This website deals with the History of Jim Crow and has many valuable resources for teachers.
The History and Geography sections of this website are quite rich in information and I think well-organized and easy to use. The website provides the in-depth essays and/or other materials to be used in the lessons. The American Literature section provides some interesting unit and lesson plans for well-known books such as A Raisin in the Sun and To Kill a Mockingbird.
The Teacher Resources section provides a variety of lessons… some involve images, music, literature, simulations, etc. Quite a few seem to incorporate the PBS series The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow. Overall, I am very impressed with this website. My favorite book is To Kill a Mockingbird and I think the Unit on this book is interesting in the way they link it to an integrated literature/social studies unit on the case of the Scottsboro Boys and life in the 1930s.
I found this article about individual teachers selling their lesson plans online to be very interesting. Over the past few years, many teachers have started selling their lesson plans online rather than just sharing them on free websites. One teacher has earned $36,000 in a year selling lesson plans. This trend has caused some school districts to question the idea of who owns material developed for public school classrooms and whether or not school districts should share some of the profits.
Others worry that selling the lesson plans harms the idea of free swapping and sharing. But, some teachers argue that it validates their efforts and shows that people recognize their hard work and expertise.
Whether using free or bought lessons from online, I did find the teachers who argued that they enjoy comparing their lessons and getting ideas to be very compelling.
While not located in the DC area, the Tenement Museum in New York City has a great website. You can dowload primary sources and other great resources. Navigating from this page is helpful.
With such huge amounts of money at stake, schools will be forced to use student achievement data in evaluating teacher performance.... how much more will this lead to "teaching to the tests"?
Obama gave a speach on Wednesday to talk about the Race to the Top competition - a competition in which states compete for $4.35 billion in education grant money.
In correspondence, her husband referred to the place as "our dear home," the
spot "where my attachments are more strongly placed than at any other place in
the world."
Finding some direct quotes from figures like Robert E. Lee that shows his link to Arlington could be an interesting way to express the struggle between loyalties to nation, state, land, etc.
Orton Williams was not only Mary Lee's cousin and a suitor of her daughter Agnes
but also private secretary to General in Chief Winfield Scott of the Union Army.
Orton Williams was not only Mary Lee's cousin and a suitor of her daughter Agnes
but also private secretary to General in Chief Winfield Scott of the Union Army.
Mary Lee received a warning from her cousin/a suitor of her daughter... who was also a private secretary to a general in the Union Army.... this underscores how complex relationships were at this time and how families were torn apart.
A sprawling Freedmen's Village of 1,500 sprang to life on the estate, complete
with new frame houses, schools, churches and farmlands on which former slaves
grew food for the Union's war effort.
This article provides a great hisory of something in our own backyard here in DC - Arlington National Cemetery and its history in the Washington family and as the home of Robert E. Lee. Studying this could be a way to link the Civil War to the area.
This website contains a great list of Historic Sites in DC - for example, I have bookmarked the page for the Old Stone House in Georgetown. If you select, "List of Sites" - you will be taken to a listing by neighborhoods of other historic sites in the DC area. This could allow you to search for places near your school that could be a great resource to incorporate into your lessons. Many, including the Old Stone House, offer tours throughout the day. The Old Stone House is also staffed by well-informed Park Rangers who are eager to share their knowledge.
Furthermore, the disruptions of routines in schools scheduled to be closed
appeared to hurt student learning in the months after the closing was announced,
the researchers found.
The study has shown that the disruption in schools appeared to hurt student learning in the months after the closing was announced. This makes me wonder, of course, about the recent layoffs in DC. While schools have not been closed, there obviously has been a lot of disruption and many classes are most likely behind schedule.
Instead of closing schools permanently, or for a year, and then reopening
with a new staff, he shifted to the turnaround approach, in which the staff of
failing schools was replaced over the summer but the same students returned in
the fall.
The new report focused only on the elementary schools closed permanently from
2001 to 2006, and thus offers no conclusions about the effectiveness of the
turnaround strategy.
Because of the disruption caused by the school closing, Duncan switchd to a strategy in which the staff was changed over the summer but the same students returned to the school. There are no conclusive studies about the effectiveness of this strategy. But, it does seem to show the danger of mass firings in the middle of the school year.
