Thursday, January 31, 2008

The Great Project

MyPre-AP kids and the G/T class are doing a Walkabout project to learn a little something about SE Asia and Oceania. We spent 4 days in the computer lab where they have been researching and working on their projects. Will they finish? Probably not. do I give them more time? I guess so, with points off.
end of class... more later

Monday, January 28, 2008

State of the Union

It's required by the Constitution, and nowadays a very important speech, but jeez, you'd think after 7 years someone would have the balls to tell him how to pronounce new-clee-are.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Jinx

I know I'm going to jinx it, but so far this semester has been great. The 3 Gorges presentation/debate went over pretty well - the kids understood the implications of the construction of the largest dam in the world. (Except 4th period, which is my greatest challenge).
We have moved on to Japan and the Koreas. Specifically, we have focused on education in Japan and S. Korea, reading an article from the NY Times and using a handout from AskAsia.org. The students compared their educational experience to that in these Asian countries, and found it woefully lacking ( although they weren't disappointed that they didn't do school 15 hours a day). Today I read them parts of Paul Burka's editorial from the December 07 Texas Monthly, No Nino Left Behind. We looked at (former) state demographer Steve Murdoch's prediction for the year 2030 - the year Texas will become a majority Hispanic state. After hearing that median income was $20,000 higher for Anglos than Hispanics in 2000, and that over 40% of Hispanic kids quit school before graduating, we had some intense discussions.
In first period it lead to a discussion about college - I never really thought about it a lot, but many of my students don't have family or friends that have been to college, and they have many misconceptions about it. It felt great to help these kids see the importance of finishing school, not only for themselves, but for the future of our state and nation. We talked about where to go (jr college is inexpensive and fine to start with), where to get the money (live at home and work part time), and what kind of grades you need to make in high school (Bs and Cs will get you in - they were relieved to hear that).
I am still working on 4th period - even with all the schedule changes the make-up of the class has not changed; I have a lot of kids in there who don't much care about their schooling. The majority are great kids, so I have to figure out a way to encourage them and reform the nay-sayers. I am working on a new seating chart - I hope it helps.


Wednesday, January 9, 2008

The Rings

New Semester

The holidays were too short, and we are back to work. Yesterday the kids came back, and there has been quite a bit of schedule-changing. All the freshmen who failed the first semester of Algebra I have been assigned to a 2 hour math class (actually class plus lab) in an effort to catch them up and help them pass TAKS. Since there were 125 kids (out of 600) that failed, there has been some serious rescheduling.
We are starting off with a project on the Three Gorges Dam in China. During the powerpoint presentation yesterday I questioned kids about various things they should have learned last semester (plate tectonics, rainshadows), and I came away impressed - they remembered more than I gave them credit for! Unfortunately, geography isn't considered an important subject - like Algebra - so we don't get the same attention or emphasis. Congress won't even pass the Geography Education bill, so most kids in this country don't take the class in high school. Perhaps if Rumsfeld and Cheney had taken geography they wouldn't have thought Iraq would be a piece of cake to conquer and reform.