Class Meetings

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Class meetings should be held regularly and not simply be used for addressing problems, although problem solution is a valid use of class meeting time. The purpose of class meetings is to increase students' positive involvement with school, the teacher and each other; solve class problems; learn to think; build confidence, specifically in verbal ability; and bring relevance and usefulness to classroom instruction.

In a classroom, there are basically three types of class meetings. There is the social-problem-solving meeting, concerned with addressing some social behavior in school or the breaking of some classroom rule. There is the open-ended meeting, which is concerned with useful learning and the open discussion of a stimulating, useful and provocative subject. Finally, there is the education-diagnostic meeting, which is concerned with how well the students understand the concepts of a particular part of the curriculum.

Teachers need to be somewhat directive in the first meeting and thereafter as needed. Rules need to be established prior to the first class meeting or can even become the subject of discussion for the first class meeting. These rules need to be maintained throughout or discussed as a class if a need arises to change or alter the rules. During class meetings, teachers must be warm and enthusiastic, keeping blame, punishment and criticism out of class meeting time.

Class meetings should be conducted regularly-not only when there are problems to be discussed, perhaps three times a week. Meetings should be conducted with students seated in a circle so everyone can see each other interaction is enhanced. The length of these discussions should be appropriate for the age of the students-roughly their age multiplied by two is acceptable. No one should be allowed to criticize or put down another student.

The open-ended meeting should be used most often, even in environments where problems and behavior issues are the rule rather than the exception. Any intellectually important topic, both related and unrelated to school, could be fair game for discussion. Students are asked to discuss any thought-provoking question. This question should have relevance in their lives and could be related to the curriculum.

Educational-diagnostic meetings are always related to the curriculum the class is studying. This type of class meeting can be used by the teacher to assess whether or not the teaching strategies being used are effective. Teachers can ask the students questions to determine how much they know about an area already covered in class. This should never be used to evaluate individual students but only as a way to determine what the students collectively do and do not know.

Educational-diagnostic meetings can be used prior to a unit of study to determine what the students already know; after a unit of study to determine what was learned and ideas for application; to examine the students' perceptions about learning specific information and its usefulness; or to evaluate specific learning or communication skills, possibly vocabulary increase.

Since teachers can have a vested interest in wanting their students to have mastered material the teacher has taught, it might be useful to switch classrooms with another teacher to conduct education-diagnostic meetings to prevent any teacher bias.

During social-problem-solving meetings, students are included in the problem-solving process. The teacher or a student would identify an issue that needs to be discussed and resolved and the students are a major part of brainstorming and contributing to find the solution with the teacher acting as the facilitator and leader. In this way, everyone in the class takes responsibility for problem resolution, while at the same time students are learning valuable life problem solving skills.

All problems pertaining to the class as a whole or to any individual student in the classroom are appropriate for discussion. A student can bring up a problem or the discussion can be initiated by the teacher.

Dr. William Glasser says, "The discussion itself should always be directed toward solving the problem; the solution should never include punishment or fault finding." The teacher conducts the meetings in a nonjudgmental fashion. He or she may reflect what has been said by the group but should avoid giving his or her own opinion. Students are, however, allowed and even encouraged to express their opinions. It is helpful for other students to hear how they are perceived by their peers.

In order for each student to feel important and heard it will be helpful to have a "talking stick" or some other object available. In this way, whoever has the floor to speak will also hold the talking stick. No one else is permitted to speak until the person with the stick is satisfied that he or she has been heard by the others. Then the stick is passed to the next person with something to say.

Class meetings are a wonderful way to give your students the gifts of confidence and problem solving skills. They also help share the responsibility with the students for figuring out solutions to day-to-day situations that arise in the classroom.

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Source by Kimberly Olver

Dealing With Challenging Behaviours of Learners

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Case Study and Professional Discussion- Dealing with Challenging Behaviours of Learners

"Our thoughts create our reality – where we put our focus is the direction we tend to go."
Peter McWilliams

A range of factors that may underlie different behaviours in the lifelong learning sector are as follows:

A: Major / general factors
1. Cultural / social background
2. Family / religious background
3. Illnesses / disease / abnormalities / learning difficulties
4. Learning styles
5. Educational background / influence
6. Peer pressure
7. Poor emotional / social / language skills

B: other factors:
1. Lack of support from teachers / peers / parents
2. Lack of motivation
3. Addiction to illegal substance eg drugs
4. Low self esteem
5. Love / relationship problems
6. Pressure at work- for working students
7. Time constraints
8. Effect of regular medication eg temperamental, tantrum, impatience
9. Classroom geography
10. Addiction to computers eg games, social sites, pornographic pages
11. Boring topic / tasks
12. wrong levelling

This is an excerpt from an Ofsted article re- managing challenging behaviour:
Number 16 in the article "Behaviour: the national picture
16. "A survey undertaken in 2003 on behalf of the Youth Justice Board showed that youth offending in all contexts showed a slight decline over the previous two years. Research commissioned by the Board provides a good understanding of the factors in young people's lives which make offending more likely. These factors are:

• aggressive behaviour by the young person, including bullying
• family conflict and breakdown
• low achievement beginning in primary school
• lack of commitment to school, reflected in truancy
• peer involvement in problem behaviour
• the availability of drugs

All of the above factors that underlie different behaviours contribute to one common effect; disturbed learning environment.

"As you begin changing your thinking, start immediately to change your behaviour. Begin to act the part of the person you would like to become. Take action on your behaviour. Too many people want to feel, then take action. This never works. "

John Maxwell quotes American Author and motivational speaker

The impact of different learning behaviours varies. In my ESOL class where the learners are adults, the effect seems to be minimal. The learners are almost autonomous and feelings such as embarrassment and shame seem to be stopping them to query if something is not understood. However for absenteeism and tardiness the direct effect is for the teacher who always has to explain for the benefit of the late comers and for those who were absent from previous sessions. Learners are affected too because much of the time is consumed for review of past lessons.
With the new group of learners I have from the foundation college, every behaviour matters.

