talkin 'bout...teaching current events
Welcome to talkin ‘bout! This discussion series brings together educators, activists and youth to participate in a public conversation about timely and important topics in liberatory education.
The next discussion in this series, talkin ‘bout…teaching current events, will focus on ideas for bringing current events into the social justice classroom. This discussion features panelists from organizations and media outlets that publish current events teaching materials including The Nation magazine, IndyKids, Democracy Now! and World Savvy.
In the column to the right you can download examples of current events teaching resources.
Here is how talkin 'bout works: A group of panelists will answer questions posted by a moderator to our online discussion board from Monday, May 19 through Tuesday, May 20. All visitors to the website are invited to post their own questions and comments for the panelists and for each other. Anyone can read the discussion without registering. To post, first you must register to use the site.
You can either reply to an existing comment or question by hitting "reply" or add a new comment or question by hitting "add comment." If you refer to a website in your post, please add the entire website address, including the "http://" because that will allow the address to hyperlink directly to the site.
Panelists for talkin 'bout...freedom schools past and present are:
- Amanda Vender, an IndyKids founder and editor. Amanda is currently a graduate student in education at Hunter College.
- Jeff Kisseloff, who writes the teacher's guides for The Nation magazine. Jeff is a journalist and author of five books, most recently, "Generation on Fire: Voices of Protest from the 1960s."
- Kelly Korenak, the Program Associate for World Savvy, a global education non-profit. She is also a teacher and social worker.
- Ricky Schneider, who has taught English as a Second Language at Newtown High School in Elmhurst, New York (Queens) for the past thirteen years. He uses reports from Democracy Now! in his classroom. A human rights unit is a major component of his classes.
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John Yanno, a New York City public school teacher and union activist who uses IndyKids in his classroom.
- Tara Mack (Moderator), Director of the Education for Liberation Network. Additional panelists TBA
Talkin ‘bout…teaching current events will continue from Monday, May 19 through Tuesday, May 20, giving everyone plenty of time to contribute. We hope this will be an enlightening and lively digital conversation.
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talkin ‘bout…teaching current events
Good morning everyone. Thanks for joining us for talkin 'bout. And many thanks to our panelists for participating in this online event. I am looking forward to an energetic, rigorous and respectful discussion on this important issue.
Subprime mortgages and globalization
There are a few things we try to do when were prepare to produce a piece for IndyKids. First, we make a list of the main and most basic teaching points- the ideas we want the reader to understand. Photos, cartoons and the page design can help a lot toward illustrating the main ideas. And we try to bring in people’s stories when we can, especially those of kids who are affected. In our teacher’s guides we often suggest class simulations of the issue being discussed and activities that help students to place themselves in the position of the people affected.
Another question
reply to Barbara
I teach Social Studies. In the 6th grade, the focus is on the Eastern Hemisphere. Current Events is not required curriculum, but I bring it in (with support from my principal). When I was in HS, we had a Current Events class, but sadly, I think that has been replaced with extra Math and ELA classes (since teachers are under increasing pressure to bring up grades in these two areas b/c of NCLB). As for my school, we are a Title I school (i.e., high poverty) with, like most NYC schools, a black and latino population.
My First Question
I'm also big on connecting the past to the present (it's the historian in me), so every week I go through the Nation's archives and try to find a story from the past that sheds some light or adds something relevant to an article in the current issue. That can be a real challenge, but it's the most pleasurable part of the job, especially when I can find an article from the archives that supplements the current piece perfectly. Usually, the more time I spend digging, the better chance there is that I can unearth a real treasure.
Challenging News Issues Reply
Challenging Issues for Middle School Students
Also...
current events in the ESL classroom
ESL Students
To John Yanno
How to get IndyKids
Free copies of the Summer 2008 issue are currently available (as of last week) in New York City at:
MANHATTAN
• New York Indymedia office, 4 W. 43d St., 3nd floor
• Bluestockings Bookstore, 172 Allen St (between Stanton & Rivington Streets)
• Labyrinth Bookstore, 536 W. 112th St.
• Ottendorfer Library, 135 Second Avenue
•Mulberry Library, 10 Jersey St.
• 96th Street Library, 112 E. 96th St.
• Julia De Burgos Latino Cultural Center, 1680 Lexington Ave, (between 105th & 106th Streets)
QUEENS
• Jackson Heights public library, 35-51 81st St.
