Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Most meaningful article
Question:
"What article in the course readings was most meaningful for you and why?" (to be posted at approximately the thirteenth week of the course).
Response:
What an amazing selection of readings the course provided. The one that stands out in my mind is the article Strategies to prevent and heal the mental anguish caused by cyberbullying by Froeschle, J.G.; Mayorga, M.; Castillo, Y.; & Hargrove, T. (2008).
As I read the article I had many reactions. I realised that a shift in teaching must occur as our students use more and more electronic forms of social media such as texting, emails, blogs, glogs etc . Educators need to be equipped with the knowledge to support and prevent on line social bullying as learners adopt more forms of technology. The quote “cyber bullying has moved bullying from the schoolyard to a worldwide audience” (Frieschele et al., 2008, p. 30) really stood out for me because it is true. We are an electronic generation.
In this article I learned that children are primarily bullied via phones through texting and email and when communication is online students experience instant harassment and it is a viscous circle in which there is little accountability. Frieschele et al., (2008) writes that perpetrators are either “social climbers” and/or “aggressive harassers” which I don't think is much different from the school yard however it is "invisible" online.
Until this course I have never given Cyberbullying much thought and after reading that article I can see how directly connected my role as teacher librarian is to promote online social responsibility and accountability through creating visible policies and dialogue to protect the invisible. I intend to look into books to support this topic and reach my students through literature and role play as suggested in the article.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Creative Synthesis: My Word Cloud
Part One: Creative Synthesis
Footprint of my inquiry based responses
This "wordle" image is my final creative representation of my learning, it is a synthesis of my communication blog.
Part 2: Creative explanation
Part 2: Creative explanation
Reflection Blogs, Wordles and course themes
I chose to create a blog as my creative synthesis with a summative ‘Wordle’ in the shape of a footprint to visually represent my inquiries. Blogs and Wordles can be used in the curriculum in various ways and I chose to focus on how technology can be integrated into the curriculum for this final synthesis, and reference applicable elements of this course, because my job is to support information literacy for the whole school community (teachers, students, parents).
A blog is an amazing technology tool that allows all of us to extend our thinking and create responses or postings in an engaging format that is visually appealing. It reminds me of online scrap booking but thankfully I do not create the mess or need to buy the supplies! In a blog I can insert images and links to relevant articles and add personal touches that make it meaningful. Wordles are formed from all of the text (any kind of text such as a document, website, blog) and then generate an image (known as a word cloud) of the key words, adding size and colour to the higher frequency words.
Being fairly new to blogging I read several articles before I created my own. I read an article titled Blogomania searching for the definition of blogs. I wondered if they were online portfolios and journals or if they were set up like websites with interactive components. Oatman (2005) said people blog “because blogging—adding entries to an online journal or commenting on them—is fun, empowering, inexpensive, and practically effortless. Individual entries, called posts in bloggerese, are generally short—easy to write, quick to read. They pop up on the monitor in reverse chronological order, giving you the choice of passing over earlier arrivals. Every post is automatically date and time stamped. Hyperinks (there's usually at least one in each post) let you access items the writer refers to with a click of the mouse” (p. 37).
During my research I found an interesting article called Go with the flow written by Michelle Boulle (2008) written in the School Library Journal on how to introduce social software, blogs and Wikis, to your school or library. “Social software can enhance the learning process and reach students in mediums they use everyday. When encountering resistance to using these tools in the classroom remember that it stems from fear and lack of knowledge” (Boule, 2008, p. 52). Boulle (2008) states that students “demonstrate creativity, learn technology and communication skills and come into contact with diverse viewpoints…networking sites operate like a community “ (p. 52).
Boulle (2008) suggested this blog to visit:
http://classblogmeister.com/blog.php?blogger_id=119124 and I loved it. She has organized a main page where she explains all the entries on the student blogs. For example, on the main page it says students studied weather and made their own forecast, she says check the student blogs for the forecast. So I checked a few of the student blogs and they are all sequentially organized by assignments. As a parent or family member this is so neat! A Grandma across the country could watch her granddaughters’ projects and read her thoughts with very little effort. This is a wonderful example of a classroom blog.
I am beginning to understand the definition of “social networking” sites and the communicative power they have to bring people together. The last article I read was This Blog's for You: Ten of the Best Blogs for Folks Who Take Kids' Lit Seriously (but Not Too Seriously). Many of the blogs Bird (2009) suggests “haven’t a single unifying goal aside from the wish to contribute something to the conversation about the best literature out there for kids" (p.28).
