I'm in my first year at a new school teaching in a computer lab that is
becoming boring quickly. I never thought of myself as a LA teacher but over
the past 5 years bouncing around I think this is what I want to do. But I
want to work closely with the SS teacher so we can do some historical novels
to bring the stories to life. 

The LA teacher in the school does nothing but complain so there may be an
opening next year. The SS teacher is young and motivated so I think it could
be a good partnership. The only thing is reading all those essays....UGH! I
think that's why I hated it initially, I was overwhelmed with reading and
grading....any suggestions\?

Alice 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2009 6:27 PM
To: A list for improving literacy with focus on middle grades.
Subject: Re: [LIT] 21st Century Skills



Bill, 

Interesting . However, the skill or reading, critical reading, writing about
reading, making shared meaning from a text -- none of that depends on a
particular text ( or core content). And all those skills  transfer to any
text. I would agree with Hirsch that you need some text to work with,
preferably a well-written text, but you do not need to read Stevenson or
Twain or Shakespeare to learn to read and comprehend well.   



If Hirsch and Willingham a re right that the workplace skills such as team
problem solving and working collaboratively don't transfer from school to
the workplace, we should send our kids to work instead of to school -- like
they did a few centuries ago.  



Or maybe we should redesign schools so they are more like the workplaces our
kids will someday encounter. So learning is project based and collaborative.
I don't think Hirsch would like that, as the content would become secondary
to the skills and the structure. If a  student team in US History cho se to
study the immigrant experience through the changing demands in this region
for migrant farm workers, or another studied the economics of agriculture in
our community, would they have time to learn the specifics of US history
that Hirsch believes we all should learn? And maybe that's OK. I needed to
know very little (if any) US history in my 20 years in newspapers. An my
friends who went into music and medicine and construction needed to know
even less. But wouldn't those kids be learning to work as a team and
dig deeply into a subject (a problem) and produce some kind of clear,
meaningful report and perhaps even recommendations for change? 



Schools don't think they can do that now, and teachers don't feel they have
time to dig deeply into anything, because we're all chasing the almighty
"core content." We have to "cover" so much stuff that there isn't time to
really explore anything deeply.   



In my 6th grade language arts class, I am happiest when kids are discussing
a text that catches them in some way, and they leave me out of the
discussion. I sit back, maybe ask a followup or a challenge question to get
them to dig deeper into somebody's idea, then help them summarize
their new ideas at the end. It doesn't matter to me if they miss some
specific element of that particular novel. The fact is they're taking a text
and finding meaning in it that is useful or relevant to their own lives. 
What were the classics good for, if not that? 



Dave Hoh 

South Jersey 

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