I included this political cartoon because this chapter of Black Ants and Buddhist was about voting. In our country, I feel like a lot of people take the right to vote for granted. In this chapter, the writer mentions how minorities did not always have this right and that they felt it was very important to get people to register and go vote. I think that is why this political cartoon is so powerful. Minorities had to go through an entire movement and violence to be able to vote. I really enjoyed reading the article and about kids who were educated on what it took to get the right to vote and I was very happy to read about how they were able to make a difference.
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
Walking and Talking Geography
While reading this article, the first thing that stood out to me that was mentioned was "First-through-third graders are not ready developmentally to learn how to identify species
of animals living in a rain forest or to color code Earth’s five oceans and seven continents. These activities—dealing with distant things
and abstract concepts—are more appropriate for later elementary grades. David Sobel, author of Mapmaking with Children: Sense of
Place Education for the Elementary Years, maintains that activities dealing with abstractions do not honor young learners’ relationships
with the local environment. Rather than helping children establish connections with their immediate surroundings, such activities can
alienate young students from their local environment by sending the message: Important things are far away and disconnected from
you; nearby things, the local community and environment, are unimportant (Gary Fertig and Rick Silverman)." This part stood out to me because I could really connect to it. I think when teachers think of geography they think that teaching children about the world outside of their local world is more important when in fact it is not. By teaching geography to students using their communities and neighborhoods they are able to appreciate their surroundings and also see that geography is everywhere, even where they live. Even when I learned geography, I was always taught about geography in other places but I never got to explore my community in a geological perspective. I think by teaching about the local communities students will be able to make that connection easier.
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