Please post your reflections after each guest visit to our class.
Thoughts to consider:
What did you take away from the presentation?
Questions that were generated from the speaker?
How would YOU use this information?
Your own reflections/reactions/thoughts?
Evaluation of the guest speaker: valuable-why |
Not so-why not?
November 29, 2010
What a great culminating session we had with Felix Chacon. As a result, you were able to delve into some issues and concerns you are experiencing in your own classrooms. Welcome to the perspective of social equity and critical pedagogy and culturally relevant teaching as an educator. This is our world to negotiate with our students. It all stems on building trusting relationships with our students which is a slippery yet rewarding process requiring us to accept the challenge of continual diligence to the distribution of power in the culture of school and the awareness of the multiplicity of perspectives shared by our students, historically and culturally. We need to become more than well intentioned educators to critically aware educators who are free to think for ourselves and question the status quo, engage in difficult discussions of race, class, gender, stereotypes and language. If we continue to perpetuate the 'unintentional consequences' of our school culture without reading the subtextual implications for ALL students, then we willingly and knowingly choose to recycle existing inequities in silence rather than through courageous action.
“One of the great challenges facing multicultural education today is the widening gap between its conceptualization as a redistribution of power and privilege in all aspects of schools and schooling and the practice of well-meaning, left-leaning educators who implement it in ways that recycle, rather than overturn, systemic power imbalances.” Christine Sleeter
What Does Discrimination Mean to Us?: Telling our stories
Farmington Civic Center
organized by the Farmington Indian Intertribal organization
Baa Nitseekes-Think About it
October 4, 2010
Kim Mizell
Former Blanco Elementary Principal
Doctoral candidate at NMSU