Most of the students show enthusiasm towards tasks given but they seem to be short with patience and focus is also quick to diminish. A lot of them need individual support for every task. There are few boys who talk so loud and even swear and verbal warnings seem to be taken on board but only for a short time. The class is disturbed for every noise and chattering that seem to be unending. There are few who are attention seekers and the environment is more likely to be chaotic with this kind of learners. One negative behaviour, results to a chain of more negative behaviours that could totally ruin the whole session. One of the tasks in my first session at the foundation college involved a lot of internet use. I was monitoring some of the students and noticed that they would at times navigate to sites with images of almost naked women. I gave them verbal warning to make them aware for the consequence of their actions. The group I was working with were all focused except for the one who showed much enthusiasm at the start of the activity by starting the task immediately, but as we went along his enthusiasm faded that made his partner for the task lost interest as well. In situations like this, aims, targets and learning outcomes are at stake.

Targeted time to finish a task is always the worst affected.

Different learning styles for every learner and a single simple tantrum could disturb the focus or interest of another.

Legislations are relevant to managing behaviour in the learning environment to safeguard the right of every child and to every teacher as well. Without legislations as guidelines for protection for both parties, better learning environment is at stake.

"A negative emphasis in behaviour policies often results in a focus on dealing with problems after they have occurred." Managing challenging behaviour pp10.

Organisational policies are important to manage behaviour in the learning environment.

In the FEDA publication 'Is not misbehaving' Mitchell et all (1998) propose that for disruptive behaviour to be managed successfully organisational systems need to be in place.
Areas suggested in the publication include:

• Learner discipline
• Learner attendance
• Learner lateness
• Use of mobile phones
• Violence
• Smoking, alcohol, drug abuse
• Harassment and bullying
• Comments related to inequality

Organisational orders have key players to promote "ordered" environment because students prefer an ordered environment as a basis for creativity and learning.

• Learners
• Teachers
• Managers

Organisational policies relevant to managing behaviour in the learning environment vary in the extent to which disruptive behaviour impacts on teaching / learning. This means there is no 'one size' that fits all. "Is not misbehavin" (1998)

One widely held principle of effective punishment is that it should never breed resentment.

These are ways of encouraging behaviours that contribute to an effective learning environment.

Giving positive feedback is one sure way to boost a learner's motivation and confidence and this would result to a positive behaviour towards learning as suggested by Petty (2004) in his book Teaching Today.

• Medals: This is information about what a student has done well, eg 'Your paragraphs and punctuation are good' or 'That's good evidence' written in the margin next to a well made point by the student. Grades and marks are measurements not medals. Medals are information about what exactly was done well.
• Missions: This is information about what the student needs to improve, correct, or work on. It is best when it is forward looking and positive. eg 'try to give more evidence for your views' or 'Use more paragraphs to show the structure of your writing'. Again, measurements such as grades do not usually give this information.
• Clear goals: the medals and missions need to be given in relation to clear goals usually best given in advance. Goals might include assessment criteria such as 'use paragraphing to show the structure of your writing' or 'give evidence, illustrations for the points of view you express'.

As the saying goes "give credit where credit is due" learners will be inspired to behave well in a learning environment if they are praised and acknowledged for their good work and in my experience as a teacher, this has worked all the time. The class at the Foundation College needs this style to encourage learners to do more and I have proven this last Wednesday, the 18th of March, 2009, in my first day, the learners showed more enthusiasm when I praised the art work they did as a group and individually praised them as well. This way made them finish all the tasks given.

Individual learning styles should be acknowledged by the teacher to encourage good behaviours. Another way is to make a lesson with interesting tasks that are common among the mainstream of youth today. Giving attention and support when needed is also a tool. One to one tutorial is one good way to access to the learner in a deeper scope to know what his / her needs are.

"I praise loudly, I blame softly"

Catherine the Great quotes

Strategies for encouraging behaviours that disrupt an effective learning environment must be used to maximise learning. The use of merits and medals is number one in my list to encourage learners to do more and better. Disruptive behaviours are always present in an environment especially if the learners are with a lot of issues like learning difficulties, family problems, personality issues etc. so what strategies should be used to encourage them? Making them feel important and giving them responsibility to promote inclusion is one tool to minimise a possible untoward behaviour. Setting ground rules with cause and effect awareness will also make learners know their limitations and boundaries. A student who is more likely to create disrupting behaviour could be grouped in a task with learners who are keen to learning to make him / her aware that good behaviours by students always produce excellent outcomes. He or she will be challenged to do better because he would feel the pressure to be better to get equal with the learners he / she is with. Knowing what a learner's interests and expertise is important element in making lesson plans / tasks and with the use of the discipline for "every child matters" are good tools to encourage behaviours that disrupt an effective learning environment. Reflective practice is also a strategy to encourage behaviours that disrupt an effective learning environment. If you reflect and analyse how and what to do next about something that went wrong; problems will be identified and will be given actions. Transactional analysis is also a theory to put into practice. Be a nurturing parent if you must to pacify and to show authority that at times is needed to give the signal that there is a boundary between the learners and the teacher.

A desire to be observed, considered, esteemed, praised, beloved, and admired by his fellows is one of the earliest as well as the keenest dispositions discovered in the heart of man.
John Adams

Ways of managing behaviours that disrupt an effective learning environment are tools to be practiced to maximise learning. Ways like medals and honours are good considerations to boost a learner's self esteem and motivation. Consistency of approach is also a good way to show that the teacher is serious about how she / he deals with the learners when it comes to behavioural management. A close liaison with parents must be practiced as well to make all concerned know what is going on.

A school's ethos provides the context within which children feel secure, know they are valued as individuals, are safe from emotional and physical harm and are able to discuss their interests and open about their fears if the atmosphere provides them not only support but also concern. Appropriate adaptation of the curriculum is also a way to capture students' interest. Flexibility is also a must to make sure that every child matters in a learning environment. If a curriculum and the level are rightly matched, a sure way to better learning is visible.

The use of strategies for managing behaviours that disrupt an effective learning environment must always be taken into account. Looking at learners' strengths and areas for development and making them as starting point for a positive learning environment is helpful to promote inclusion. If the idea of ​​inclusion is evident in a learning environment, disruptive behaviours could be avoided. In the class where all the learners are with learning difficulties, disruptive behaviours such as disinterest and impatience are likely to happen. One strategy that I used during my first day was an unnoticed push because I praised everything a student did to maintain their interest and finish what they were doing. I noticed that they become so easily destructed just by simple annoyance like noise but when I started a gentle push through praise, they got back to what they were doing with more enthusiasm.

