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erika webb

Educational Leadership:Educating for Diversity:Why Some Parents Don't Come to School - 0 views

  • From talking with Latino parents and parents in two low-income Anglo neighborhoods, we have gained insights about why they feel disenfranchised from school settings. In order to include such parents in the educational conversation, we need to understand the barriers to their involvement from their vantage point, as that of outsiders. When asked, these parents had many suggestions that may help educators re-envision family involvement in the schools.
  • What most people don't understand about the Hispanic community is that you come home and you take care of your husband and your family first. Then if there's time you can go out to your meetings.
  • Diverse linguistic and cultural practices. Parents who don't speak fluent English often feel inadequate in school contexts. One parent explains that “an extreme language barrier” prevented her own mother from ever going to anything at the school. Cultural mismatches can occur as often as linguistic conflicts. One Latino educator explained that asking young children to translate for their parents during conferences grates against a cultural norm. Placing children in a position of equal status with adults creates dysfunction within the family hierarchy.
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  • Whether it is for social, cultural, linguistic, or economic reasons, these parents' voices are rarely heard at school. Perhaps, as educators, we too readily categorize them as “those other parents” and fail to hear the concern that permeates such conversations. Because the experiences of these families vary greatly from our own, we operate on assumptions that interfere with our best intentions. What can be done to address the widening gap between parents who participate and those who don't?
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    This article gives various reasons why Hispanics may not paricipate in community and school events. Reasons vary from cultural, linguisitic or economic barriers.
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    Here is an article I found that helps explain some reasons why Hispanics do not participate in community forums, etc, at the same rate as blacks and whites.
Essence Lee

WEB|WISE|KIDS - 0 views

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    This website talks about parents role in keeping their kids safe on the internet.
Rob Eden

The Associated Press: Web-monitoring software gathers data on kid chats - 0 views

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    A leading parental monitoring/filtering tool (CyberPatrol) also data mines kids' chat messages.
Mick Killman

FBI-SOS: Safe Online Surfing - 0 views

shared by Mick Killman on 29 Mar 10 - Cached
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    FBI site teaching parents, students, and educators how to recognize and react to online dangers.
Nick Orsini

Nine in 10 of young people turn to internet for help in solving personal problems - Tel... - 0 views

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    Young people use internet instead of asking parents for advice.
Steffen Spinks

Law.com - 3rd Circuit Bars Prosecution Threat for Teen 'Sexting' - 0 views

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    Article about how sexting got teenagers in trouble. Then DA tried to force them to take a class about sexting but when they refused, they sued the DA because the DA was questioning the parenting of the parents. Very good article.
Amy Hallmark

Parent Alert: Teens and Porn - 0 views

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    Sexting is, in fact, a very big deal. Not because sexual curiosity and boundary pushing aren't normal parts of growing up; they are. The thing is, on the Internet, nothing ever truly vanishes.
Mark Klinger

"Boomers zero in on social networks" - 0 views

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    This is a recent article I found that relate's to this weeks topic of social networking. The article discusses the uses of social networking for older generations, and provides many statistics, some of which come from the Pew Project we study. As the article shows, older generations use social networking for many of the same uses as teens and young adults. The article may be help you think of questions related to this week's discussions. Here's a little excerpt to help you get an idea of what the article is about: "Whether it's congressmen Twittering during presidential speeches, parents connecting with high school flames on Facebook or empty-nesters planning group outings on grown-up sites such as Eons.com, Baby Boomers are speeding up the Web's ongoing metamorphosis from limitless void to global watering hole. Social networking is fast becoming a staple for a growing number of adults as Web use surges. One-third of adult Internet users have a profile on a social networking site, up from 8% in 2005, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. And though adults share some teen habits - checking in with friends, planning get-togethers - they differ from the younger set in their desire to use the medium to meet new friends from across the country." Enjoy!
Aunjanice Anderson

Teens and "Sexting": What You Need to Know About the New Trend - 0 views

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    Family Education has put together a blog to help parent educate their teen of the danger of sexting.
donald loeffelholz

Sexting 101 Guide For Parents - 0 views

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    This was a great site that I used for my paper. It gives general information and the rest of these things on their site. I would recommend checking this out if you are interested in this topic!! Table of Contents Definition & Background Sexting Statistics Similarities & Differences to Offline Behavior Harmful Effects Recognizing if Sexting has become a problem with your teen What to do if you discover your child is involved in a situation involving sexting… Laws that Help External Resources References Terms Associated with 'Sexting'
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