SPED - TLT 404, Fall 2015 - Course record
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Session 1 - Monday, 24 Aug
Before class
- If you can, get into CourseSite and poke around
- Purchase copy of the textbook
During class (ppt)
- Brief introductions
- Course discussion/rationale – why a diversity course? Why this kind of a diversity course?
- American teachers vs. American students – e.g., recent-ish AP story.
- Complexity of American educational politics
- Can't agree on standards – cf right-wing critique of Common Core, as summarized by the Southern Poverty Law Center (see espec. pp. 35-37).
- Can't agree on what books should be in the school library! Surprising (in hindsight) 1945 example of E.B. White's Stuart Little (see para. beginning, "I never was so disappointed in a book in my life")
- ...and sometimes teachers' instructional decisions, in hindsight, look pretty bad – recent example of Rialto school district writing assignment about the Holocaust.
- The difficulties of looking in the mirror
- Personal example from TCH, centering around class
- Categorical example of professors! Recent op-ed in the New York Times. (See para. beginning, "Professors were more responsive to...")
- ...plus we're doing this course at Lehigh, which has not had the most distinguished track record, in terms of diversity / multiculturalism / sensitivity...hence the lawsuit. (And if you need some further background, here's an article from the Brown and White. The updates are handy, and the comments are essential reading.)
- Frameworks / metaphors for the course
- Hands up demo
- Metaphors to work by: Teacher as collaborator, communicator, student
- Going through the first part of the syllabus
- Online resources for you to use
- Going through second half of syllabus: Assignments we'll be doing
- An ice-breaker: The matching game
- End of history effect
- Discuss Self-in-Context assignment
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Tierney, 2013
- Christenson, 2004
- White et al., 2005
- (browse online bookmarks list: http://delicious.com/tchammond/TLT404)
- Grant & Ray, Ch. 1
- Assignments
- WTL
- In CourseSite, post to class forum (and update your profile with a current pic)
- Start your individual thread and share it to my gmail address. In your first post, please briefly summarize the prior experiences you have had (if any) in diversity / multicultural ed. Did you take a course? Have a class session focused on identity, culture, or privilege/oppression? Attend a workshop? It doesn't matter if this was in college or in your K-12 experience. Out of these experiences, what worked for you or didn't work for you? What insights did you gain (if any)?
- Bring in an artifact for your personal sharing. (For example, I’m posting a URL to my flickr feed)
- Start working on Self-in-Context assignment
- Please let me know if you have any contacts with traditionally underserved families that might agree to participate in the Family & School Interview project. Just fill out this form. (If you have more than one contact in mind, you can fill it out multiple times.) Thanks!
- WTL
Session 2 - Monday, 31 Aug
Before class
- Complete reading
- Bring in an artifact for sharing about yourself
- Complete class-wide WTL. If you're on top of things, please also start your private WTL thread (via Google Docs or whatever else you like) and share it with me
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Sharing artifacts
- Dimensions of identity; identity as monopolar or multipolar
- Challenging the model: WEIRD people...and just how weird are we, anyway?
- Activity: Name That Norm!
- Norms Gone Wild
- 1945 example of E.B. White's Stuart Little (see para. beginning, "I never was so disappointed in a book in my life")
- 1967 Boston Marathon: Jock Semple attempting to expel Katherine Switzer from the race. The story has a happy ending, though! See
- Defining culture
- Personal identity & broader cultural context
- Special case: religion
- Models of cultural identity development
- Culture & identity in context: Meet Jeffrey Isidoro (video, article in NYTimes)
- Closure
- Private writing-to-learn: Concept of 'floating' topics, specifically the 'vicarious experience of diversity' topic
- Discussing Self-in-Context assignment.
