We see in the video everything is made of cardboard and they are all inside a box. All were white artists but have different colored shirts. The music is slow and melancholy and very catchy. It was written after the baby boom and speaks of housing communities that were built with cheap materials. Speaking of college, it’s become a cookie cutter of what is expected for everyone. “All went to the university, where they were put in boxes, and they came out all the same”. We go to college and are put into dorms which are like boxes and we are all expected to finish college. The song also goes into details about becoming doctors and lawyers, stating this is the only “real world” jobs that are acceptable; this doesn’t give the opportunity to be music majors or creative writers. The song was written for those who were trying to break away from the normal and the housing/baby boomers community system.
The group reaction to the images is that we liked how it brings you inside one of these very uniformed homes and everything is made of boxes. It makes you think about what you find as important goals and what makes individuality. Teachers should support debates that states ideas and information rather than allowing students to attack each other’s ideas. Support participation rather than the “right and wrong answers”. You need to have a class that goes beyond the black and white view of thinking; you need to have diverse answers. Having a larger number of teachers throughout the school year helps support diversity; in elementary school it’s up to the one teacher to instill diversity opinions in the students. As for this assignment it asks us to write why it’s import to support diversity and how this song supports that, this is limiting in the assumption that the student has an idea about diversity that is supported by the message in the song.
The idea that supporting diversity in schools is one with a tricky and very sharp edge. Too many people (many of whom are in positions of power) only look at outward diversity. They want to SEE how many colors that you have in your classroom. They don't care about content, as long as they don't see a class full of white kids. The more important diversity, the one that is being ignored, is diversity of thought. opposing ideas are not heard and studentss are all too often not taught how to back up their thoughts with facts and research.
Blog Archive
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Webquest About Webquest
Your Impressions
| Teaches the use of multiple sources for research purposes. | There is a lot of wasted time on researching unnecessary information such as the extraneous background on the chosen organization and thee failure to explain that the information on the gorillas should be used in the context of how they are threatened. The time and understanding that this project would take is probobly best left for upper levbel classes who can gain the most from the underlying lessons. | |
| students are split into specific roles with specific assigned tasks. this would allow for time limits to be set on each phase since the research materials are already set out for the student. | the student will need to be given deadlines that are fast approaching yet reasonable for each role. the information is there so too much time spent on one phase may lead to not enough time in other phases | |
| Clearly timeline and duties are laid out for each group member and their roles. parameters and rules of the contest are clearly stated. | progress reports would help to keep groups on task and communicating. | |
| outline for the student is already created and thee structure is sound. | there is no timeline and this should be set depending on the detail that the teacher wants the student to go into in his.her project. | |
| very detailed | highly complex and probably only appropriate for an AP class. no timeline and the organization is difficult to follow clearly. i fell that there will be a lot of wasted time just figuring out what the directions say to do. |
Best: Earthquake
Worst: Foreign Country
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Looks Aren't Everything: Media Literacy
For the assignment of designing a magazine cover portraying ourselves as the Teacher of the Year, I chose a picture of myself at a moment of pure joy in my life. I felt that choosing a photo of happiness would portray an image of a teacher taking pride in their job and making an effort to pass that pride on to his students.
I feel that the use of graphics that "pop" to catch the attention of a prospective audience.
As far as persuasive techniques i used the Experts technique with an interview with the "Teacher of the Year", the Frae technique in the Old Tech article saying that not using more modern gear is "dangerous", and i chose to use simple solution in convincing readers that they would be able to help children with higher math.
In addition to the three dimensional graphics for the text, I chose the color blue as a main theme for the cover. Research into sales techniques have shown that shades of blue increase a persons willingness to purchase or buy into a product. To maintain consistency, all the headlines are the same size (slightly smaller that the title) and the descriptors are also the same size. the use of photos as well as math graphics stress the focus of the issue.
Monday, March 7, 2016
Wikipedia vs. Textbooks
| Many educators are still reluctant to allow Wikipedia as source. |
Over the past week we have seen and read several examples of
how textbooks and many types of traditional learning are extremely one sided
and/or censored to the point of becoming almost useless. In the article “A Textbook Example of What’s
Wrong with Education, “ author Tamim Ansary states, “most of these books fall
far short of their important role in the educational scheme of things. They are
processed into existence using the pulp of what already exists, rising like
swamp things from the compost of the past. The mulch is turned and tended by
many layers of editors who scrub it of anything possibly objectionable before
it is fed into a government-run "adoption" system that provides
mediocre material to students of all ages.”
Ansary goes on to talk about how all textbook publishers have merged
into one entity so school systems have little choice in what they can get as
far as textbooks go.
One of the main examples of how the history we teach is one
sided was that of the history we have with the Lakota or Sioux tribes of the Midwest. It should come really as no surprise that
there is little written about the other side of the fight. As they say, history is written by the
winners. To bring the issue into sharper
focus here is a page from a history textbook on the Wounded
Knee Massacre. In contrast here is a
Wikipedia article
on the same event. Hardly an equity of information, and the fact that the
textbook is on the lacking end shows the sad state of our educational
resources.
This censorship and political correctness in an effort to
avoid giving offence in an age where a weak populace is offended by everything
under the sun, and in some cases the sun itself, has sent many educators
running to seek out new sources of information.
Unorthodox sources of information to help students see more than one
side of an issue. To help students learn
to do proper research requires multiple sources of information on a
subject. Students need to learn to ask
questions and find the answers rather than taught to simply regurgitate facts
that they get from an abridged version of a topic written in a painstaking
effort to avoid making people feel uncomfortable.
One of the more popular alternative sources for information available
is Wikipedia. And while the site has gained
a more positive reputation, many educators still are reluctant to allow
students to use it as a source.
Truthfully I feel similarly to this group of educators. While “much of Wikipedia is not edited by
just ‘anyone.’” According to the article “Wikipedia Emerges as a Trusted Source
for Ebola Information” by Noam Cohen, I would still rather have students use it
as a site to find other useful sources for research rather than as a source
itself.
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Learning Styles Don't Exist
The idea of there being specific learning styles by which students learn is coming under fire. For years there has been the idea that we learn either visually, aurally, or kinetically. However recently some scientists have proposed the idea of multiple intelligence's. in this theory there are nine different intelligence's that people have. Rather than focusing on how a person learns, the stress how a person see and processes information and works on the idea that any subject can be taught through more than one method.
My MI evaluation showed my top three intelligences as musical, mathematics/logic, and naturalist, so my picasso head portrait incorporates musical notes, a fish and an infinity symbol.
I feel that anyone can learn anything, and while there is more than one way to skin a cat, so to speak, some ways are better than others. you cant learn about the civil war by leading an uprising, but you will never learn to hit a field goal without going out and actually kicking some footballs.
Since human intelligence is based mainly on pattern recognition, the key is to find how to present the patterns to the students. Many of the MI classifications suggest spreadsheet or powerpoint style presentations to facilitate learning and pattern recognition.
My MI evaluation showed my top three intelligences as musical, mathematics/logic, and naturalist, so my picasso head portrait incorporates musical notes, a fish and an infinity symbol.
I feel that anyone can learn anything, and while there is more than one way to skin a cat, so to speak, some ways are better than others. you cant learn about the civil war by leading an uprising, but you will never learn to hit a field goal without going out and actually kicking some footballs.
Since human intelligence is based mainly on pattern recognition, the key is to find how to present the patterns to the students. Many of the MI classifications suggest spreadsheet or powerpoint style presentations to facilitate learning and pattern recognition.
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