I ran across this article, and thought I needed to share it. It made me think of growing up, and listening to my my grandmother speak English. I could understand her, but sometimes my husband, with his untrained ear couldn't.
How or would this impact the classroom? In Arizona, Complaints That an Accent Can Hinder a Teacher's Career . This made me think about accents. My gut says that it is a non- issue???? I mean what would we do with a student from the Northeast moving to a school in Texas? What about that accent?
There are many avenues that lead to cultural profienciency. This is a running record of thoughts, ideas, resources for those who are interested in learning more about CRT. This topic tends to leave people feeling on fire or inspired. More than anything, I hope it leaves you thinking.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Real + Relevant = CRT
I recently was in a high school US History classroom. The essential question was, "What problems need to be solved? How?" The topic was Reconstruction after the Civil War. The teacher was connecting aspects of the Civil War to the following points:
On my way back to my office, I heard this story about Haiti on NPR, Cellphones Could Help Doctors Stay Ahead Of An Epidemic . This story related to the discussion about rebuilding, and solving problems using technology. I immediately reconnected to the classroom discussion.
The challenge as an educator, is to put all content into layman's terms. Being able to articulate WHY we are teaching what we are teaching.
- Freed Slaves: A group of people who have been freed and some of them returned to the plantation for work because they were not "taught" the process of being self sufficient. Those who returned to work on the plantation, worked for 10% of the commission.
- History has been a creative process in solving problems: Hurricane Irene, Joplin, New Orleans. Then link back to rebuilding the South after the Civil War. The government spent 12 years to rebuild... Connected back to more recent natural disasters.
- President Lincoln: After dissecting his second inaugural address, the teacher gave a scenario of what it would look like to be a "Lincoln" mom.
On my way back to my office, I heard this story about Haiti on NPR, Cellphones Could Help Doctors Stay Ahead Of An Epidemic . This story related to the discussion about rebuilding, and solving problems using technology. I immediately reconnected to the classroom discussion.
The challenge as an educator, is to put all content into layman's terms. Being able to articulate WHY we are teaching what we are teaching.
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