- Tech support things
- How to start and share a private WTL thread
- Introduction to digital portfolio stuff, for those who need it
After class
- Reading
- Tierney, 2013 (to think about your own growth and change in identity)
- I also recommend reading linked articles from the ppt or the wiki – consider, in particular, the case of Jeffrey Isidoro. What are the dimensions of his identity? What is his cultural identity development model? Our personal environments and our students' environments are increasingly complex...there's a lot to think about!
- Assignments
- Class-wide WTL
- Private WTL: If you haven't already, set up your personal thread and share it to Dr. H. Suggested topic, but not required: Think back on what you chose to share about yourself in class today. What did that story reveal about you? Think about the stories you choose to tell in other social or professional settings – what image do you seek to put forth? If you really want to dig into things, think also about the stories that you choose not to tell – by editing these stories out of your conversation, what aspects of your identity do you keep hidden or try to suppress from others' image of you?
- Complete and turn in your Self-in-Context. Re-read the syllabus description of the assignment to make sure you're hitting the required elements.
Session 3 - Monday, 7 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete both class-wide WTL and do a private WTL entry. Feel free to get started on the vicarious experience of diversity topic, if you like; you can also do the suggested topic or you can write your own thing.
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping: Questions or concerns about turning in Self-in-context?
- Conceptual work
- Opening activity: After the apocalypse
- Identity, race, and culture. What is 'white culture'? Is there a 'white race'?
- Making identity & cultural more practical and concrete: Privilege and oppression
- ur-text: McIntosh "Invisible Knapsack"
- Going broader: PrivilegeCheck.
- Two suggested tactics for recognizing the constraints of identity & culture
- Something more pointed: Concept of "white fragility"
- Broadening your reference base
- A habit to establish or continue: Consuming media from viewpoints/funds of knowledge different from your own
- The "vicarious experience of diversity" topic for your private writing-to-learn thread
- Another floating private WTL diversity implications within your content area or level.
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- McIntosh, 1988
- privilegecheck.tumblr.com – select 3 or more privileges to explore. Can also check out http://privilege101.tumblr.com/post/5988512297/list-of-privileges-permanently-in-progress
- DiAngelo, 2011. Warning: You might find this highly annoying. I really like it, but your mileage may vary. Regardless, give it a read and engage the author's point of view
- Assignments
- Class forum (in CourseSite)
- Individual thread (via Google Doc shared to Dr. H): Think back to your own school experiences and/or what you're observing in your current field work. Identify one or more areas where you feel a group of students (and this could be you!) either received a privilege or was oppressed. Explain what the privilege / oppression was, under whose authority it took place, what the community reaction was (if any), etc. How did you feel about it? Did you speak up or take action?
Session 4 - Monday, 14 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete WTL
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Self-in-Context returned: Grading, next steps, questions about any of the above
- Conceptual work
- (Thought about balance & diversity ed)
- (Discussing goals of course, how today's session pivots)
- Draw your family activity
- Family models, theoretical frameworks
- Family-school dynamics
- Collaborative practice (to be returned to, later)
- Closure: Floating WTL topic of diversity implications within your content area or level.
After class
- Reading
- Grant & Ray, Ch. 2, 3, & 4
- optional: Harkness & Super, 2006
- Assignments
- Please let me know if you have any contacts with traditionally underserved families that might agree to participate in the Family & School Interview project. Just fill out this form. (If you have more than one contact in mind, you can fill it out multiple times.) Thanks!
Session 5 - Monday, 21 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- WTL: No class-wide, just private.
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Upcoming assignments
- Floating WTL topic of diversity implications within your content area or level.
- Current event that have prodded this to move from the end of class (where it gets skipped) to the beginning
- Conceptual work: Families and communities
- Opening activity: Selections from In My Room: Teenagers in Their Bedrooms.
- Families: Life cycle theory, crisis/coping, resiliency
- Community
- Again, as with individuals and families, challenge of creating acceptable models, definitions. Typology, yes; functional clarity...not so much.
- To ground this conversation in a reality: Southside Bethlehem. Let's do a modified KWL activity
- Establishing the frame: What geographic area are we talking about?