When Arne Duncan presided over Chicago public schools, he closed failings schools. Recent studies show that this did not actually help the students at those schools.
Story Corps is an amazing nonprofit project - the goal is to record people's stories and copies are then placed in the Library of Congress. When I worked at the Phillips Collection, StoryCorps came and recorded stories that related to migration because of the Jacob Lawrence Migration Series Exhibition. The stories were very powerful and you could see they way younger generations really responded to hearing the stories of both their own families and strangers. It made the experiences seem so real and connected them to real people.
While I am not sure of the best way to highlight different pages of this website to suit the format of Diigo, I think this could be a really helpful website. The "Volumes" link takes the viewer to a section where you can go through the volumes page by page. These writings are a great primary source/document to bring into the classroom.... so much more exciting to read the real thing than just see a mention of it in a text book.
But this is precisely where Mr. Dunn chose to be, having seen too many people at
the end of lives gone wrong, and wanting to keep these students from ending up
like his former clients.
I think this is a great story about an individual who gave up a successful legal career to become a teacher. It caught my attention because the teacher with whom I am doing my practicum placement left a career at the State Department to become a teacher for some similar reasons.
Mr. Duncan said that he had met hundreds of teachers who complained that they
did not get enough practical training with classroom behaviors, particularly
with poor students.
One of the things that Duncan criticized, and about which he said he heard many complaints, was the lack of practical training that students received in their education - implying the importance of such things as practicum placements and student teaching.
I thought this was an interesting article. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan recently gave a speach in which he criticized current teacher training programs.
New York State’s English and math exams include several questions each year
about livestock, crops and the other staples of the rural experience that some
educators say flummox city children, whose knowledge of nature might begin and
end at Central Park
Educators have long known that prior knowledge of a subject can significantly
improve a child’s performance on tests.
I think this factor of prior knowledge of a subject matter is one of the most difficult things to contend with in the debate about standardized tests. If students walk in to a learning experience with this lack of prior knowledge it becomes very difficult for them to ever catch up to the test's expectations.
The New York State Education
Department runs statistical analyses of its tests to look for gender, racial
or socioeconomic bias, but it does not compare the performance of rural and
urban students, partly because it is hard to isolate whether a disparity is the
result of a lack of familiarity with an environment or is caused by other
factors like socioeconomic status or quality of classroom instruction.
Some of the examples provided in this article provide clear examples in my opinion of why the department should compare the performance of rural and urban students.
Only the prekindergarten and kindergarten
classes at Harlem Success schools — about 450 students — attend the farm trips,
though the state exams do not begin until third grade. Students in other grades
go on nature-related field trips, like camping, that help acquaint them with
unfamiliar settings, Ms. Moskowitz said.
The Harlem Success Academny takes its students on field trips that aim to help students do better on standardized tests by taking them on fields trips to introduce them to subject matter that will be on the test, such as a farm.
Not that financial cost is everything or reveals the true extent of the effects this problem has on a community, but this is a large sum of money.
Again, the statistics were worse for young African-American dropouts, whose
unemployment rate last year was 69 percent, compared with 54 percent for whites
and 47 percent for Hispanics
Young female dropouts were nine times more likely to have become single mothers
than young women who went on to earn college degrees, the report said, citing
census data for 2006 and 2007.
Young women were nine times more likely to have become single mothers... also a staggering number when you think of the extra challenges they will face in life.
In light of all the recent discussions about DC schools and dropout rates, I found this article to be particularly relevant and upsetting. According to the study, about 1 in 10 male high school dropouts is in jail or juvenile detention (compared with 1 in 35 high school graduates).
The townspeople were in such dire straits that they sold all of their cattle to
him in an attempt to survive the drought. A short distance out of town, slowly
driving the cattle north toward Texas, Captain King realized that, in solving an
immediate problem for the people of Cruillas, he had simultaneously removed
their long-term means of livelihood. He turned his horse back toward the town
and made its people a proposition. He would provide them with food, shelter and
income if they would move and come to work on his ranch.
This tells the story of how the "King's Men" came to the King Ranch. Captain King purchased an entire town's cattle during a drought and then realizing that he had taken their livelihood, he asked them to all move and work on the ranch. While this page does celebrate the skills the Kinenos brought to the ranch, I cannot help but feel that there is a hint of paternalism in the situation, too.
