Monday 2 April 2012

Photo Two




Review Five: "Oh Captin, My Captin" & "Rip it Out" - The Dead Poets Society


Okay first of all,
WATCH THE CLIP
above if you have neverwatched The Dead Poets Society.




The Dead Poets Society is one of my all time favorite movies. It is the story of a group of boys struggling with self identification in a school which dictates their lives. The professors tell them what to think and has strict rules on how they should act. John Keating (Robin Williams) goes against the norm and teaches the boys in a way which facinates them. The boys are then enthralled with literature, wanting/ needing to know more. Keatings teaching style was impractical yet it was so memorable and unique that the boys in the society learned far more than expected. they learned about literature, life and who they are.

The difference between an amazing teacher and one who clearly doesnt care is highly noticable. In the scene the boys are being taught by a stern older man who wants them to learn the basics. Keating had the boys jumping around throughout the textbook, not sticking with one subject for too long. In this scene you see the respect the students have for Keating and the lack of respect they have for the stern old man who is dictating that what they should know.


Learning should be a partnership, like that of the Dead Poets Society. They all taught one another, there was no dictatorship in Keatings classroom. This form of interactive unique way of learning proved to be effective for the boys and honestly it just seems fun.


In this clip you can see that the boys are uninterested in the traditional way of learning. Keating then introduces them to a new way of learning. Learning does not have to be dull and boring, it can be fun and vivacious. Keating in the movie The Dead Poets Society proved that.


Video Games


This just goes along with my previous review.
ENJOY GUYS!!

Review Four: Video Games

This is for all the gentlemen out there who play video games. Ladies, I apologise in advance.


Okay, so I'm sitting at my kitchen table right now watching my roommates playing the old NHL on the old Nintendo. And I had never thought of it before but video games have some educational purposes.

That's right I said it. Educational. My roommates would so proud right now.


The games including shooters enhance eye hand coordination, mental stimulation. "Cognitive ethnography is an apt methodology for the study of learning with games, in virtual worlds, and the study of activity systems, whether they are mediated digitally or not" (vgalt, 2012).

The web page that I found to go along with my recent understanding of video games outlines many reasons as to why video games are beneficial.


For the most part the article goes on to justify video games as "a literate practise in an authentic context" (vgalt, 2012). It pretty much says that gaming is more than just a game. It is a form of literature which enhances and teaches valuable skills needed for everyday life.

I am not sure how i feel about this but I will admit, my roommates have better eye hand coordination than I do. i attempted to play Call of Duty a couple of times and I am unable to look around and walk at the same time. I'm not convinced that gaming enhance the abilities mentioned above in the picture from he site but I do believe it can be beneficial.


SO, I may take the articles advice and before I decide where I stand - I will create my own ethnography of gaming... That means I get to take time from studying to play games, right?

Review Three: Encouraging Learning Styles

Hey Guys, Found a website where learning styles are described and ways to encourage that particular style in children.

Here it is:

For visual learners it says that a child will enjoy visual/ picture books at any age. This I disagree with. When I reached a certain age There was no way I would sit down and read a picture book. It seemed so juvenile, and it still does. There are better ways for a visual learner to interpret their lessons. The other ways to teach a child/ encourage them to learn visually are perfectly acceptable in my eyes. Boardgames, visualisation/ analogies, and daydreaming are accessible by all children and have all been proven to help a child retain information taught to them.

Auditory learners can learn through books on tape, listening to their own words on tape, and having someone type up a story the learner dictates to them. These all seem reasonable, especially the books on tape. It all makes sense that a child learns through an auditory lens. Lectures, videos, plays and other verbally represented lessons all enhance a lesson.

The kinaesthetic learner learns through physical touch and movement. I personally do not learn in this way so I find it a little difficult to relate to a student who needs to physically do the lessons or have a hands on experience. The website however lays out some clever ways which a parent can enhance lessons.

Lastly the site outlines what the logical learner. They learn through mathematical problems, puzzles, computers, and patterns. Another learning style that I do not associate with, but it makes sense, mathematically inclined people are more likely to learn in a different way. Science experiments are the best way to help along the logical learner.

I understand that a child will need to learn according to their particular learning style but I can not get out of my head my previously posted video on how there are no learning styles. After reading this site I disagree with the video clip even more now.

Reflection Five: Taking Control of Learning

Critical pedagogy allows a student to comprehend the concepts at hand further and with a deeper understanding. A deeper understanding of scholastic topics can come from many forms. Everyone learns and comprehends topics in certain ways and when it comes down to it analogies and visual enhancements of education further a student understands in ways beyond the norm. 

