I believe my
feelings about my unit coincide with what Samantha wrote in her blog below: I
love my topic and ideas so far, but I need to hone in on lessons and skills
that will make my unit feasible.
Right now my
essential questions deal with marginalization and how/why it is expressed in a
text. Other interconnecting ideas across
my unit are people as property, negotiating boundaries, education and
suffering. I think each of my texts
gives insight to these topics while being very different from one another. I see how they could each connect and
contribute to one another, but how do I share this with the student? I need to now begin considering in what form
students should explore these texts and how they will demonstrate their
‘take-aways.’
Similar to what
Michael wrote in his blog below, I think I need to work on limiting my critique
of each text. Part of the difficulty of
transitioning from an English student to a teacher is that I do not necessarily
get to do the fun stuff of analyzing a text(besides maybe in our teacher’s log
and/or rationale), but need to think about how students are connecting to it
instead. So, what activities will serve
the function of my students connecting to these texts? And how will I best plan
for carrying them out, then assessing them?
Those are the questions that I am now considering and will hopefully
resolve over the next week of planning.
On a side note,
I read this article today http://www.wired.com/business/2013/10/free-thinkers/
and wouldn’t mind hearing other’s thoughts about it if you feel strongly about
the topic. It reminded me of The Ignorant Schoolmaster by Rancière,
which we read last year in a class and I found intriguing.
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