Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Warm Heart at Work

Monday, June 15th, 2009
Shafer in Thailand - As Happy As I've Seen Him

Shafer in Thailand - As Happy As I've Seen Him

Some of us talk about ‘changing the world’ and some of us do it. As they say, ‘the devil is in the details’ and that is exactly where where Global PACT’ers are most focused. How something gets done is just as fascinating as the actual achievement of the goal.

But, I’ve got to say though, that when things finally happen, the fruits are quite sweet.

Today I spoke to Michael Shafer, Global PACT founder, for our weekly check-in on Global PACT - Thailand and this time it was all about the fruits of hard work. From building, staffing, and nurturing children to fill two Children’s homes not to mention the water well, water tower, a biomass power project so close we can taste it, the soon-to-launch Warm Heart Online Store, and the new Shafer - Schecter home nearby! Wow, I just had to take a moment and absorb all that has been accomplished in the last year.

I guess it didn’t sink in a few weeks back when my dad, who visited Warm Heart and is on the email list for the Warm Heart Newsletter, was blown away by the progress. My quick answer to his question “how did all that get done so quickly?” was “well, Shafer, Carole, Tara, P’Tie, P’Aoy, Evelind and a LOT of other interns, staff and volunteers worked very hard for more than a year to get it done.”

It somehow took a moment, which we should all take more often, to reflect and think about what’s been accomplished. Well done Warm Heart! Enjoy the moment. And, as Shafer would say, “Now, get back to work!”

The Lost Population

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

School closing in South BronxThe world is full of social problems. The non developed countries suffer the most. However, the developed nations do have social issues of their own. The biggest problem, that these issues go unseen, and forgotten. Not everyone in the United States of America is advantaged. Not all American children are well feed or dressed. Not all American children receive a good education. There are cities where street violence have left the classes empty, where local government’s corruption left the schools close down. The children are lost in all of that. They cannot learn when they have the worlds problems at home. They cannot go to class because the bullies, drugs, and violence. Moreover, it is not like the teacher can inspire them, especially when they are unpaid. It is true that the federal government has passed the No Child Left Behind Act, but what it has done, it closing down of schools that struggle to function. That is what is happening in America’s cities.

School Closing in South Bronx

In previous posts, we focused on how people are creating social change around the world. But, there are individuals you are creating change in their home country. I got to know a young woman who comes from a privileged upbringing. She always wanted to teach, but little did she know about where she will end up. Now she teaches at high school level in a school in South Bronx. She said, “Poverty, violence, broken homes, and racism seem to control my students’ lives. The South Bronx is the poorest congregational district in the United States. Next to Manhattan, perhaps what could be considered the Mecca of the World, with its skyscrapers, nannies, celebrities, and pretty cars you have gangs, violence, graffiti, and poverty. While some assume these problems exist in poor nations, in third world places, or in war zones in fact they also exist in our own country. Our country itself has its own lost population.”

Heather FlayThrough her interaction with the students she learned so much from them, and she was successful to have them learn from her. Her name is Heather Flay. She told me “teaching in the South Bronx-to me is a conscious effort to undo all of the racism and stereotyping that occurs in the world. So much of it exists and it is disgusting. We do not live in the land of the free. There is not equality between race or gender.”

In my interview with her she explained her experience with racial and gender issues that faced her.

“I admit I like coming home to little Pendleton, New York. Its quaintness, simplicity, and structured environment are what I am use to and grew up in. Life is a little bit more comfortable being in the majority again. Is that right or wrong? I don’t know. I still enjoy the Bronx and being in the minority has taught me many lessons. I can’t say which one I like more than the other. Sometimes I feel guilty for being white. Sometimes even though some minorities say they don’t feel welcome in white communities I feel very often I am not welcome in theirs. I know somewhere in my life something was somehow made easier because of the color of my skin but there is nothing I can do about it. I didn’t choose to be white. Do I act differently in the Bronx than I do at home. Yes. Is that because of skin color? I don’t know anymore.I don’t know what I know about skin color anymore. While I have never been more aware; I don’t think I have ever been more confused.”

I asked her why she chose to teach in the South Bronx, when she could have taught in where else and what did she hope to get out of it. She replied to me by saying,

“ It all started when I was a freshmen is college. A friend of mine suggested I teach in an urban setting. I shrugged off the suggestion. I can’t teach in a city school. No, I couldn’t. But the idea lingered in my head throughout the rest of my freshmen year and into my sophomore year of college. Okay, I thought now I need to figure out if this is sometime I can do.

So junior year for a requirement for one of my classes I began teaching at a Job Corps Center twice a week. Class finished and I met my requirements but I continued to go back and work at Job Corps twice a week. I loved it there. I felt like I was making a tangible difference there. It was intimidating and overwhelming at first but soon became my home away from home. Later in the school year, I was offered a position to work in the recreation building and I accepted. I spent about a year and a half at job corps learning how to handle these “inner city” kids. I learned how to handle confrontation, fights, their problems, their backgrounds, their education, their goals, their dreams, and their aspirations.

