curryed away Curryed Away: Carrying Curry Education Away and Into the Classroom

Posts Tagged ‘news’

I’ve been having a problem with social media lately. Like most individuals in my age group, I have a facebook account. And like all good Curry grads, my settings are up so high that you can’t see anything about me unless you’re my friend. My students haven’t looked for me (to my knowledge) or tried to friend me, and I intend to keep it that way. My primary use for facebook is to post interesting articles that I’ve read, and to communicate with friends and family back in the States (for which it has been invaluable). However, I always find myself pausing whenever I want to post about work on facebook (and on this blog, for that matter).

Social media is an outlet for people to celebrate, publicize, and seek help for issues in their lives. My life is teaching, so naturally I want to post about my teaching, including both the ups and downs. But with recent incidences like an Ohio math teacher getting suspended for posting a picture of her kids with duct tape on their mouths and other stories I’ve heard of teachers getting fired over facebook posts, I’m loath to even post a comment seeking advice for how to get my kids to keep quiet and focus on a lesson! And unfortunately, this has got me feeling a bit confused as to what to do, but also very alone in my profession. Because unless I tell someone about my problem face-to-face (which implies that I can find a good confidant even though I’m an ocean away from all my Curry professors and friends), then I’d better keep my public, online mouth shut (so to speak).

And so this has all got me thinking: Where is the line between “productive sharing” and sharing too much? 

What do I mean by productive sharing? In my Curry class on Contemporary Issues in Education, we read a book called Teaching 2030 that suggested that teachers could use technology to build their professional learning networks or guilds in an effort to become “teacherpreneurs”. What I imagined, then, was being able to ask my network everything from how to effectively teach conjunctions to how to get a group of energetic sixth graders to buckle down and pay attention for 50 minutes.

However, I don’t foresee that happening when any relatively negative comment I have (like the Ohio teacher’s ”Finally found a way to get them to be quiet!!!”) could be used against me on any public, online platforms. I could keep my comments all positive, like “how great it is that Johnny finally learned the difference between an adverb and an adjective” or that “I shared a heart-warming moment with my homeroom over cookies”. Unfortunately, all of that just seems so false.

The truth of the matter is that teaching is hard, and if you’re lucky, you’ll have a few heartwarming moments in your day to balance out or (if you’re lucky) erase the frustrating, mind-boggling, and tear-your-hair-out moments. It also feels so incredibly false to only talk about the good stuff, as if I would be perpetuating every Hollywood myth that teaching is like Dead Poets Society and Stand and Deliver. Parents (and administrators) should know that teaching their children isn’t always a treat. I believe that suggestion cheapens both my job and shortchanges the child.

I suppose in this sense, it’s a bit like parenting these days. People always tell you to have children because the good moments outweigh the bad. They never talk about what happens when your child ends up less than perfect. I’m thinking here of We Need to Talk About Kevin — an excellent book that I actually got to read for fun (gasp!) over the winter holiday — and of the woman who got lambasted by social networking sites after she compared her son to Adam Lanza, the Newtown, CT shooter, in her blog. After all, children are innocence incarnate, according to those wonderful Romantic poets William Blake and William Wordsworth, and it seems to be an idea that we’ve held on to since then. To imply otherwise makes one cynical (as I might be) or a monster (as the post-CT blogger was called). Perhaps I’m taking this a bit too far, but it would be interesting to compare the number of positive media portrayals of children against the negatives, and see how this affects the attitude of the generation of parents-to-be.

What, then, is the real problem? Is the problem that some people (and teachers in particular) don’t know where to draw the line when it comes to sharing about their workplace? Or is the problem something deeper: that we don’t want to deal with the negative aspects of children, especially in school?

What do you think?

This isn’t a fully fledged lesson plan, but just a few ideas and some resources that I had that I wanted to share with you all. Every once in a while I get some politically or religiously charged emails from my family members. And while I hate receiving them, I always think how great they would be to use in a classroom to teach media literacy. After all, the average person often gets forwarded emails in his or her inbox, takes the information at face value, and then forwards it on to the dozens of other people on his or her email list who might be as equally un-critical of the information they’re receiving. But as teachers, it’s our job to make our students more media savvy.