Giving emphasis to the importance of literacy and numeracy by giving more tasks filled to be better in these two fields will improve the communication skills of students; a skill that could be the reason why a student becomes disruptive. Not having the ability to communicate is a barrier that could stop a student to connect with peers and teachers making him a vulnerable victim of abuse from peers and this may lead to behavioural problems. A good quality of teaching is the prime ingredient to get learners' interest. If lessons are rendered with good subject knowledge, a learning session is most likely to be active and without any disruptive behaviours. A one to one tutorial must always be offered to learners to make them feel their importance in the process. A student with disruptive behaviour must be involved in group works with learners who are with better behaviours and interests to make him feel responsible and challenged.

My own approaches, strengths and development needs in relation to managing different behaviours in the learning environment are somehow a combination of how I was disciplined at school in the Philippines and the new approaches learned in the DTLLS course. In the Philippines, teachers are highly respected. They are considered as second parents so disciplining a child with behaviour problems is a part of his / her job. Physical harm as a punishment is not legally allowed anymore physical harm is not the only way to discipline students. There are written orders clearly imposed set as guidelines to manage disturbing behaviours. Teachers in the Philippines in my time acted as imposers of things to be done in the learning process. The tasks are taken more as to avoid embarrassment from being picked on as a slow learner which was not fully helpful because there is a concrete barrier between the teacher and the students. As a teacher now myself, I would like to get involved in the process not as a source of fear but as a source of motivation for a learner to get involved in the whole learning process; however the barrier between the teacher and a learner that was imminent in my school days should just be taken as boundaries by both the teacher and the learner. If there is a barrier, communication is deterred. A boundary with communication between the teacher and the learner is a good tool to harmonise professionalism in teacher student relationship inside a learning environment. In my peers and tutors comments in my micro teach, they said I showed classroom management by imposing authority and because of my good subject knowledge. I believe that excellent subject knowledge could make a learning environment interesting for learners. The first placement I have, the ESOL class is an ideal group. All the learners are adults and there are no behavioural problems going on. Frequent absenteeism and tardiness are the only problems at times because of their individual circumstances. They are all working students and some are with young children that's why at times being absent could not be avoided.

The new class I am with at the foundation college is a challenge for me. I believe I have to put into practice all the theories like transactional analysis, reflective practice, Kolb's learning styles model and experiential theories to promote a better approach towards teaching.

Ways to adapt and improve own practices in relation to managing different behaviours in the learning environment are as follows:

As per suggested in "Behaviour Management, A whole organisation approach" by learning and skills development agency, Northern Ireland, knowledge about these occurrences is a good suggestion on where to start with managing disruptive behaviour.

1. Where does the disruption take place?
2. What type of behaviour?
3. Who is involved?
4. Why does the organisation experience disruptive behaviour?
5. When does the disruption take place?

These questions help to get to the bottom line of a problem.

LSDA NI has also devised a short staff training programme in behaviour management that I find a helpful tool on dealing with behavioural problems.

The centre of resource for the following scheme is the whole organisation.

They are called "The Four Focus Model."

1. Recognising
2. Understanding
3. Preventing
4. Dealing with

I believe that actions for management should start from the whole organisation. If there are clear written objectives and rules to be imposed, behavioural management will be easier. As a teacher, reflective practice is always a must to consider about dealing with all the aspects in a learning process. Reflective practice and action plans; to make all learners involved in the whole process. Knowing what the needs of your learners are, communication, tutorials, consideration of individual learning styles and needs are tools to make a learning environment a good experience for all learners. if the environment is with recognition for individual strengths, understanding for individual areas for developments, preventive measures for challenging behaviours, and knowledge in dealing with all of the above as a whole process, maximised learning without chaos is most likely to be achieved.

"The successful teacher is no longer on a height; pumping knowledge at high pressure into passive receptacles … He is a senior student anxious to help his juniors." -Sir William Osler, The Student Life

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Source by Salee Tadeo

Running Records of Text Reading and Miscue Analysis at the Intermediate Level

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A Running Record (or modified miscue analysis) is when a student reads out loud and the teacher records every error made on a duplicate copy of the text. It is an important assessment tool for several reasons:

  • First, it allows the teacher to identify an appropriate reading level for the student.
  • Second, it reveals how well a student is self-monitoring their reading.
  • Finally, it identifies which reading strategies a student is using (or not using).

Running Records allow teachers to run an assessment-driven, differentiated program that targets the specific needs of their students.

WHAT ARE RUNNING RECORDS?

Miscue Analysis

  • Miscues are more than just "oral reading errors", but a way to understand children's existing reading strategies and to help students learn more effective new strategies.

Running Records

  • A Running Record is a teacher simplification to run a miscue analysis in the busy reality of the classroom (Clay, 1985). PM Benchmarks is an example of a commercial resource that offers a graduated program of reading texts to use for running records. Although primarily designed and used with young children, a running record can provide important information for the Intermediate teacher.

Informal Reading Inventories

  • Robb (2000) argues that running records are appropriate for students "who are at the emergent and beginning stages of reading" or read with poor fluency, but recommends using a reading inventory to complete a modified miscue analyis of intermediate students' oral reading.
  • Informal Reading Inventories are similar to running records. They consist of graded word lists (to determine sight vocabulary – Word Recognition) and graded story passages (to determine literal and inferential comprehension – Comprehension.)

Informal Reading Inventories are typically given to all students in the fall and again in the Spring if possible to note growth and change (Cohen & Wiener, 2003). In comparison, Running Records are administered more frequently to guide instruction.

WHY WE USE THIS TOOL (THEORETICAL BACKGROUND )
Psychologist Lev Vygotsky (Mind in Society, 1978) coined the term "zone of proximal development" as the level of difficulty between what a learner can do independently and what they can do with support.

  • Students working below the zone will not learn as much because the work is too easy.
  • Students working above the zone will not benefit as much because the text is too hard. "When the text is too hard, comprehension is simply impossible." (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996b, p156)
  • Students working in the zone will experience the most growth because they are working at the cutting edge of their zone of learning. (Au, Carroll & Scheu, 1997)

The goal is to have students reading in the zone. A running record / miscue analysis allows us to identify what level students are reading at in order to have students reading texts that are just right.