- K: Write down 5 facts that you know about SSB. For each: How do you know this? Personal experience? Hearsay? Something you read or saw on TV?
- W: Write down 3 things you want to know about SSB. For each, write down a possible source.
- Investigation phase
- Share your Ks and Ws at your table. Can you help one another out in filling in gaps of knowledge? Thinking about resources? Do you have any conflicting knowledge?
- Turning to (social) media: Without overtly focusing on your 3 "want to know" items, use the following tools to learn more about SSB. Feel free to divide up the labor at your table, or just do a free-for-all. We'll start with a demo with this YouTube clip from April, 2012.
- Organized media, focusing on Southside results
- The Morning Call.
- Channel 69, WFMZ.
- The Bethlehem Press. You're probably best off using a Google scrape of their site, so follow this URL to this search for their items related to "Southside."
- LehighValleyLive.com. (Note that I just had to use 'southside' as the term to get any current results, so some hits are from elsewhere in the LV)
- Social media. Note that you need to use some surfing smarts here: Find a video or an image that seems fruitful? Look at the related items, look for more items by that user, etc. Also, keep in mind that social media is, by definition, pretty much unfiltered; surf within your own comfort limit.
- Twitter feeds – start with these searches for Southside Bethlehem, Broughal, Donegan Elementary, and then try your own. (You may have to sign into Twitter to do this)
- Flickr map, zoomed in on SSB. You'll have the use the search feature to start getting results specific to the map – try "southside"?
- (If you use Instagram, you might try the same thing on that)
- YouTube–again, surf within your comfort limit. The comments are typically depressing...but that's part of the value in YouTube: being able to see the worst side of the community, hearing the things that typically don't get said out loud in polite company. I'm never sure how seriously to take them, but they're there.
- Search results for SSB, ordered by date.
- Individual videos that may be good starters. I'm pretty sure these were created by Lehigh students as part of a class within the South Side Initiative.
- Individual users that may be useful to explore – be sure to check out their related videos (with caution...)
Lehigh student (A. Detterline), channel created for a class: http://www.youtube.com/user/brey825– sorry, video taken down. Here's some similar options- From a Lehigh PR class: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOSP5-12r7Y&feature=plcp.
- From a project completed in the summer of 2015: Bethlehem Unbound Storytelling Project, South Side and Bethlehem Stories. You will have to sift through to find stories specific to SouthSide, but it's a neat collection. 39 videos in all.
- Specialized media
- Bethlehem City Hall has made a couple of maps, including a walking guide to the Southside.
- Pennsylvania Department of Education's database of info on BASD schools – the Southside schools are Donegan Elementary and Broughal Middle School; Fountain Hill Elementary is adjacent.
- More school district info: Here's a very-much-unfinished web-GIS map of area school districts: http://arcg.is/1dMuJMx – if nothing else, pay attention to the SHAPE of the districts....
- The Bethlehem Area Police Department also publishes its crime records on crimemapping.com.
- Lehigh University has an interactive archive of info about the parts of the SouthSide that have been consumed as Lehigh's campus has expanded. It's called Still Looking for You: A Bethlehem Place + Memory Project.
- Organized media, focusing on Southside results
- Discussion at your table: What did you learn about SSB? What sorts of information did different media channels tend to offer? Try to focus your discussion on funds of knowledge – what funds of knowledge were presented in the organized media? Social media? What funds of knowledge do you think exist within SSB that the organized media might not report? That the university might not know about?
- L: Class-wide discussion of what we learned, what we would need to do to investigate further.
- Putting the exploration of the Southside into a larger context
- Research perspectives vs. parent perspectives
- Schools' community action efforts to support schools and/or support families
- Support families: Deficit-based approach and/or asset-based approach
- Real-world examples
- Broughal as a community school
- Asset map of Easton
- Harlem Children's Zone
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Grant & Ray, Ch. 6 & 7
- optional readings, giving some opportunities to think about diversity in your content area
- Milkman, Akinola, & Chugh, 2015 – see charts on pp. 14 and 15...lots of threads to follow from that, if you're interested
- Rosenthal & Jacobsen, 1966 (Pygmalion effect)
- Assignments
- Starting working on your Neighborhood Walk!
