Monday, February 26, 2007

Inquiry Post #4

It seems cyberbullying is like the new generation of bullying... kind of interesting, I wonder if anyone is looking into more research on that.

I have an article on it in the "Teaching Tolerance" magazine that I have.

Some resources:


Stop Text Bully

The Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use

Wired Safety

Cyber Bullying

Inquiry Post #3

hmmm... I'm not sure where to begin with this one. I was going through my stack of resident mentor paperwork that I have collected over the past three years of participating in this job and I came across a few of my booklets on tolerance.

First, before I continue, I want to reiiterate the fact that I severely dislike the word "tolerance."

Think of it this way -- When you live a roommate who you just "tolerate." Or how would you feel if you overheard a friend of your say "Oh yea, I just tolerate her/him."

Tolerance is not what I want in my classroom, although it's the first step to the goal, my goal in my classroom is to create an atmosphere of... ACCEPTANCE.

Now, moving on...
One of the booklets I have is called "Responding to hate at school." It's published by "Teaching Tolerance," www.tolerance.org.

The booklet has guidelines that a teacher, counselor or adminstrator can follow to help combat hatred within the school...
The following guidelines are ones that an individual, such as a teacher, can work for:
1.1 - Create an unwelcome environment for hate speech and symbols.
1.2 - Put the lid on hate graffiti and other vandalism
1.3 - Take a stand against hate literature, music, web sites and e-mail.
1.4 - Be alert to signs of student alienation.
1.5 - Speak up when bigotry comes from colleagues.
1.6 - Respond to community and national hate incidents.

"I find most defendants are not bigoted in their hearts but are acting out, using hate words but often not knowing why they are hateful. You want to create an environment in which the student can grow from this," - Rabbi Steven Moss, Creator and director of stopbias, a rehabilitation program for hate-crime offenders in Suffolk County, N.Y.

I researched more about this STOPBIAS web site and apparently it was kicked off by the attorney general's office (hmm ... maybe Michigan should look into it)... anyways, I found a decent essay from a high school student who wrote about the STOPBIAS program... CLICK HERE TO READ IT.


Returning back to the booklet, I wanted to make note of the fact that there are several small blurbs on the sides of each page that describe incidences of harrassment within a school or classroom... it's surprising to me, because I guess I just didn't notice a lot of harrassment based on race or sexual identity in my high school, but I'm sure it was there.

Anyways, I will bring this booklet in if anyone's interested in looking at it.

I also have a booklet called "10 ways to fight hate on campus," "ten ways to fight hate" - which is a community response guide (less school related), "101 Tools for tolerance," and "101 ways to combad prejudice."

I also have a collection of posters that are good to put up in the classroom that have great quotes/sayings that deal with prejudice, hatred and tolerance.

Friday, February 9, 2007

Inquiry Post #2

So, I saw this facebook advertisement 2 weeks ago about doing a research study ON research. SO I applied to do it and was immediately asked to do it today from 12-1:30pm. Basically, the research group (which apparently is part of PROQUEST), logged onto my computer via this software called USERVue and watched me as I researched for an hour and a half. Then afterwards they asked me some questions. So I decided to do the research for my inquiry project (which they thought was an awesome research idea -- I showed them the rubric for everything as well).
Anyways, the following is the research I found and the bottom of this are the questions that I came across for myself as I did this research...

Focusing on harrassment in the classroom, I've found a great resource from Teaching
Tolerance:
http://www.tolerance.org/rthas/section1_1_1.jsp

"The social strata are very, very real during adolescence. It is so difficult to change your peers' perceptions of you once you have a "reputation." -- page 2 of "Be alert to signs of student alienation."

Interesting article on racial harrassment within a white classroom - interesting dynamic to think about ... is there racism in a classroom full of all white students? Click Here for JSTOR Article

Sexual Identity in the Classroom
GLSEN - Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network has some resources/research on this topic.
2005 Research Study on Harassment of students age 13-18.
  • Specific research information on the state of Michigan
    • Statistics from GLSEN.org:
      • More than a third (35%) of all Michigan students thought that bullying, name calling and harassment was a somewhat or serious problem in their schools.
      • The most common types of bullying, name calling and harassment were based on appearance, actual or perceived sexual orientation, and gender expression. A majority (71%) of the students were harassed due to appearance, two-thirds (67%) were harassed because they were or were thought to be lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and 60% were harassed due to their gender expression.
      • A vast majority (90%) of Michigan students reported hearing homophobic remarks such as, “that is so gay” to indicate bad or worthless; and derogatory terms like “faggot” were heard by 82% of students.
      • When teachers or other staff heard derogatory remarks or biased language, intervention was not as common as expected. There was no correction or consequences when racist, homophobic, or sexist remarks were made as often as 30%, 27%, and 25% of the time respectively.
      • A majority (67%) of students who experienced harassment or assault at school did not report it to a teacher, principal or other school staff person; More than a quarter (26%) of students said they didn’t report incidents because they believed that school staff would not care or believe them, or that it would only make the situation worse.

***Side note: Is anyone in my class doing anything on sexual harassment in the classroom?"
***What do schools do about online/internet harassment amongst student peers?
***How often is it that teachers are trained in dealing with harassment in general -- and then more specifically with racial harassment and sexual identity?
***How does one break down their own racial stereotypes while teaching so that it doesn't (negatively) affect his/her dynamic and diverse classroom?
***Institutionalized Racism