• Espresso 77 Café, 35-57 77th Street, Jackson Heights
BROOKLYN
Tea Lounge, 350 7th Avenue, Park Slope
Democracy Now!
DN is Spanish
Mary's inquiry
The book the student gave me is called "From the Pain Come the Dream: The Receipients of the Reebok Human Rights Award. This samples a whole host of human rights issues. It has great pictures in it. If the English is too difficult for your students, you can always rewrite the articles in easier English.
There is another great book I got on Child Labor from someone in the school. It is put out by teh American Federation of Teachers. The address is International Affairs Department 555 New Jersey Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20001-2079.
Sometimes it takes a few years to gather good material. I know of another great, easy to read magazine to subscribe to. It's at my house, so I will tell you tomorrow.
Another Good Resource
Response to first question
Back to your question: how did we deal with the challenge? Well, at World Savvy, we have been sending out bi-weekly current events resources to our network of teachers for a few years now: with leveled readings, discussion questions, recommended curriculum units and lessons. And while this was useful to many teachers, it didn’t do what I just mentioned above - - lay out the historical context and layers of these complex issues. So we just launched a new resource called the Global Affairs Monitor that aims to do just that - - provide comprehensive background and analysis of one region or issue each month. Each issue includes an introduction and context, detailed timeline, descriptions of key stakeholders, as well as a Classroom Companion with ideas for teaching the issue in the classroom. The goal is to provide as much of that context and background as we can for teachers, all in one place, and then they can choose from this wealth of info for their students.
Response to first question
Controversy in the Classroom
Teachers today who do try to teach about contemporary problems from a social justice perspective are sometimes accused of perpetuating a liberal agenda. How do you deal with that problem? Can you give an example of a particular issue that you tried to teach or develop curriculum around that was controversial?
Controversy in the Classroom
Controversy in the Classroom
I have been in schools that subscribe to (as in, the school’s budget PAYS FOR) the NY Post, the Daily News and the New York Times in addition to Jr Scholastic and Time for Kids. Schools leave these out for students to take. Shouldn’t the school also subscribe to publications with an alternative perspective?
The American Library Association’s Bill of Rights is very supportive of IndyKids’ position on this. It states:
“II. Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”
Most educational standards that teachers are required to follow state something about fostering “critical thinking.” It seems to me that one of the best ways to do this is to offer materials from a variety of perspectives and let the students research, debate and come to their own conclusions.
Re: Controversy in the Classroom
This brings up the inevitable question of media literacy. Are kids truly understanding what they read, and what is being digested? When they read from all these news sources, can they detect the bias? Do they know how to find other sources to provide additional perspectives? Usually not, and we have to teach students how to do this.
As a place to start analyzing news sources, I'd like to plug a simple tool from another Bay Area organization, www.gradethenews.org. They have a simple rubric that teachers can use to analyze the local or national news for content and biases. It's written for TV news, but could be adapted for print media as well.
Controversy
For example, when I teach U.S. History (which I don't teach at the moment), we go over the Columbian Exchange and how Columbus' discovery led to the eventual settlement of the "New World." My students have been learning that since day one. My students have heard about "Columbus the Hero" since they started school. That is biased. That reflects an "agenda." Too few teachers teach Columbus through the eyes of the Taino natives. Yes, I have an agenda - my agenda is to teach a true multi-sided version of history, not a eurocentric version.
Influence of Your Personal Perspective
My Perspective
I clearly state my opinion, but make sure my students know that all perspectives should be presented. This is often difficult when you have a class of students who are against the war. Often I have to play devil's advocate. This is often a question progressive teachers are faced with (from others, usually), but the same question is never heard to question teachers who are pro-war, pro-military, pro-corporate, pro-capitalist, etc.
Reply from IndyKids re: bias
Question: I have trouble using IndyKids in the classroom because it’s biased.
Response: All news publications and all media children are exposed to are biased, whether they admit to it or not. Mainstream publications are financed by corporate sponsors and wealthy people. Writers and editors write from the perspective of their class and cultural background, and it is generally from the dominant class and culture. They present a view that is overwhelmingly favorable to the U.S. government and corporations. This is bias too. When Time for Kids says that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is “working to help bring peace” to the Middle East and, “After all, she is making history,” (Feb. 9, 2007), Time for Kids is presenting a biased perspective. Time for Kids does not point out Rice’s role in the U.S. drive for war in Iraq or call the millions of people who protest the war in Iraq peacemakers. It does not present the perspective that the people play a role in making history. This is a perspective you can find in IndyKids.
