Basic Skills in Complex Contexts

FIN Commons

A Teacher Wonders: Do I Really See My Students?

Posted by Jan Connal on March 28, 2009 in Fear, Identity, Student Interviews, Student Voice with 1 Comment


 

 

This conversation represents the beginnings of a collaboration between teacher and student to explore learner identity and how students project themselves in and out of class.

Generation 1.5 Survey (Santa Ana College)

Posted by Sandra Wood on March 12, 2009 in Equity, Identity, Literacy, Surveys with 2 Comments


 

 

 

Language Use Survey                                                                      (CATESOL Journal 14.1 2002)

 

Name: ________________________________

 

Note:  If you speak only English, and you don’t speak any other languages, please answer questions 1, and 4—7 only.

 

I.   My Background

                1.  I was born in the United States.       Yes _______     No _______

 

                2.  I was not born in the United States.  I was born in _______________________

                                                                                                                        (name of country)

                3.  I was not born in the U.S., but I came here when I was:

                                Under 5 years old

                                6—12 years old

                                13—18 years old

                                Over 18 years old

 

                4.  English was the first language I learned to speak.     Yes ______   No ______

                                If not English, I first learned to speak: _____________________ (language)

 

                5.  English was the first language I learned to write.      Yes ______   No ______

                                If not English, I first learned to write: _____________________ (language)

 

                6.  English was the first language I learned to read.       Yes ______   No ______

                                If not English, I first learned to read: _____________________ (language)

               

7.        I am a native speaker of English. ( I grew up speaking only English at home. )

Yes __________    No __________

 

8.   I am a non-native speaker of English.

           (I grew up speaking a different language at home.)       Yes _______    No _______

 

9.   I speak English as a second language.                Yes _______    No _______

 

10.  I am an ESL student.                                        Yes _______    No _______

 

11.  I am bilingual.                                                   Yes _______    No _______

 

12.  I am neither an ESL student nor bilingual.

   I am _____________________. (This best describes my language background.)

 

13.  What language do you speak most of the time with your friends?

 

 

14.  When you talk with others, do you switch from one language to another? 

                                                Yes _________      No __________

 

                If you switch from one language to another, what situation(s) are you in and who

                  are you when you do this?  ___________________________________________

                _________________________________________________________________

 

                Do you ever speak Spanglish (or a combination of two other languages?)  For

                  instance,  do you ever mix in Spanish words (or Vietnamese, Chinese, Arabic…

                   words) while speaking English?         

Yes ________       No ___________

     Read the rest of this entry »

LMC/Puente/Math Lesson Study: Math is fun!

Posted by Maria Tuttle on March 11, 2009 in Identity, Integrative Learning, Math, Student Confidence with 1 Comment


Plan: Co-teach a lesson that combines math and English concepts.

Myra Snell and I cooked up a project that would preview our math/English collaboration for next semester. We wanted to test our theories that math can be relevant /FUN and that math can inform themes of racial and class identity covered in my Puente cohort over two semesters or 1 year. I know! Seems very challenging and me not being a math-y person at all, felt nervous. Truth is I avoid teaching essays that involve any kind of percentages because I find that I am challenged to 1) understand the information myself (which means I am possibly teaching it incorrectly a.k.a. winging it) or 2) help students synthesize textual ideas with data (cold, hard data). This was an opportunity to select a more challenging essay written from an economist’s POV and sprinkled with all sorts of data. I won’t spend much time revisiting details, so I will just add, SEE LMC/PUENTE LESSON STUDY. Long story short, we tried it.

Day 1: Post class observations and follow up questions.

Realization number 1: Math is fun (I still remember what cross multiply means) and students found Myra’s “visualizations” (which I love) of Mantsios’s claims to have had an important impact of their understanding of class in terms of income and wealth. I got the pleasure of observing Myra lay out a clear way for students to create “pictures” to understand concepts like total national wealth versus total U.S. household wealth. In Mantsios’s essay, “Class in America–2003,” he writes that class is not well understood, never discussed, and surrounded by “myths.” He poses several interlocking questions two of which I supply here: Are class differences getting bigger or smaller, and how do these differences impact the way we live? Does everyone in America have an equal opportunity to succeed? Side note: At the beginning of this unit, Money and Success, students self identified as middle-class. They did not view themselves as under privileged and did not see their families as struggling to make ends meet. It would be interesting to insert conjecture regarding cognitive development, but oh well. Myra used columns, pennies, and even a football field to represent the complexities of the author’s argument. The numbers proved to students that wealth is not equally distributed in the United States and possibly that opportunity to advance along the class ladder in the U.S. is limited to a select few (an important moment of growth when discussing concepts like the American Dream). Day 1 of our lesson study presented our team with many more possibilities for math and English to intersect.

Question? These questions may seem to go outside of what we planned in our study, but at least two students talked about how the ideas of the current unit, specifically themes in The Grapes of Wrath, kept popping up in other classes. They seemed excited and empowered to be able to inform and even teach others about what they are learning in English. Does it make more sense to create packaged first-year experience that could include a cluster of classes working with similar themes? What would this mean for student efficacy?

Door Number One

Posted by Sean McFarland on March 8, 2009 in Equity, Fear, Identity, Learning Communities, Learning to Learn, Making Visible, Metacognition, Multimedia, Student Confidence, Student Voice, Video Evidence with No Comments


Door Number One offers introductory profiles of a dozen of the many Programs and Services offered at Chabot College. Students, Staff, and Faculty share their experiences and offer their perspectives about why these Programs and Services are so vital, and what students can expect if they just “Pick One.” And along the way, we see what it takes to successfully repel a Zombie Student Attack on Chabot College!

 

 

The creation of  Door Number One was generously supported by:

* SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

*Chabot Student Services Funding for Retention Initiatives

*Chabot Enrollment Management Committee (CEMC)

*CLPCCD Office of Public Information and Marketing

Daraja: A Syllabus For Life

Posted by Sean McFarland on March 6, 2009 in Equity, Fear, Identity, Learning Communities, Learning to Learn, Literacy, Making Visible, Metacognition, Multimedia, Reading, Student Confidence, Student Interviews, Student Voice, Video Evidence, Writing with 2 Comments


 

The Daraja project, founded in 1988 at Chabot College is widely recognized as one of the best opportunities for success for underrepresented students, especially African-American students, in the California community-college system. In this film, current and former Daraja students speak candidly about their educational preparation before entering Daraja and then share their personal needs and professional goals. Daraja staff and faculty also offer their perspectives about the “family” that is created over the course of a school year. Daraja: A Syllabus For Life is a rich, engaging portrayal of a program that changes lives. For Educators and students who have never experienced this kind of program, the film offers an intimate lens into what it would be like to have an Umoja community on their campus.

The creation of Daraja: A Syllabus For Life was generously supported by: SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

(Note: the film starts at around 22 seconds on the timeline)

 

About FIN

The Faculty Inquiry Network’s (FIN) purpose is to support professional development which includes: conducting faculty inquiry; revisiting basic skills assumptions; interpreting and integrating data; accessing student voices; developing students as co-inquirers; making visible; using technology for teaching and learning; creating and supporting new initiatives, curriculum and program development; constructing educational tools using digital media; and hosting dialogue around student and faculty learning.

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