Here are three examples and my ideas for their use.

Example 1

CBN News in Paris – A MUST SEE!
This is a shocking clip from CBN News in Paris.
It is extremely important that you watch this!
Then you will know that you must send it on.
Click on this link:

Background: This video was forwarded to me with just the above message and link. Note that it was released by the Christian Broadcasting Network in English. Clearly it’s meant to scare Americans with our post-9/11 obsession with terrorism and Islam. It also draws attention to an ugly vein of xenophobia among the French who see their country as being overrun by Muslims (and Roma) — for the Germans its the Turks, for Russia its the Chinese, and for the US its Mexicans. (Check out this NY Times article for a discussion about xenophobia around the world.) It’s the same story of assimilation over and over again.

Ideas: This could be a great video to use in a French class to focus on culture, in an English class to focus on audience, or in a history class to focus on nationalism and xenophobia. Specifically, it reminds me of an exhibition on nazi propaganda that I recently saw at the Holocaust Museum in D.C. It pointed out how people tend to focus on extreme nativism more when the economy is bad, which is partially how HItler convinced Germans to round up the Jews — he blamed them for Germany’s suffering economy after WWI.

I also see this becoming an increasing concern of globalization — people still see themselves as “French” or “American” and don’t take kindly to others who don’t assimilate. And while this may have worked before, I wonder if it will for much longer what with 7 billion people on the planet and humanitarian concerns that cross national boarders. (Click on this link for a great piece on population from the National Geographic Magazine.) This could be a hook into a science lesson on population that crosses with the humanities.

Example 2

Subject: Look what other countries think of us– PARADE IN GERMANY

You can bet the pro Obama media will never print these pictures!!
A chuckle amidst the insanity….the world is laughing at our Liberal government and the coorruption.
These floats were part of the annual Carnival Parade in Germany, watched by an estimated 3 million people in 3 German cities including Dusseldorf ..

“There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation.
One is by the sword.. The other is by debt.”
John Adams 1826

“You cannot strengthen the weak, by weakening the strong.”
A. Lincoln

“When injustice becomes law, then resistance becomes duty.”
T. Jefferson


GOD Bless America…
In GOD We Trust!

Background: I received the email above word-for-word. My immediate response was how can the author make such a hyperbolic statement about ”what other countries think of us” based off of one German parade. A quick search on my favorite English-language German news site told me that the parade is actually called the Rosenmontag parade. I actually remembered seeing these photos back in February during the carnival season. What the forward doesn’t mention is that the parade exists for “revellers [to] poke fun at current events and enjoy tonnes of sweets hurled from the travelling floats,” a bit like Mardi Gras. The other floats included equally damning images of Silvio Berlusconi (the Italian Prime Minister) and Angela Merkel (the German Chancellor). The parade makes fun of everyone’s government, whether liberal or conservative.  You can see the full photos here.

Ideas: Like the previous example, I think this email is supposed to promote a kind of nationalism that draws a line between America and other nations, a kind of “How dare they!” feeling. At the same time, I think it’s supposed to highlight our “corrupt liberal government” and get Americans all fired up about changing the government. It would provide a great lesson on audience and purpose and give students the chance to actively question what’s being left out by the photo selections made by the author. It could also help spark an interesting discussion on free speech and if a person can ever cross that line.

The email comes with some interesting quotes at the bottom that seem characteristic of these kinds of emails and which are worth examining to determine what values are being presented. And finally, I would really like to use this for a grammar and spelling lesson in an English classroom and discuss how the mistakes help or detract from the message.

Example 3

First Lady Requires More Than 20 Attendants

Background: This email actually came to me in a roundabout way. A close family member of mine once got very emotional at dinner about the number of Michelle Obama’s staffers and how much the taxpayers were spending on them. My husband, ever being the skeptic, decided to look it up online and found a great article about it on snopes.com.

