Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Ogbu, J.U., and Simons, H.D. (Jun., 1998). Voluntary and Involuntary Minorities: A Cultural- Ecological Theory of School Performance with Some Implications for Education. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 29(2), 155-188.

This article seeks to provide more detail and perhaps clarify three key issues that Ogbu has presented in past studies. The authors begin by describing Ogbu’s cultural-ecological theory of minority school performance. They then break down minorities into the following categories: autonomous, voluntary (immigrant), and involuntary (nonimmigrant). These classifications are used to explore the differences in school performance among these groups. The final issue they address is the pedagogical implications that can be derived from the theory. They note that an understanding of the nature of the problem will offer better insight when creating strategies to improve learning.

White, M.J. and Glick, J.E. (Dec., 2000). Generation Status, Social Capital, and the Routes out of High School. Sociological Forum, 15(4), 671-691.

The study described in this article examines the participation differences in “human capital enhancing activities” among immigrants and those born in the United States. This longitudinal study focused on collecting data that measured the influence of generation status, human capital and social capital on high school sophomores. It then uses this data to study whether these characteristics have an influence on the routes taken by adolescents that have dropped out after two years of high school.

Trueba, H.T. (Sep., 1988). Culturally Based Explanations of Minority Students’ Academic Achievement. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 19(3), 270-287.

This article reveals the need to acknowledge and incorporate the role of culture into the learning environment. Trueba examines past macro- versus micro-, and explanatory versus applied ethnographic research to make the point that differences in achievement within and between minority groups cannot be attributed solely to societal forces. He also discusses the stereotyping taxonomy of minority groups and argues that the minority categories created do not explain the different responses found between individuals of a same group that have been affected by the same social and economical circumstances. Finally, he stresses the importance of a socioculturally based theory of achievement.

Montero-Sieburth, M. and LaCelle-Peterson, M. (Dec., 1991). Immigration and Schooling: An Ethnohistorical Account of Policy and Family Perspectives in an Urban Community. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 22(4), 300-325.

This article addresses the misconceptions that developed through the years that have suggested that in the past immigrants that came to United States somehow learned English without the help of special programs. The study focuses in on reviewing the historical documentation of urban communities during 1890 to 1920 and 1970 to 1990, particularly “the historical and contemporary schooling policies that were used to integrate immigrants in a local urban community”. The authors then examine the reconsideration of “commonsense” notions that have dominated views about immigration and language acquisition.

Gitlin, A., Buendía, E., Crosland, K. & Doumbia, F. (Spring, 2003). The Production of Margin and Center: Welcoming-Unwelcoming of Immigrant Students. American Educational Research Journal, 40(1), 91-122.

The study discussed in this article focuses on Kousanar Middle School and examines how immigrant students are caught in contradictory circumstances which welcome them, while at the same time unwelcome them into the school system. The authors of this article focus in on exploring various elements outside the classroom to better understand the impact they have on the students’ place within the school. The study begins by researching the history of the school, and its English as a second language (ESL) programs in which these students are enrolled. This revealed that a foundation of marginalization was already in place before this study began. The study then looked into the roles of the school system, the teachers, the community and even the students’ parents in enforcing these policies and practices. Keys factors found included breaking the racial barriers of a historically all white school, the lack of ESL curriculum materials, large class size, and the parents’ role in enforcing the assimilationist policies and practices imposed on the students. It was concluded that the placement of these students into ESL programs while including these students into the school system, they also excluded them by not allowing them to become an equal part of the school. This shows how these programs actually place these students at the margins, not allowing them to be viewed and, consequently, fully integrated into the school system with all of its benefits. This article is very insightful in that it highlights factors outside of the classroom that often get overlooked, but prove to be crucial in the way these students develop within the school.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Culture Collage:

My family and loved ones are the theme for my culture collage because the bonds that we share are a very important part of my life. When I was young, home was a three-story building with family on each floor. I have countless memories of birthday parties with my cousins, summers playing in the backyard, and even waking up to the sounds of my parents having breakfast with my aunts and uncles. My parents were pretty strict, so having my cousins nearby helped balance things out. I loved every minute of it, but by the time I reached high school, everybody had moved away.

Since before I can even remember, my parents would always take us to the motherland, in our case Chile. The close relationships I have with my cousins have most likely been shaped by the close relationships my parents have maintained with their generation of family. When we were young, my cousins and I would only see each other once a year. Now that we’re older we’ve gotten a lot closer thanks to the internet and the occasional trips overseas. Two major similarities that we have found in our home lives are, one: all of our parents were incredibly strict, and two: we all have a strong religious background (with the majority being Christian and there are also a few Catholics).

