Author: Tracy Rosen

  • Change and Community: a response to recent comments

    I am finally back online at home and am able to respond to some recent comments to my post:

    Black-focused public school in Toronto by 2009…What do you think?

    The response became so long that I’ve decided it merits a post of its own. If you want to know what I am talking about when I address specific people, go take a look at the comments to the original post, linked above.

    Here we go…
    @ Jose – help me to understand…why Yikes?

    @ Marc – better special ed programs, eh? That doesn’t sit easy with me at all.

    I’d agree with you if you said better programs in general. One of the issues I have with much of our education system is the segregation that goes on within it under the guise of special ed classes. Instead of recognizing differences in learning amongst different populations, those who learn differently are placed into special programs – a prime example of teaching subject matter and not students.

    I’d like to think that if we look at changing how we teach in general, to recognize difference and see how we can harness it to achieve common goals, then things would make much more sense than creating more special ed classes.
    (see this conversation re: in-school segregation)

    @ Elona – interesting comment. Would they be windows? Let’s look at the present situation in Montreal. The dropout rate for black students in Montreal is even higher than in Toronto. Recent numbers show it at 49%, I believe Toronto’s is very close, at 40%. What do we see through that window?

    I would like to think that by creating schools that represent communities and answer to their needs we may at the same time create a society that does the same.

    @ Chris – I agree in theory, though I’m not so certain that reality reflects the theory. For instance, you write about the fact of plurality in Canada. Our population is certainly composed of many different kinds of people who have many different kinds of beliefs, but do our social systems (like schools ) address needs in a pluralistic way? No.

    The more I write about this topic, the more I realize that I am more in favour of it than not. No question – our school system (both American and Canadian) needs radical change. In order for change, real change, to take place it needs to reflect the real needs and concerns of the people who will be directly affected by it.

    Creating schools that respond to community needs – in this case the need to motivate learning in a particular community that has long been marginalized and disregarded – is a step toward real change.

    My dream – to see all schools a reflection of the communities they are in, with a goal of strengthening  community through education.

  • Moving moving moving

    My bags are packed and I’m ready to go….
    kind of.

    I’m moving today, luckily we have this one day of calm between yesterday’s rainy,icy, windy (I couldn’t get out of my car at one point, the winds were keeping the doors shut!) day and tomorrow’s forecast of 25cms of snow!

    So I may be slightly absent for the next little while.

    Also, I’m in the process of migrating things to a new host…and since I generally start new things without quite knowing what I am up to…well, I may be slightly absent for the next little while :)

    oh…and I’m not taking a jet plane or anything…just moving about 15 minutes away by car…

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  • Black-focused public school in Toronto by 2009…What do you think?

    Toronto trustees vote in favour of black-focused schools

    cbc.ca -Tuesday, January 29, 2008

    “A proposal to create Canada’s first black-focused public school was approved by Toronto District School Board trustees Tuesday night.

    They have recommended the creation of an alternative school that features a curriculum and teaching environment oriented around black history and culture.

    Some parents have said they want to try something new because the current system isn’t working. As many as 40 per cent of black students don’t graduate from Toronto high schools.

    Angela Wilson is a mother of two who has been at the forefront of a push for Afrocentric or black-focused schools for years.

    “Make our education system better for everybody,” she said.

    “It’s not a one size fits all education system. It’s actually working its way to be one size fits few — and the few that are successful do not look like me.”

    Trustees were supposed to have discussed a report delivered last week that makes four major recommendations:

    • Open an Africentric alternative school in 2009.
    • Start a three-year pilot program in three other high schools.
    • Work with York University to improve school achievement.
    • Develop a plan to help failing students.

    Supporters said those options will keep black students engaged and in school, but opponents said it will lead to greater isolation.

    “I just feel being with a mixed group of people is better, you know, you get to learn different cultures, different aspects of different people, the way they live,” said Grade 10 student Terrin Smith-Williams.”

    hmmmm….not sure what I think about this yet.

    My gut feeling is that it is a cop out. It is a way of saying we are addressing issues of student learning without looking at the whole system.

    Or…perhaps it is a step toward a new system. Creating student-centred schools that focus on the different communities they are in.

    Like I said…still thinking…

    What about you? What do you think about this proposal…ready to go next year!

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  • Request for techy feedback

    Hi all

    I am moving in, oh dear, 6 5 days counting today.

    I have barely begun to pack.

    My procrastination technique of choice is doing research, generally about something that does not have to do with my major project at hand.

    So of course I decided to learn how to deal with CSS and have been researching that. Hence the changes to this space.

    I began with a 3 column template (WordPress’ Sandbox) and played around with the link colours. It looked just lovely on my linux version of firefox (Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.8.1.11) Gecko/20071127 Firefox/2.0.0.11) but when I got to work and looked at it through IE – ick. The left sidebar was superimposed on the main column.

    So when I got home I switched to a 2-column skin for the Sandbox theme But since that also didn’t work in IE, according to my friend, I switched back to the 3-column number and have since added a few little fancy touches.

    Does it work on your browser? If you could let me know that’d be great! I’m looking for feedback from different operating systems, different browsers, different resolutions….

    So far epiphany and firefox (linux) are A-OK!

    Update – Jan. 28: AND – ooh, very happy, it is now working on IE 7 :)

    I think it has more to do with the resolution than the browser…is that possible?

    Thanks!
    Tracy
    ps – and if you have any suggestions on how to make a 3 column theme work through different OSs and browsers I’d really appreciate it! Please write them as if you were talking to a child :)

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  • Amen of the day on this US Martin Luther King jr Day

    Jonathan Becker boldly reflects on LeaderTalk:

    However, what troubles me more is the mounting evidence that even where we have managed to create diverse/integrated schools, there is extensive  within-school segregation by race. For example, students of colour are disproportionately:

    • overrepresented in special education;
    • underrepresented in gifted and talented programs;
    • underrepresented in the highest level academic tracks (including AP courses);
    • overrepresented in the population of students subject to serious discipline (suspension, expulsion, etc.);
    • under-served by highly qualified and/or highly experienced teachers.

    Collectively, at the very least, I believe that these empirical facts amount to a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

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