While it is fine for Time for Kids to present a biased perspective, it is questionable for school districts to spend public monies for Time for Kids, Sports Illustrated for Kids, Readers Digest and other publications from a similar perspective while discouraging or not allowing IndyKids to be used in the classroom or to be displayed in the library.
The First Question
Child Labor & other materials
Also, Rethinking Globalization, published by Rethinking Schools, is excellent for teaching materials and classroom activity ideas:
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/publication/rg/
It has a whole section on child labor.
ESL and Child Labor
http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/fairtrade/cocoa/docrequest.php?docurl=ChocolateBook36.pdf
Its content is fairly accessible and it's got maps and photos. I also use the book Iqbal by Francesco D'Adamo. Since the reading level is high, I use it in the inclusion classes where group work is possible. There are plenty of supplementary materials on the Internet. To start us off, I ask the kids to go home and tell me some of the countries where their clothes are made and then read the piece on child labor in the summer issue of Indykids. Really good discussion! I also like this short film:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4786079244183070132&pr=goog-sl
Apparently Howard Zinn's A People's History of the US is coming out in comic book, oops, I mean graphic novel form. That might be a good resource. Has anyone seen it?
Zinn graphic novel
Testing and lost pedagogy
What sort of response have you folks gotten from administrators, how have you convinced administrators to become supportive of using your materials (i.e. how did schools end up buying subscriptions to indykids) and are there organizations of administrators and principals who continue to promote the use of alternative/progressive materials into the classroom?
When you don't have support for using alternative information
I think for a teacher who wants to teach critical thinking and alternative perspectives, it’s always going to be tough and there will always be opposition. Maybe it’s possible to get into a progressive school in a progressive neighborhood where the administration, parents, teachers and students welcome a social justice perspective. But this is just not what our society promotes right now. And even such a school may not be able to escape the standardized tests.
While I’m not yet a classroom teacher, some of the best days I have are those where I get into principled discussion and sometimes debate- in my graduate classes, at church, in a community organization, or at IndyKids, where I am able to challenge the dominant perspective and advocate for what I think is right. Even in NYC, I feel that if I don’t raise questions, my colleagues may not hear it from anyone else. Those are the days when I come home and flop down on the bed and say, “I did a good job today!” But it’s rough and could be risky in a job situation. I think it’s really important to have a support network such as the New York Collective of Radical Educators or Teachers Unite or just a group of like-minded friends for when you feel isolated at your school.
Multiple perspectives?
Multiple perspectives?
Resource: For my own media literacy education, I really like the radio program Counterspin, http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=5 (online or on WBAI 99.5 at 10am on Fridays) produced by Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting.
Multiple Perspectives?
I think what Tara is suggesting, for example using Sheehan to criticize Cheney, is the next logical step in this process to get them to the next level of understanding and media literacy.
A variety of information
I am just of the belief that our foreign policy (and domestic policy for that matter) carries two masks, but that one of these masks is extremely criminal and has been for as long as we have been a country, and to this very day we live with its blowback, as Chalmers Johnson referred to it. We need to help the kids understand this concept and other problematic decisions we've made in the Middle East and other parts of the world that make us out to be very hypocritical and continue to be as Dr. King said, "the greatest purveyor of violence" in the world. The overthrowing of Mossadeq in Iran in '53, Allende in '73, and the removal of the Chagossians native to the island of Diego Garcia to put a military base there and, use it as a secret prison are just a few of the cases that should be learned by our kids going into high school so that they can start to cut through some of the rhetoric of our leaders who are perpetually implying or blantantly stating that we are only doing what is right and good for the world. Is this the modelling we want for our kids? A lot of our kids are already rebelling against a lot of this propaganda, but instead of learning about it, sometimes, they shut it out, avoid talking about it, and get ensnared in cynicism. We've got 7th graders walking around thinking that our votes do not count. We have to inspire them at a younger age so that they vest themselves in their learning.
I am now at the point at my school where my administrator asks me if what I am doing is "political", when I decide to do a bigger project for the entire school. I think I am doing my job when my administrator is confronting me on this point. (e.g. We had a "Darfur Dinner" one time; I had Salee, a 10 year-old Iraqi amputee, join my class one day; we screened the documentary, "Recycled Life", etc.) But what rankles me is the fact that my administrator is even asking this as his first question. Why are not the questions: "If the materials you are presenting are controversial or political in nature, how are you ensuring that they are presented in a balanced manner?" I digress.