Of the ten blogs she suggested, nine were still active and as I looked at the blogs I looked for authority, accuracy, criterion, currency and coverage as suggested in an earlier course. Overall I have learned a few things that I like in blogs- I like humor, I like opinion and I like relevant content suitable for an elementary school library and I love pictures and visual representation.
Setting up a blog at school or in the library requires deliberate thought and planning. Education communities considering implementing social networking are often fearful of personal information disclosure and students accessing inappropriate sites. According to McPherson (2005), “information challenges facing children accessing internet information are stereotyping, violence, online hate, unethical views, harassment, unreliable information, invasion of privacy, pornography, online crime and false arguments”(p. 108) so why wouldn’t the educational community be fearful of bringing social networking software into their schools. According to McPherson (2005) teaching Internet critical literacy should begin in the early years and can be developed through a variety of activities. As we learned in one module “Cyber bullying has moved bullying from the schoolyard to a worldwide audience” (Frieschele et al., 2008, p. 30) and as learners adopt more online forms of technology educators need to be equipped with the knowledge to support and prevent bullying.
I found several of the control features useful in creating a blog and no one is able to make comments if they are not invited or the function is enables. Blogs can still be socially responsible forms of social networking. Boule (2008) states teaching privacy and safety in a controlled setting, having students use unrelated personal names, develop policy or have student’s develop policy and self-police, and perhaps purchasing software to avoid pop ups with external links are all strategies to avoid personal information disclosure and inappropriate site access. I really connected to her comment that “ certain ages may require more or less teacher supervision, [but] allowing students some measure of control will create a sense of ownership and participation, a true community” (p. 52). I think creating situations where students need to be accountable, are knowledgeable of the required skills and have the freedom to create something of their own” are really engaged in learning.
Originally, in the "Taking Stock" response I had been drawn to making comparisons between moving into a new house and literacy. I had written, "Just as I know literacy- I know how to teach children to read and write but I do not know how I can use technology to do this. I will continue to make connections between the articles and my own 21 st century literacy exploration. I hope to create some kind of visual image or poem at the end of this course to summarize my " literacy" house. "
When I finished the last article response I began searching for a creative representation that was summative, that still honored the hours of design and visual elements I had added to the blog, and to each posting, but the literacy house image was just not the right fit. Then I came across the tool "Wordle".
Using Wordle I was able to pull it all together and provide my blog link as the text, and the software generates "word clouds". The word clouds that stand out appear larger and more defined, are the words that more appear more frequently in the text (my blog). I was able to create different images and change the font and color based on my own words. What I love about this Wordle is that all of these words are things I have more questions about. I created a footprint image because this course has changed the way I hope to leave my mark as the teacher librarian. Through this course several modules refered to the power of image and that has changed the way I look at text and library activities.
In the first module, new technology for new learners we were introduced to the idea that text is more than just the written word and depending on the embedded image it can have multiple meanings. In the article Finding space and time for the visual in K-12 literacy instruction Hassett & Schieble (2007) shared “examples from picture books and graphic novels, [and] they expand[ed] our understanding of how readers extend three cueing systems—graphophonic, semantic, and syntactic—to negotiate multiple levels of meaning in visual text” (Hassett, & Schieble, 2007, p.62). The authors also presented the idea that “the text-image relationship, then, requires an active reader to make meaning using his or her sociocultural knowledge and background to make the images come alive in relation to the print” (Hassett, & Schieble, 2007, p.66) as readers face print that is dominated by images. My blog posts have images embedded within them to create further inquiry and dialogue. My Wordle’s image of a footprint is meant to have meaning on many levels.
The Wordle is purposefully full of different shades, literacy is not black and white and what works for some children does not work for others. Students is the word that stands out the most and that is the way it should be. I am a student centered teacher and throughout this course many of the authors’ main ideas behind their articles or videos reflect the importance of reaching every learner.In a society where, “new knowledge in every discipline is increasing exponentially every moment….Students need to be metacognitively aware of themselves as learners, able to monitor their learning and set goals to push their learning forward. Today's classrooms need to engage students in their learning through authentic, relevant inquiry” (Snapshots of Effective Practice, Curriculum Services Canada, 2011).
Luke’s (2011) Critical Literacy speech made me shift the way I ask students to look at images and ask questions. He believes a critically literate society is something we can all build through simply adjusting our teaching strategies to share with our students the power of questioning. A Wordle is an interesting way to start a dialogue about the "hidden" image, the meaning of text and how colour, size and shape impact one's emotional response because the shape is based on manipulation of the words. Grocery flyers, shopping flyers and newspapers all use text to communicate multiple levels of meaning. A Wordle could easily be created of student's initial thoughts about critical literacy, and then after several lessons, a second Wordle could be created and comparisons could be examined. For example, the footprint image implies movement and that it is just a ‘snapshot’ at one time. A footprint changes over time and the road traveled also changes. Shoes, terrain, weight, age are all factors that change the footprint just as language, color, image all change the way text looks. Students need the skills to critically look at images and think about them in various capacities.