HOW THIS TOOL HELPS WITH INSTRUCTIONAL DECISIONS
Running Records allows teachers to make data-based decisions to guide whole-class instruction (using modeled or shared reading), small-group instruction (guided reading), and to ensure students are reading appropriately challenging texts during independent reading.Miscue analysis allows you to run a targeted and differentiated program:

  1. Identify particular difficulties that a student might be having. (Assessment for Learning)
  2. Aid in the creation of homogeneous guided reading groups. (Differentiated instruction)
  3. Monitor the progress of a student.
  4. Allow different students to move at different speeds. (Differentiated growth)
  5. Provides assessment and evaluation data for reporting purposes.

HOW WE USE THIS TOOL
Both the teacher and the student have a copy of a levelled text. As the student reads out loud, the teacher makes notes on their copy of the text. Every error is recorded and a standardized set of conventions are used to record miscues. Questions are usually asked at the end to gauge comprehension. A miscue analysis should take about 10 minutes. (See appendix for instructions.)

Text samples are typically between 100 to 200 words. It is suggested that a student read from several different levels of texts: an easy text (95-100% correct), an instructional text (90-94% correct), and a hard text (80-89% correct). These three samples can provide insights into a students' strengths (using easier texts) and weaknesses (using more difficult texts) (Clay, 1985).

ANALYSIS
A miscue analysis can determine the level of text the student should be reading, whether they are self-monitoring when they read, and they kinds of decoding strategies they use.

1. Identify an appropriate reading level (Accuracy Rate)
2. Identify how well a student is self monitoring while reading (Self Correction Rate)
3. Identify which reading strategies a student is using (or not using)

CHALLENGES FACED IN CLASSROOM IMPLEMENTATION

  • The challenge in the intermediate classroom is to build time during the literacy block to do a running record / miscue analysis. Students need to be trained to do other things to buy the teacher time to do miscue analysis or guided reading groups.
  • A larger challenge is finding resources that can be used at the intermediate level. PM benchmarks can be used for students who are significantly below grade level, however, teachers may end up making their own running record texts by selecting 100-200 words from a levelled text. Finding high-interest levelled texts for intermediate students is a challenge.
  • Finally, there is a learning curve associated with using this assessment tool. Accuracy in catching errors will improve over time. Clay notes that "as your ear becomes tuned-in to reading behaviours and you gain control over the recording conventions, your records will become more and more reliable." (Clay 1993, p.24 as cited in Cohen & Wiener, 2003, p 127)

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Source by Kisu Kuroneko

Fractional Analysis As an Approach to Literary Writing

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In literary Analysis writing, it is crucial to study and understand fully the text of a piece. One recommended conceptualized approach is an easy technique to employ. I call this strategy, fractional analysis. Operationally used in my exposition, Fractional analysis is studying the fictional work by components in order to comprehend the whole meanings of a specific work in written forms where reading intervention plays a vital role.

This ingenuity is unconsciously alluded with Bauer (2011) 's "Well Trained Mind" where she asserted that there should be a great understanding of the texts to be able to understand the techniques employed for effective literary understanding when students are able to recognize or classify through intensive reading. In addition to that, Pope (1995) who wrote his book, "Textual Intervention: Critical and Creative Strategies for Literary Studies" says that Interpretation of texts always entails interaction with texts. He discloses that the best way to understand how a text works is to change it or play around with it. He claims that this exercise applies to various levels of literary study.

In conjunction with this part-by-part analysis concept, the knowledge of literary terms is a fundamental tool in the writing tasks. It expected that the students possess enough knowledge in literary elements such as allusion, symbolism, conflicts, characterization, point of view, tone, imagery, theme and settings among others to succeed. In addition, the satisfactory knowledge of the literary genre and literary techniques are primarily needed components in performing this introduced scheme.

The method introduces and aids students to perform simplified written literary analysis by components that can be used for formalistic literary analysis. It also involves reading comprehension levels in literary texts by engaging with literary genre, literary elements or literary techniques or devices. This has been conceptualized to find solutions for the difficulties of students in reading and in writing by the introduction of simplified stages in approaching literary works as tool kits for learning.

To impart this, the teacher fundamentally introduces the elements of literature known as literary devices. To perform this writing style, the students are tasked to identify the literary genre of the input such as poems, essays, biographies, short stories, novels, legends and tales among other genre that are widely used. The teacher individually explains the elements that are used by writers in expressing their ideas in a passage. While it is true that we can not wholly digest a work of literature, the elements identifies will support one's understanding about the works; exploring the work by extracting element by an element guides students in grasping the major thoughts of the literary piece. The literary writing procedures are initially made possible through the intervention of reading. It is understood that students who are going to use this innovative technique should have acquired sufficient academic subjects in introduction to literature with literary analysis and criticisms backgrounds to produce desired learning outcomes. Furthermore, introducing literary analysis among second language learners require abridged technique such as this method. Students with limited language and vocabularies will encounter comprehension difficulties because reading to them is a complex process manifested by their weak comprehension levels.

Perceiving this practical method in the study of literature yields varied favourable characteristics worth proposing. It aids students' reading comprehension, establishes a crucial role of reading skills as a prelude to writing and speaking skills. In addition, it enables students to express interpretations orally or in written form and allows the students to use textual intervention through manipulating the advanced knowledge of the language independently. Other than that, it determines the importance of textual intervention in literary analysis and infers that literary text can be approached by fractional components to synthesize ideas. This method builds a closer link among textual interventions, knowledge of the language and literary analysis in appreciating, understanding and expressing thoughts of literary works. Furthermore, it allows teachers to innovate further strategies out of this presented concept. Likewise, it shares a creativity to the awareness which have been previously introduced globally to college and university students to straightforwardly experiment on varied forms of literary writing to broaden students' knowledge in language and literature. Besides, this approach encourages individual reading for the viability of critical thinking. Furthermore, it practically employs dimensions of reading that links to the employment of collaborative learning and augments vocabularies for the freedom to discover the structures and forms of the language.

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Source by Marvin Wacnag Lidawan

Simple Steps on Turning a Naughty Classroom Into a Nice Classroom

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If you find that you have a naughty classroom, you will be pleased to know that there are several simple steps that will help you turn a naughty classroom into a nice classroom. There are several different types of effective classroom management resources that have the ability to turn an inattentive, disruptive classroom into a classroom that is productive, attentive with students that are well behaved. While dealing with a naughty classroom is a challenge that any educator may encounter, it takes an open-minded, positive teacher to quickly transform the undesirable characteristics. Throughout this guide, you will be introduced to many productive strategies that will turn a naughty classroom into a nice classroom.