As it would turn out, most of my friends after high school are Hispanic, mainly South American. I guess I can attribute this to the strong connection I feel with them because of the similarities in our cultural backgrounds. Something that always seemed to surprise them was that I had never lived outside of the United States. Until I corrected them, everybody always assumed that I was born in Chile or that at some point in my life I must have lived there. We all pretty much listen to the same type of music, and of course soccer is the major, and in some cases, the only sport of choice. The most North American thing they have found about me is my interest in baseball. The friendships that I have made have allowed me to feel like myself without the backlash of feeling like an outsider. But eventually as was the case with my family, my closest friends have also moved back to South America. Like my family, we stay connected thru the internet, phone, and the occasional visit.

I think that the most important thing that my family and friends have taught me is the importance of having a strong bond. Some things in life are temporary or short lived, but this type of bond is constant remains strong through distance and time.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Questions:

The questions that I would like to explore originate from my past experiences. I am fluent in Spanish and English. Although I was born here in the States, growing up, Spanish was the language spoken at home. This is something which my parents were pretty strict about, and for which I will always be grateful for. Being fluent in another language other than English has provided me with more job opportunities, has allowed me to really get to know the Spanish speaking countries I have visited, and most importantly has made possible the close relationships I maintain with my relatives overseas. Being bilingual was also very useful in school, mainly in elementary school where there were very few Latinos. Whenever there was a new student that did not speak English, chances were that the student would be seated next to me so that I could translate what was being taught, this of course before they were placed into ESL classes. What most caught my attention was that many of the things we were being taught, especially in Math, they would always tell me that they had already been taught in their native countries. What would later bother me is that when they were placed in ESL classes they would most often have to take less advanced subject courses because they were not fluent in English. Although it is logical that they would have to learn English first, many of them became frustrated and even bored, in classes like Math, when they had to go over things that they already knew. My questions are the following:

· What are the evaluation standards set for Non-English speaking students in comparison to English speaking students? And how and what are they based on?

· What is the success rate of minorities that have come to this country having already experienced the education systems of their native countries, versus the success rate of minorities that have solely been educated in the United States?

Another question I have, which can relate to my topic and this class in general, is the following:

· So far we have discussed and read about how change can be achieved by focusing in on changing the system, but while we are doing this, what can we effectively do in our classrooms to make a difference in our students’ education despite what is being imposed on them by the school, community, government, and etc.?

Monday, February 9, 2009

February 2nd Assignment

FILM
Urban: Dangerous Minds
In this film the students are represented as “rejects from hell”. There is little hope that any of them will ever leave the ghetto, that is until a retired Marine becomes their teacher. Although at first it seems as though Ms. Johnson, their teacher, might give up on them the film goes on to show how her determination to get through to them prevailed. I feel that this is a classic example of the characterization of urban students as failures, but that it also demonstrates how influential a teacher can be in a student’s life.

Suburban: American Beauty
This film depicts the stereotypical suburban life of everything seeming perfect on the outside, while in reality life isn’t as wonderful as it seems. School life in this film displays the notion that if you don’t fall into the perky cheerleader category you are likely to be viewed as an outcast. Although suburban life is often associated with perfection, the hidden imperfections are always an underlying theme.

Rural: Footloose
This film offers a look at what rural life is in comparison to city life. Rural life is often seen as calm and peaceful. If not for a “rebellious” city kid moving in, you are left to wonder if anybody would have ever really made a big deal about the outlawed rock music and dancing in this small town. This film shows how the problems depicted in rural life are often deemed important through the regulations enforced in that community.


MUSIC
Urban: Gangsta’s Paradise – Coolio featuring L.V.
This song conveys the concept of “gangsta” life being dark, dangerous, and tragic. To many it may seem like an exaggeration of what life on the streets really is, but to others this is a reality. I feel that this song is insightful to the urban life that most people would like to believe only exists in movies.

Suburban: Little Boxes – Malvina Reynolds
The lyric of this song illustrates the uniformity that suburban life is often identified with. The words “all the same” are repeated every other line. This is a clear example of how suburban life is mostly described from the outside and hardly ever revealed from the inside.

Rural: Home on the Range – Dr. Brewster Higley
This song is what I have always considered rural to be. I think that the following verse says it all:
Oh, give me a home where the Buffalo roam
Where the Deer and the Antelope play;
Where seldom is heard a discouraging word,
And the sky is not cloudy all day.
For some reason I have always thought of rural life to be almost as if from another time.


Television
Urban: 21 Jump Street
This show is the best example of urban life that I grew up watching on television. It covered all the social issues that still plague urban schools to this day. Even excluding the police drama that went on, I feel that this show provided a deeper look into the struggles that urban students must face day to day.