Idea: Apart from being good fodder for a discussion on politics and valid sources in a history classroom, I also wonder if this could work for a math or economics lesson. I don’t know many math people, so this may not work, but the email seems interesting to me because it deals so much with numbers and salaries. Maybe students could be asked to go on their own web quests to find accurate salary figures for the staffers of other first ladies, adjust those numbers based on inflation, and provide a more accurate comparison. I also like that the email highlights the very emotional and powerful grip that Americans (perhaps people in general?) seem to have on their money. Students could even try to compare the amount spent on the staff for the American president versus the leaders of other countries, and then discuss the implications of their findings.

Have you received any fun forwarded emails lately? Have any other ideas? Leave them in the comments!

“Is coffee the cure to cancer?”

by Katie Smits

Students learn more about Mitosis through the reading of an article about caffeine possible being able to cure cancer.

Fact and Opinion

by Christine Chang

Fact and Opinion

At this point in their study, the 9th graders of Centreville High School are being prepared to closely analyze informational pieces such as news articles.  Before coming in contact with an actual news article, I want them to know what kind of content they will encounter by familiarizing them with the definitions that pertain to facts and opinions and how to differentiate the two.  Summative assessment will come later on in this unit in the form of a written assignment.

Plan Type:  Full Detail

Big Idea:

What is tragedy?  How do we use this term in literature, and how do we use this term in our lives? Today, we will explore the concept of tragedy.  Duration:  90 minute block period.  Class: Sophomore English class – non-honors, non-AP.

Standards of Learning

10.3         The student will read, comprehend, and critique literary works.

d)     Explain similarities and differences of techniques and literary forms represented in the literature of different cultures and eras.

e) Identify universal themes prevalent in the literature of different cultures

Lesson Objectives

  • Students will know the concept definition of tragedy.
  • Students will know the original definition of tragedy, and how that has changed in literature and beyond.
  • Students will know examples of tragedies in various human communities, including the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
  • Students will understand that tragedy is a universal experience that shapes the way human communities construct their culture.
  • Students will understand that human communities respond to tragedy through the creation of artifacts and cultural representations, and that literature can be a powerful example of this creation.
  • Students will be able to identify tragedy as a concept in literature.
  • Students will be able to identify tragedy as a concept in the historical and modern world.
  • Students will be able to discuss the ways in which tragedy shapes the construction of culture among human communities, through art and literature.
  • Students will be able to choose one (or several) tragedies that they would like to learn more about.

 

Rationale

Teenagers are melodramatic – and I don’t mean this in a judgmental way.  Melodrama can produce some of the most inspiring literature and craft that we have come to know.  Adults tend to rationalize their emotions and settle into understandings with less drama, but teenagers may still find emotions to be a driving force in their lives.  I believe that the study of tragedy in literature will really speak to them.

This lesson is designed to fit in the middle of a unit on Human Tragedy in Literature.  This is an emotional topic and must be well-scaffolded; thus, students will spend the first half of the unit moving from an individual conception of pain (with texts like A Separate Peace and Into Thin Air, and student texts on personal injury) to a collective understanding of pain.  This concept development lesson will fall at the very beginning of our move to collective understandings of pain.  We will define tragedy in this lesson, and we will begin to explore the human tragedies that most engage and interest students.    From this lesson, we will undercover the literature of collective pain; we will examine how human communities make meaning from tragedies through the use of art – and specifically language.  Students will eventually choose a tragedy that interests them and act as the literary spokesperson for that event (or series of events).  Their final project will be their individual writing that explains/explores/laments this tragedy.

Read More

The goal of the Currypedia section of the blog is to archive easy-to-use, easy-to-read lesson plans in a permanent database that you can take with you to your future teaching career. It’s a place for you to post lesson plans that you’ve already created for your content area class.  

Simply log in to your account, find ‘Lesson Plans’ on the left sidebar, and click ‘Add New.’  Easy!

A few reminders:

1. Go through the form and copy/paste your plan’s sections into the form boxes. Do not just attach your lesson plan.

2. Don’t forget to assign your plan to a category based on your content area, and check off any tags that you think apply to the content of your plan.

3. If the form doesn’t meet your needs for whatever reason, contact curryed_away@virginia.edu

4. Have fun, post often, and check out your colleagues’ contributions!