This book has really helped me to have a better understanding of ALL boys and their unique design. Its authors did an excellent job with providing not just WHY behaviors occur but also detailed ways on HOW to help boys in poverty.
Sadly, when a boy drops out of school he tends to become a statistic in the judicial system, which costs a community not only money, but safety. So, "the sooner the interventions, the lower the cost."
The book recommends a systematic approach of identifying at risk boys, then a consistent diagnostic approach of early intervention (not a wait-to-fail), with a use of the indicators and interventions noted throughout the book.
Teachers-
Be proactive
Build relationships
Establish mutual respect
Assess resources of family
Watch for disproportionate amounts of boys in poverty being placed in special ed
Involve the community as stakeholders within the school
"The talent that can be developed in an individual when he is educated, is phenomenal. We owe it to the greater well-being of everyone."
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Chapter 8
http://www.educreations.com/lesson/view/ch-8/6083556/?s=50tpOY&ref=app
I have created an EduCreations "lesson" on chapter 8. Please excuse my raspy voice, as I am still struggling with this cold.
I have created an EduCreations "lesson" on chapter 8. Please excuse my raspy voice, as I am still struggling with this cold.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Chapter 7
There are many things we can do to support boys who are Sensitive, Gay, Gifted, or ADHD to Prevent Dropout
Sensitive Boys: Are boys who typically do well in school but do not fit into the typical male world due to little or no athletic ability... they maybe writers, artists, etc and are commonly referred "Gender Atypical". Many of these boys are victimized and lonely, with over protective mothers and absent fathers. Most school shooters fall into this category.
Gay Boys: Students today may show a greater tolerance for gay youths than they did 10-15 years ago but these boys still face great obstacles. Most who are different feel shame. They are nearly 3x as likely to be assaulted or be in physical fights, 3x more likely to be threatened or injured with a weapon at school, and nearly 4x as likely to skip school due to feeling unsafe.
These boys need FOUR things to establish emotional security:
1.Parental Acceptance-- especially from dads
2. Religion or spirituality
3. Community acceptance -- including school community
4. Tolerance in the workplace
Gifted Boys: By the time many gifted boys have reached middle school, they find themselves labeled as geeks & nerds and feel excluded from most groups. The risk of social isolation, inappropriate educational response, and lack of authentic interaction is particularly troublesome.
Don't allow exclusion of others. Foster these special boys' gifts. In poverty, giftedness is not admired. We must be an advocate for these boys.
I even had a young man tell me that he couldn't go to college, because his family would be "jealous!" I was astounded!
ADHD Boys: Boys in general, as well as children born to parents who have low educations levels, are at an increased risk for developing ADHD. Hyperactivity, inattention, and impulsivity are all normal boy behaviors...it is the degree to which these manifest themselves. The side effects, costs, and risk of addiction are all concerns with this subgroup of boys.
Our young men need drug education as they prepare to leave school. Many times the dependence on ADHD meds creates a dependence on drugs later in life.
This weekend, a letter from a Father to a son went viral. It made me think of the need of young men to have supportive fathers... Gay, straight, sensitive, "jocks", etc. BOYS NEED STRONG, LOVING MALES in their lives!
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No matter your beliefs, a father's love is such an important thing for boys! |
BOYS need our SUPPORT! We must teach our children tolerance for ALL. We don't have to agree but we MUST be kind! The school should be a place of safety for all students.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Chapter 6 - Effects of Drugs, Alcohol, and Early Sexual Activity
Chapter 6 Review is a LINO board...
<div><table><tr><td><a href="http://linoit.com/users/mrsevans4/canvases/Chapter%207-%20B.I.P"><img src="http://linoit.com/dock/10109536" border="0" width="89" height="68" id="lino10109536" /></a></td></tr><tr><td style="text-align:center;font-size:80%;"><a href="http://linoit.com/users/mrsevans4/canvases/Chapter%207-%20B.I.P" style="position:relative;top:-10px;">Chapter 7- B.I.P</a></td></tr></table><!--[if IE 6]><script type="text/javascript">var e=document.getElementById('lino10109536');e.src='http://linoit.com/image/iepngfix.gif';e.style.filter='progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.AlphaImageLoader(sizingMethod=\'crop\',src=\'http://linoit.com/dock/10109536\')';</script><![endif]--></div>
Let me know if you cannot access the board. LINO is free so you might have to sign up.
