The
toolkit on the GLSEN website that I thought was the most interesting was “Ready,
Set, Respect!” Written especially for elementary school students, it provides
tools to teach age appropriate lessons on respect and bullying. I love the idea
of anti-bullying campaigns starting in the early grades. As a future Elementary school teacher, I can definitely see myself incorporating lessons from this toolkit in my daily lesson plans. If children are taught
early on about bullying, it is less likely to happen as they get older. The
site was interesting and included many ideas to help bring schools together and
stop bullying. When I was in high school, we had a Day of Silence every year. I
always participated, and it made me realize how difficult it is for someone to
be unlike the “norm”, how alone many of them must feel. My high school was pretty strict about
anti-bullying and respect but of course it still went on behind teacher’s backs
and especially on Facebook.
External Link: Facebook Bullying
http://www.ajc.com/news/ap/crime/facebook-bullying-catches-attention-of-nm-police/nSPKb/
Share in Class: Having the Day of Silence in schools really help kids have a different perspective on bullying and respect.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Sunday, September 23, 2012
"Aria" by Rodriguez (Reflection)
In “Aria”, Rodriguez explains the
difficulties he went through as a young child trying to learn a whole new
language that was spoken all around him. Though I never had to learn a new
language as a child, I can relate to this article because I was placed in a
kindergarten ESL class for my Service Learning Project. The little boy that I
work with knows only a few words in English, while I know only a few words in
Spanish so our communication is very limited. Rodriguez’s article made me
realize how difficult it is for this boy to not only try to understand the English
language, but to also do the schoolwork that is involved. As tough as it may
be, it is better for children to learn a new language at a young age .Rodriguez
mentioned in the article that if he was taught English later in his life, it
would be very delayed. Reading this article made me realize how fortunate I was
to be brought up already knowing English, but on the other hand I respect
people who are bilingual because it must be difficult to learn .English and the
culture that surrounds it.
Point to Share: In class, I can share how even though I took two years of a foreign language in high school I could barely say more then a few sentences at a time. It must be so difficult to learn a new language at a young age.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
"Amazing Grace" by Jonathon Kozol (Quotes)
Quote #1 (page 6) “There are children in the poorest, most abandoned
places who, despite the miseries and poisons that the world has pumped into
their jives, seem, when you first meet them, to be cheerful anyway.”
Even though these children are living in one of the poorest
cities in the country, they still find joy in their lives. They have learned to
deal with what they have, and not to take things for granted. These kids are
not yet burdened by harsh reality, unlike their parents, who are struggling to
find a place to live and put food on the table. Compare these children to
children of upper class families. Many are spoiled and don’t know anything about
the real world. Even though the poverty stricken children don’t have as many
material things, they learn to be grateful for what they have.
Quote #2 (page 15) "Once you're in bed, if you call the nurse,
you wait for half an hour. 'You know, Mrs. Washington, you've been here
before,' they say. 'You know that we are understaffed.' How do they know, when
someone calls, that you're not dying?"
This
quote explains the hospital conditions in the south Bronx. The hospitals are so understaffed
so the patients can’t get proper care that they need. The government won’t do
anything to help fix the hospitals, it’s as if they are saying that poverty
stricken people don’t matter, when in reality, everyone both rich and poor
deserves equal treatment. These people who need the most help are being completely
ignored by everyone else, and are being left to fend for themselves. This quote
is relevant to the text because it further explains the terrible living
conditions of these people, while not even a twenty minute train ride from the
Bronx is where the wealthiest cities are located.
Quote #3 (page 23) "I
believe that what the rich have done to the poor people in this city is
something that a preacher could call evil. Somebody has power. Pretending that
they don't so they don't need to use it to help people-that is my idea of evil.”
This
quote explains how the people with power seem to be unaware of its presence
while people without power are the most aware. Since the people of power are stereotypically rich, white males, they are pretending to keep a blind eye on the
poverty in south Bronx. These people are “evil” because they aren’t even
acknowledging the help that these poverty stricken people need, like food,
housing and adequate health care. Without help from the upper classes,the
conditions of these poor cities will keep getting worse and the poor people will
even get more secluded then they are now.
Thoughts to Share in Class: How easily a rich child could have been born
poor, and a poor child could have been rich based on their families background,
race, education and religion. Some children’ lives are so much easier based on
the presence of power.
Friday, September 14, 2012
A Little Info About Myself
Hey! I'm Shannon. I'm a sophomore at RIC. I am an avid runner (hence my blog address) and I love watching/listening to stand up comedy, baking, and working with little kids. That's why I decided I want to teach kindergarten or pre-k. My favorite color is teal and cupcakes are my favorite food.

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