From there I dipped my hands into an intern program for the summer teaching school. I thought “I can do this.” So I student taught in the Big Apple right before graduation. it seemed like the next step to stay there and begin working.

I hope to feel like I am living a life of purpose. There are days I hate and days I absolutely love. As much as the kids learn from me I learn from them. They have the power to bring me to my knees or make me feel like a million dollars. There is no greater feeling that having a classroom of students yelling your name for help. There is no worse feeling than be cursed out. It is a day to day survival.

Currently I am in the beginning stage of developing an English Language Learner Math curriculum. At the end of my time teaching in the Bronx I hope to walk away with my own curriculum. One thing I did not learn during my years in undergraduate studies was that math and reading go hand in hand.

Many of my students are English language learners who have immigrated to the United States. They need language support in their content classes in order to learn the material and the English language. My hope is to accomplish this. Math literacy is my goal in my classroom. I want to foster both math education and English proficiency.”

She went on to describe to me how crazy her classes are and how does she introduce new information to her students.

“I realized, in the midst of the chaos and craziness, the students were learning and working. The first couple of days with the freshmen were very rough. No one listened, no one did work, and nobody tried. My days were spent yelling and disciplining, controlling and babysitting. Now only some of the students required babysitting, many had at least tried to do the work; and some had even been able to complete the whole worksheet. Before I had felt helpless and lost and today I finally let like maybe I’m doing something right. It was a sigh of relief that was quickly swept up by chaos. The chaos was that of students yelling from every corner of the classroom. They were yelling but asking for help. I like that type of chaos. Kids were using rulers, plotting points, and solving for y.

Nervous about trying an unconventional lesson plan for my observation, I went with my gut and still decided to do it. The kids were getting bored with the material. I was getting bored. I had just finished hitting my head against the wall for 4 weeks as I taught, re-taught, and reviewed again how to solve equations. After four weeks of instruction I said forget it. We are moving on. They still weren’t getting it. I decided to move onto a new unit.

I decided the first 15 minutes of every class in the new unit would be dedicated to the continuing practice of solving equations. The rest of class would be spent on new material. We would begin our new graphing unit-covering everything from line graphs to circle graphs. The first four days of the unit dragged. The kids weren’t into the material.

And then suddenly something hit me - global warming. Where it came from I have no idea. But when I got the idea I stayed up to midnight making Powerpoints and searching for graphs. I was excited about this lesson. I decided I would teach interpreting graphs using global warming. The lesson would start off with a quick introduction of global warming, why some people say it exists, why some people say it doesn’t exist, what causes global warming, and other thought provoking questions.

The movie and the graphs

 I would then show them the trailer for Al Gore’s documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth.” I have heard mixed reviews about the documentary. But say what you will, the trailer is very dramatic. I knew it would grab the kid’s attention. Following the trailer the students would be divided into six groups. I then introduced them to six graphs they were going to have to analyze and answer questions about for class. Each graph would be printed out, one per page, and slipped into a plastic protective cover. Each group would get one graph. They would have 4 minutes to answer the questions for graph they had in their group. Once the timer went off the graphs would rotate clockwise. They would then have another 4 minutes to answer the questions corresponding to their new graph. The rotating would take place until all groups had seen all graphs. After a class discussion would take place.

The lesson went so smoothly and for the first time since the beginning of the school year it wasn’t a fight to keep the kids paying attention, to keep them in their seats, to keep in engaged in the lesson. The lesson went so well that they talked about it into their next period and convinced their Global Studies teacher to let them write a paper on it. It was great to see the kids leaning out of their seats trying to get a better view of the graphs and debating back and forth what answer was correct. Students who never speak at all were arguing about the CO2 levels produced in different countries and Americans seemed the least concerned about global warming. My most spaced out student, Edward, was excited about the idea of Manhattan going under (as sea levels rise). When I said the Bronx is going next he said, “Then I better tell my dad to stop driving those SUV’s.”

They were silent for the first time without me having to ask. It is phenomenal what one well planned, creative lesson can do to a classroom of off the wall, low level freshmen. The problem is lessons like these take time. A lot of time. Time I don’t have right now. I figure I have enough time for really creative lesson a week. After a few years of teaching I’ll have a substantial bank of creative lessons to work with for each unit. Right now, it’s a day to day game trying to figure out what works-what doesn’t. Global warming worked. How long can I utilize it for who knows. Not only does a good lesson motivate the kids, it motivates the teacher as well.”

What about salaries, how does that work in the inner city schools?