Session 6 - Monday, 28 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Start working on your Neighborhood Walk!
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Tonight's plan of attack
- Conceptual work
- Finishing up last week's tech-mediated community investigation, discussing Neighborhood Walk assignment
- New topic for this week: Race
- From communities to race
- Something I knew about but never really thought about: Redlining. For an overview, consult the Wikipedia article. For a more detailed description of redlining–addressing it as something that pre-dates the New Deal–in a specific location (Richmond), see historian Robert Nelson's "Redlining Richmond" project. (The maps I'm using are pulled from Urban Oasis' archive of digital HOLC maps.)
- Something I didn't know about until recently: "The Ghetto is Public Policy", focusing on Chicago. Note that the author, Ta-Nehisi Coates, recently expanded this discussion to a long article published in The Atlantic, The Case for Reparations. (See comments on the article here; see the author's discussion of his 'evolution' on the issue here.) The article opens with an extended example of Jim Crow law in the South, immigration to the North, and then the impacts of redlining and other forms of institutionalized racism, culminating with the efforts to fight back against it.
- Something you probably knew about already: Chinese-American exclusion act, placed in background of other legislation
- Quote system applied to Jews (and others) in school admissions
- Chicano experience of the border
- Race, society and schools, starting with the Carlisle Indian School
- Unpacking race
- Sorting People: Who Goes Where? - http://www.pbs.org/race/002_SortingPeople/002_01-sort.htm.
- Race as biology?
Race as behavior? YouTube clip of random KPop video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upbAbcTCDwA) or the mind-crushingly awesome Oppa Gangnam Style.
Considering role of race in social contexts: schooling, labor, even social phenomena such as gun deaths – see CDC report on gun deaths.
Education research on impact of race
- Setting up your reading of Harry & Klingner, 2006, Ch. 5 – think in terms of families and race, especially what happens when educators take a deficit view / family structure view as opposed to a strengths-based view / family systems view
- From communities to race
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Blanchette, 2006
- Harry & Klingner, 2005
- Recommended reading: Ta-Nehisi Coates' "The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration" – see especially the material on the nexus of the politics of crime, racism, and schools. Very, very depressing.
- Assignments
- Work on Neighborhood Walk! Note flexibility in due date.
Session 7 - Monday, 5 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
- Work on Neighborhood Walk
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Finishing off discussion of race, with way too much attention to the KKK.
- Opening up discussion of class – let's see how far we get during this session
- Class inventory activity
- Sharing experiences of class, class-conciousness
- Self-disclosure: My middle name is (was) a car
- Playing mother-may-I with American household income
- 1979-2003, then we'll go back and do
- 1947-1979
- Examples of class as the Forbidden Subject
- First, the impact of class as Forbidden Subject: video on social mobility – I don't think we have any idea how bad it is.
- What do we talk about when we talk about tax policy? Handy (longer-term!) link to the National Taxpayers Union data. (Note that they would strenuously disagree with the argument I'm making, even though I'm using their data.)
- Why tax policy is urgent: Katherine Newman, writing in the NYT and summarizing her 2011 book, Taxing the Poor: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/09/in-the-south-and-west-a-tax-on-being-poor/
- American History as a vision of progress? A history of competing social classes?
- Considering that most of us are (or grew up in) middle class / affluence, and that many students come from less economically advantaged backgrounds, how do we prepare to teach them? Well, here's a handy Framework for Understanding Poverty.
- I have an agenda to sell you
Special case of language & class- E.D. Hirsch and cultural literacy.
- Ruby Payne and Understanding Poverty.
- Book.
- YouTube channel from consulting arm (aha Process).
