Tag Archives: culture

Empathy: Key to Immersion?

“As many of our cases indicate, SIFE often have intensive social and emotional needs as well as academic ones. These needs stem from their lack of experience in a formal school setting, their academic difficulties in New York schools, and for some, the traumatic experiences and unstable living conditions they had in their native countries and in the United States. Many of our clients required counseling or other supports, but few received them. When they did not receive these supports, they became disengaged with school and had behavioral issues in and outside of the classroom. A number left school as a result.” (from Advocates for Children reading)

This so, so important. Oftentimes it is not a focus, but if anything the social and emotional needs of ELLs are even more important than academic needs at the the beginning! This is an issue that gets at my sense of empathy. Especially since working with a little girl who speaks only Arabic in a class of English speakers and a teacher who does not seem to like her.

Continue reading Empathy: Key to Immersion?

Building Self Esteem + Open Communication = SUCCESS

“Youth in this study did not independently create critical opportunities to challenge traditional teaching practices and to combat stereotypes about urban youth in science. They relied on situations in which they had choice, space to express voice, one-on-one dialogue with a teacher, and after-school support. When presented with such resources, they actively took hold of these opportunities to deepen their knowledge and engage in physics in ways that furthered nontraditional pedagogical practices and contradicted stereotypes of minority students. These findings align with existing research, which suggests that youth develop deeper levels of understanding in the context of student-centered instruction.”

(Trigwell, Prosser, & Waterhourse, 1999) (Cited in Basu reading)

This bit stood out to me not in the specific context of this study, but as a commentary on adolescents and people on the whole. Continue reading Building Self Esteem + Open Communication = SUCCESS