Thursday, August 16, 2012

Immigration in Chicago

This map of Chicago was created by Eric Fischer, modeled after Bill Rankin's map of Chicago's racial and ethnic divides Each dot represents 25 people, based on 2000 census numbers. Red is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Gray is Other.


Chicago has one of the richest immigration histories among American cities. Already in 1870 immigrants made up a larger proportion of the city's population (48 percent) than any other place in North America. During an 80-year period between 1880 and 1960 the size of Chicago's foreign-born population was second only to that of New York City. Local immigration patterns unfolded in a manner parallel to those of the nation. Mid-19th century arrivals from Ireland and Germany were followed by large numbers of Russian Jews, Slavs, and Italians in the years 1880-1920. Since the immigration reforms of 1965, the city and its suburbs have attracted growing numbers of Asians and Latin Americans. 

Chicago maintains its legacy as a major destination for immigrants to the United States. Recent patterns suggest continued growth among Mexican immigrants and Indians, as well as high percentage growth among certain sub-Saharan African groups such as Nigerians and Ghanians (both of whom tripled their size in the 1990s). Demographic statistics such as these are a starting point for understanding the impact and dynamics of immigration.
Chicago: Decades of Immigrants



Chicago Demographics
2010 Census Data Chicago Illinois US
Total population 2,853,114 12,421,906 Population, percent change, 1990 to 2000 +4.0% +8.6% +13.1%
Population density 12,750.3/mi² 223.4/mi² 79.6/mi²
Median household income (1999) $38,625 $46,590 $41,994
Per capita income (1999) $20,175 $23,104 $21,587
Bachelor's degree or higher 25.5% 26.1% 24.4%
Foreign born 21.7% 12.3% 11.1%
White 42.0% 73.5% 75.1%
Black 36.8% 15.1% 12.3%
Hispanic/Latino origin (of any race) 26.0% 12.3% 12.5%
Asian 4.4% 3.4% 3.6%

Boldly Braiding Group Unit Plan


Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Bag of Tricks

1. Praise
How might you encourage an individual or group?


As a teacher, I would praise my students by making positive statements about papers or essays they may have written, while at the same time giving positive feedback on how they can improve on their next effort. 


During classroom discussions, it's important to acknowledge each students contribution.  If possible, it might be good to keep a written or mental tally of how often each student gets praised so as not to exclude certain students' praiseworthiness. At the same time, its important not to use praise indiscriminately or else the praise loses some of its effectiveness, if used too often. 

2. Revive
How would you reinvigorate when boredom strikes?


If students seem restless, it might be good to let them stand up and stretch or take a water break.  If teaching in a high school setting, it might be alright to have a pot of coffee brewing that students can pay 25 cents for a cup of, which would go to an agreed upon cause or charity. 

3. Refocus
What kind of distractor would you create to get them re-engaged on your lessons goals?


Allowing students to simply relax and rest their heads for a few minutes might be what they need to get re-engaged in a lengthy lesson.

Starting a related game of Hangman might be what students need to refresh their brains.  Other word play games that students can play with each other might help break up the monotony of the lesson as well.

4. Acknowledgement
How would you note or celebrate accomplishments?


A reward system for students' involvement might also be an idea to try out for effectiveness.  Students should be able to showcase their ideas through individual and group presentations that allow time for students to gather their ideas and present them to their classmates.

5. Re-composure
What would you do to limit or change interactions that negatively influence the activity or to teach appropriate ways of being?


It's important to reduce distractions in the classroom in order to influence the best possible outcomes for the classroom environment.  This might mean ensuring that students who are a distraction to each other are seated away from each other in the class.  A proper structure of conducting discussion should be established in the classroom such as how students should contribute by raising hands or acknowledging what other people in the class have said. 

6. Rituals
Regularized actions that situate the students into an expected series of events.


I would hope to implement bell-ringer activities as a teacher.  This might be five minutes of journal time on an open-ended question related to the day's lesson or a riddle or problem that students have to work out on their own.  Students might see significant news or past news from history about the specific day, which will help students get comfortable about talking in class.  Other possible rituals in a social studies classroom might include the day's objectives and homework assignments on the blackboard creating a certain structure for the class. 

7. Right of Passage
Semi-regular or seasonal activity or activities that demonstrate success and/or coming to a new stage of learning or experience.


I hope I could work at a school where open houses would be held after the first month or two of school.  This would allow students to showcase projects that they have been working on and allow parents to view their child's progress. 

