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anonymous

Teaching for social justice (definition: wikipedia) - 0 views

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    Over the course of dozens of books, Freire proposed that educators focus on creating equity and changing systems of oppression within public schools and society
anonymous

[text] Rethinking Gifted Education. Education and Psychology of the Gifted Series. - 0 views

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    A brief narrative description of the journal article, document, or resource. The 15 essays in this collection examine and challenge the assumptions and beliefs underlying the theory and practice of gifted education today
anonymous

Pupil with Asperger's syndrome rejected by school | Life and style | The Guardian - 0 views

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    Alex Goodenough, 17, taught himself at home from textbooks after Hertfordshire and Essex high school and science college (H&E) rejected his application to study there.
anonymous

(Social) Class Matters | Class and Other Identities - 0 views

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    How do you experience class differently because of your race, ethnic group, religion, gender, age, or other identity? What class dynamics do you notice within your identity groups?
anonymous

A portrait of 21st-century poverty | Society | The Guardian - 0 views

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    Today marks the 10th anniversary of Tony Blair's promise to eradicate child poverty by 2020, but about 30% of children remain beneath the breadline. Amelia Gentleman reports
anonymous

[video] Life without highspeed: The Foushee Family, Roxboro, North Carolina - 0 views

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    The digital divide is alive and well in Roxboro, North Carolina where the Foushee family, like many other rural families, do not have access to highspeed internet.
anonymous

Cameras catch kiss, raising questions | TheNewsTribune.com | Tacoma, WA - 0 views

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    But the investigation prompted Schellenberg to tighten his policy on how school security cameras can be used. School staff members can now use footage only for security monitoring and to catch trespassers, fights, vandalism and similar violations, he said
anonymous

[video] Ill Doctrine: How To Tell People They Sound Racist - 0 views

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    Race matters. Here's a little 101 about how to confront racism. Also known as "that thing you said is racist" versus "you are a racist" conversation.
anonymous

Alberta passes law allowing parents to pull kids out of class - 0 views

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    Alberta legislators passed legislation early Tuesday that will give parents the option of pulling their children out of class when lessons on sex, religion or sexual orientation are being taught.
anonymous

Education Week: Study Probes Cooperative Learning and Race - 0 views

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    African-American students, in particular-often perform better in cooperative-learning groups
anonymous

Teaching tolerance: Mix It Up: Mix It Up at Lunch | Southern Poverty Law Center - 0 views

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    Mix It Up at Lunch Day - to be held on November 13, 2008 - is a simple call to action: take a new seat in the cafeteria. By making the move, students can cross the lines of division, meet new people and make new friends.
anonymous

[paper/pdf] (under)mining privacy in social networks - 0 views

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    First, users should be explicitly aware\nof every event that gets fed into their activity stream.\nWhile that may not necessarily mean that every time such\nan event is generated the user receives a message, applications\nshould be explicit about which activities of the user\ngenerate events for their activity stream.
anonymous

(video) Class Dismissed: How TV Frames the Working Class - 0 views

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    "Class Dismissed breaks important new ground in exploring the ways in which race, gender, and sexuality intersect with class, offering a more complex reading of television's often one-dimensional representations"
anonymous

Challenging Class Bias - Terezia Zoric | Learningwork.ca - 0 views

  • This educator's resource is designed to provide support for Junior, Intermediate, and Secondary Teachers who wish to integrate work on challenging socio-economic class bias into their teaching. Most of the activities and resources within this document have been written or adapted for an intermediate/senior (grades 5 to 12) student audience.
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    This educator's resource is designed to provide support for Junior, Intermediate, and Secondary Teachers who wish to integrate work on challenging socio-economic class bias into their teaching. Most of the activities and resources within this document hav
anonymous

Why Johnny Can't Fail: Grade inflation is only part of the problem - 0 views

  • “You know there’s something wrong, when, as a teacher, you put more time and effort into the process of failing a student than the student has put into your class.” And, as for Johnny, there’s a further irony: not failing when he needs and deserves to, may prove more problematic for him than failing.
  • the principal calls in Johnny’s teacher. He tells her to give Johnny the opportunity to recover his credit by allowing him to redo a few assignments, including the ones he didn’t do, and hand them in whenever it is convenient—for Johnny. The teacher is up to her neck marking exams, preparing final reports and getting ready for the next semester that starts in three days. She leaves the interview distraught and disturbed: distraught about the extra work she is now expected to do and disturbed about having to compromise her professional principles. She decides to refer the matter to her Branch President.
  • Success becomes a function of the system in which the student has been immersed. Failure is understood as a function of the teacher who has allegedly not managed to convey the material or inculcate the appropriate behaviours in the student.” Accordingly, “students…will develop only the feeblest sense of individual obligation for their performance.”
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  • The inordinately complicated and refined nature of current “assessment and evaluation”—outcomes, expectations, rubrics, learning skills, achievement chart categories, assessment guidelines, and so on—partly explains why administrators are reluctant to tolerate failure: too much methodology, expertise and commitment has been invested for anything but success
  • When this becomes a systemic culture, the traditional and arguably natural principle of education is subverted: the school now finds itself adapting increasingly to its students. A school does this when, for example, it allows late assignments to go unpenalized, plagiarized essays to be rewritten, absolute deadlines to be repeatedly extended, unsubmitted work to be accepted after the semester is over, and obvious failures to be overturned. Students are quick to sense when those ultimately accountable for enforcing the standards of the school, its administrators, are soft; that so few students take advantage of this is a wonder.
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    This article was published when I was completing my teaching degree here in Ontario. Many of us read it not as a critique of the system but of a new policy document (freshaer) that essentially allowed students to hand in materials into the summer. What benefit is this to students or teachers? How does it prepare students for reality (to allow them to skip months of classes and then hand in the work whenever they like)? Furthermore, is it fair to allow students to decide when they'd like to hand work in, forcing teachers into overtime labour to accomodate this?
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    "You know there's something wrong, when, as a teacher, you put more time and effort into the process of failing a student than the student has put into your class." And, as for Johnny, there's a further irony: not failing when he needs and deserves to, may prove more problematic for him than failing.
anonymous

Hidden curriculum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Hidden curriculum is difficult to explicitly define because it varies among its students and their experiences and because is it constantly changing as the knowledge and beliefs of a society evolve.
anonymous

Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work by Jean Anyon - 0 views

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    students in different social-class backgrounds are rewarded for classroom behaviors that correspond to personality traits allegedly rewarded in the different occupational strata--the working classes for docility and obedience, the managerial classes for initiative and personal assertiveness.
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