Spring Chapter 1
Quote:
“Political liberty would be possible, according to Mann’s philosophy, because it would be restrained and controlled by the ideas students learned in public schools.” (Spring p.10)
Response:
Horace Mann makes a valuable point with this quote. He is saying that the United States government would be able to survive because the citizens would recognize how important it is. His idea is that an educated citizenry would be able to make decisions that they would then vote on instead of reverting to violence or revolution. Other political theorists and educational leaders suggested that a free education available to all would “control the minds of future citizens” or “prepare them for conformity to government regulations”. I agree with both of these statements and believe that our education system does both to a certain extent. Schools do teach students how to think and can obviously help determine the way someone thinks politically. We also grow up learning to obey the “rules” at home and at school. The government has laws that most people obey, probably because they were always taught to obey the rules.
Spring Chapter 2
Quote:
“The use of “secular” in the legislation is to make a distinction from character education based on religious values.” (Spring p.38)
Response:
This quote refers to the No Child Left Behind Act and a section of it entitled “Partnerships in Character Education”. I believe Spring emphasizes the word secular that is used in the legislation because he doesn’t think it belongs there. While I certainly support the separation of Church and State, I don’t have a problem with someone describing the type of character we should teach our students as secular. He does bring up my point that it is not being used in a religious framework but I still get the feeling that it bothers him. I think the writer of the legislation was just using language that would be understandable by the common person and was not trying to create a CCD class in our public education system.
Spring Chapter 3
Quote:
If a company needs highly educated workers… competing for low-wage jobs.” (Spring p. 68-69)
Response:
Spring is discussing the possibility that schooling is contributing to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. A report from the 2005 National Education Summit on High Schools reported that “in short, we run the risk of losing our middle class.” I absolutely agree with this however I have a theory of my own which I derived from a joke I heard. The joke had to do with how expensive a psychiatrist visit was and how if we don’t maintain a working class that a good plumber would cost just as much in the future. I am making the assumption that trade workers are in the middle class, have a high school education and sometimes a vocational education post high school. My assumptions probably aren’t far from the truth which leads me to believe that the middle class may not be as large as it once was but it will still exist. The report is singling out those that do not complete High School, and I’m sure that those individuals will be in a worse situation than anyone else especially with today’s job market. It’s likely almost impossible to get a job without a high school diploma when our workforce is flooded with over qualified workers. These individuals are then restricted to minimum wage jobs which aren’t even paying living wages.
Spring Chapter 6
Quote:
“A major problem for schools is finding… Exceptionally high dropout rates have been reported for these students.”” (Spring p. 150)
Response:
This paragraph is about the problems schools have in finding teachers that have limited English proficiency (LEP). I knew from my personal experience that LEP teachers are not always available which causes the student to be at a serious disadvantage if they don’t speak English. I did not know that the National average was only 29.5% of LEP teachers with LEP students in their classrooms. This is an obvious problem that needs to be addressed. I have some ideas that may be helpful to solving this problem. Native speakers that are fluent in English can be recruited by school systems and allowed to work as translators while they earn a teaching certificate. This may attract more candidates to the field by providing work during their education and the promise of a job afterwards. I also think that hiring translators from the community, even if it is a relative of the student, would help the students more than just letting them continue in school not understanding anything. These translators may not be certified which would allow the school to pay them a lesser, but fair, wage than their certified counterpart but their presence would be beneficial to the student until a certified translator could be found.
Spring Chapter 7
Quote:
“According to the Anti-Bias Curriculum, research findings show… believe that prejudice can be reduced if there is conscious intervention to curb the development of biased concepts and activities.”
Response:
The research in this paragraph details the ages that young children start to become aware of who they are and what distinctions they have from others, such as gender and skin color. It ends with “the advocates of the curriculum believe that prejudice can be reduced if there is conscious intervention to curb the development of biased concepts and activities.” To me this makes perfect sense! When our students start to notice something, we can intervene and teach them about it instead of allowing them to form what can be racist concepts. I don’t know if elementary education teacher candidates are taught how to bring this up but it is something that needs to be added if it isn’t already in place. Teaching young students about racism will probably be a touchy subject with parents, especially if they’re racist, but no one ever said our job was going to be easy. Another point to make is that if the parents are openly racist, the student may contest the teacher. Somehow this subject needs to be addressed without bluntly telling the student that their parents are bad people.
Ok... so chap 1&2 was week 2: so I will comment on Quote #1:
ReplyDeleteI agree with this point to an extent. Maybe I read it wrong, but I thought he was saying that it would create a similar thinking population. Like, everyone would be republican (which of course meant something different than it does now). I would not be in favor of that. I think political dissidence is a positive, generally speaking. Creating a gaggle of like-minded citizens sounds a little like an exercise in brain-washing. But again, I could have gotten this whole thing wrong....
So, next would be Chap. 6 & 7 which is Week 5:
ReplyDeleteQuote from Chap. 7:
Ok, again, I am unclear on the exact definition of a biased concept and activity. I agree 100% with you, John - it is not a concept that should be ignored and if something comes up in the classroom it should be addressed. I am wondering how much that will curb all concepts. Kids figure out from an early age that they are different (or treated that way in some place in their world). You see the division on the playground from an early age. Of course there are exceptions, but it exists on so many levels.
Chap. #3 from Week #6:
ReplyDeleteMaybe what you say in your last line is part of what the book is saying. The fact that skilled workers barely make livable wages would put them in the lower class - in the poverty levels. With unemployment rising and fierce competition for jobs, many skilled workers are living below the poverty level. Definitely our "tracking" system in secondary schools leads to the "tracking" in life or the "haves" and "have-nots." Kids that don't finish school or are on the vocational track end up on the lower spectrum of the work force, financially. It didn't use to be that way.