Monthly Archives: October 2016

The Daunting World of Parent-Teacher Conferences

“Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot (2003) has written eloquently about how intimidated many parents feel when they come into their children’s classrooms for conferences with teachers. She explained that the sights, smells, and sounds of school, the small chairs, the authority of the teacher-all these elements transport many parents to their own childhood schooling experiences, some of which may have been unpleasant or fightening.” -Fabienne Doucet

I chuckled out loud when I read this quote from Doucet’s “(Re)Constructing Home and School: Immigrant Parents, Agency, and the (Un)Desirability of Bridging Multiple Worlds,” because it explains perfectly what I experienced/felt when I met with 6th grade parents for the first time at Parent-Teacher Conferences last week. I noticed when speaking to some parents about their child’s performance in Spanish class as being good, the parents would later questioned my opinion and felt that wasn’t true at all. I didn’t necessarily understood where the lack of disbelief was coming from until some parents began to talk about their own experiences of taking Spanish in middle/high school and how it was a really hard subject for them to learn. That’s when I finally understood where the disbeliefs were coming from.

One parent in particular stood out for me when he asked his son to leave the classroom so he could have a chat with my CT and I alone and was begging us to give ways to force his son to speak Spanish outside of school. I told the parent that his son participates a lot and is always the first one to arrive in class and even runs up to the whiteboard to be the first one to answer the trivia question of the day. His parents, especially, his father didn’t buy the fact that his son could truly be interested in learning Spanish because he doesn’t show any interests at home. His father consistently kept comparing himself to his son when he was his age and even went as far as telling us how he never took Spanish seriously until now and he doesn’t want his son to miss out on an amazing opportunity. My CT had to calmly say to him that “you can’t force your son to do something, if he doesn’t want to. We, his teachers, need to be the ones to light a fire inside of him and push him pass his limits, not you because you could potentially push him away and make him rebel against your wishes.”

It makes for an awkward and uncomfortable situation when you, the teacher, come in contact with parents for the first time and you’re not sure what to expect as well as not being sure what the family dynamic is like at home. I felt like some of the parents were disconnected and not truly listening to what the teachers had to say about their child whether is be good or bad in Spanish and simply were too focus on comparing their academic themselves when they were younger to their kids. It’s a difficult task bridging the two worlds togther, but it is something that has to be done to avoid further miscommunication and mistrust between parents and teachers.

Where do I learn to be me?

“Indeed, the developing adolescent is frequently immersed in existential questions: Who am I? Why am I here? What is my purpose? How do I make moral decisions? Whom should I love and how should I love them? What is sacred and what is taboo? In what or whom should I place my trust?” (Toshalis 190)

     This article discusses a very important and at times controversial topic: what is the role of (public) schools in the education of faith? Legally, in public school teachers and administrators are not to include religion in the classroom; they should, however, open the space for students to discover for themselves who they are. Continue reading Where do I learn to be me?

Let’s chat–Wechat

When you see Chinese people typing on or talking to their cellphones, they are probably using Wechat which is a cross-platform instant messaging service created by Tencent in China and has become world famous with over a billion created accounts as of 2016. The Wechat app can be downloaded for free and is available for many systems including IOS, Android, Blackberry, etc.

Like many other social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram, Wechat provides a way to share and express in public. Users can put pictures, type words or do both to share anything with friends, and nobody else can see your posts unless you “allow strangers to see at most ten posts”. Wechat also supports different ways of instant messaging such as texting and sending voice messages which is one of my favorite features of it since it brings a lot of convenience to us.  People can send what they want to say by just pressing a button to talk and releasing it when they finish. Besides, making videos, scanning QR code, adding contacts via other social media, finding friends nearby can also be done though Wechat. In mainland China, even shopping is available by using electronic cards.
Continue reading Let’s chat–Wechat

Texting: not as bad as you think it is

As a student teacher in high school, there is not a single day in class in which I don’t have to ask at least one or two students to stop texting and put their phones away. Although I’d prefer that my students leave their cellphones in their lockers during my class, I understand that the way adolescents communicate has changed. What used to be done orally, today’s teens like to do it by texting. Continue reading Texting: not as bad as you think it is