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Showing posts from November, 2024

They, She, He

     The YouTube channel "woke kindergarten" did a read through and lesson on a book called, They, She, He Easy as ABC by Maya and Matthew. This book teaches students at an early age about pronouns and breaking the norms of gender. The book even uses a rhythmic, song like structure to help further the understandings of the students. I think a book like this is incredible. It is so important to introduce to kids that these topics are completely ethical and not to be afraid of. This will allow the kids to grow up and form their own thoughts and opinions on the matter without it being a foreign concept. Looking at all this, their is absolutely no reason this book shouldn't be taught in school or even just a short read through. The book is banned in schools.     Our country takes so much pride in our school system and how "progressive" it is. If our school system was actually that good then why are books banned just for simply having LGBTQ type topics in it. I can s...

Ableism

      Ableism is a massive problem not in just everyday life but in the education system. I have watched myself and many others be effected by this. According to Oxford Languages, ableism is "discrimination in favor of able-bodied people". You can see this in schools when the "funny" kids pick on kids with disabilities or even when teachers deliberately will target the behaviors of a kid with a known disability. Actions like this make it nearly impossible for someone with a prominent disability to make it through the school system. There are systems set up to try helping and accommodating to their needs but it is simply just not enough. Furthermore, it is always all or nothing. It is either you can't learn and need to be in this class that is separated from the rest, or you are completely fine. There needs to be a system set up where those who still need help but not to the extreme can get their help.     I grew up going through school with a copious amount of A...

Aria

      In "Aria", Rodriguez talks about his transition from Speaking Spanish to English. Something that is touched on in his essay is the question of, is this important to teach in a public education setting. I think it is important to teach in a school system but not the way I've been seeing it done myself. While observing in my placement classroom I had multiple students come up to me and speak to me in Spanish and I did my best to talk back to them but I wasn't one hundred percent sure what they were really saying or even how to respond. Later on in the day I asked my teacher what I should do in those settings and she told me "Don't speak to them in Spanish that isn't allowed in my classroom". I think that is completely unfair.     Many classrooms in America are trying to teach children that knowing English is right and any other  language is wrong. That is completely unjust and unfair and borderline discriminatory. I do not understand why these Sp...