“I sat in room 106 during lunch listening to people debate whether or not accepting a $3,000 salary bonus at the end of the year was a good thing to do. The union cut a deal with the DOE and this was the result-for selected schools that increased their report card score by a particular percentage each union member will be given $3,000.

Who doesn’t want an extra $3,000. That’s what I thought…Initially.

With this deal, the school would be awarded $3,000 for each union member in our school if we raised our school report card grade score by approximately 3%. Now, re-read what I wrote carefully. The school would be awarded $3,000 for each union member. So, if a school has ten union members the school will receive a check for $30,000. It is up the school however, to determine who gets how much. A committee of two administrators and two union members would have to founded and that committee would decide who got the money and how much. Potentially, some teachers could get no money while others get too much. That is problem number one. A tug-of-war with money that will inevitably turn into a popularity contest.

It also was suggested by faculty members during this meeting that those teachers who have a good pass rates on NYS Regents exams get a bigger cut of the money than those who didn’t. Problem number two-what about the teachers who don’t have to prepare students for a NYS Regents? For example, freshmen do not have to take an English Regents at the end of the school year. So does that teacher, through no fault of her own, not deserve a piece of the pie? I don’t know.

Test and GradesProblem number 3, for me, is the idea of data driven salaries. This is a small baby-step toward data driven salaries and the DOE seems to be moving toward this method slowly but surely. Data is strictly data, numbers on a piece of paper that can be misleading and deceiving. Data can’t measure student-teacher relationships and at times it can’t measure learning. Why then would I want my salary to be based on data? I am not against data driven salaries because I question my teaching abilities. I am against data driven salaries because data can never measure some of the most important elements of a classroom. It also doesn’t take into account student backgrounds. For example, a group of 30 students take their NYS English Regents Exams in 11th grade. All of them pass but not one scores above a 70%. The scores sound terrible right? Not exactly. Are the scores terrible if the students came to high school at a 3rd grade reading level? Absolutely not. In fact the scores would then be a phenomenal success. But since the data does not take into account the fact that these students were reading at 3rd grade level their first year in high school the data is misleading. It makes the school and the teacher look like they didn’t do enough when in fact they did plenty. Would you want your salary based on such a flawed system? I would not.

I was one of the few who voted down the proposed $3,000 deal. With a more than 55% of the union members in my school supporting the deal, next year the faculty at school will be eligible for $3,000 if our report card score goes up. $3,000 isn’t worth it”

Finally I asked her what lessons did you learn so far, and why should other do the same as you did?Helping hand

Working here is my life. It’s hard to walk away at the end of the day. The kids’ stories and lives and problems follow you. I have learned a lot. Usually the lessons come from day to day experiences-each event nothing too profound but when accumulated together have changed the course of my life.

You are literally pushed to the breaking point almost on a weekly basis with the students and the system. Every time it happens you say you’re not coming back. You’re done. But you show up the next day and go in again. Give it your best. Even though most days I complain about the students-in reality life without them around doesn’t seem the same. They grow on you. They become your purpose in life. They have taught me how to love life deeper, have no regrets. They, through their actions, have shown my true strength and patience. Working in the Bronx has taught me who I am as a human being.

 

Child Labor Conference on April 25-26

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

child labor

The term “childhood” can be associated with fun and games. Children learn in schools, and discover the world around them, by playing on the swings with their friends. They eat cookies, candy, and a lot of junk foods, and doing anything as they pleased as long as their parents say it is ok. They watch Disney movies. In the case of the American girls they own Hannah Montana’s CD or a Barbie doll. For the boys, they probably spend their time on some video game or PSP, or exchanging Yugioh cards (or whatever they have these days) with their friends. They are well feed and tucked into bed around 8 pm.

kids playing

However, that is not the case for millions of children. For the other kids, childhood has no meaning. For some of these children they have to worry about work, their bosses, and how they are going to provide food for their families. There is no time for fun and games. There is no time to waist. Some of them do not even have running water, not to mention electricity. There are no cookies to speak of, and in many situations there is not even a bed to be tucked in or even a roof over their head. In short, there is no childhood.  A child of the age of 6 has to worry about things that teenagers cannot cope with in the developed world.

child laborchildlabor

Let’s not forget that the develop nations had child labor back in the late 1800’s. It took a lot of effort for the reform movements to take children out of the labor force and put them in schools to learn and be children. The developing world needs help, and provide guidance in order to reach the outcome which the children of the developed world enjoy today. That is why there is the ICCLE or the International Center on Child Labor and Education.