Chapter 7 of Takaki briefly mentioned the fabled King Ranch in Texas which led me to check out their website. It provides a history of the ranch and its various industries. This page is about the Kinenos....and provides an interesting look at their history on the ranch.
“I have a younger brother, and it sets an example for him and how important it
is,” said Westbrook, who declared for the N.B.A. after his sophomore season at
U.C.L.A.
People who criticize me for that have something to think about, I think, because
that’s an important time in anybody’s life,” Carter said at the time. “There’s
not one person who could sit there and say that they would miss their graduation
for nothing.”
Role models who pursue education should be made available to the students, I think. Rather than not wanting to discuss sports stars or entertainers, I think it would be great to hold up the ones who do prize education.
This article caught my attention because my practicum placement cooperating teacher has a bulletin board and he encourages students to bring in newspaper articles that catch their attention. However, he has said that he hopes that they will not all be about sports stars and entertainers. Yet, the students are constantly talking about entertainers (especially Lil Wayne - he's all the rage in middle schools apparently!) and sports starts. I feel like a story like this could be used to help inspire the students to stay in school - seeing people they admire commit to their education could be very valuable.
The format of this website has changed a bit since I first learned of it over the summer. I don't think it is quite as user friendly as it used to be. However, it does provide some great primary documents for teachers to use when teaching certain moments.... in this case, the lesson I chose was Rosa Parks. By using some of these documents, students can become exposed to a more nuanced interpretation of the bus boycott and the events leading up to it.
I happened to see this clip on TV this morning while having my cereal and getting ready to head off to my practicum placement. In it, Rhee addresses the security issues and says that the security company "went under" and that is why police were called in. This was a big topic among my teachers today at school.... they feel that the story about the security company "going under" is false and are pretty angry that they had NO security last Friday and that teachers had to take turns outside the school acting as security.
I thought the idea of borrowing the packets for $10 for three weeks is an interesting copy. This might be useful for schools without the budgets to purchase more expensive packets of materials.
Education in America from the Colonial Period to 1850
Winterthur (in Delaware) is the former country estate of Henry Francis duPont. He was one of the first avid collectors of American fine and decorative arts and the museum (aside from being a beautiful place to visit) is now a leading center for scholarship in the field.
The museum has created packets of primary-source materials that can be used in classrooms if a field trip is not possible.
Two days of protests by DC students in response to unfair teacher layoffs.
Students held protests on September 28 at the DCPS central office and at Duke
Ellington High School for the arts on September 29 at lunch time. These videos
say it all. Our students are following the lead of the rank and file teacher
rally held on last Thursday, September 24. What a tribute to DC teachers. You
have taught them well !
The teachers at Takoma Education Center told me about the protests and I think it really emphasizes how much of an impact the lay-offs have on the students themselves and the level of personal investment they must feel in their education.
McKinley Technology Senior High School located in
NE DC was disrupted today as students unexpectedly protested teacher layoffs at
the DCPS central headquarters near the Capitol today.
I thought this might be interesting to share in light of what is happening with DCPS. Yesterday was my first day at my practicum placement and during lunch a few teachers were talking about the "buzz on the blogs" and the firings. All of them mentioned the students protestes by the students at the Duke Ellington School.
A result is that poor children, even many who have access to government-financed
early care or learning programs, tend to enter kindergarten
less prepared for school than those with wealthier parents.
I was especially struck by this line when I thought back to Ch. 5 in Mathison - Defining the Social Studies Curriculum. It lists the goals of Goals 2000: Educate America Act. The first thing listed is "All children in America will start school ready to learn". The reality is that not all students start school ready to learn or at least at the same place. As this newspaper article acknowledges, many poor children enter less prepared for school than those with wealthier parents and this is, in some cases, despite some having access to learning programs. Would an influx of new funds from such a bill create a more organized and directed early learning strategy? And if so, I wonder how educators can really help parents take advantage of the available services.
I think a plan for reaching out to parenst will be a crucial step in making this worthwhile. Communities need to provide the structures that would enable to parents to take advantage of these options and that might include adult education or parenting classes, too.
This article provides a look at a bill that proposes to raise the quality of early learning and care programs that serve children from brith through age 5.