Ending Poverty by Developing Justice- Oriented Citizens By: Jenny Hellstrom, Rachel Kohl, Kristin Letrich, Karen Martin, and Kim Stange.

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Presentation transcript:

Ending Poverty by Developing Justice- Oriented Citizens By: Jenny Hellstrom, Rachel Kohl, Kristin Letrich, Karen Martin, and Kim Stange

Overview of the Social Injustice: Poverty “Empty pockets never held anyone back. Only empty heads and empty hearts can do that.” ~Norman Vincent Peale Facts: At least 80% of humankind lives on less than $10 a day. The U.S. has the largest gap between rich and poor of any industrialized nation. About 790 million people in the developing world are chronically undernourished 1.6 billion people live without electricity 2.6 billion people lack basic sanitation Of the 2.2 billion children in the world, 1 billion are in poverty According to UNICEF, 25,000 children die EVERYDAY due to poverty. Approximately a billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book or sign their names. Based on enrolment data, about 72 million children of primary school age in the developing world were not in school in 2005

Journal Articles “Modern Myths about Poverty and Education” “The Role of Social Foundations In Preparing Teachers for Culturally Relevant Practice” “Online Resources for Developing an Awareness of Poverty” “TEAMS: (Teacher Education for the Advancement of a Multicultural Society)” “Beyond Charity” “The Causes of Poverty- Key Economic Issue”

“Modern Myths about Poverty and Education” Myths are unsubstantiated narratives with strong moral overtones. National myths promoted in textbooks Myth 1: “The Poor are Lazy” Myth 2: “U.S. Public Schools are Failures” Myth 3: “Racial Segregation in Schools is a Thing of the Past” Myth 4: “Student Test Scores Measure School Quality”

“The Role of Social Foundations In Preparing Teachers for Culturally Relevant Practice” 2003 National Assessment of Educational Progress Social inequities play a significant role in shaping teacher beliefs, attitudes, and expectations of students of color and those in poverty. Teachers explain reasons for student’s behavior with references to ethnicity, culture, and/or socioeconomic status of the families. Teacher preparation needs to include courses in social foundations. Teachers need to be culturally relevant and have a clear sense of their own cultural identities. Teachers need to hold high expectations, scaffold from home to school, and involve parents and community members in the classroom.

“Online Resources for Developing an Awareness of Poverty” In elementary school: poverty, hunger, homelessness is most often discussed in terms of a canned food drive Avoid language such as “poor little children” or “people who don’t work and don’t have food” Service Learning Project: Make placemats (or trays) for a local soup kitchen on a weekly basis.

“TEAMS: (Teacher Education for the Advancement of a Multicultural Society)” Urban schools have a “revolving door” of unqualified teachers Seeking diversity of teacher recruitment Prepares teachers to increase the academic success of all students –Pedagogical Seminars –Service-Learning –Teacher Support

“Beyond Charity” Children need practical experiences in schools and communities. Social justice education begins with children’s personal experiences then moves toward critical perspective and action Students should get involved in efforts to change the root cause of a problems ex. speak with service providers and public officials about the condition of homelessness

“The Causes of Poverty- Key Economic Issue” Students are interested in poverty due to the stigma attached Lesson on poverty statistics proves opportunity to think critically about data Debate on poverty- does not resolve issue but will help become informed, critical decision makers Use date to evaluate the positive claims in each argument Cornerstone of socially responsible citizenship

Directions: Affecting Systemic Change in our School 1)Get into your lesson planning groups 2)Assign group roles: Recorder: writes the letter Discussion Director: leader, generates discussion questions Time Keeper: makes sure work is progressing in a timely manner, alerts the group when there are 5 minutes left, and two minutes left Task Master: keeps everyone on task Presenter: reads the letter

Directions: Affecting Systemic Change in our School 3)Discuss in your group (for 10 minutes): –How could you help students in poverty in our school? –What programs could you create that provide support for poverty stricken students? –How would these programs assist all students, not only those in poverty?

Directions: Affecting Systemic Change in our School 4)Use your ideas to write a letter to our Superintendent. Explain how the programs you propose would help the children in poverty in our school (5 minutes). 5)Make sure the letter has all components: date, greeting, main body, closing, and signature. 6)Read your letters to the class (Presenter)

Questions and Answers

References Fernandez, M.R., & Nunez, M. (2006). Collaborative recruitment of diverse teachers for the long haul – TEAMS: Teacher education for the advancement of a multicultural society. Multicultural Education, 14(2), Fox,K.R. (2008). Online Resources for Developing an Awareness of Poverty. Social Studies and the Young Learner, 21(2), PP.32-Cover 3. Guillemets, T. (2007). Quotations About Poverty. Retrieved October 1, 2009 from The Quote Garden Web site: Krashen, S. (2005). The hard work hypothesis: Is doing your homework enough to overcome the effects of poverty? Multicultural Education, 12(4), Manning, J.P., & Gaudelli, W. (2003). Modern Myths about Poverty and Education. Social Studies and the Young Learner, 16(2), Otlin, J. (2008). The causes of poverty: Thinking critically about a key economic issue. Social Education, 72(2), Ryan, A.M. (2006). The Role of Social Foundations in Preparing Teachers for Culturally Relevant Practice. Multicultural Education, 13(3), Shah, A. (2009). Poverty Facts and Stats. Retrieved October 1, 2009 from Global Issues Web site: stats#src24 stats#src24 Wade, R.C. (2000). Beyond Charity: Service learning for Social Justice. Social Studies and the young learner, 6- 9.