- Ramping up out of K-12 education: Bridges Out of Poverty.
- Criticisms of Payne's model: Bohn, Gorski, et al.
- Ron Clark and...whatever label you want to apply to it. Sub-components
- Books.
- Ron Clark Academy.
- Things to buy (could this be you in ten years??)
- Teacher community: Great American Teachers Club– just $150/year! Gah! Sadly defunct these days. Here's hoping that it will be resurrected.
- And to be fair: James A. Banks and multicultural education; Paul Gorski and edchange.org.
- And my agenda?
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Grant & ray, Ch. 7
- Select 3 or more items from the "Handouts" list on EdChange.org (I am particularly fond of the "Taco Night" piece by Paul Gorski)
- Follow up on 2 or more items linked above from tonight's session or else identified in the ppt's Notes section
- Assignments
- WTL
- Class-wide: Experiences of class & K-12 schooling
- Private = up to you
- Complete Neighborhood Walk
- Work on other assignments
- WTL
Pacing break - Monday, 12 Oct & Tuesday, 13 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete and turn in Neighborhood Walk
During class: Movie night! Seeing Waiting for Superman -- either meet in Iacocca Hall, E-104 at 7:00 and we'll go down as a group, or just meet us at 7:30 in Packard 416. Please RSVP ahead of time via http://bit.ly/WFS2015. If you've seen the movie already: You don't have to see it again, unless you want to. We'll just catch up with you next week. If you want to use this movie as the source material for your Vicarious Experience of Diversity, feel free!
After class
- Reading
- To prepare for our next class session, if you haven't already, please read Lois Gould's Story of X.
- Assignments
- (I will post a forum for class discussion / interaction following the movie and the Q&A session. If you didn't join us for the showing and the discussion, you can skip this forum task.)
- Work on Family & School Interview and your Field Experience paper
Session 9 - Monday, 26 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
- Turn in either your field paper or F&S interview. If you need more time, just ask!
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work – gender & sexuality
- Gender
- Padlet wall for gender free-associate: http://padlet.com/thomaschammond/lffzn7j7s1g0
- Gendered curriculum: Caldecott winners, history ed research by Sam Wineburg
- Kimmel: Gendered classroom
- Claiming a cognitive basis for gendered education: Abigail Norfleet James – see a collection of links.
- Senators KB Hutchison and Mikulski's Op-Ed in the WSJ: A Right to Choose Single-Sex Education.
- Sexuality
- Rationale?
- Genderbread cookie activity from Adams, Bell, & Griffin, 2007
- A couple of clips from "It's Elementary: Talking About Gay Issues in School".
- Shifting social norms: My experiences; yours?
- Katz, "The Invention of Heterosexuality"
- Heterosexual privilege
- Example: Excerpt from "Homosexuals: Just Another Minority Group?" (and see counter-example to 'six types of homosexuals' in Slate: 'The Six Types of Heterosexuals'.
- Shifting climate / norms?
- Tips for working with LGBTQ students & organizations
- Gender
- Closure
After class
- Reading: If you haven't read them already
- Assignments: Work on whichever you have left, field paper or F&S interview
Session 10 - Monday, 2 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
- Work on Field Experience and/or Family & School Interview (whichever is left for you)
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work – culture & acculturation
- To get us started and ground us in a concrete educational context: "Leaving Midland" case study
- Immigration
- Historical orientation: History of immigration to United States
- Personal history of immigration
- Overview: 1820-2007: http://vimeo.com/2424744
- Pair up and inspect decade-by-decade, country of origin by country of origin: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/10/us/20090310-immigration-explorer.html
- Contemporary situation: Map from the 2000 census. If you want to see the source, it's here: https://www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/censusatlas/pdf/6_Place-of-Birth-and-US-Citizenship.pdf
- What were you familiar with? From what context – classroom instruction? Media? Interaction with family and/or friends?
- What about the gaps? What do they tell us? What was happening?
