This is what you will be facing when you come into education in America… Food for thought.

There is something very wrong with the system of values in a society that has only derogatory terms like nerd and geek for the intellectually curious and academically serious.
    A geek, according to Webster’s New World Dictionary, is a street performer who shocks the public by biting off heads of live chickens. It is a telling fact about our language and our culture that someone dedicated to pursuit of knowledge is compared to a freak biting the head off a live chicken.
    Even at a prestigious academic institution like Harvard, anti-intellectualism is rampant: Many students are ashamed to admit, even to their friends, how much they study. Although most students try to keep up their grades, there is a minority of undergraduates for whom pursuing knowledge is the top priority during their years at Harvard. Nerds are ostracized while athletes are idolized.
    The same thing happens in U.S. elementary and high schools. Children who prefer to read books rather than play football, prefer to build model airplanes rather than get wasted at parties with their classmates, become social outcasts. Ostracized for their intelligence and refusal to conform to society’s anti-intellectual values, many are deprived of a chance to learn adequate social skills and acquire good communication tools.
    Enough is enough.
    Nerds and geeks must stop being ashamed of who they are. It is high time to face the persecutors who haunt the bright kid with thick glasses from kindergarten to the grave. For America’s sake, the anti-intellectual values that pervade our society must be fought.
    There are very few countries in the world where anti-intellectualism runs as high in popular culture as it does in the U.S. In most industrialized nations, not least of all our economic rivals in East Asia, a kid who studies hard is lauded and held up as an example to other students.
    In many parts of the world, university professorships are the most prestigious and materially rewarding positions. But not in America, where average professional ballplayers are much more respected and better paid than faculty members of the best universities.
    How can a country where typical parents are ashamed of their daughter studying mathematics instead of going dancing, or of their son reading Weber while his friends play baseball, be expected to compete in the technology race with Japan or remain a leading political and cultural force in Europe? How long can America remain a world-class power if we constantly emphasize social skills and physical prowess over academic achievement and intellectual ability?

By Leonid Fridman- 1990 New York Times

Everybody-

Tomorrow we will continue with the Praxis review. It may be a good idea to think about a book that you have read that is on the main booklist as I might ask you to write something in class tomorrow.

You have nothing to respond to about this post.

Here is a link to look at some interesting graphic organizers- enjoy!

http://thisisindexed.com/

 As for the final exam… It will be due to me no later than the 14th of May. You can bring it to me on the 12th as a hard copy or send it to my email by the end of class time on the 14th.

The final is in two sections:

Section 1- Your “Philosphy of Education”  It should be no longer than one page- typed- double spaced.

Section 2- “What did you learn in this class?”

I want you to convince me that you have learned something in this class. It should be a synthesis of the books we have read, the posts on this blog and the discussions we have had in class. I want you to write about what you think you have learned as a result of this class. How are you going to use what you have learned in the classroom? What will you take with you that is important? You should use examples from the books we have read as well as the postings and the discussions in class. I am looking for you to convince  me that you have benefited from this experience.

I’m looking forward to reading your ideas!

The semester is almost over and I want you to start thinking about your beliefs concerning education. What do you belief about teaching, about education, about students, and about yourself? What do you know to be true;  what do you think to be true? You will need to develop a philosophy about teaching for your portfolio and it will be good for you when you start teaching.

Chances are that your philosophy will change depending on what you are doing in education at the time. Now will be different from when you are student teaching and your beliefs during student teaching will change when you become a full-time teacher. This can be an interesting exercise if you really take the time to develop it.

This will get you started…

Read through this and tell me what you think it has to do with philosophy. Then synthesize that into education and your beliefs.

Good luck

 

The difference between the effect that thinking for oneself and that reading has on the mind is incredibly great; hence it is continually developing that original difference in minds which induces one man to think and another to read. Reading forces thoughts upon the mind which are as foreign and heterogeneous to the bent and moon in which it may be for the moment, as the seal is to the wax on which it stamps its imprint. The mind suffers total compulsion from without; it has first this and first that to think about, for which it has at the time neither instinct nor liking.