My questions for you guys, however, broach a different topic. I just recently read that a student from Agoura Hills near Los Angeles received a $13,000 scholarship to the Program for the Exceptionally Gifted at the age of 12. Michelle attends Harvard Westlake School in L.A., but is now planning on attending the PEG program at Mary Baldwin, a four-year liberal arts college in Staunton, Va. She took the SATs in 7th grade and attained a very high score on them. My question is, I guess: how do we make sure that our kids in the public schools are aware of these various programs, SAT test-taking, and scholarship monies? I am assuming that Michelle is just surrounded with all this info. How do we make sure that the public schools students are aware of the same programs and info?
Welcome to Day 2
Dick Cheney's Side...
Why do this? Because they are saturated with Cheney's side of the story, arent they? We can ignore the mainstream media in the classroom and have our students learn about issues, historical or current events, from a working class/minority perspective. But outside of my classroom - at home, in church, or in other classes, they are learning the ruling class' perspective. Better to teach them to critique the MSM. And at least my kids come to the classroom fully aware that the MSM is biased against them. This comes up every time we read Indy Kids. For example, we are reading an article on the high number of African Americans in the prison system and a number of my kids have family members locked away for non-violent offenses. Two of my students have parole officers.... and they are only 11!!!!!
I hope I understood the question and answered it correctly.
Dick Cheney's Side
In starting a unit, a class may pose questions such as: "what do we know about this topic and what do we want to know?" As the unit progresses, more questions may come up and be added to the list. For example, "Why did the US invade Iraq?"
Then the class may research these questions and access multiple sources. In their research they may find Dick Cheney's point of view and Cindy Sheehan's point of view and evaluate the differences and which is closer to the truth. So, it's not a matter of giving equal value or using one to critique the other, but of the students themselves finding the facts and giving value to what they think is correct, based on the information available.
Multiple Perspectives
Multiple Perspectives
This makes me laugh, because the first teaching guides I did were for US News and World Report, and I was constantly urging students to find out what the other side's points of view were, and the other side was the progressive one. It was a bit like conducting my own little guerilla war against the mainstream media.
Standards and Current Events
Lesson Plans
I am not trying to take a position that one is better than the other, merely trying to argue that the same phrase can be interpreted in these very different ways and trying to get a sense of which interpretation you prefer and which you think fits best into a social justice classroom. Is that any clearer?
If people are interested in this point and want to continue the debate, that is great. But I would also like open up a new line of discussion. I was hoping that you could share with us some of your favorite lesson plans. Is there a recent news topic on which you have found/created a particularly powerful piece of curriculum that you can tell us about? What made it so powerful?
Lesson Plans
What I like about this project is that it's a real world scenario, makes students look at the arguments of both sides of the coin, but in the end there is no set answer. Maybe they will come up with something better than the so-called "experts"....
Lesson Plans
I think the best CE lessons are when you allow the students to choose their topic and when you offer plenty of opportunities to give their opinions. Indy Kids is good at offering a variety of topics (at different reading levels). I often assign students 1-2 pages to look over and choose an article from. This gives them an opportunity to read somethign they are interested in. When you have groups of students doing this, they are forced to argue why an issue is more (or less) important than another.
Lesson Plans
I think our paper has had some powerful center spreads lately, such as child labor in the summer 2008 issue because of the photos: http://www.indykids.net/issues/pdf/indykids_iss15.pdf
and the March/April 2008 issue on wealth inequality: http://www.indykids.net/issues/pdf/indykids_iss14.pdf
The latter aims to help students understand that around the world wealth is concentrated among a small number of people and the majority are poor, and the economic and political reasons for this (as in, not smarts or how hardworking you are, as the mainstream media tends to promote). This is one of those difficult issues because there's so much to understand- colonialism, free trade, migration, etc. I'm really not sure how much students got out of this material and if this spread was effective. But when enhanced by classroom activities such as the simulations of wealth and poverty from "Rethinking Globalization": http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/12_03/wealth.shtml
or from United for a Fair Economy, I think students can come away with a new understanding that they won't easily forget and can help form the basis to understand a lot of other social justice issues.
My First Question