Structure

If you have a naughty classroom, you must first focus on classroom management resources that encourage structure in the classroom. By ensuring that there is structure in the learning environment, students well stay connected to the instruction provided, as well as the educational goals outlined for them. Structure creates a positive and welcoming atmosphere that increases the child's motivation. You should ensure that you are setting clear guidelines for your class. It is also important to ensure that your expectations are consistent. You must also follow through on the guidelines and expectations. There are many resources that may assist you in creating classroom structure. Examples of these products include posted rule charts, posted consequence charts and magnetic reward charts. By creating rules, consequences and providing rewards for optimal behavior, you will find that students will strive to perform as you expect them to while in your classroom.

Time Management

If you have a naughty classroom, it is essential that you incorporate a specific schedule each day. By managing your time, and utilizing a schedule that outlines when you will engage in certain activities throughout each day, students become better organized. There are many different types of classroom management resources that are designed to structure time in the classroom. Examples include lesson plan books, posted daily time sheets, magnetic responsibility charts, wall clocks, and even student planners. You should ensure that you break down each block of time ahead of time according to subject or activity. A schedule that reinforces time management is an essential element in creating a productive and positive learning environment.

Educational Play

All children love to play and explore the world that they are part of. Most students prefer hands on activities that permit free movements to written assignments that require them to sit for long periods of time. The most important aspect of teaching is not the amount of written work that a student does, but the knowledge that they gain when it comes to skills and concepts. You want to the if transform a classroom into a naughty nice classroom, you shouldnt use classroom management resources That Promote educational play . If you are teaching your children about weather, for example, get them involved by letting them create a rain gauge or their own pet tornado. If you are teaching fractions, allow your children to use a recipe to create a simple treat they may enjoy in the classroom. While it is true that educational funding is tightly restricted, your educational strategies do not have to be. Thinking past the internal and external regions of the "Box", will help you turn your naughty classroom into a nice one in no time at all!

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Source by Jacquelyn L Holl

The Top Seven Tips to Taking True-False Tests

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Learning how to maximize your scores on true-false tests is simple and will significantly increase your test scores. Although many students say that they prefer true-false tests, they can be very tricky. True-false sections remain the staple of many teacher-constructed tests. Here are the tips to "ace" any true-false section on your next test.

1. Read the true-false statement twice before choosing an answer. Test-takers frequently say that this strategy helps eliminate rushing though a test and answering impulsively.

2. True-false tests can be very tricky. Look first at the statement as being true, then if any part of that statement is false, then the whole statement must be false.

3. True-false tests tend to have slightly more true statements than false. Therefore, if you must guess, guess "true."

4. The longer the true-false statement, the greater is the chance that it is false because it only takes one part of the statement to be false to make the whole statement false.

Example

The moon orbits an average of 240,000 miles away from the earth, has craters and mountains, and is made of cheese.

5. Statements that show cause-effect tend to be false, unless an Exception Word is used. Words such as the following:
because, caused, resulted in, is the reason that
indicate cause-effect relationships.

Example

Only one US president has been elected four times, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and this caused financial chaos.

6. Extreme statements tend to be false.

Example

Japanese automobiles are all more reliable and cost less than American automobiles.

7. Finally, make sure to guess, if not sure of your answer choice.

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Source by Mark Pennington

Active Learning Activities – Guided Lecture

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Wow … lecturing and active learning are certainly two concepts that one would not expect to see in the same sentence. In fact, as a proponent of active learning activities, lecturing is not something I do very often. However, regardless of your teaching style, there are times that all teachers must directly teach, or lecture, to their students. Unfortunately, as we all know, students simply do not have the attention span to keep up with a lecture that carries on for too long. That is why Guided Lectures work as great active learning activities.

A Guided Lecture is a teaching strategy that simply combines lecturing with student interaction and feedback. What's great about using Guided Lectures as one of your active learning activities is that they require little or no preparation.

In a Guided Lecture the teacher will lecture for 5-10 minutes depending on the grade level and ability level of the students. During the lecture students are NOT to take any notes. After the 5-10 minutes of lecturing, the students create a list of everything they remember about the content of the lecture. After they create their lists, the students pair up with a partner to share their lists and add anything they missed. The teacher can then repeat the process with another 5-10 minutes of lecturing.

It is important that teachers always let the student know before hand how long the lecture will be and what they will have to do afterwards as students will be more likely to pay attention if they know that the lecture is going to be short and that they will be required to provide immediate feedback based on the content of the lecture.

Active learning activities are based on the fact that students who make frequent responses during a lesson will learn more than those that do not. Guided Lectures force students to make those frequent responses by listening, writing, and speaking, thereby turning the passive learning into an active learner.

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Source by Adam Waxler

Best ESL Grammar and Speaking Tips – What If You Taught ESL Learners to Speak More Communicatively?

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Often ESL learners are worried that when they learn new structures and forms in a target language, they "getting it right." Teaching form or accuracy is just as important as "getting the meaning across" which is both of fluency. fluency emphasizes meaning and accuracy emphasizes form and structure. However, accuracy is developed through fluency, which is why in our teaching, we should strive to provide the best method that caters to both these principles.

The Goal behind Successful ESL Teaching

In ESL classrooms, using language to communicate is the most effective way to learn a language. Teaching students to be communicatively competent is just as important as teaching reading strategies. By giving students the chance to use combinations of different functions and structures, they can develop their fluency and confidence in speaking the target language.

Start by Using Pre-Communicative Learning Activities

By using pre-communicative activities, the ESL learners is equipped with some of the skills required for communication without requiring him / her to perform communicative acts. This might be a good way to help build up confidence in speaking and grammar related activities. The criteria is not whether s / he has managed to convey an intended meaning, (accuracy) but rather if s / he has produced an acceptable piece of language. The activities also aim to help the learn develop links with meaning that will later enable him / her to use language for communicative purposes.

Principles behind Communicative Activities

Encouraging students to give a variety of responses both personal and practice using language creatively.

Giving students a purpose for using the language. Examples include discussion, games, problem solving and information-gap activities.