            On the other hand, when a man thinks for himself he follows his own impulse, which either his external surroundings or some kind of recollection has determined at the moment. His visible surroundings do not leave upon his mind one single definite thought as reading does, but merely supply him with material and occasion to think over what is in keeping with his nature and present mood. This is why much reading robs the mind of all elasticity; it is like keeping a spring under a continuous, heavy weight. If a man does not want to think, the safest plan is to take up a book directly he has a spare moment.

            This practice accounts for the fact that learning makes most men more stupid and foolish than they are by nature, and prevents their writings from being a success; they remain, as Pope has said,

 

            “For ever reading, never to be read.” – Dunciad, iii. 194.

 

Men of learning are those who have read the contents of books. Thinkers, geniuses, and those who have enlightened the world and furthered the race of men, are those who have made direct use of the book of the world.

 

Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

No link to another page this week.

I remember reading about an old teacher that would wear two buttons when he taught: One button read- Trust Your Teachers the other button read- Question Authority. I love the paradox.

I know we’ve already covered this but it is one of my favorite subjects. How do we know we know something? How do we know they know something? What do they need to know and how do we know what they don’t need?

These question drive teaching… along with others, but ultimately, it is very important we learn how to question and what to question.

WANT my students to trust me, but I NEED them to question me.

This means you too!

Here is the article-

Enjoy…     http://www.edutopia.org/asking-students-good-questions

Hope you had a good break-

Here is an article that will get you thinking about how much we don’t know about our students and how hard it is to connect and care about them. The emotion we put into them will drive you crazy, wear you out and destroy you emotionally, and it is not an option… all good teachers care about their students, usually above and beyond the required 45 minute class. If you give up on them, you give up on yourself- 

http://www.utne.com/GreatWriting/Driving-School-Bus-Connecting-With-At-Risk-Kids.aspx

Also- Should we pay students to learn and behave in school? If we tell students that going to school is their job, then shouldn’t we pay them for it?  

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/21/AR2009032100760.html

(Sorry, my first posting didn’t work)

 

Enjoy- I look forward to your comments. I would like our comments on both article please.

Stories make us human- it is how we relate, connect, and understand the past, the present and possibly the future.

What is important about story? Why are they so valuable to us as human beings? Can the stories that you have about your life become vital in the classroom?

Here are a few links that talk about stories and storytelling, read through them and tell me what you think about them and the questions I’ve asked.

I am a storyteller- is it an effective way to teach? Are you willing to try? I’ll bet some of you believe that you don’t have any stories to tell, but I would argue that you have plenty to say…

http://www.edutopia.org/stories-storytelling

http://www.edutopia.org/teachers-life-stories

http://www.edutopia.org/storytelling-event-personal-stories

Also, pick one of these from the list and read one of them-

http://www.esquire.com/search/fast_search?search_term=what%20i’ve%20learned&srchtyp=system

Enjoy!

With all the talk about the economy these days I wanted to see if it has an effect on our profession. I found this article from Teaching Tolerance and I think it reminds us about the ‘invisible spectre’ poverty can be and how it can interrupt all of our lives.
http://www.tolerance.org/teach/magazine/features.jsp?p=0&is=44&ar=1011

What do you think?

In reference to the Obama piece I found this essay. I find that it asks more questions than it answers but fuels a very large debate among educators in this country including myself!

http://www.alternet.org/rights/127682/

Think of this in relation to everyting you have been taught about how ‘education saves’.

I found this the other day and I thought you might enjoy it… I had a lot of fun goofing off with this. I do think it would be a great start to reading a story or to characterize a person in the story. It would also work with poetry.

Not an assignment just a supplemental post!

Wordle: use it for pre-reading, pre-writing, responding to reading, editing.

Wordle generates a visual image of a block of text, with frequently used words appearing in larger letters. It is a useful tool for visual learners. Teachers are finding it a both a useful strategy and a challenge to their creativity!

The election of Barack Obama as President is an achievement for all people, not just minorities, but when it comes to education some feel like it might have even a deeper effect in the minority community.
Read both the articles and comment on this “Obama Effect” and the achievement gap.
Will this “Obama Effect” have the capacity to effect change or is it another way to set up minorities for failure?

http://www.utne.com/Science-Technology/Obamas-Effect-on-Racism-and-Test-Scores.aspx

also read this link-

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/23/education/23gap.html?_r=2&scp=1&sq=obama%20test%20scores&st=cse

Please post coments before the next class-

Thanks

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