[EnglishLanguage 642] Re: ESL ResourcesCraig Alinder info at gaming-pc.netFri Sep 15 10:16:12 EDT 2006
ESL ResourcesSharon, You are exactly right. If we truly take education seriously we will not seek to impose our value systems on the children we teach, but instead we will teach them to develop their own based on discriminate knowledge of the facts. Thanks for your comment. Craig ---------------------------------------------------------- Craig Alinder Escuela del Sol Montessori 1114 Seventh St. NW Albuquerque, NM 87110 http://www.shoebrands.net/zappos/ ----- Original Message ----- From: Sharon McKay To: englishlanguage at nifl.gov Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2006 11:44 AM Subject: [EnglishLanguage 635] ESL Resources To head back towards ESL instructional materials, it's obvious that people have very strong views about the immigration topic. Perhaps our job as teachers is to help students separate fact from bias in their daily lives. The first time someone assured me there was no 'unbiased' news because someone decides WHAT and WHAT NOT to print or broadcast, I was shocked. Civics instruction about freedom of speech doesn't usually address this. Most of our students take everything at face value while they are absorbing the language and culture for the first time. Our students need tools to find value laden terminology, faulty arguments, and an eye for what is NOT said. I've discovered you can begin to model these analytical processes early on for high-beginning students with samples of a variety of mass media. I'd be curious to know if anyone has found some classroom resources that help further this kind of awareness. Sharon McKay Washington, DC -----Original Message----- From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Mary Ann Florez Sent: Wednesday, September 13, 2006 2:09 PM To: Janet_Isserlis at brown.edu; englishlanguage at nifl.gov Subject: [EnglishLanguage 630] Re: Immigration class materials I guess one man's caviar is another man's fish eggs. While I'm not teaching regularly right now, I have taught in the past and I have tapped the Change Agent for ideas and information. And like anything that I'm considering as a source of instructional ideas and materials (as well as personal enrichment and provoking of thought), I looked through the Change Agent with an eye to how it might enhance or expand the issues and language that my students and I were working with in class. Often it did and sometimes it didn't. But what I always appreciated (and still do) is its engagement of problem-solving, critical thinking, and analysis skills--from me and from my students. MaryAnn Florez Arlington, VA >>> Janet_Isserlis at brown.edu 09/13/06 11:20 AM >>> Kearney Are there specific instances of unabashedly leftist writing or articles that you've read in the Change Agent that have led you to this analysis? As well, regardless of one's political leanings, many working to help adults learn English might find the term illegal alien inhelpful. If by 'illegal' you mean without documentation, and if by "alien" you mean born in a country other than the one in which one lives, a more useful term might be undocumented immigrant. While I have no interest in splitting hairs, I do believe that language conveys important messages and would be interested to know more about your - and others' - views of the material in the Change Agent. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Adult English Language Learners mailing list EnglishLanguage at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/englishlanguage -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/englishlanguage/attachments/20060915/27c14856/attachment.html
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