In the 5th module I watched the literature circle webcast and saw the excitement of students discussing their literature circle. I noticed the many ways the teacher embedded technology into the curriculum. In the webcast the teacher shared a collaboratively developed classroom definition of critical literacy, which was clearly student developed and very comprehensive. I can see a classroom connection between Wordles and literature responses. Wordles might be an interesting way for students to communicate what they think the theme of the story is if they posted all of their responses to a blog or used an author's website to generate the Wordle as a summative discussion piece.
Snapshots of effective practice. Primary literacy clips was a neat video clip to watch. I saw many ways the teachers engaged the students and encouraged emerging writing. After watching the students jump out of their seats for a turn to use the smartboard marker I think students would love writing in blogs. It is an online journal and students can make it very visually appealing without being artistic. This is something I always struggle with. I like the idea of having a blog for book responses where students can write their responses or book reviews to a group and it can be linked from our home library page.
I hope my footprint image will remind me of the inquiries that many elements of this course have spring boarded. I chose to explore the power of multimodal resources throughout this course and I was always drawn to the articles that examined the role of visual literacy.
Changes in direction related to my teaching theory or practice, which I had recorded in Assignment #1
I wrote “I am excited to learn how to use pod and web casts and many other forms of interactive technology to motivate and allow students to express and communicate in new ways. I want to explore what is lost and what is gained when we move towards this digital form of representation. The connection between reading and writing is critical for our learners but we must teach them to use writing in relevant ways. I see more online manipulation of text, as opposed to pen and pencil editing, now that students have access to word processing programs. I wonder how technology and web 2.0 tools impact writing instruction in the elementary program. As I progress through this course I hope to expand my knowledge base about writing strategies in the 21st century".
As I have worked on this blog and thought about what is lost as we integrate technology into the curriculum I have begun to realize it is not about losing anything it is about continuing to work together. Students are still creating group presentations, they are just using video and teachers are still “uncovering” the curriculum but may be accessing resources such as web quests or online encyclopedias. The social cueing system may be different when a class corresponds with another class about a topic of study through podcasts and video conferencing. I do still wonder about writing with pencils and papers, I wonder what the future is for this in schools. I have always believed there is something magical about books but I have learned there is also something magical about interactive books and graphic novels. The writing snapshots I saw resembled a regular writing lesson with the exception of the smart board. Everything looked integrated and balanced. As I like to live my life, everything in moderation.
References
Arsenault, A. & Doiron, R. (2005). Developing a full literacy partnership. In Asselin, M. & Doiron, R. Literacy, libraries and learning. Eds. Markham ON: Pembroke Publishers.19-32.
Bird, E. (2009). This Blog's for You: Ten of the Best Blogs for Folks Who Take Kids' Lit Seriously (but Not Too Seriously). School Library Journal, 55(11), 26-29. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.
Persistent link to this record (Permalink): http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=eric&AN=EJ863360&site=ehost-live
Boule, M. (2008). GO WITH THE FLOW. School Library Journal, 54(11), 50-52. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.
Persistent link to this record (Permalink): http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=35226113&site=ehost-live
Curriculum Services Canada. (March 31, 2011) Snapshots of effective practice. Building global mindedness. Retrieved September 11, 2011
Curriculum Services Canada. (2011). Snapshots of effective practice. Primary literacy clips. Retrieved October 7, 2011 from: http://resources.curriculum.org/secretariat/snapshots/primaryliteracy.html
Doiron, R., & Asselin, M. (2005). Literacy, libraries and learning. Ontario, Canada: Pembroke Publishers Limited.
Froeschle, J.G.; Mayorga, M.; Castillo, Y.; & Hargrove, T. (2008). Strategies to prevent and heal the mental anguish caused by cyberbullying. Middle School Journal, March, 30-35.
Hassett, D.W. & Schieble, M. (2007). Finding space and time for the visual in K-12 literacy instruction. English Journal 97, 1, 62-68.
Luke, A. (2011). Critical literacy. Retrieved September 22, 2011 from http://resources.curriculum.org/secretariat/snapshots/learners.html
McPherson, K. (2005). Of course it's true! I found it on the Internet: Fostering Children's online critical literacy. In Asselin, M. & Doiron, R. Literacy, libraries and learning. Eds. Markham ON: Pembroke Publishers. 107-115.
Oatman, E. (2005). Blogomania!. School Library Journal, 51(8), 36-39. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.