Suburban: The Wonder Years
Again, through this show suburban life seems to offer that safe type of lifestyle that many cherish, but that some try to escape. Although this show was set to shine light on the suburban life of the past, the white picket fences and the typical suburban students of the present remain somewhat connected. Somehow to this day many sigh for a taste of that “Wonder Years” simple life.

Rural: Darcy’s Wild Life
This show is about the daughter of an actress who is moved from the spotlight of Malibu to a more normal home in the country. Her days of designer clothes, cell phones and trips to the mall are over, and now she struggles to adjust to her new life on a farm. In searching for examples of rural life I’ve notice that rural life is most frequently shown side by side with city life in an attempt to show the giant gap between the two.


NEWS
Urban: Schools try offering kids 'paychecks' – MSNBC
This article talks about how some city students receive pretend money for good behavior, completing homework assignments, and achieving academic gains. The pretend money can be used to buy school supplies at a designated store. The idea behind paying these students was developed as a motivational technique to boost student achievement. I feel that this article demonstrates that with a little bit of creativity academic goals can be reached.

Suburban: NOT IN SCHOOL: CUPCAKES AND HUGS? – MSNBC
This article discusses the recent cupcake and hug bans that have become significant issues in suburban schools. Once again the problems that suburban communities expose are almost laughable in comparison to the problems urban communities face. What is interesting is that suburban communities also share, to some extent, the same types of issues that urban schools have, yet the problems that make the headlines are often the prettier of the bunch.

Rural: 1 in 10 U.S. high schools is a ‘dropout factory’ – MSNBC
This article highlights the issues surrounding the extreme dropout rates found in large cities and high-poverty rural areas in the South and Southwest. Education in these areas has not been valued to point that obtaining employment was possible without a high school diploma. Now that these jobs are no longer available there are strong efforts being made to turn things around. I think that this article is valuable in that it brings light to the issues that were once overlooked by the culture and/or traditions of a region.