After completing a unit, it might be good to give students a chance to lead the classroom in some significant way.  This might mean students could teach the class for a day near the end of a unit's completion or allowing a class-chosen video to be shown after a test/evaluation day.

A change in the assigned seating of the classroom's desks or tables could be made after a new stage of learning is completed as well.


Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Boldy Braiding Individual Unit

Cause: Global Warming
Tools: Kites
Art form: Kite-making, painting, photography, videography
Objective/Purpose:  The main objective for this project is for students to learn about the causes and effects of global warming, which will ultimately result with the creation of kites that students will be able to fly at a field near the school.  Students will learn about changes in global weather patterns and climate over long periods of time.  The class will also study and debate the possibility of a Greenhouse Effect and its impact on the earth.

 
Project Title: Kite Runners for Earth
Background/Justification:  Global warming is a pressing issue for today's generation as well as for future generations of the world.  It is important that students learn about the man-made causes and what they can help do to combat its continued rise.  One of the effects of global warming is a decrease in wind energy.  Although there is some disagreement among scientists on what has caused the decrease in windpower, this will be a great jumping off point for students to build something creative and learn about the effects of global warming.

Skills:  Students will be able to read and build explanations for the causes of temperature changes including greenhouse gas emissions and human-induced pollutants.

Content:  Students will learn about the environmental effects, societal effects, and numerous views on global warming.  Students may see portions of the film An Inconvenient Truth to help them gain a better historical understanding of global warming.  Students will be provided with excerpts of Generation Us: The Challenge of Global Warming by Dr. Andrew Weaver to expand their knowledge of the facts as well.

Community Building Assets: This lesson helps student build self-esteem because they gain a better understanding of the effect that they have on their environment and how their individual actions contribute to future generations' well-beings.  They will also gain confidence from the fact that they were able to build a kit with their own hands and will be able to show it off to their family and friends.  This project enriches the community and potentitally the world because students are well-informed citizens who may take action because of their newfound knowledge about the detrimental effects of global warming. 

Other Expertise:  Expertise could be offered from the industrial arts teachers (woodworking or "shop" class) on how to cut and construct the kites that will be made.  Additional expertise could be offered from the arts department where instructors could help students with painting the body of their kites.

Materials: Students will need some materials for the research and note-taking part of the lesson:

    1.  Computers
    2.  Pens/paper

Students will also need materials that they use for the kite-making portion of the lesson:
 
   1.  Nylon/lightweight fabrics/paper
   2.  Twine/cord
   3.  Glue
  4.  Sticks/pieces of wood

Students may also document their culminating project of flying their finished projects with:
   1.  Cameras
   2.  Camcorders


Student Activities:
  1. Students will be presented with a PowerPoint to establish an introductory base of knowledge on the debate over global warming.  This presentation will be accompanied by a short worksheet that students will complete for the next day.
  2. Students will be divided into groups where they will research data on global warming and its effects.  Students will be divided into groups that believe in the effects of global warming and those that do not (whether they actually agree with these points of view should not be important).  They will construct a debate-style team presentation against another group in the class. 
  3. Students will observe and take part in debates with other groups from the class.  Students not taking part in the debates will be able to ask questions of the groups at the end of the debate and will determine the debate winners by a raised hand count. 
  4. Students will be given materials to build a kite.  The teacher will instruct students on how to build kites step by step.
  5. Students will paint an effect of global warming on their kite's body as well as whatever else they might like to draw.
  6. Students will have a class period to take their kites out.  Hopefully, weather conditions will be accomodating. 
Evaluation/Assessment: Students will be measured by their ability to construct arguments for or against the effects of human-induced global warming.  They will be graded with a few quizzes on their ability to consider different perspectives, reason with scientific evidence, and build explanations for their beliefs about global warming.  Students will also be graded on their ability to construct a sufficient kite with a cause of global warming painted on the nylon. 

Reflection: 
N/A

THINKING ABOUT THINKING

1.  The actions students in your class spend most of their time doing.  What actions account for 75 percent of what students in your class on a regular basis?

2.  The actions most authentic to the discipline.  What things do real scientists, writers, artists, engineers, etc. (or other possible professions within your content area) actually do as they go about their work?

3.  The actions your remember doing yourself when you were actively engaged within a subject area.  What specific memories of school activities from middle school or high school stand out as really helping you develop a new understanding of the content area?