Persistent link to this record (Permalink): http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=eric&AN=EJ786272&site=ehost-live
Response 8: Part 1- Wordless Picture Books, Part 2- The Power of Community and Rubrics
I chose the article, “Reading between the Pictures” Immigrant Students’ Interpretations of The Arrival written by Martinez-Roldan and Newcomber (2011) article because I struggle with how to support second language learners as an English speaker.
The Arrival is a wordless picture book written by Shaun Tan, also author of several other wordless picture books. The following link is to a book summary and personal note where he speaks of writing books which share a belonging theme. Click on the link, it's a wonderful way to familiarize yourself with the book if you have not read it.
http://www.shauntan.net/books/the-arrival.html
The Arrival is a wordless picture book written by Shaun Tan, also author of several other wordless picture books. The following link is to a book summary and personal note where he speaks of writing books which share a belonging theme. Click on the link, it's a wonderful way to familiarize yourself with the book if you have not read it.
http://www.shauntan.net/books/the-arrival.html
I thought this article was a good fit for my school district. “Burnaby schools reflect the increasingly global nature of the Burnaby community, with more than 4,000 students enrolled in English Language Learning programs. A recent survey of languages spoken in Burnaby homes identified more than 85 languages other than English were spoken in the homes of Burnaby students. Such diversity has brought rich cultural benefits to Burnaby's communities and schools.” (http://sd41.bc.ca/about/)
The high numbers of second language learners in our schools create a wonderful opportunity to explore multimodal resources and varied approaches to supporting English language development and literacy-based comprehension. This study was created to assess the comprehension level of immigrant students who could not communicate in English. It intrigued me as they presented two students (Ryan and Almah) interpretations and responses to the wordless story as both hypotheses and predictions throughout the literature circle discussions.
Originally I was introduced to the text, The Arrival by Shaun Tan in a children’s literature class. We were involved in a literature circle and we discussed our interpretations of the graphic novel online but never actually knew the true storyline. I see tremendous potential for the book, and I have intuitively used with intermediate second language learners, but I have not used it with a whole class yet.
Although I enjoyed reading this article and I found many strategies very helpful, the reality of the study is that it is just not applicable in the current school system. We do not have interpretative services at the school level therefore it is very difficult to see a child’s comprehension if they cannot communicate it in English or in pictures. I could relate to Ryan’s teacher’s concerns. As a classroom teacher I struggled with knowing how to support second language learners engage in the curriculum. As a teacher librarian I want second language learners to enjoy reading and to be able to access and evaluate information.
I think volunteers that speak various languages would be a wonderful way to bridge this book with students who do not speak English to help them give language and meaning to their experiences. It is the content and format of this book that makes it so appealing.
From a community building perspective I love the idea of hosting a literature circle for students new to the country to speak about their experience (international students, immigrant students, refugee children) and make meaning of it through wordless picture books that tell stories of immigration and language barriers. It would be a vehicle for the students to become the experts on the topic and to share their knowledge and stories with the English speakers.
I would change the initial inquiry questions to: “Can we build community through immigrant children making meaning of wordless picture books in small literature circle discussions?” to guide my thinking and planning. It certainly supports the research that children learn to read and write through accessing background knowledge and making personal connections.
Direct connections from the article to my practice
As I participate in this course and notice what the students (where I work) like to check out I can see the graphic novel collection has tremendous potential to engage our most vulnerable readers (reluctant and second language learners). “In order to read and interpret graphic novels students not only have to pay attention to the usual literacy elements of character, plot and dialogue, they also have to consider the visual elements such as color, shading, panel layout, perspective and even lettering styles (Schwarz (2006) as cited by Martinez-Roldan and Newcomber, 2011,p. 189).
When I am thinking about wordless picture books I can see a big difference between traditional wordless picture books that are written to promote story sequence for pre readers and postmodern texts. According to Martnez-Roldan and Newcomber (2011) postmodern texts have multiple perspectives, intertextuality of different characters and images, indeterminacy and non-linear chronology, they break traditional genre boundaries and there is not the same borders, and storylines are often blurred between fantasy and reality. This brings up other teaching opportunities such as the traditional story structure vs. the modern story structure one might find in a graphic novel.
There are 12 strategies for discussing wordless picture books presented in this article. The following ones will be most useful for designing lessons using wordless picture books in the library.
· Look at several books by the same author and then compare author’s style
· Use buddy reading, group students to talk and take turns discussing the images found on interchanging pages.
· Keep the conversation flowing and provide questions or prompts such as: What do you think about this page, what do you notice here? What is happening here? Why do you think so? Students can also create their own questions and inquiries about the text.