- Context of immigration into the US: pushes, pulls, pushing back...privilege?
- Culture & acculturation
- Cultural profiles activity
- Acculturation
- Another lens on multiple cultures (stemming from multi-racial individuals): "swirl" concept
- http://swirlinc.wordpress.com/about/
- http://www.swirlsyndicate.com/About.html
- See also Beat Nation, blending indigenous and urban cultures (from Canada, but I assume there's an American analog...somewhere)
- Closure
After class
- Reading: Grant & Ray, Ch. 9 & 10; Gonzalez, 1995
- Assignments
- Work on either Family & School interview or Field Work, whichever you haven’t done yet
- Group WTL: Brainstorming for our teacher resource projects
- Private WTL: something or nothing; up to you
Session 11 - Monday, 9 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- NYT article on rising death rates among white middle-aged: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/03/health/death-rates-rising-for-middle-aged-white-americans-study-finds.html
- Conceptual work: Language & diversity; linguistic minorities & education
- "Multiplied challenges" of under-served ELLs
- Significance of language
- Who here has studied a language other than English? Who here speaks one? (And how can you tell if someone's American?)
- Who here speaks a second (or third? Dare we hope for fourth??) language? What was the context of learning it? Using it?
- The challenges of learning another language: mental, physical, emotional – even perceptual! See Ta-Nehisi Coates on learning French; his commenters are even more useful!
- Examples of things we don't think about
- Class roster exercise
- For more in that vein: See pp. 3 onwards in Language Transfer Supports.
- Language is more than words; hearing is more than de-coding sound waves – think about language and culture via Amy Walker's 21 Accents video. (Spanish accents video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlK-neOypDM
- The significance of English – it's not easy to acquire
- ESL stages, time-to-mastery
- Dual coding (Triple coding?)
- Spoken vs. written (vs. txt? Chat? LOLspeak?)
- Slang vs. 'marketplace' vs. academic
- Formal vs. informal writing, genre writing, concept of 'voice'. Example: Mark Twain's writing of Huck Finn's father
- Think about how you learned it. Example: 'If I was president' / 'If I were president' – formal instruction? Modeling? Or did you never learn it? Could you explain it to someone who was learning it for the first time?
- English as a high-stakes language (and set of cultural conventions) to learn
- Example of 'push back': English-only laws via Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English-only_movement
- Flipping the script: We are now in class in Haiti, and I will be speaking Kreyol...very badly, but I'm thinking I'll get away with it....
- (If you were interested in our source text: http://www.amazon.com/Dis-moi-chansons-dHa%C3%83%C2%AFti-French-Edition/dp/2916046119
- How did you feel? How did you react? What if you were the only student in the class who didn't understand? WHAT IF YOUR LIFE WAS LIKE THIS EIGHT HOURS A DAY?
- (And if you want a more thorough, complete treatment of that teaching technique, see Vanderbilt's module on working with English Language Learners: http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/module/ell/, particularly the series of videos that do the same thing I did: https://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/wp-content/uploads/pdf_activities/independent/IA_Understanding_Sheltered_Instruction.pdf)
- Working with ELLs
- Awareness – who are the ELL students / families / communities in our area? What are the trends nation-wide?
- Standards: Meet (if you haven't already) the PA ELPS
- Resources
- http://delicious.com/tchammond/ESL – anything you can contribute to this??
- An emerging area for consideration: Mobile tools, such as http://jibbigo.com/
- Hopefully your school provides access to these
- https://www.wida.us/index.aspx
- Culturegrams. Here is their sample country report, to give you an idea of the scope of information provided.
- MIND-SET
- Out-bound (teacher-to-student) action: Translation as a human right. Think about it.
- Book that may be of interest: Found in Translation, particularly the anecdote about a mis-translation of 'intoxicado'
- And look at this! Exact same name, and in fact addressing the exact same topic! Found in Translation.