In class we performed a play called “Snakes and Ladders” (Goldstein, 69) in Goldstein’s work, “Snakes and Ladders: A Performed Ethnography” depicting ways students and teachers intend to educate their peers by way of a week-long event. The “performed ethnography”, our presentation of the play is a way of learning itself. Reading alone the play is one way of learning but when you have others read it to you is another. When you combine the acting that we did with the reading of the play you are able to hear and see the play. This alone generates a deeper understanding of the reading. Those who are auditory learners find it easier to have different people play the roles of the characters and the visual learners will see the roles being performed. The “performed ethnography” then becomes a reflection of the students performing the roles and the students interpretation of what is happening. There are many ways the play enhanced the understanding of what is happening within the play itself. An active participation in the lesson forces the students to look deeper into the meaning of context at hand. The message in the play is another form of critical pedagogy. When reading the play by yourself you may not fully grasp all the concepts. When hearing and seeing the play a student may see aspects disregarded in their own interpretation. Needless to say we all benefit from “performed ethnography” in different ways.

            I personally believe that new innovative ways of incorporating a lesson into everyday life is the best way for a teacher or professor to teach students. A new way of learning every now and then will only keep the students interested and continually wanting to learn. When they themselves can perform and partake in the presentation of the lesson they then can relate the topic to their own life. This reflection onto everyday life allows for understanding of the topic in ways that are unique and deeper than the intended lesson. Critical pedagogy is a critical outlook on how students are taught and asks us to learn in different ways. And the “performed ethnography” is only one way of introducing new ways into the student’s life.

            Students take what they need to from education, just enough to get by. It is not until a teacher or professor is willing to attempt to teach a deeper understanding do the students apply real life situations to school work. Learning does not have to be boring; it can be anything as long as the student takes the lesson and strives for more. This need for more information is places the responsibility of learning upon the students to not only comprehend the lesson but to take control of their learning and apply it. Critical pedagogy can be found in any unconventional way of learning. It includes and surpasses the “performed ethnography”.

Sunday 1 April 2012

Which learning style are you?

Here is a free test you can take to determine what kind of learner you are:


Review Two: Learning Styles


This video clip interested me when browsing youtube the other day.


The man in the video is saying that good teaching is only good teaching. Audio, visual, and kinesthetic learners do not exist. I agree and disagree with his findings for various reasons.

 A) I have previously had amazing teachers yet I was still unable to grasp a lesson until I see what the teacher wants from me. For example a math equation. I am unable to understand math until I see someone else do an equation. This makes problem solving difficult for me. However this video is saying that even though I associate as a visual learner I should still be able to reproduce specific information because learning is memory based. I can see facts being easily learnt because they are memory based but learning certain curriculum's need to be enhanced by visual aspects. Audio is not always the best way to store memories to be reproduced at a later date.

B) Stored memories are apparently stored in order to learn. What happens if in a classroom a teacher is lecturing and within the class there is a deaf student. Then are they not missing the lecture, and missing the lesson? They are then denied the ability to store memories because there are no visual attributes to go along with the lecture. A deaf student would have to be a visual or kinesthetic learner.

C) Denying the notion that there are styles to learning, only strengthens the idea of the banking method. That students are there to have knowledge deposited not learned. The idea of memory storing seems to be the exact same thing as the banking method. It may work for most students but it does not work for all students due to various reasons (one of which would be a learning disability).

Learning is hard enough without the teacher making it dry and boring. Adding visual elements will stimulate those students who normally would tune out an auditory lesson. So we may all store our memories of learning. But our interests and abilities dictate how we learn. Some students may not have the patience to sit and listen to a teacher drone on for an hour while others do. some enjoy group work to enhance and clarify a lesson while other rather see what they are supposed to be learning. So we may use all of forms of learning to store our knowledge but in a classroom setting I believe it is our interests and patience which tell us what kind of learners we are for certain subjects. For me when it comes to math I am a very visual learner. You can tell me about an equation, you can give me analogies but I will not understand until i see someone else apply a formula. So I disagree, I believe we do have learning styles, they may change depending on our mood and abilities but we do have them. The styles may all be psychological but they enhance a boring topic and make it easier to understand for those students who have issues comprehending certain subjects.

Reflection Four: Discipline or Suppression


Schooling has become a tool which is able to control the population. Deacon’s 'moral orthopedics' dimension insinuates that a school system has qualities such as a prison. Disciplinary action is taken, and authority is proven. Those who teach are controlling the “inmates” (Deacon, 2006 p. 182), as he calls them. He believes that the learning process cannot be detangled from the judicial process. Punishment may have moved from the physical to the emotional but there is punishment for ill behavior none the less.

