on the website. I found it very sad that we had to set certain laws just so blacks could be treated equally. For example they chose to be "seperate but equal" but who was this really helping? In reality it wasnt equal. The whites had better schools while the blacks were placed into basements at schools. Like what happened in the case of "Sweat vs. Painter" This case is about a black man that applied for a white law school in Texas because they didn't have a law school for blacks set up. Instead of enrolling him into the school like every white student they set up a few rooms in the basements for them and had only three part time teachers. This was ruled unconstitutional. He was seperated but was it really equal?

     Wise's video shows me that after all this time their is still segregation all over the place. Looking at this video and reading the information on the website I have noticed that not much has changed over the years. We still have racism. Many people will argue that they didnt vote for Obama just because he was black or the other way around many people did vote for Obama because he was black.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

In the Service of what? (Quotes)

     I found this article to be difficult for me to read. I had trouble getting into the article. I did like a few points that the authors made in this article. In my service learning project" I have found it to be very rewarding and I am really enjoying this experience.

    "Educators and legislators alike maintain that service learning can improve the community and invigorate the classroom, providing rich educational experiences for students at all levels of schooling".  I like this quote. The service learning program isn't just a great experience for the people going into the classroom it's also a great experience for the kids in the classroom. Everyone in the service learning program has the potential to make a difference in a childs life. The service learning program is a very helpful program. I feel like in my experience with the service learning program I am making a difference.

    "Others argue that educators may miss important opportunities if they disconnect the act of service from a critical examination ofthe setting in which it occurs". I agree! This program is a good oppurtunity to get hands on experience with different types of kids. It would be a shame to disconnect this service program.

    "The idea that educators should foster a volunteer ethic and encourage youths to give something back to their school or community currently receives widespread support" Being a part of this program shows the younger kids the importance of volunteering. Being able to help someone else is a great feeling. Being able to make a difference in someones life is an amazing feeling. This program gives you the opurtunity to have this experience.

In class I would like to talk more about the importance of the service learning project.

Here is some more information about the service learning project

  

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Unlearning the Myths that Bind Us (argument)

 This author Linda Christensen argues that watcing cartoons and disney movies teach children to be racist at an early age. "The impact of racism begins early. Even in our preschool years, we are exposed to misformation about people different from ourselves". Linda Christensen wants her students to realize the sterotypes in these kid movies and point out to them that kids start learning these things at an early age.
  "The young pretty ones only want to hook their man; the old pretty ones are mean because they are losing their looks." "Kenneth noticed that people of color and poor people are either absent or servants to the rich, white, pretty people"

   Linda Christensen argues that children are being exposed to these specific stereotypes at such a young age. That every beautiful girl with find her handsome prince and live happily ever after. These movies dont show what happens to the average looking person. Christensen that you should point out the specific stereotypes in these children movies. So, that you can become aware of them. Children may sometimes unconciously absorbing these particular sterotypes in these fairy tale movies.

  In class I would like to talk more about how we as teachers can help students realize that they don't have to be exactally like the people they see on tv.









   Aladin "a whole new world" I love this song and I love Aladin. I after reading this article I realized that looking at this cliping of a disney movie a young child might say to their self I wish I could be a beautiful princess and have a handsome prince sweep me off my feet. And this is what Linda Christensen talks about in her article.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Gayness Multicultural Education and Community by Dennis Carlson (extended comments)

  This article Gayness Multicultural Education and Community by Dennis Carlson was a difficult article for me to read. But as I was reading it I was reminded of the other day when I was watching the news with my parents about a young gay man who jumped off the George Washington Bridge because he couldn't handle being harassed anymore. Jess wrote about this in her blog so I decided to do the extended comment instead of pretty much repeating what she wrote. Jess writes "This man, named Tyler Clementi, was a freshmen at Rutgers State University of New Jersey, and, as you can read in this news article, he was pushed beyond the limit, and decided to end his life by jumping off the George Washington Bridge" When I heard about this on the news I was stunned. People need to grow up. As they were talking about this on the news they also brought up several other cases of kids killing themselves because they couldn't take being bullied anymore just because they were gay.
Jess wrote this: "I am extremely disgusted, to say the least, with what is going on in our world right now." I completely agree with her. People are so judgemental and it needs to stop.
  "Carlson argues that people, kids especially, need to become aware that there are differences in this world, and they need to be accepted. No matter how against something kids are, they need to somehow reprogram their brains and think otherwise. To do this, teachers and departments of schools need to stop being cowards, and they need to start teaching and acknowledging homosexuality in their curriculum. They need to know that it's okay to teach about these things, because it is present in the real world. It's when teachers decide to maneuver around the subject and ignore it, then students begin to think that maybe it is wrong, and maybe it shouldn't be accepted. And that's when gay student themselves are too afraid to stand up for themselves and live their lives openly as who they really are."
 I totally agree with Jess. This is a problem that can't be ignored just like race. We are taught about the different race problems but never once are we taught about homosexuality. This is a problem that just keeps getting swept under the rug and that's not right. This is a huge problem in our society and we need yo do something about it before another person takes their own life just because they cant take being bullied anymore just because they are gay.
  In class I would like to talk more about what we can do to work on solving this problem.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Aria Richard Rodriguez (reflection)