- In-bound (student-to-teacher) action: Teach me your language (or culture, pronunciation, etc.). Think of this as a form of 'reciprocal teaching' – see entry in Wikipedia or this article from Education Leadership: http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar97/vol54/num06/Why-Reciprocal-Teaching%C2%A2.aspx
- Out-bound (teacher-to-student) action: Translation as a human right. Think about it.
- Closure: Meet people! Go new places! Try new things! Keep growing your cultural competence! An interesting concept: http://www.language-exchanges.org/
After class
- Reading
- If you haven't already read it: Grant & Ray, Ch. 11 & 12
- Follow up on the links above!
- Assignments
- Work on wrapping up
Session 12 - Monday, 16 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading – don't forget the links
- Work on final assignments
During class ( no ppt tonight – we're wrapping up left-over material from last week and then working with the links below)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- First, we'll finish off what I didn't get to last week, starting with the Sheltered Instruction activity ("Flipping the script," above)
- New material: Mandated reporting, diversity
- First, a disclaimer: I have no particular training and no legal standing to discuss this beyond my role as a teacher-educator. You must seek further guidance elsewhere beyond this discussion. (For those of you headed into intern teaching, you'll receive a 3-hour, face-to-face training there. For those in the workforce, you may have received training already. If you haven't yet – you will! You can also do a approved online training that results in a certificate. Here is one from Pitt: https://www.reportabusepa.pitt.edu/webapps/portal/execute/tabs/tabAction?tab_tab_group_id=_2_1 )
- We'll start by looking at Pennsylvania's Code of Professional Practice and Conduct for Educators. Note particularly the sections on "Relationships with Students" and "Professional Relationships" (particularly part 5)
- Next, let's look at PDE's running log of certificate actions
- The take-away from looking at these:
- As a teacher, you work within a legal framework, and
- There are some bad people out there...and some of them are teachers. (Same goes for police officers, doctors, taxi drivers, etc etc etc – I'm not singling out teachers)
- What is mandated reporting? What do you already know about it? What training or information have you already received about it?
- Some resources on mandated reporting
- FAQ about mandated reporting: http://www.pa-fsa.org/Mandated-Reporters/Understanding-Mandated-Reporting/Frequently-Asked-Questions
- PSEA summary of recent legislation on mandated reporting: https://www.psea.org/uploadedFiles/PupilServices/NewChildAbuseLaw-ReportingReqs.pdf
- Pennsylvania Code governing child abuse reporting: http://www.pacode.com/secure/data/049/chapter42/s42.42.html
- Website for reporting: https://www.compass.state.pa.us/cwis/public/home; sample form for reporting child abuse: http://ohr.psu.edu/assets/hr-professional/forms/CY47Form.pdf
- Examining some scenarios
- What are the implications for teachers / schools working in diverse situations? Consider issues of gender, social class, religion, culture, language, etc.
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Follow up on links in tonight's wiki. (Don't forget to look back at last week's material to see the links, etc., on Sheltered Instruction and other ELL resources.) If nothing else, file them away for future reference,
- Assignments
- If you haven't already, turn in your F&S interview and fieldwork papers!
- Complete and turn in your Teacher Resource project
Session 13 - Monday, 23 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
- Turn in your Teacher Resource project. You'll be presenting them next week
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Portfolio how-to time at end of class
- Conceptual work – "strategies for diversity"; social justice & the importance of dissent
- Everything we're discussing tonight is linked in the ppt; however, you may want to explore this map of Lehigh Valley school districts more thoroughly. (I believe it requires a Lehigh log in.)
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- optional, but highly encouraged: Ridenhour, 1994
- Required: Gorski, 2013; Gorksi & Swalwell, 2015
- Assignments
- Class-wide WTL on metaphors (see Forum in CourseSite)
- Write self-in-context #2
- Bring in food!
- Be prepared to present your Teacher Resource project
Session 14 - Monday, 30 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Closing activities!
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Assignments
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end