Organizing activities in pairs or small groups allow the students to use language in private face-to-face interaction

Teaching Form and Meaning

Teaching communicatively is closely connected with situation context. By that I mean, teachers can contextualize language and ask learners to practice responses which would be a) realistic ways of performing useful communicative acts and b) situations they might expect to encounter at some time. This makes language learning more relevant and useful. when encouraging students to use the correct forms in communicative teaching, errors are seen as natural to the learning process and are corrected only when studying grammar.

When teaching function meaning, teachers relate the language (structural forms of the language) to external reality such as a concrete situation or a picture or personal knowledge. For example, teachers can relate going to the movie with learners' likes and dislikes:

Example:
Student # 1: Should we go to the movies tonight?
Student # 2; I do not feel like going to the movies. (OR) The movies? Yes! That's a good idea.

Teaching language communicatively provides opportunities for positive personal relationships to develop among learners and between learners and the teacher. Communicative interactions also encourage cooperative relationships, promotes learners' security and allows them to share ideas and opinions and make them feel they are doing something useful.

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Source by Dorit Sasson

CREATIVITY – An Impeccable Virtue in Schools

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Robert Kiyosaki, a well known author of "Rich Dad, Poor Dad 'in his book titled" Be Rich and be happy ", highly condemns the negative programming an education system does to the young minds as such system focuses on bookish knowledge. He further argues that such knowledge taught in school for children is futile where applications in practical affairs of life become totally obsolete.

He further re-defines and urges all schools and educationalists to re-engineer their education systems that will prepare their children for practical life success financially, socially and emotionally.

The enigmatic truth about his new way of thinking of educating children are experienced only in rare schools for instance, The Yenepoya School, (though it may not be the only school), that pioneers and initiates such innovative methods of learning from Montessori 1 until grade 10.

A child who's educated at such a school does not view the world like a child at another traditional school. He or she thinks differently ie thinks outside the box. This means that that the child's thinking is original, creative, imaginative, artistic, innovative and of resourceful nature.

Let me illustrate this point, and you as a parent of a creative school may openly discover when you just compare to another friend or relative of yours whose child may be educated in a traditional school:

· If your child is at Montessori level or even a little higher class, give your Montessori child the plastic Fun dough clay and, also give another child from another traditional school the same clay too. Your child will surely astound you with excellence in a unique and unbelievable creativity and variety of thinking he has applied and, he could easily mould the clay into anything you ask or any vegetable, fruit, animal or anything with a great combination of colours in a few minutes. Unfortunately you may not see the same result with the other child though the child may be equally capable and intelligent.

· Similarly, a child going to a creative school will outcompete in creativity of drawing and colouring in such a unique and original pattern that will enthrall you to a large extent.

· Another notable characteristic of creative students is the ability to write creatively. When asked to write a story from grade 2 onwards, students come up with fascinating stories with their own original characters and settings with a great beginning and ending. However, the less creative ones will come up with re-written stories in their own words of a story they have already heard or read somewhere.

· Also at such creative schools, we do not teach about money to lower primary students just verbally and in writing but also we create small shopping centre in our campus where each child plays a role of either a shopkeeper or customer, and then FEELS the practical transaction of money using dummy currency notes and coins.

· Let's take another instance, of the theme "Day and Night" in teaching science to lower primary students. When this topic is being taught, the learner must first observe the day sky and night sky so as to know what is seen in the night (for eg stars and moon) is different from the day sky (for eg the sun and bluish sky) .

Also when we teach about the revolution and rotation of the earth, the learners have to come forward to do an activity such as role play or enactment of one student (say A) as Sun, another student (say B) as earth and another student (say C) as moon.

So, by enactment of the motion and movement ie the rotation of the earth around its axis and the revolution of the earth, the subject matter about the solar system especially sun, moon and earth becomes clearly imprinted on child's mind to the extent that he could even define the scientific terms correctly using his own language.

Such schools also facilitate the learners with regular Yoga, Swimming, Karate, Dance, Drama, Music, Arts and Craft Classes along with regular field trips to bring out the hidden potential and sharpen skills of each child in every area so as to shape them into a great and a beautiful personality to bring in individual success in his walk of life.

This kind of multitude of learning experiences in such schools integrates and caters to all types of learners as put forward in the 'Theory of Multiple Intelligence' by Howard Gardner, an American developmental psychologist and a professor of Harvard University.

When such pedagogy is implemented, learner is not only curious but also there's maximum absorption and gaining of knowledge wherein the learner need not at all depend on bookish knowledge through memorization.

I strongly believe every school through out India and across the globe need to implement these teaching strategies as rare schools as suggested by Robert Kiyosaki or Gardner by building and nurturing the creativity within the child, and make learning an enjoyable experience thus mould students into great creative individuals no matter which path they choose to opt for later in their life so as to achieve life success in all areas.

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Source by Yasmin Elias

The Shame of the Nation: A Summary, and Analysis

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Jonathan Kosol's interest for teaching profession and activism was triggered after the killing of three young civil rights activists in Mississippi in June of 1964 while he was working as a grade four public school intern teacher in Boston, Massachusetts. His experience as a teacher in one of Boston's urban segregated schools gave him an insight to the plight of children of minorities, which motivated him to address the issue of segregation, and inequities that exist in public schools that has continued to plague the nation till the present day.

School Segregation
According to him, he visited approximately 60 schools in 30 districts in 11 different states. Most of his visits were in the South Bronx of New York City, Los Angeles – California, Chicago, Detroit – Michigan, Ohio, Seattle – Washington, Boston – Massachusetts and Milwaukee. In the schools he visited, he observes that the conditions have grown worse for inner-city children in the 15 years since federal courts began dismantling the landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education. He notes that the number of white students in urban public schools have increasingly declined with the shifting pattern of white middle class families from urban to suburban communities since the 1960's (white flight). He talks of the irony of school population in relation to the leaders of integration, which the schools bear their names, like Thurgood Marshal Elementary School in Seattle Washington with 95% minority students. According to him, the overwhelming majority of students in urban public schools in the United States are students of color. In Detroit for example, 95% of students in public school are either black or Hispanic. In Chicago, the figure is 87%, Washington is 94% while New York is 75%. He pointed out the cynicism in the "The small school initiative" like the Center School in Seattle that was perceived as a "tie-breaker" of school segregation that "attracted 83% white and 6% black enrollment when it opened in 2001, in a city where whites are only 40% of high school students district-wide ". (P 277). In comparing the Center School with African / American Academy in another section of the city where black students make up 93% and whites make up 3% of the enrolment, the location of the center school and its curriculum offers many opportunities to students. "The Center school which is sited in a cultural complex known as the Seattle Center, offers an impressive academic program to prepare its graduates for college while also provides a wide array of opportunities for students to participate in science projects, theatrical productions, music, ballet , and other cultural activities ", (p.278) while such opportunities are lacking in the African-American Academy. "The school in a sense represents a local version of 'your own Liberia' … the African American Academy is using a highly directive method of instruction that, in some respects resembles the approach used in Success for All" (p. 279) . He argues that after decades of persistent struggle against school segregation by educators and civil right activists, social and economic policies have continued to aid the growing trend of school segregation.