ICCLE

According to the ICCLE “There are more than 100 million children of primary school age deprived of basic education in the world today. Most of them (57 percent) are girls. Huge numbers of them are child laborers.” What ICCLE lobbies government leaders to fix the child labor problem, and the lack of education provided to these children.  Some of these children are sold and bought but factory owners. These children need the worlds help to be freed from bondage. They also voice their objectives to the UN and the World Bank.  They also aim to educate the citizens of the developed countries about the challenges these children face, since they are the consumers who buy the products these children make. They also lobby developed government officials to provide aid and assistance to the poverty stricken countries.

letters to the world bank

Drew University’s Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) Program and the International Center on Child Labor and Education (ICCLE) are co-hosting a conference on Teaching about Global Child Labor and Human Trafficking at Drew on April 25-26. The end purpose will be for the participants to develop teaching ideas which can be used with narratives.  The educators will have the opportunity to meet and interview former child laborers and trafficking victims, and attend a film festival and lectures by top scholars and human rights activists working in the field.

ICCLE a DREW University

So, If you  are considering to be a teacher, you might be interested of how you can incorporate these important issues in your teaching. Even if you are not planning to be a teacher, your will or may be are a brother , sister, father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, aunt , uncle, or a cousin who should address these issues to the children you know, to  your friends and family. We need to bring awareness to the situation and try to come up with a solution. There is a fee in order to register and the program is kind of long. But remember you are not going to a party, for the golden arches you are going to educate yourself of the problems these children face every day. Moreover these kids can work for more than 11 hours a day without a break every day for less than a quarter a week, you can also have the guts to sit and hear their stories.

Below, I have come across Video of some of these children, their local news coverage of the situation, and one video about the founder of Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save the Childhood).

Laptops of Hope

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

one laptop per child

Jodi Hilton for The New York Times

Education is considered a human necessity by many people. However there are millions of children who do not know how to read or write. The lack of education forces these children to become a part of the endless cycle of poverty.
Individuals like Nicholas Negroponte want not only to make sure that every child gets an adequate education, but also aims to break the digital divide at the same time. In the early 1980s Professor Negroponte began working on projects to help educate the developing world’s children with computers. Negroponte created the $100 laptop. He launched the One Laptop per child Campaign in 2002. By 2005, tens of millions of them were given free of charge to children in developing countries throughout the world, giving them access to the Internet.

In an interview with ABChe said “We see education as key to any world problem, from peace to poverty to hunger to the environment…Primary education is the most important thing to us because if you mess up primary education, you really then spend a lot of time trying to undo the mess afterwards.” According the article “The computers are wireless and run with very little power. In areas where there is no power source, it can be cranked up.” The laptop is light, small, easy to use, can connect to the internet from anywhere, withstands falls, can even work if it rains on it, and does not necessarily needs electricity to charge it.

Even though there are those who do not believe that OX laptop is the answer to the developing world’s problems. But Negroponte said to CNN that he sees the computer as an educational lifeline that could open up opportunities for children to learn independently. “It is a window of hope,” he says. “Education is at the root of eliminating poverty.”

He promised that he will bring the cost down. He is doing that buy creating offers like The “Give One Get One” scheme last November. The offer is that for$399, customers can order a laptop for themselves; bundled into the price is the cost of delivering a second XO to a child a poor country. According to the CNN article “The rugged, green-and-white XO is made by Taiwanese company Quanta Computer Inc., the world’s largest laptop manufacturer and maker of laptops for Apple, HP and Dell amongst others.” Negroponte said to CNN “Don’t buy it because it is an inexpensive laptop,” he told CNN.”Buy it to join a movement to change the world.”

Dreaming Big

Friday, March 28th, 2008

kimmie weeks

 Africa has and still torn by political struggle, racial biases, and religious differences. Once new states were established after the colonial rule, different groups used force to gain power. Thus, millions of Africans found themselves in the middle of wars that they did not wage. Land lord became the new rulers, they forces millions to fight against their will men, women, and even children. Families were separated or killed.

Liberia

Kimmie Weeks found himself in the midst of the Liberian civil war at the age of nine. The civil war left 250,000 dead, force thousands more to flee the country. For those who stayed behind, they had to face a ruined economy, shortage of electricity, food, and clean running water. Kimmie Weeks even recalls eating roots and wild leaves to survive. We were almost buried alive “after epidemics had wrecked his emaciated body.” His experience left him wanting to help those who suffered.

weeks vow

He started working to ensure that all children have access to food, medicine and shelter since he was fourteen. He even lobbied the disarmament of over 20,000 child soldiers.However, his efforts were not welcomed by political officials in Liberia. The Liberian government attempted to assassinate him. Thus, he was forced to flee the country. He was granted political asylum in the Untied States. In the United States he continued his mission to make Africa a better place. He founded the Youth Action International. The organization works to improve the conditions which children live in and help to battle poverty, war, and HIV/AIDS.

weeks-4.jpg

 Kimmie Weeks is recognized internationally for his efforts. He was interviewed and featured on many programs. The BBC even made a documentary about Weeks. He is truly an inspiration to all of those whose lives have been ruined by war and poverty. He is an inspiration for hope, and to never give up and to pursue any dream.