· Pose inquiries that promote wondering and guessing, such as “Maybe…” and "I wonder if…”
· Have students write notes directly on photocopied pages about their thoughts and ask the students to choose their favorite page and write their thoughts on it."
(Martinez-Roldan and Newcomber, 2011, p.192)
This is my favourite page:
This is my favourite page:
References
MartÃnez-Roldán, C.M. & Newcomer, S. (2011). “Reading between the Pictures”: Immigrant Students’ Interpretations of The Arrival. Language Arts, 88, 5,188-197.
www.sd41.bc.ca accessed on October 12, 2011
Part 2: The Power of Community and Rubrics
The Power of Community
Module 10: Barriers to literacy: several learner-centered approaches
The Power of Community
Module 10: Barriers to literacy: several learner-centered approaches
I was a community school coordinator for 5 years and I am a strong advocate of working with families and community members as partners in attempts to create a continuum of community minded caring. Although I have completed my formal "responses" I am writing a few thoughts about this module because it has impacted my planning this year in a meaningful way.
Imagine creating an experience that brings empowerment and joy to families to share within the school context. Imagine creating this scenario, “Pearl was exuberant as she walked out of the classroom a short 30 minutes later. Beaming with excitement, she expressed her amazement at how the children had responded to her writing and was especially impressed with the sophistication of their questions. It was a new feeling to have her work appreciated by the audience for whom it was meant. Moreover, she was encouraged by the children’s expression of understanding about John” (Whitmore and Norton-Meier, 2008, p.456).
I am co-planning a human library that I hope will bring as much joy to the participants as it does to the learners at our school. The human library is a project that invites real people to come and share their stories,each person is a book to be "checked out" and this process is a wonderful vehicle for sharing. To read more about this project please see: http://humanlibrary.org/
One day I hope to work in a society where everyone agrees that "schools must recognize and validate that each family exists in an intellectually credible history, culture, and language and that all families hold expertise that is essential for their survival in or- der for them to negotiate their position in society" (Whitmore and Norton-Meier, 2008, p. 458)
Reference
Whitmore, K. F. & Norton-Meier, L. A. (2008). Pearl and Ronda: revaluing mothers’ literate lives to imagine new relationships between homes and elementary schools. Journal of adolescent and adult literacy, 51, 6, 450-461.
Rubrics
Module 11: Assessment
"Rubrics are created for many purposes in many contexts, including classrooms, programs, institutions, and states. Instead of declaring all rubrics “good” or “bad,” we need to examine what they do, why, and in whose interests" (Turley and Gallagher, 2008, p.92).
Module 11: Assessment
"Rubrics are created for many purposes in many contexts, including classrooms, programs, institutions, and states. Instead of declaring all rubrics “good” or “bad,” we need to examine what they do, why, and in whose interests" (Turley and Gallagher, 2008, p.92).
I thought this article was very interesting and certainly raised some good points for using and not using rubrics. I really thought the article stressed the need for authenticity of rubrics to be meaningful. In the classroom I used many forms of assessment including formative and summative. I taught lessons that were meaningful for students because I used the performance standards to assess where my students were and then planned lessons that would meet their unique learning needs. As a teacher I found them very grounding, I was able to see the provincial expectations of students in each grade and I could adapt and modify them as I needed them. I like the idea of having the students become involved in creating the rubric. Perhaps I will use the performance standards as a starting place and add a few more columns that the students can design.
Our district uses the B.C. Performance Standards
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/perf_stands/
References
Our district uses the B.C. Performance Standards
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/perf_stands/
References
Turley, E.D. & Gallagher, C.W. (2008). On the Uses of rubrics: reframing the great rubric debate. English Journal, 97, 4, 87-51.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Response 7: Online Writing and Social Responsibility
Response 7: Online Writing and Social Responsibility
Module 8: Writing Part 2
When I read Armstrong’s (2011) module notes on cyber bullying it immediately made me want to explore online writing from this perspective. Writing is how we express and communicate, from Facebook to UBC courses to preschool immunizations- my life is framed by writing for various reasons. Examining how our written communications impact generations in social context is very empowering for educators.
In 2004 I was involved in teaching a grade 6/7 class that was writing and performing in a play that explored cyber bullying. The script was written by the students and pieced together by a professional director and it was powerful. Writer's Workshop was conducted with four grade 6/7 classes and the director read all of the journal articles and writing responses and pieced together a script for the play "The War Within". The Vancouver Foundation had provided a large grant to cover the cost of this. I was not involved in the planning or preparation of this project, however I was involved with the execution of it. Loneliness, anger, sadness, embarrassment, hurt were all underlying feelings of the main “bully” characters and though artistic scenes, that were framed around monologues, our students were exposed to many issues. I saw that group support each other as they explored obesity, cancer, bullying, language, poverty and transportation barriers.