Inequities
Kozol laments the lack of basic resources and amenities in the urban public schools – restrooms, clean classroom, hallways; appropriate laboratory supplies, up-to-date books in good condition and classroom supplies and material. According to him, this lack of resources moves some teachers to spend between $ 500 – $ 1000 of their own money every academic year to purchase the supplies and materials in the case of Winton Place elementary school in Ohio. He argues the overcrowding of students in a classroom. For instance in Chicago, it's not uncommon to see classrooms with as many as 54 students coupled with the fact that most of the teachers are unqualified.

Kozol also points out the issue of lack of pre-school opportunities for a large number of students because the federally funded head start programs were denied them. He also shows the disparity for money spent on a student, and its effect on state testing. In the case of New York State, the average spending on a student in the city is $ 8,000 while that of the suburb is $ 18,000. Also in New York, the inequities in expenditure between 2002 and 2003 are: NYC $ 11,627, Nassau County $ 22,311, Great Neck $ 19,705. The salaries of teachers in poor and wealthy school districts follow the same pattern. While the average salary of school teachers in poor communities is $ 43,00, the salary of teachers in the suburb like Rye, Manhurst and Scarsdale in New York ranges from $ 74,00 to $ 81,000. Even the issue of fundraising is a factor in the disparities among schools in poor and wealthy communities. Whereas schools in wealthy neighborhoods could raise up to $ 200,000, schools in poor districts could only raise $ 4,000.

Adaptive Strategy Curriculum
Kozol questions the rationale behind the scripted programs that has been adapted into the minority school system. "Authentic Writing", Active Listening "," Rubric for Filing "," Accountable Talk "," Zero Noise "etc., according to teachers account, they are meant to follow the scripted lesson to bring formality and structure to the learning environment which raises the anxiety levels of both students and teachers. The high standard language and higher expectations with little support, has taken over the moral and ethical values ​​that use to be the integral part of the curriculum. According to Kozol, the "auto -hypnotic slogans "used by most schools has become part of the daily rituals and practices that are fashioned to boost students moral. students from the under-performing schools are encouraged to memorize phrases like" I am smart "," I am confident "to raise their self -confidence and academic performance. This according to him has formed the framework used to identifying the causes of the under-achievement of students of color. He argues that teachers are treated as "efficiency technicians" who are encouraged to use "strict Skinnerian controls" to manage and teach students in their classrooms, and whose job it is to pump some "added-value" into undervalued children. (P. 285)

In close semblance to the above is the business-like outlook "work related themes" that is being created in these schools, "market driven classrooms", "sign contract", "take ownership of their learning", "pencil manager", " classroom manager "," building managers "," learning managers "etc. This kind of corporate outlook portrays students as "assets," "investments," 'productive units, "or" team player "according to Kozol. The knowledge and skills, which the students acquire, are seen as" commodities "and" products " to be consumed in the "educational market place." Kozol argues that educational administration should in no way be equated with factory production line, and advices that "teachers and principals should not permit the beautiful profession they have chosen to be redefined by those who know far less than them about the hearts of children. "(p. 299)

High stake testing
The issue of teaching for testing has replaced the essence of teaching for learning in public schools. According to Kozol, "In some schools, standardized testing begins in the kindergarten. Courses that are not included in the high stake testing are often not taught any more or they are completely removed from their school curriculum, like arts and music. In some schools , naptime and / or recess has been reduced or taken out completely to allow more time for the preparation of state standardized test. Even teachers meetings are geared towards the discussion of effective strategies to prepare students for quarterly assessment tests or reviewing state and district standards. Teachers are encouraged to attend workshops and conferences in regards to the testing to acquire more knowledge on how to integrate their teachings to the state testing standards.

In the bid of all the educational superficiality imposed on the students, they are also tracked and labeled. Labeling the children from level one (lowest) to level five (highest) places them into categories supposedly for further instructions. Instead of being given adequate attention regarding their labels, it is used as a description of their academic stance. "She's gone down to level two," "She's a level one." The issue of academic tracking and labeling in these schools poses a huge obstacle in creating equity and democracy in a learning environment. According to Kozol, learning is taught as "a possession" not something one "engages" in. Students are encouraged to select "a career path" during their freshman year, so as to tailor their course work. Nevertheless, there is little encouragement on the career path of college education. For example, the case of Mireya who attends Fremont High in Los Angeles, while she aspires for a college education, she is rather placed into vocational classes – sewing and hairdressing. She tells Kozol "I hoped for something else." "Why is it that students who do not need what we need get so much more? And we who need it so much more get so much less?" She questioned.

In view of all these structured teaching strategies imposed on the urban public schools by the administrative body, both teachers and students exhibit robotic behaviors in order to achieve the set goals of the planners. Teachers who tend to veer out on these stipulations face disciplinary actions and could possibly lose their jobs. Students who do not adhere to the rules and follow the stipulated pattern face the risk of not passing their tests. Overall, there is loss of creativity and ingenuity in the classroom. Kozol points out that it would rather take a reformation than a miracle to set the schools on the right track again. He argues that desperate schools can not be turned around by the arrival of a charismatic, tough talking principal. "There are hundreds of principals in our urban schools who are authentic heroes … But there is a difference between recognizing the accomplishments of able school officials and marketing of individuals as saviors of persistently unequal system".

Ray of Hope
After questioning and critiquing the re-segregation of urban public schools in America, Kozol pointed out a few schools, teachers, principals, administrators and human rights activists he had met in the course of his study that gives hope to the possibility of school integration. According to him, "Virtually all the truly human elements of teacher motivation have been locked out of the market misperceptions that control so much of education policy today. But when we go to the schools in which these market ideologies have been valiantly resisted, we are reminded of a set of satisfactions and devotions that are very different from the ones that dominate the present discourse about urban education. " (P. 297) … "These are the schools I call" the treasured places. "They remind us always of the possible." (P. 300).

