[NIFL-FAMILY:1742] Re: sports

From: kriss (nierules@lex.infi.net)
Date: Wed Oct 28 1998 - 07:31:28 EST


Return-Path: <nifl-family@literacy.nifl.gov>
Received: from literacy (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by literacy.nifl.gov (8.9.0.Beta5/8.9.0.Beta5/980425bjb) with SMTP id HAA04715; Wed, 28 Oct 1998 07:31:28 -0500 (EST)
Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1998 07:31:28 -0500 (EST)
Message-Id: <36370FFF.11E0@lex.infi.net>
Errors-To: azaheer@famlit.org
Reply-To: nifl-family@literacy.nifl.gov
Originator: nifl-family@literacy.nifl.gov
Sender: nifl-family@literacy.nifl.gov
Precedence: bulk
From: kriss <nierules@lex.infi.net>
To: Multiple recipients of list <nifl-family@literacy.nifl.gov>
Subject: [NIFL-FAMILY:1742] Re: sports
X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0c -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Macintosh; I; PPC)

>
>The best thing we can teach the teachers is to let the kids explore the 
paper>and discover what they are interested in. 
>Mike Peterson
>On a tall soapbox in Plattsburgh NY
>

I say we carve these words on a bronze plaque and put them in the
NIE Hall of Intelligence! Did I say bronze? Make it silver! Silver?
Nay! It shall be of GOLD!

Speaking as a teacher of 28+ years, and a part-time NIE coordinator
of the past 7 years, I believe truer words have never been spoken 
on the subject. (Even the part about the big bucks, because I know
how much I make at each job and there is no contest...)

I teach in a state juvenile facility and I use a vast range of 
teaching materials. My kids are 12 - 18 and are on a wide span of
ability levels. At any one time I may have kids who are working on
a third grade level at the same time other students are studying
for their GED. 

I have often challenged other teachers to give a newspaper to each
student in their classroom with no instructions whatsoever, and see
what happens. I can guarantee that the only sound they'll hear for 
at least 30 minutes is the rustling of newsprint, and it is a
*beautiful* sound.

The newspaper can act as the "great equalizer" in the classroom.
Several years ago I had a student who was 15 years old and a virtual
non-reader. He was 100 miles away from the only ones he truly 
loved - his mom and his coon hounds (I don't know for sure which 
he loved better; he pulled a gun on his mom to avoid going to school
and he accidentally shot one of his hounds on a weekend visit...)
He could barely spell his name, but when the newspapers came out
he was always the first one to ask for the sports. He could figure
out from the pictures and the numbers which of his teams were doing
well and he would always tell me about it. As long as he had the 
newspaper in front of him, he was on the same playing field as 
everybody else in the classroom.

My students go to two places in the paper first: The court news to
see which of their buddies has been arrested, and the classifieds
to see about a good job or a cheap car. I have to be careful
about using my own program so there is no conflict of interest, 
but I am certainly not above using another newspaper to help out in
the classroom. The kids love it, they benefit from it, and hmmmmm...
Has anyone heard me say anything about curriculum materials so far?

Kids need to read! One of my kids who is currently in jail took 
_Call of the Wild_ to detention with him last night and said he had
to virtually fight his way into his cell through all the other kids
who wanted to read it. But it would be fine with me if he'd had a 
copy of the Archie Comix. Kids need to read! And they need to read
what they like to read. And I have yet to run across a student in all
my years of teaching who didn't like to read the newspaper. 

Like Mike said, let them make their own discoveries in the paper and
then go from there. That doesn't rule out the usefulness of curriculum
guides (I provide 45 of them in my Newspaper In Education program, all
the way from pre-K through adult ed.). But a good teacher can and will
use the paper to serve the best interests of his or her students.

Thanks for putting my thoughts into a much more succinct package, 
Mike, and forgive me for crowding you on the soap box. ;-)
(And for those of you who are wondering about the kid with the
coon hounds, he went on to a local high school, lived in a great 
foster home, played football with one of my sons, and was quite
successful in the special education program at the school. Year 
before last, I watched him graduate.)

-david

David Pettit, NIE Coordinator
Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer
Owensboro, Kentucky



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Jan 11 2000 - 13:20:59 EST