“Cyber bullying has moved bullying from the schoolyard to a worldwide audience” (Frieschele et al., 2008, p. 30) and as learners adopt more online forms of technology educators need to be equipped with the knowledge to support and prevent bullying. According to this article children are primarily bullied via phones through texting and email. Students experience instant harassment and it is a viscous circle in which there is little accountability. Students can be anyone they want through words, there is no visual cueing system or body language to read. It is a one sided dialogue and once words are written there is no retracting them.
Frieschele et al., (2008) writes that perpetrators are either “social climbers” and/or “aggressive harassers”. As a teacher you see the kids in the class who are in need or socially striving to fit in; it makes me wonder if I have ignored cyber bullying and could have created in class opportunities to create dialogue around these issues. Technology does allow them to be anyone they want and perhaps they are not fully aware of the impact these horrible messages have on their peers. I like many of the ideas suggested for educators and I will try to bring in books that look at real social issues for students. In primary I love to read the Recess Queen and talk about social responsibility.
For students in grade 4-7 Eric Walters weaves together tales that promote empathy and adventure. He begins with real world events or topics such as an earthquake, a tsunami, war, obesity, bullying etc. and writes stories about children and families. My students love his books.
I Am A Taxi by Deborah Ellis is a powerful book I read that made me look beyond the drug trafficking trade to think about some of the reasons children get involved. Children living in prison cells who are promised a better life.... I wonder how many of my own students live in situations with parents who have taken “easy” money opportunities and are now living with the consequences. Parvannah's Journey, also by Deborah Ellis is another story that looks at a family living in Afghanistan that must make decisions to leave a war torn city. Many students I taught were refugees and these issues were real to them. Many of their peers lived above Choices Market in beautiful apartments beside the social housing complex, sat beside these children in class and did not understand why they didn't do their homework. Literature is a powerful bridge for children.

For students in grade 4-7 Eric Walters weaves together tales that promote empathy and adventure. He begins with real world events or topics such as an earthquake, a tsunami, war, obesity, bullying etc. and writes stories about children and families. My students love his books. I Am A Taxi by Deborah Ellis is a powerful book I read that made me look beyond the drug trafficking trade to think about some of the reasons children get involved. Children living in prison cells who are promised a better life.... I wonder how many of my own students live in situations with parents who have taken “easy” money opportunities and are now living with the consequences. Parvannah's Journey, also by Deborah Ellis is another story that looks at a family living in Afghanistan that must make decisions to leave a war torn city. Many students I taught were refugees and these issues were real to them. Many of their peers lived above Choices Market in beautiful apartments beside the social housing complex, sat beside these children in class and did not understand why they didn't do their homework. Literature is a powerful bridge for children.

Some of the following strategies were suggested by Frieschele et al., (2008) for identifying and preventing social bullying:
- Permitting students to access internet sites using software blockers, keep parents updated and educated about teen access sites and ensure students are accountable by using identification codes.
- Classroom and social skill building through empathy programs. This was glossed over in the article and I think that you can suggest teachers include this in their programs but you can not mandate. In B.C. we are so fortunate to have the social responsibility performance standards. In our school district, Burnaby, we have over 50 Literature Circle kits for K-12 at our district library resource centre. These kits include 3-4 picture books and 5-7 novel sets of 5 copies grouped together on strand of the performance standards. For example, under the strand "Solving problems in peaceful ways" there would be a K-3, 4-7, 6-8, 8-10, 10-12 kit for each category with books, summaries and suggested teaching strategies all grouped togther. We had curriculum consultants put these together before all of the cuts to education five years ago.
- Fiction was mentioned (I think there is a wonderful connection and opportunity as a librarian) and some suggested strategies for asking students to think about the characters actions and intentions through "stop and pause and respond" prompting. The literature circle kits I mentioned earlier are a wonderful tool for classroom teachers. As a teacher librarian I work mostly with picture books when I am trying to work on character because of the limited time I have with the students.
- Involve community partners and law enforcement personnel in education endeavors. Students don’t realize the dangers associated with posting information.
- School wide programs that create a climate that does not accept online bullying. Educate students about the definition and encourage “mainstream” students to reject these behaviors, add in components for peer pressure. I thought the "mainstream" comment was a good point. If the bulk of students deem something unacceptable there is more general consensus of what is right and wrong.
- “Role plays have been found to offer a safe atmosphere to practice responses intended to dissuade cyber bullying “ (p. 33).
- Mentors and school counsellors can get involved with students and have a tremendous impact on shaping a child's emotional intelligence. Sadly, many children do not have appropriate role models.