Frames of Reference about Urban Schools Paper

Understanding education in urban schools is an area which I feel should be core to anyone seeking to become a teacher. As a teacher you will be faced with many challenges and being prepared will not only be essential to you in your career, it will also have a huge impact on the guidance you provide to your students. I would like to discuss my personal impressions of what constitutes an urban school. Although my impressions may not focus too heavily towards the typical characteristics, I will explore the beliefs behind my reasoning. It’s fair to say I could be wrong and that I actually don’t have a clear idea as what an urban school is, but I look forward to the insight this class has to offer. Urban schools are often referred to as “high needs”, and in many, usually provoke a cringe by the mere thought of pursuing employment in such a place. I can admit that at times I too have tried to omit the possibility of some day becoming an educator in an urban setting. However, I have always been motivated to make a difference and I feel that these areas could use more educators with that common goal.
My personal beliefs of what would constitute an urban school have mostly been formed by my own proximity to them. I have lived in Hudson County my whole life, and to me Jersey City schools have always been the urban schools of my area. If I hadn’t heard the details of a major incident that occurred in those schools by word of mouth, I could always be brought up to speed by the evening news. Although I attended public schools only a couple of towns away, that small distance made a world of difference. In high school I had a close friend who grew up in the Jersey City projects prior to moving to my town. To say that the stories he told of his experiences were shocking is an understatement, but I have to confess that his stories although raw and intense did not impact me as much as knowing that he had been exposed to these experiences at such a young age. When asked what it was like growing up with things like watching classmates being stabbed in the schoolyard right in front of him, his response was, “it was scary the first time, especially because your young, but then you get use to it”. Just a couple of towns apart, but his response was completely foreign to me. From that point on I would pay more attention to the things that created this giant gap between these two worlds.
What most caught my attention wasn’t so much the violence, but the conformity to it. How could something so wrong be considered normal? Quickly I began to find other elements that were being passed off as normal within urban schools. I couldn’t help wondering at what point alcohol and drug use became just something that the kids at school did. And when did teen pregnancy become an “in” thing? If you weren’t dealing drugs or in a gang, then you would have to watch your back if you ever disrespected one of its members, this was just common knowledge. As if these issues weren’t enough, for those students who didn’t drop out as a consequence of one of these problems, they would have to rise above the low standards that were set for them. When I was in school, A’s and B’s were the grades that I was encouraged to strive for. Imagine my shock when I was informed of the praise given to students for reaching C level and even a D level, because D was still considered passing. Is it possible that it became acceptable not to challenge students beyond the constraint that they have found themselves bearers of? It’s almost as if these things passed from being significant issues to significant statistics, to some just numbers on a paper.
It stills troubles me how different schools can set almost opposite sets of standards. While the high school I attended pushed me to enroll in college-prep courses, a couple of towns away among the students that managed to remain in school, some never even considered college as a possibility. Many were trying to survive their present that the prospects of a future were non-existent. A common defense was that careers were meant for people who had the money to go to college. In our schools we were told that scholarships could provide great opportunities, unfortunately in their schools scholarships would be more attainable if only those academic standards weren’t set so low. But setting aside these standards, I still wondered why the hope and desire for a better life hadn’t prevailed for the majority of students in these urban schools. Were these students ever inspired to aspire to greater things? Suddenly the cruel irony became clear to me. While their limited and at times violent lifestyle seemed so foreign to me, in their eyes the high standards and hope for the future I grew up with were somehow foreign to many of them.
I am the type of person that believes that if you really believe in something and you really put your all into reaching these goals you will accomplish great things. It is for this reason that I began to believe that the lack of motivation that existed in most urban students is what maintained these students living in a so-called “urban cycle”. Having realized this, I then began to examine what kind of impact urban teachers were leaving on their students. If school provided me with the educational and motivational tools I needed to succeed, then what were urban teachers providing their students? Through my own experience I know that not all teachers are the same. On one hand there are teachers that are very passionate about the difference they can make. These teachers engage you from the minute you step into the classroom. In the same bunch, but with a much different style are the teachers that you grow to hate for always being on top of you, and never accepting failure. More often than not, as the years go by, these are the teachers you thank. On the other hand, as I also experienced in my own schools, there are also those teachers who just seem to put in their hours. These teachers often times reminded me of dictators. They stuck to their notes, handed out assignments, and were firm in implementing their schedules without any interruptions. Most times they gave me the impression that they dreamed more about the summer than the students did. When it came to discipline, they were usually the ones to kick students out of their classrooms in record time. They hardly seem willing to invest time on resolving any issues, instead they would automatically have a punishment assignment ready for distribution. It was almost as if it wasn’t in their contracts to deal with any outbursts.
Having established these characterizations of teachers I then began to question which type predominated in urban schools. I concluded that perhaps there had to be more of the latter. I think that what most pulled me to this conclusion was the success rate, or lack thereof, that urban schools too often revealed. I know that there are many factors that contribute to the life that a student ultimately leads, and my intention isn’t to place the blame on the teachers. However, I do believe that teachers are critical in the growth and development of a student, and to many they are the only constant guidance in their lives. I strongly believe that teaching isn’t an ordinary job, it is truly something so much deeper than that. The influence you have in a student’s life will stay with them forever for better or for worse. The younger we are the more impressionable we tend to be. As students not only are we trying to find our path in life, we are also trying to find ourselves. A teacher should guide you in the right direction, should encourage you to always pull forward and should provide you with the tools you will need to achieve your goals. Although I am aware that all the other elements in these students’ lives and surroundings do not cease to exists, I still believe that a teacher has the ability to allow them to see beyond all that.
These beliefs will affect my interaction with the teachers I will someday work with, in that I will seek to draw from the passion of those who are truly there to make a change. One teacher can make a difference in a student’s life, but if there are a few with the same common goal this type of unity can reach much further. While getting past the urban environment will be a fundamental obstacle, I am also aware this will not be the only difficulty we will come across. Forming a unified front with my co-workers will provide us with a vital support system among ourselves and this in turn will allow us to more effectively reach our students. As for working with those teachers that really aren’t interested in making a significant difference, I will use their lack of enthusiasm as my personal motivation to become a better teacher for my students. I aim to use my beliefs as a reminder to never lose sight of the obligation I have to my students. My goals will be to make every effort to maintain an open mind when managing the chaos, and to focus on helping these students see beyond their surroundings.
These beliefs are essential in shaping the type of classroom I hope to create. I want to create a place where students not only thirst for more from life, but that they actually expect it. I want my students to know that they can accomplish things beyond their own expectations. I want them to gain an appreciation of knowing that life is not easy and that if something is really worth it, it shouldn’t be easy. Ultimately I hope that they accept that everybody will make mistakes, but that even these mistakes can be valuable if you are able to learn from them and utilize them to become better. I feel that my classroom should create hope in their lives because without this hope these students will continue to conform to their surroundings.
I think that my assumptions relate to the type of professional I hope to become in that although I am aware of the social and economic issues that exist in these urban areas, I focus more on the areas where I am capable of making a significant change. While I can’t change the surroundings in which my students will grow in, I can change the way they see themselves in relation to these surroundings. As a professional it will be my responsibility to help students build the bridges that will allow them to rise above the things that can potentially hold them down. As an educator I must always maintain my focus on the student and on providing them with the tools they will need to overcome the limitations that surround them. My objective will be to give them a vision of a future many of them aren’t completely aware truly exists for them.