Think about it, Deacon is correct. A school dictates how its pupils should spend their time and manage recreation accordingly according to sexuality and gender. Children were split up based on age and capabilities, which excludes those who are unable to function as its peers. Segregation would have been created by this separation and therefore discipline is easily achieved by completely separating the child or making an example of them in front of their peers. Discipline has evolved and so have the schooling process. The methods of discipline in a school are those seen all throughout the population. You are able to see it in “workhouses, poorhouses, prisons, and guilds” (Deacon, 2006, p. 182). The way one teaches remains the same but the repercussions have vastly changed in regards to education.

Take the Panopticon idea of structure as a disciplinary resource. In high schools that are being built recently in Halifax there are generally mezzanine area where authorities are able to look down and observe their pupils. This method as we have learned is used in prisons. They are used to control behavior. No one is willing to act out when they believe their authority is watching. Sir John A. Macdonald High School for example has a crescent shaped mezzanine which allows you to see the entire entrance and stair case leading into the school. The students would be watched while they were inside and out from this area of observation. Students just as the inmates did would act accordingly. This form of observation was not present in the older building which the high school used to occupy. Authority has taken it as their job to observe the down time of the students in order to chastise them for wrong doings in order to control their behavior. Just as Deacon said the school system has become a prison for the students. They are told what classes to go to, what times they are able to take a break, how they should behave, what homework they have to do, when their homework is due, and a new school rule has been passed that all students must partake in a physical education program during one of the semesters they are in school.

The students have little control over what they do in the school and disciplinary actions for schooling does not end within the institution. Parents are now dictating what activities are deemed appropriate for their children and how much time they must dedicate to their schooling. “The apportionment of time, the management of sexuality, the manipulation of bodies, the spread of lateral controls” (Deacon, 2006, p. 181), are the ways the education system controls the students. It may not be the barbaric tactics previously used like beating a child but the effects are detrimental. It would emotionally shun particular children from the educational system without even realizing. Discipline is a necessary for the means of education, deacon sees that need, but that discipline should not control the students overall personality. Deacons word choice of inmates creates a disconnect between joy and education. Children are still children, and why should the disciplinary actions of authority snub their imagination process and freedom. Complete control is necessary for disciplinary actions which are not related to schooling but when a child feels obligated to act in a certain way all the system is doing is making it easy for rebellion.

            The term moral orthopedics means a common standard in justice, involving right and wrong. Why then with this encouraging of goodness does the educational system implement a discipline system such as the one where the fundamental human rights of a child are taken away. Their lives are controlled and they are unable to stop it. Schooling does not teach you right from wrong because it does not give you the chance to act in the wrong, and if you do you are chastised to a point where you will never act out in such a way again. Education is suppressing students to fit a mold of the perfect student.

Reflection Three: The Oppression of Education

In many ways, education is seen as being unique based on the learning types of the pupils. According to Paulo Freire that is not what is occurring in the educational system as we know it. The curriculum is all the same and location and ethnicity of the students tends to be forgotten. I agree with Freire that education now serves to solidify forms of oppression in society.
In my experience in the education system there are aspects of our culture which are left out for various reasons but which seem to be relevant to me. For instance where I grew up in we were not educated in the fact that just down the road was a major community of black African Canadians and that they thrived within Hammonds Plains. You would think that it would have been a staple topic in the curriculum especially during Black History Month. We were unaware of this, and it was not until this year when I took a class on Black Canadian literature was I even aware of this fact. Now the community was within walking distance of the elementary, junior High and High School. Why, were we not educated on this topic?
There were selected topics based on the provincial curriculum which we were supposed to cover and I am guessing that none of my teachers or professors decided to stray away from the laid out curriculum to teach us about our surroundings. I am fascinated at how little we were taught regarding the general area with the schools resided. In being taught only certain aspects we as students are being oppressed in our own neighbourhood.
There are other ways of learning but shouldn’t our educational program take into consideration where the school is located before creating a curriculum? There are other reasons to take community into consideration when making a lesson plan. Depending on where the school is the pupils may have different ways of learning. For example in a University setting the ethnic background is vast. And not all cultures learn in the same manner. Therefore how does a professor create a lesson plan with which all students will benefit from? Disregarding the banking method of learning which means the professor just stands there giving a lecture assuming the students are absorbing the information they could use PowerPoint’s, videos, games and create group work which stimulates interpersonal connection. No one learns the same based on where they come from, and had we all been provided with the information of our surrounding community the discussions would have been even more creative. Students are being oppressed in the ways of learning, and the lack of learning is oppressing our thirst for knowledge.
The banking method only gives the students the fundamental, but when community is brought in, and alternative ways of providing the information are given then the students are more receptive. Had I been educated fully on the background of my own community I would not have grown up believing it lacked spark, or historical relevance. I believed it was only Hammonds Plains. But really there is an entire background of historical information which I was never privy to. My understanding of my community was oppressed through lack of knowledge which could and should have been provided to me.