- School projects that promote cooperation rather than competition are ways that a teacher can support this in the classroom.
- Mirrors that show what is on the computer screen around the library is a suggestion and one that I really like.
Overall, I thought this article was a very comprehensive and that it included some valuable information about the victims, perpetrators and school wide suggestions and programs that might make a difference. The connection with literacy is timely. As we move into a visual era where everything is instant gratification we must find ways to spark our students interest and teach them these powerful life lessons. I see writing as the tool for expression.
References
References
Froeschle, J.G.; Mayorga, M.; Castillo, Y.; & Hargrove, T. (2008). Strategies to prevent and heal the mental anguish caused by cyberbullying. Middle School Journal, March, 30-35.
Friday, October 7, 2011
Response 6: Writing and Technology Motivate Learners
Response 6: Writing and Technology Motivate Learners
Module 7: Teaching Writing, Part One
This module was very inviting! The writing videos were very practical and show many of the possibilities for emerging writing. These would be perfect at a staff meeting to show exemplary teaching for all members of the school. Student teacher advisor, faculty associates and programs would find these videos very clear examples of good teaching. I like to think of teaching writing as "putting the pieces together". They all fit together somehow!
In the videos I was very impressed with the level of detail, rich vocabulary and quality teaching/instructional strategies used. However, I have been teaching in inner-city areas of South Burnaby for 10 years and the videos felt somewhat staged. In one video I noticed the children were wearing uniforms which led me to believe it might be a private school. The socioeconomic and cultural dynamics of some neighborhoods make it very difficult to teach “carpet” lessons with everyone on task and applying the learned language. Technology is not as seamless as some of the videos imply. Although they are good examples, I did not think they were prefaced accordingly. Some information about each teacher, location, neighbourhood statistics would have helped me put the videos in context. I have been to one school called Blakeburn Elementary in Coquitlam which is known for being a social responsibility school. I have seen students learn the language much like they learn the alphabet so I know it can be done, I am just a bit skeptical that this is the norm in "exemplary" teaching.
In the shared writing video clip the teacher and students were using and engaging with a smart board. How neat for students to be in a technology rich environment and learning to write at the same time. Adjectives and nouns are still teachable concepts but somehow seem more fun when using a yellow smart board pen to circle them. The teacher had the computer at the front and kept breaking up her lesson with “talk with your shoulder partner” while asking students to support their inferences with her scribing. She was appealing to the visual learners by using colors to differentiate the answers from the questions. Although it was heavily teacher directed I still thought she provided room for individual and group discussion.
During the writing conference video the students really knew the language to give feedback to each other and that is very challenging! This teacher must have front loaded and completed this activity (or similar ones) many times for students to be able to use it with out rehearsing. I saw evidence of metacognition and that is truly amazing with this age group.
Using powerful words in writing is a concept I struggle with every year. To see the teacher asking the students to use the words written on the chart paper in their writing made me feel tired and glassy eyed.
However, as I kept watching the video I saw her use of sticky notes emerge, and I could see that the students loved using them. I noticed the word "schema" was used repeatedly; I call it making personal connections or activating background knowledge. Encouraging synonyms and adjective usage was highlighted in this video.
However, as I kept watching the video I saw her use of sticky notes emerge, and I could see that the students loved using them. I noticed the word "schema" was used repeatedly; I call it making personal connections or activating background knowledge. Encouraging synonyms and adjective usage was highlighted in this video.
Writing conference with teacher was a follow up video and watching the student and teacher “conference” about the writing was powerful and motivating. The students use of sticky notes covering powerful words is a great idea because they become a focal point for the conference. As a teacher librarian I am using reading strategies to promote comprehension and reading for enjoyment. I also noticed her strategies for sharing powerful words, students keeping tally of how many “powerful” words are being used.
The word sorts video was fun to watch. Students were given little baggies with words to categorize and students can make their own rules, sometimes kids sort with word parts some sort by letters etc. Although the teacher prompts children to sort the words based on the semantics students had the flexibility and freedom to find their own way. Children are like little satellites, they intake and access information from so many sources. Choosing sorting methods requires "multi tasking".
Creating this blog to post my responses as part of my final project has really stretched me to create more visual, engaging responses that cause the reader to stop and think or process my analogies.
Creating this blog to post my responses as part of my final project has really stretched me to create more visual, engaging responses that cause the reader to stop and think or process my analogies.
Visualizing was another vignette I enjoyed viewing, Grade 1 students were using pictures to make inferences and self-connections, which is one of the most critical literacy strategies. As many other articles in previous modules have repeated, literacy must be multimodal and visual to support our learners.