<div><table><tr><td><a href="http://linoit.com/users/mrsevans4/canvases/Chapter%207-%20B.I.P"><img src="http://linoit.com/dock/10109536" border="0" width="89" height="68" id="lino10109536" /></a></td></tr><tr><td style="text-align:center;font-size:80%;"><a href="http://linoit.com/users/mrsevans4/canvases/Chapter%207-%20B.I.P" style="position:relative;top:-10px;">Chapter 7- B.I.P</a></td></tr></table><!--[if IE 6]><script type="text/javascript">var e=document.getElementById('lino10109536');e.src='http://linoit.com/image/iepngfix.gif';e.style.filter='progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.AlphaImageLoader(sizingMethod=\'crop\',src=\'http://linoit.com/dock/10109536\')';</script><![endif]--></div>
Let me know if you cannot access the board. LINO is free so you might have to sign up.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Links
HELPFUL LINKS:
Seven Habits—Awesome Self-Management tools!
·
EduBlog: 6 R’s to Success in School and Life
·
Free Lesson Plans:
·
Poverty and Achievement Gap - BLOGS
·
School Reports on the Achievement Gap
·
Get up and Move
·
Vocabulary
Builders
·
Anger Management
Articles
Boys
in Poverty and High School Dropout
References to Articles of significance:
Alexander, K.L., Entwisle,
D.R., & Horsey, C.S. (1997). From first grade forward: Early foundations of
high school dropout, Sociology of Education,
70 (2), 87-107.
Abstract: In tracking the educational progress of a
sample of Baltimore school-children from entrance into first grade in fall 1982
through early spring 1996, the authors examined the children's personal
qualities, first-grade experiences, and family circumstances as precursors to
high school dropout. Logistic regression analyses were used to identify predictors
of dropout involving family context measures (stressful family changes,
parents' attitudes, and parents' socialization practices), children's personal
resources (attitudes and behaviors), and school experiences (test scores,
marks, and track placements). These various measures were found to influence
dropout independently of socio-demographic factors and account for much of the
difference in the odds of dropout associated with family socioeconomic status,
gender, family type, and other "risk factors." The authors take a
life-course perspective on dropout, viewing it as the culmination of a long-term
process of academic disengagement.
Semeniuk, I. (2013). How Poverty Influences a Child’s Brain Development,
The Globe and Mail. Retrieved on
January 27, 2013 from:
Smith, E. (2005). Failing Boys and Moral Panics:
Perspectives on the Underachievement Debate, British Journal of
Educational Studies, 51 (3),
282-295.
Abstract: The paper re-examines the
underachievement debate from the perspective of the ‘discourse of derision'
that surrounds much writing in this area. It considers the contradictions and
inconsistencies which underpin much of the discourse -- from a reinterpretation
of examination scores, to the conflation of the concepts of 'under' and 'low'
achievement and finally to the lack of consensus on a means of defining and
measuring the term underachievement. In doing so, this paper suggests a more
innovative approach for understanding, re-evaluating and perhaps rejecting the
notion of underachievement.
O'Connor, E. & McCartney,
K. (2007). Examining Teacher-Child Relationships
and Achievement as Part of an Ecological Model of Development, American Educational Research Journal,
44, (2), 340-369.
Abstract: The purpose
of the present study is to examine associations between quality of
teacher-child relationships from preschool through third grade and children's
third-grade achievement using Phases I, II, and III data from the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Care and
Education, a prospective study of 1,364 children from birth through sixth
grade. There are three main findings. First, positive associations were found
between quality of teacher-child relationships and achievement. Second, high
quality teacher-child relationships buffered children from the negative effects
of insecure or other maternal attachment on achievement. Third, the effect of
quality of teacher-child relationships on achievement was mediated through
child and teacher behaviors in the classroom. In sum, high quality
teacher-child relationships fostered children's achievement. Implications for
educational practice are discussed.
Robinson, J. & Biran, M. (2006).
Discovering Self: Relationships Between
African Identity and Academic Achievement, Journal of Black Studies, 37(1), 46-68.
ABSTRACT: The
present study explored connections between African identity, study habits, and
academic achievements. Correlation analyses, using data from 96 Black high
school students, indicated multiple connections between these factors. The most
important finding was that a sense of collective identity, a sub-factor of
African identity, was positively related to academic achievement. Implications
of the results for the improvement of school curriculums and environments are
discussed.
