Monday, November 5, 2012

Social Responsibility



            I really enjoyed Brown Ch. 26 because it talks about one of the reasons I want to be a teacher.  In my soul there is a deep desire to make a difference in someone else’s life.  As a teacher, we have the opportunity to make a difference in the next generation.  We have a social responsibility to mobilize change.  Teachers are responsible for giving students opportunities to learn about important social, moral, and ethical issues and to analyze each side of an issue.  It’s also extremely important for teachers to create a classroom environment where everyone respects and learns from each other’s values and opinions.  Teachers are also responsible to have moral principles that establish the atmosphere in the classroom.  Brown definitely brings up some great points when it comes to how challenging this can be when we’re in the reality of our own classroom.  However, it’s important to remember that it’s always better to be active agents of change than to be passive bystanders of something that’s in need of change. 
            Kumar talks about “ensuring social relevance” in chapter 11 of Beyond Methods.  He talks about the benefits of using the L1 to help students make connections between their home language and the TL.  It’s a resource that far too often is not used in the classrooms.  In chapter 12 Kumar gives some microstrategies that are great to look at when it comes to raising cultural awareness.  I liked the example with thanksgiving, because it helped the students to use critical thinking to see which holiday they have that is similar.  It helps them to think about their different identities within their languages and see how they connect and make them who they are. 
            I’m researching on simultaneously maintaining L1 and L2 literacy skills.  I’m looking further into research by Lilly Fillmore. Ofelia Garcia, and Nancy Hornberger. 
Educating Emergent Bilinguals: Policies, Programs, and Practices for English Language Learners. Language & Literacy Series”written by Ofelia Garcia and Jo Anne Kleifgen.  This offers alternative practices that will help improve the futures of ESL students.  It talks about building on students’ home languages and literacy practices in school as well as alternative assessment tools and curricular innovations. 
“Reading-Writing Connections from Theory to Practice” by Mary Heller.  I plan on using this to research how reading and writing are interconnected.  Each skill builds off of the other and this book will help me to see how I can integrate these skills together within my teaching.  It will also help me analyze how I can best help English language learners become literate in both languages. 
“Literacy and Bilingualism:  A Handbook for All Teachers” by Maria Brisk is a book that I am using in my research.  It really connects literacy to bilingual students and gives techniques that are proven to work.  Its goal is to help teachers learn more about bilingual students in order for us to maximize our instruction to fit their needs.

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