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Sunday, August 14, 2011

Office hours today

Hello all,

   I will hold office hours today at the Starbucks on Oxford and Center. I will be there from 2:00-3:30. Please email me with your preferred time so that I can set appointments. I will see students in 20 minute blocks.


Best,

Jeremiah

415-786-8787


Saturday, August 13, 2011

Cancelled: office hours for today

Hello all,

   I apologize, but I can't make it to physical office hours today. My wife suprised me with a mini-cruise for our 5th anniversary (which was yesterday). Thus, I will be out cruising the Bay until 4pm; and, after that we're heading to dinner. So, to make up for this time, I  will hold office hours tomorrow: most likely, I will hold office hours, on campus, from 2:00-6:00pm. If this window changes, I will be sure to update the blog.


Thursday, August 11, 2011

I need to know who is taking the unit of field study ASAP

Hello all,
   If you plan on taking the one unit field study credit, please email me to let me know and include the amount of hours that you've completed as well. Thanks. By the way, great job on the presentations today!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Readings to focus on for the case study assignment

Hello all,
   Here is a list of readings that will, in my opinion, help you construct your case study. Some articles like Hull & Rose's "Wooden Shack Place", for example, and Mahiri & Sablo's work as well as the Lee piece provide exemplars of ethnographic case-study papers. Other articles, like Vygotsky's and Scribner's (respective) works offer theoretical lenses, which can be used as conceptual and/or theoretical frames for this assignment.

So, again, in my opinion, you should review the following articles for the case study assignment:

Hull & Rose, "Wooden Shack..."
Mahiri & Sablo, "Writing for their lives..."
Lee, "Beyond the model..."
Scribner, "Literacy in three metaphors..."
Vygotsky, "The prehistory..."

Remember, there are a few examples of case studies interspersed throughout the reader; and, I included the ethnography that I covered in class (my own) in the course-wide dropbox.

Monday, August 8, 2011

MWF group (final presentation), please email me your groups ASAP.

URGENT: Here are the final presentation groups that I have thus far (TTH group only):

If you do not see your name, you need to one of two things (or in some cases both): firstly, if you have not already done so, join a group; and, secondly, once you have joined a group (or if you already have a group but have yet to email me with memebers' names), please do so right away.

The people for whom I have yet to receive an email are: Preunky, Nicolas, Jisu, Donna, Andre, Tiffany, Helen, and Glen.

*The final presentations will take place, for the TTH group, this Thursday, August 11th. Each group will have 12 minutes to present. The assignment sheet is in the dropbox, should you need further clarification on the assignment.*


Group 1
Zack Aslanian-Williams
Tarchie Herron
Kelly Tche
Tuyet Truong

Group 2 
Astrid Ackerman
Patti Shnell
Yeri Kim
Chinyere Okereke
Group 3
Phillip
Yurina
Anna
Jashley
Nayiri



Phillip

 Yurina

Anna

 Jashley

 Nayiri

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Class will start at 9:45 today

Hello TTH group,
   Due to unforeseen circumstances, I cannot make it to campus until 9:40. So, we will begin class at 9:45 this morning. I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Remaining readings for this course and reading assignments for MWF group:

Gates, Jr.,: Ruby & Sarah
Douglass: Anna & Edwen
Mendoza-Denton: Lauchlin & Daniel
Steele: Sequoia & Arno
Lee: Michelle & Leshee
Tatum: Mary & Eileen


