The Literacy Network @ ISTE 2018
1) Rob at PLN table, Networking Fair, 2) Evelyn presenting annual PLN award at PLN Leaders Breakfast 3) Mark with Keynote Presenter, Michael Cohen, 4) Brandi, Michele, and Rob at Networking Fair
The blog of ISTE's LITERACY_PROFESSIONAL_LEARNING_NETWORK_____________________________ Current Leadership Committee: Joe Hutcheson, Mark Gura, Michele Haiken, Evelyn Wassel, Saul Duarte_ This blog features Show Notes and information for the LITERACY SPECIAL INTEREST Podcast, Literacy Special Interest JOURNAL, and Guest Blog Posts of interest to Literacy Educators Everywhere_____
Friday, June 29, 2018
Tuesday, June 12, 2018
Using the Writing of Child Leaders to Inspire Today's Youth
“As a 12 year old, I can have my ideas change the world by
having a loud and proud voice.”
Sajida, 6th grade
Sajida, 6th grade
Using the Writing of Child Leaders to
Inspire Today's Youth
by Dr. Rose Reissman
As
part of my work as the director of the Writing Center, a program that improves
literacy skills through learning projects, products, and student portfolios as
well as student publishing and real audience feedback, I worked with a class of
Sixth graders taught by Amanda Xavier
at DITMAS Intermediate School in Brooklyn, NY. Ms. Xavier and I engaged the
students in a successful and moving activity inspired by the book “Dear
World- A Syrian Girl’s Story of War and Plea for peace”, written
by eight year old Syrian girl, Bana Alabed and her mother who
escaped Aleppo in 2016.
by Dr. Rose Reissman
(See
previous post here: http://literacyspecialinterest.blogspot.com/2018/04/dear-world-how-twitter-brought-syrian.html
)
Ms. Xavier’s class learned about the efforts of young Bana Alabed to alert the world to the
bombing of civilian families in Aleppo in 2016 by its government. They were
inspired by the tweets she used to acco mplish this. Sitting in their classroom
in Brooklyn, these 11 and 12 year olds, were moved to understand that Bana’s
tweets in particular and the fact that she, unlike other child writers alerting
the world to injustice and inhumanity, was able to immediately see by her
twitter feed that her message was being heard.
Leveraging additional resources I found online, they also heard Bana’s story by viewing the CNN interview she did in 2017 https://youtu.be/MRWhZzl.5K , https://youtu.be/Pqwrb65ALtg , and https://youtu.be/ttDRvOxwBMo .
Leveraging additional resources I found online, they also heard Bana’s story by viewing the CNN interview she did in 2017 https://youtu.be/MRWhZzl.5K , https://youtu.be/Pqwrb65ALtg , and https://youtu.be/ttDRvOxwBMo .
Inspired by the l visual and vocal presence of this child
who alerted the world to the plight of
Aleppo’s innocent citizens, including
families with children, who were bombed in their apartment buildings, my
students were ready to react and take action.
I took some of the tweets reproduced in the book, typed
them onto a sheet left spaces and asked kids to react as older peers to each
tweet. I suggested that the students respond with mock tweets that they would
really have liked to send to Bana, had they been her Twitter followers at the
time, or with a poem that expresses their thoughts and feelings about the
messages carried by her tweets.
Our extensions of this activity are still in
progress and we intend to publish our aggregated text responses as a ‘Tweet
Poem’ as well as record them in our own voices, this week.
Below are some of the items created by the Ditmas students. Some answered her tweets with their own mock tweet responses:
Emmanuela, for instance, reacted to Bana’s tweet about
children’s childhoods being stolen with
“Anger.“
“Anger.“
And In reaction to tBana’s tweet about missing
school
“Start your own!/W/the knowledge you’ve got.”
“Start your own!/W/the knowledge you’ve got.”
In reaction to Bana’s tweet “Please save us now” Emmanuela responded
“We’ll try
w/everything we can.”
Sadnila reacted to Bana’s tweet that begs “Please do not steal from children their
childhood”, with
“Childhood cannot be
taken only ruined.”
As Bana tweeted – “Speaking for the children of Aleppo, I demand peace
for us- #Stand with Aleppo.”
And Sadnila responded
And Sadnila responded
“Speaking will not
help-we must SCREAM!”
Some students did not tweet responses to Bana’s words,
but rather produced poems which expressed their reactions as peers and as citizens of the world. The
following are a few examples:
Anvar T.
We are just children.
We do not want to die.
We want to live.
Please do not ruin children's lives.