I found this article to be sad. I never realized that learning a new language would be so effective in ones life. When I think about learning a new language I find it exciting. In high school I took Spanish for four years and I really enjoyed it. I enjoy learning about the different language and different culture. I also think it is very important to know some of another language.
  This article was very interesting. I never realized that coming here to America and learning English would make someone feel like they are losing their own culture. My best friend is full blooded Portuguese and her family and herself speak Portuguese and English at home. My friend and her family is the complete opposite of Richard and his family. My friend and her family is still very close to their Portuguese culture and even though they all speak English very well at home they will switch back and forth between Portuguese and English while they are speaking to each other.
  I think it is very important to learn at least simple words in another language especially for us future teachers. In the class room I am working in for the VIPs some of the children cant even speak English. So like in the article "To hear my teachers address me in Spanish when I entered the classroom. I would have felt less afraid". It is a teachers job to make the students feel comfortable in their classroom and if that means saying hello to them in a different language then that's what we should do. I find it very important for teachers to know some simple words in a different language to make their students feel comfortable in the classroom.
An article about the importance and advantages of learning a second language
  In class I would like to discuss the importance for teachers to learn a bit of another language.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Amazing Grace By: Jonathon Kozol

      Amazing Grace by Jonathan Kozol is a very eye opening article. It was also very sad. This article makes me apreciate where I live and how fortunate I really am. In this text a few quotes really stood out to me.
    One of the quotes that really shocked me was this one "I saw a boy shot in the head right over there, he says a moment later, in a voice that does not sound particularly sad". This quote really stood out to me. This little boy acting like seeing a kid shot in the head barely even phases him, like its just an everyday thing to him. It's really sad that this young boy has to see these horrifying things that no one should ever have to witness.
    Another quote that I found important "The point is that they put a lot of things into out neighborhood that no one wants, she says. The waste incinerator is just one more lovely way of showing their affection". "Theres trashy things all over" This quote bothers me. It's almost like saying that they dont care they will keep putting in "trashy" things  in the neighborhood because they are poor people so it doesn't really matter. I dont think thats right at all. Just because they live in a low class poor area doesnt mean that they can make it worse by putting things in their neighborhood like the waste incienerator.
    Another quote I found important in the text was "He pointed to my pizza. What did you do? I gave him some! Were your parents mad at you? He looks surprised at this, Why would they be mad? he asks. God told us share!" I found this quote to be an important quote in the reading beacuase even though this young boy lives in a rough, poor trashy neighborhood there is still kindness in thier hearts. This quotes shows that not everyone in this low class poor neighborhood is bad.
    In class I would like to talk about the second quote I pointed out. The quote bothered me just because they live in a "trashy" poor neighborhood doesnt mean they need more things thrown into their neighborhood to make it worse.

Friday, September 17, 2010

About me =)

Hi,
 My name is Anne Souza. My family and close friends call me Anne Kelly. I am the oldest of three. I have a sister (who is in my profile picture) and  a brother. A lot of people confuse me and my sister to be twins and other people think we don't look a thing a like. I have a very close family with lots of cousins. Me and my sister are pretty tight at times.
Outside of school I work at Ann & hope. Everyone finds this amusing because my name is in the title. Its not a very exciting place to work most of the nights i just stand there bored. I also enjoy hanging out with my friends and my cousins.
I am a sophmore. So far this semester is going pretty well it has been stressful but a lot better than last year. Last year i spent all year on crutches it wasnt fun at all. For the first semester I had a cast on my right foot and the second semester I had a cast on my left foot. I had to have surgery on both my feet. I am so glad to be healed and off of crutches.
So thats a little about me. =)