Friday, August 3, 2012

MAKING THINKING VISIBLE



Chapter 1: Unpacking Thinking

In this chapter, Ron Ritchhart explores mental activity of ourselves and our students and how we as teachers can make thinking visible in our classrooms.  He touches on Bloom's Taxonomy, which classifies educational objectives into three domains: affective, cognitive, and psychomotor.  Bloom also identified a sequence of six learning ojbectives that moved from lower-order to higher-order thinking: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis synthesis and evaluation.  According to Bloom, each category precedes the next.  However, Ritchhart argues that this is not the case because thinking is much more complex than this and that
 these skills are more fluid and interchangeable. 

Ritchhart also unpacks Bloom's framing of "understanding."  Ritchhart points to the distinction that researchers have made between surface learning, which focuses on rote memorization of facts, and deep learning, which develops understanding through active and constructive processes.  The main point here is that thinking is not a sequential process but rather a complex and dynamic procedure.

Ritchhart provides a researcher J.B. Biggs who stated that, "To be properly metacognitive, then, students have to realistically aware of their own cognitive resources in relation to the task demands, and then to plan, monitor, and control those resources (15).   Basically, students need to be strategically aware of their own thinking in order to be getting the most effective type of thinking done.  As teachers, we want students to become more independent thinkers.

Questions:

1.   How do we help students become more aware of their own thinking?
2.  How do we create a classroom where everyone can become a more engaged and independent thinker?
3.  What do you think about thinking?

Chapter 2: Putting Thinking at the Center of the Educational Enterprise

The next chapter continues with the importance of creating opportunities for thinking and making our students' thinking visible.  A line that really stuck oiut for me here was that we should continually expose our students thinking by "pushing it forward through discrepant and unexpected events."  I think this is a really important way of trying to create memorable lessons and trying to avoid the same kind of teaching methods in our classrooms.   Although these kinds of unexpected events might not always be possible because of other restrictions and demands within the school setting, I think it is incredibly valuable to teach students by creating unexpected lesson plans.

Another point of emphasis in this chapter was that we need to be models as teachers for our students to learn from.  Ritchhart states that "the students in our charge need to see an image of us as thinkers and learners that they can imitate and learn from." (29)  Students need to see how we challenge ourselves in our thinking so that they can advance their understandings as well.

Ritchhart lists 6 ways that we can making thinking visible for students.  First, he points to asking good, open-ended questions that push towards deeper understanding.  Along these same lines we should also ask authentic questions of our students that show that we are simultaneously involved in the act of thinking and questioning in the classroom.  In this way, we model an interest in ideas for our students.  We show that we too are interested in learning from their questions and observations.  He also points to constructing understanding by asking guiding and direct questions to leader students toward understanding of important ideas.  This is a matter of asking well-worded questions and following up by building upon students' previous knowledge and answers.  The next step in this is facilitating and clarifying thinking.  The author explains how the question "What makes you say that?" is powerful in advancing thinking and conveys, in a simple way, how we are genuinely interested about our students' thinking.  Another simple way of making thinking visible is by listening attentively for our students' answers and showing respect for each learner's contributions by really responding to what they have provided to the class.  Finally, another tool is the use of documentation which helps students and teachers observe the learning process through things like whiteboards, photographs, notes, blogs, drawings, etc.

Questions:

1.  How do we create "discrepant and unexpected events" while at the same time fulfilling state standards and other requirements like preparing for testing?
2.   Are there other ways to make thinking visible besides the ones that were pointed out in the chapter?

Chapter 3: Introduction to Thinking Routines

The next chapter introduces the idea of thinking routines which are helpful ways of managing and facilitating classroom goals successfully.  These routines work as tools, structures, and patterns of behavior.  These routines help both students and teaches in the classroom.  Routines can be things like bellringers at the beginning of class (a question on the board to get students thinking for the first five minutes of class) or a way in which quizzes get handed in at the end of class.  Ritchhart states that "all instruction takes place within a context, and routines contribute to the establishment of that context through the creation of socially shared, scripted clices of behavior."  (48)  Classrooms should be a a microcosm of a civilized society and societies need certain ways of getting things accomplished.  This doesn't mean that the classroom should just turn into a series of mundane patterns of behavior but routines help organize the class into an engaging, organized structure.

Questions:

1.   What kind of thinking routines do you envision for your classroom?
2.  Were there any routines from school that were more annoying than useful?