Lastly, I viewed fostering independent learning and I could see that students knew the routine, knew what to expect, and the teachers kept her lessons short and focused. She provided flexibility for children to represent their learning (comic, letter, story, brainstorm) and this is a practical strategy which promotes empowerment and autonomy in the classroom.
References
Curriculum Services Canada. (2011). Snapshots of effective practice. Primary literacy clips. Retrieved October 7, 2011 from: http://resources.curriculum.org/secretariat/snapshots/primaryliteracy.html
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Response 5: The power of graphic novels and comic style text
I was excited to see a module devoted to alternate texts such as graphic novels. As a new teacher librarian I am learning about the school collection and students are requesting the Bone and Amulet series over and over. I had a Kindergarten child in tears because he could not take out the Batman comic style picture book and several kids asking for books about superheroes everyday all day long. I have chosen to respond to Ranker's article (2007-2008) Using Comic Books as Read Alouds : Insights on Reading Instruction From an English as a Second Language Classroom to learn more about how to use these in the library as teaching tools, how to promote them for reading enjoyment, and be aware of the issues surrounding them. I read Yang's (2008) article as well and I thought it was a good catchy article to promote the visual "permanence" associated with comics but found it did not address the typical problems with comics (violence, gender stereotyping) as Ranker's. It was very positive but after reading Ranker's article I felt more educated about the positive and negative issues that arise with graphic novels.
According to Armstrong (2011) "Ranker explores the idea of using popular media texts in the classroom as important frameworks for literacy learning. ... [He] represents reading from multiple angles and [makes] the link between comic book reading and critical thinking" (course notes, module 6) through examining Ms Stephen's use of comics in the classroom.
Reading her observations and lesson insights I could see how she taught gender stereotyping, story structure (problem and solution), representations of dialogue and speech bubbles, reading from different positions to teach critical literacy all through using superheroes which is very motivating for the children. I saw some direct instructional opportunities between the BC Performance standards in Social responsibility, Reading and Writing and graphic novels. For example, students are expected to "solve problems in peaceful ways" and using graphic novels and comic character as examples the teacher could model the expectations of the BC Performance standards and students could create their own comics.
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/perf_stands/skto3.pdf
Students in ESL classes tend to have an oral program and teachers are always searching for motivating text that is age appropriate to use with this population. Although it is not traditional text, I wonder if students will they learn the language faster and be able to make more sense of the classroom lessons over time? Of course that would have to be measured. I noticed that Ms. Stephenson was able to clarify in Spanish to the children and most of the ESL teachers I have worked with do not speak Cantonese or Mandarin which are the main languages spoken at my school. Having assistance deciding the images is critical in ESL classes and comic style text lend well to this.
The discussion that followed the lesson insights was very articulate about how many comics portray a high level of fictional violence in popular media. I am reluctant to suggest these books to my ESL students because I fear that they will think the violence is non fictional and acceptable. However, after reading this article I think I will acknowledge the fictional violence and use it a teaching tool.
I think these resources could be very interesting to use with graphic novels and have students create representations of their critical literacy learning.
http://plasq.com/products/comiclife/mac
Students can create their own comics and use their personal writing and memorabilia to do this.
http://voicethread.com/about/features/
Students can narrate their own pictures and present Reader's Theatre using this tool.
References
http://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/perf_stands/skto3.pdf
Students in ESL classes tend to have an oral program and teachers are always searching for motivating text that is age appropriate to use with this population. Although it is not traditional text, I wonder if students will they learn the language faster and be able to make more sense of the classroom lessons over time? Of course that would have to be measured. I noticed that Ms. Stephenson was able to clarify in Spanish to the children and most of the ESL teachers I have worked with do not speak Cantonese or Mandarin which are the main languages spoken at my school. Having assistance deciding the images is critical in ESL classes and comic style text lend well to this.
The discussion that followed the lesson insights was very articulate about how many comics portray a high level of fictional violence in popular media. I am reluctant to suggest these books to my ESL students because I fear that they will think the violence is non fictional and acceptable. However, after reading this article I think I will acknowledge the fictional violence and use it a teaching tool.
I think these resources could be very interesting to use with graphic novels and have students create representations of their critical literacy learning.
http://plasq.com/products/comiclife/mac
Students can create their own comics and use their personal writing and memorabilia to do this.
http://voicethread.com/about/features/
Students can narrate their own pictures and present Reader's Theatre using this tool.
References
Ranker, J. (2007). Using comic books as read-alouds: insights on reading instruction from an English as a second language Classroom . The Reading Teacher, 61, 4, 296-305.
Yang, G. (2008). Graphic novels in the classroom . Language Arts, 85, 3, 185-192.
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