Sharkey, P. (2009) Neighborhoods and the Black White
Mobility Gap, Economic Mobility Project, Retrieved
on March 3, 2013 from:
Weismann, J. (2012). Occupy Kindergarten: The Rich-Poor
Divide Starts with Education, The Atlantic,
Retrieved on March 3, 2013 from:
Chapter 5 - Social Development
Patterns of Socialization: roles of aggression and competition and the influence of media as a provider of role models indicates a need for high level of supports.
Patterns must be taught through interactions with others~ observations, imitation, coercion, persuasion, reward, punishment, instruction, and example.
CHANGE in Family structure: Over the last 30 years activities that were once single-gendered have disappeared. Single parenthood creates undue stress on all involved and time is limited. Many fathers are absent from their children's lives and children of divorce "lose something fundamental to their development-- family structure, the scaffolding upon which children mount successive developmental states, which supports their psychological, physical, and emotional ascent into maturity" is crushed.
Role and Gender Identity:
ROLE> what you do- the part you play in society. "I am a teacher."
GENDER> what you think a man or women is-- what it means to be masculine/feminine.
In poverty, boys and girls are often without immediate role models. Without a community of men, a boy is likely to look elsewhere for role models... he seeks a "tribe" to which he can belong, thus, the increase in gangs, drugs, alcohol, etc.
Boys need relationships with adults who offer support,
have high expectations,
insist on quality work, &
enforce social and emotional behaviors.
Boys need relationships with teachers that are based on
MUTUAL RESPECT!
Students feel respected when adults challenge them to succeed,
give attention to their particularities,
are responsive to their needs,
and foster positive expectations!
Teachers must give students positive feedback, empowerment and a sense of self worth!
Boys feel the pressure to grow up but do not know what to do with their lives.
Boys in foster care MUST go out into the world at 18- ready or not!
Boys in school
Boys aren't as likely as girls to do homework, to participate in class, or generally want to please the teacher.
Boys don't usually "affiliate" with school or adults.
Boys allegiance is usually to other boys.
Boys tend to challenge the teacher.
Researchers believe this is due to the fact that females tend to remain with the family while the male leaves.
MEDIA- creates a view for men
The bumbling fool....
Although adults know this is a joke, children think the dad is just dumb.
The girl must be sexy....
Sadly, boys and girls think that this is they way it must be.
The man must be tough and bad...
Even the title..."I'm not afraid" promotes toughness!
OTHER Media forces:
If you cry... You better do it alone!
Destroy your enemy... You must win!
Males must be physically fit!
These messages are significant because, as we have read, the male brain processes everything BUT it is often incapable of evaluating what it takes in. While adults can distinguish fact from fiction, children aren't always so savvy.
TV & Video games are baby sitters. This creates desensitization because the stimulation becomes more and more to the point of overload and nothing shocks children anymore.
POVERTY & Social Development
Lack of bridging and building capital-- How does a female teach a boy to interact with other males? Poverty is feminized.
Impediments cause by health issues-- Social development opportunities are restricted in poverty.
Absence of support for organized sports-- a primary socialization tool is limited if you do not have the financial resources or support system to participate.
Lack of experience with teamwork-- typical poverty based conflict resolution is zero sum- I win: You lose. Cooperating with a team while competing can be a foreign concept.
Absence of collective efficacy--neighborhoods impact the violence and many times in poverty their is no trust or responsibility
Scarcity or inability to work-- work for males in poor neighborhoods is often intermittent and unstable. It is a "job" not a "career."
Devaluation of education-- the poverty neighborhood does not value an educated man. They value a man who can fight, provide protection, and is sexually potent.
WHAT CAN EDUCATORS DO??
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Chapter 4- Cognitive Development of Boys
PHYSICAL EDUCATION is IMPORTANT |
Intensive physical activity actually enhances and increase learning. During demanding physical activity, the brain produces "miracle grow" chemicals and structures that help one learn more!
(John J. Ratey)
- BMI and Physical Activity explain up to 24% of variance in academic achievement.
- Academic ratings are correlated with exercise levels.
- Appropriate PE programs raised standardized test scores from below to 17-18% above in Pennsylvania and the incidence of fighting dramatically declined.
- In Kansas after a one year daily PE program, suspensions dropped 67%.
Time should be devoted everyday to PE, recess, and unstructured play. New studies state there should be 15 minutes of movement for every 45 minutes of instruction!
WINDOWS of OPPORTUNITY
As a child approaches puberty, learning rate slows. The connections that are not found useful are eliminated. If the brain doesn't receive certain stimuli at appropriate times, these networks don't develop. It is true... "Use it or lose it." As the window of opportunity tapers off, the ability to perform certain tasks diminishes.
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