He acknowledges the modifications made in most school districts since after his visits over three years. At PS 65, a new curriculum that focuses on the need of the children had been introduced. The hand-held timers and scripted lesson plans have been taken out, and actual writings of children are displayed in the walls. He also recalls the efforts of some school districts in Milwaukee and Louisville where school leaders have promoted desegregation across district lines.

Kozol sees every hope in teachers and administrators like Louis Bedrock (whom he dedicates this book to), Miss Rosa the retired principal of PS 30, Fern Cruz the new principal of PS 65 and others for their dedication and persistence in fighting for the right course of education for the minority. He also acknowledges the contribution of black activists like Congressman Lewis who have voiced out publicly and written books that expose the persistence of segregation in America.

In his epilogue, he wrote "A segregated education in America is unacceptable". "Integration is, it still remains, the goal worth fighting for" (p. 316).

The Shame of the Nation: An Analysis

I find this book very revealing, intriguing, insightful, and at the same time one sided and opinionated, but in summation, it is very educative. This book is an outcome of a good ethnographic researcher who not only puts energy in his work but also has passion in the subjects of his work – the students. The empirical analysis of this book rests in the inequality that is salient in the American society. Race, class, culture, gender and economic status which have formed the measuring tape of individuals' worth in the American society have become the bedrock of the administrative bodies in the formulation of policies. Policies like education, housing, income and property taxes, transportation etc. have been so carefully formulated to include and exclude some members of the society. These policies of course favor the dominant group, which are whites and disfavor the targeted group which is mostly blacks and Hispanic.

It takes a critical mind to understand the game in the policies. Taking for instance the funding of community urban schools from property taxes from the community, one has to first, think of the nature of the properties in such a community, who owns them, what shape, and of what value they are. If the majorities of those properties are individually owned and are of good shape and value, the expectation is that they will yield good tax for the community. On the other hand, when the government owns such properties, little can be realized in property tax in such a community, and that in turn affects the sourcing of the school. This is the game of politics in perpetuating inequality as we have seen in this book.

Who would expect that the administration that tends to speak in favor of equal education has a hand in making it unequal? That the promulgations of "No Child Left Behind" and "Equal Opportunity for All" are only frivolities? Who would imagine that some teachers and education administrators could be so robotic that they question their ingenuity and creativeness in the face of manipulation, except for a revealing book like this? In addition, how can anyone comprehend the damage that has been done by these administrative inconsistencies over the years?

There is an insight into the social, economic, and cultural capital powers of the society in this book. Parents who are more informed, educated, with good jobs and better means have more say in the education of their children than those with little or no education and means. They surf for good schools for their children, organize themselves as the parent bodies of the school, and intervene in matters that are not favorable to their children, for instance, they raise money to employ more teachers and advocate for lesser number of children in a class. They come up with one voice to exclude others from integrating into their children's schools and sometimes take out their children from a school that are getting more minority enrolment as the case may be. They are less dependent and more challenging to the school administration and government than the parents with fewer capitals. The parents of the minority who have fewer capitals, complain and rely mostly on the school administration and government to make the necessary adjustments in their children's schools. The system fosters posterity of family status.

In this atmosphere of stratification, while the dominant group acts up to maintain its status, and the targeted, subordinate poor group agitates its position, the children suffer the struggle. A wider gap is created between the rich and the poor. While the children of the dominant group perceive themselves as fortunate, they are less 'educated' than the poor children who see it all. They face lesser chances of integrating and facing realities of multiracial society and as such are less likely to accommodate differences in future. On the other hand, the minority poor children get more skeptical and cynical when matters of equity arise. In the case of the little Bronx boy who wrote Kozol, "You have all the things and we do not have all the things," and the high school student from California who told his classmate "You're ghetto, so you sew. " The disparities in their educational experiences raise innumerable questions in their heads, which only the government can comprehend in that while their parents may be 'guilty' of not possessing the where-withal, the students are innocent. Kozol's study goes to predict that going by the present pace in educational strategy in America, inequality will persist; integration will be minimized, and desegregation will not only be a nightmare in schools but would be nipped in the bud in the society in future if they are not addressed now. He goes to say, "This nation needs to be a family, and a family sits down for its dinner at a table, and we all deserve a place together at that table."

Having enumerated the classical work of Kozol in diagnosing the blatant, ugly passionate inequities in our public urban schools that plagues America today, I need to point out the one-sided, opinionated view of the issue. In a situation as this, no one person can be all right and the other all wrong, there needs to be a balance of 'a little to right and a little to the left'. In the entire book, Kozol addresses the structural approach to educational inequality that sees the school and government administration as the factor that has perpetuated the problem, little suspicion if any, of the cultural approach to the discourse with parents and students contribution. Though there were a few mentions of all white public schools, there was little emphasis on their interactions, though one might argue that they have all the necessary amenities available for them in comparison to the minority schools that have little amenities.

I call this one sided and opinionated in the sense that the subjects of the matter visa vie poor minority parents and their children, are not addressed as potential input to the problem and as such potential contributory factors to the solution. If in a capitalist society like America where opportunity is laid down for everyone for grabs, the 'majority' of the minority group keeps complaining of marginalization of resources, there is a problem somewhere despite imposed limitations. The problem could be in derivation of comfort in dependency or reliability on false sense of security. The core word is value. As regards to the parents, many of them depend on the system and can not walk their ways out to independence and instill that value of independence in their children. A culture of poverty has evolved among this minority group and they seem very comfortable in such a zone. So who makes the extra money for their children's comfort?

The children as well due to lack of role models from their parents, do not deem it fit to strive and conquer the inevitable, they embrace violence and they keep on finger pointing like their parents instead of realizing that education not agitation is their only access to high status in the society. I believe that a focus on re-orienting the children of the minority group in exploring educational opportunities no matter the limitations they face would help in getting them back on the right track. On the other hand, if they should be contented, respectful, curtail violence, and love themselves, that would attract more empathy to them from whatever administration that is in place and they can be in their own schools without any white and feel good just the same. Understandably, the structural approach often times shape the cultural, which is unstable based on economic resources that yields self-support and autonomy.

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Source by Catherine Ohanele