They want peace.
We are just children.
We are innocent.
We are just saving out lives.
Why kill us the children?
We want to go to school.
Let us go.
We are just children.
Samiha M. (class 680)
Why is this
happening to us???
I am ONLY a child.
So are my brothers,
Why is this happening to us?
Why do I have to live with fear everyday.
I miss my friends and other family.
I am so tired.
I wish this were a dream- a bad nightmare.
This has stolen so much of my childhood.
Nafzia B (class 660)
We are the children of Aleppo
Imagine going to bed
Thinking you might awake with a battered head.
Never experiencing “good times.”
Think about all your crimes.
We are not armed.
Yet we are being harmed.
We are the children of Aleppo.
Hello?
Save us from this war.
We just want the regular “more.”
Let us go back to school.
Save us from these murdering adult fools.
We have empathy for others.
Why does there need to be a war?
We want peace.
Leave us alone to be children.
We are the children of Aleppo.
Brian M. (class 680)
Children do not want
to die
They deserve to
live.
They did not do
anything.
They want peace.
Children should not
live through war.
Children should go
to school.
Children should be
saved.
Children do not
deserve to die.
Obviously, Bana’s
tweets , digital presence and her published memoir represent the voice
of only one very appealing, poised and charismatic child caught in violence and
danger not of her making. What impact can her words and presence, and that
of other young leaders like Malala, Zlateh and Anne Frank have on 21st
century students seated in classrooms like the one I worked with Ms Xaviers
class in? Why should teachers, focused on curricula goals and data driven
scores, and project accountability, bring these child voices via social network, digital media
and print to their students ? Perhaps sums
up the impact best: “As a 12 year old, I can have my ideas change the world by
having a loud and proud voice.” Is this
not the ultimate ideal for every teacher to inculcate? Is not using one's voice - in writing and in
speech, at the core of our country’s constitutional values?
I have included the ‘template” I used to work on this project with these students, below. Please make good use of it.
Dr. Rose Reissman is the founder of the Writing Institute, now replicated in 200 schools including the Manchester Charter Middle School in Pittsburgh. She is a featured author in New York State Union Teachers Educators Voice 2016 and was filmed discussing ESL student leadership literary strategies developed at Ditmas IS 62, a Brooklyn public intermediate school. roshchaya@gmail.com
I have included the ‘template” I used to work on this project with these students, below. Please make good use of it.
Dr. Rose Reissman is the founder of the Writing Institute, now replicated in 200 schools including the Manchester Charter Middle School in Pittsburgh. She is a featured author in New York State Union Teachers Educators Voice 2016 and was filmed discussing ESL student leadership literary strategies developed at Ditmas IS 62, a Brooklyn public intermediate school. roshchaya@gmail.com
.......................................................................................................................
This is my letter to
the world
Write your own short tweet for twitter to post on Bana
Alabed Account . These are her
comments. What other writers you studied
with Mr. Nolan or read might have said the same thing? One writer’s
first name started with a Z.
Another writer’s initials are A. F.
In fact Bana uses a quote from another writer whose work you
may have also read.
Or just react in a single short line of emotion or ideas to
Bana’s comments
I just want to live without
fear.
____________________________________
Please do not steal from children their childhood.
_________________________________________
We are not armed. Why
do you kill us?
__________________________________________
Speaking for the children of Aleppo, I demand peace for
us. #StandwithAleppo
_____________________________________________
I am sick now. The war started again, Please pray for me, dear world.
_____________________________________________________
I miss going to school so much.
____________________________________
Please save us now.
________________________
How can you as an 11 or 12 year old have your ideas for changing the world for
the better heard by peers and adults?
Did you do so this year with Ms. Xavier?
How? Hint videos are digital messages to the world. Author a DEAR WORLD message telling your
global adult and child readers how to change for the good.
Dear World #Write4Rights-Rites2Change
Dear World
Look at each other and at animals with empathy.
Reach out to talk, to help and to care.
Let hope shine on and yield
solutions.
From tragedy go forward to find new futures.
Treasure connections .
Focus on closing gaps to bind together,
Treasure the sun, the planet and its life.
Value dialogue over martial strife.
Believe in your power to help just one other person or
situation.
Imagine all coming together with that help just one goal destination.
Use the force of life and strength within you and yours to
combat evil and natural disasters.
Move forward each day knowing each good deed layers a bright
day that can stretch into ongoing progress toward peace, participation and
positive power.
Marshall your words and deeds together we can address all
needs.
Look, listen and do for others
Make a joyous future shine through.
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