WEEK 5
Race & power
Gates, Jr., H.L. (1986). 'Race' as the trope of the world. In "Race," writing, and difference (pp. 590-597). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Gates challenges the careless use of "race" as the ultimate trope for irreducible difference between cultures; gives an account of Phyllis Wheatley's "oral examination" to prove that she, as an African girl, was capable of having written a set of poems; rehearses and refutes the European assumption, existing since the 1600's, that Africans were incapable of creating formal literature.
Douglass, F. (1987). Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass. In H.L. Gates, Jr. (Ed.), The Classic Slave Narratives (pp. 273-281). New York: Penguin.
This section of Douglass's autobiography gives an account of his learning to read and write, despite the fact that, from the perspective of Douglass's slave owners, "it was unlawful, as well as unsafe, to teach a slave to read."
Mendoza-Denton, R. (2010). Are we born racist? New insights from neuroscience and positive psychology. Framed! Understanding achievement gaps.
In this chapter Mendoza-Denton chronicles the erroneous assumptions, which later became aphorisms, regarding what was perceived as an inherent cognitive deficiency in African Americans; and, how these erroneous assumptions have informed rhetoric around the achievement gap.
Steele, C. & Aronson, J. (2004). Stereotype threat and intellectual performance of African Americans.
In this essay the authors discuss the ill effects of stereotype cues and stereotype threat both psychologically, and to a lesser degree, psychosomatically.
Lee, S.J. (1994).  Beyond the model-minority stereotype: Voices of high- and low-achieving Asian-American students.  Anthropology & Education Quarterly 25: 413-429.   
This article examines the complex relationship between Asian American student identities and perceptions regarding future opportunities and attitudes towards schooling.  
Tatum, B. (1997). Why are all the Black kids sitting together in the cafeteria? And other conversations about race (93-113).New York:  Basic Books.
Tatum writes in this chapter about how white people can develop identities both as white and as anti-racist.

WEEK 6
Final in-class presentations
Multiliteracies
Boal, A. (1979). Poetics of the oppressed (selections). In Theater of the oppressed (120-126; 142-156). New York: Theatre Communications Group.
Boal uses theatre to enact Freirean pedagogical theories that intertwine literacy and democracy, and that result in personal and collective revolution.

Movie in class: Shakespeare’s Children.
This documentary highlights a drama project carried out with kids in a Berkeley school.
Hull, G.A., Kenney, N.L., Marple, S. and Forsman-Schneider, A. (2006). Many versions of masculine : an exploration of boys' identity formation through digital storytelling in an afterschool program, The Robert Bowne Foundation: Occasional paper series, vol. 6, Spring, pp. 1-42.
This monograph examines how young male students of color use digital storytelling to realize complex masculinities for themselves, masculinities that defy limited (and limiting) perspectives on male childhood and adolescence.
Parker, J.K. (2010). Preface and Chapter one: Understanding youth and digital media (xi-xiv; 1-14). In J.K. Parker (Ed.), Teaching tech-savvy kids: Bringing digital media into the classroom, grades 5-12. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.
This chapter calls educators to examine and capture the power of digital media, with specific examples from classroom teacher-researchers throughout the book.
Gee, J. P. (2005). Learning by design: Good video games as learning machines. E- Learning, 2(1), 5-16.
Gee connects video game design with effective teaching and learning principles.
Finnegan, Ruth.  (2002). A mix of arts. In Communicating:  The multiple modes of human interconnection (pp. 223-243). London: Routledge.
This chapter, which comes toward the end of Finnegan’s book, celebrates the creative and diverse means that human beings have invented to make meaning and interconnect.  How can we use Finnegan’s insights to rethink literacy?
Lee, C. (2009). Culture, Literacy and Learning: Taking Bloom in the Midst of the Whirlwind. Teachers College Press: New York. [pp. TBD]
This chapter articulates the potential for out-school knowledge in learning advanced literacy skills.
Hull, G.A. & Schultz, K. (2002). Connecting schools with out-of-school worlds: Insights from recent research on literacy in non-school settings. In G. Hull & K. Schultz (Eds.), School’s out: Bridging out-of-school literacies with classroom practice (32-57).

CASE STUDIES DUE MONDAY AUGUST 15

Class schedules
MWF
Class 1: Wed 7/06
Class 2: Fri 7/08
Class 3: Mon 7/11
Class 4: Wed 7/13
Class 5: Fri 7/15
Class 6: Mon 7/18
Class 7: Wed 7/20
Class 8: Fri 7/22
Class 9: Mon 7/25
Class 10: Wed 7/27
Class 11: Fri 7/29
Class 12: Mon 8/01
Class 13: Wed 8/03
Class 14: Fri 8/05
Class 15: Mon 8/08
Class 16: Wed 8/10
Class 17: Fri 8/12
TTh
Class 1: Tue 7/05
Class 2: Th 7/07
Class 3: Tue 7/12
Class 4: Th 7/14
Class 5: Tue 7/19
Class 6: Th 7/21
Class 7: Tue 7/26
Class 8: Th 7/28
Class 9: Tue 8/02
Class 10: Th 8/04
Class 11: Tue 8/09
Class 12: Th 8/11

Running late...

Hello all,
   I will be in class by 9:25. I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.