Monday, April 27, 2015

Debate topics from our last discussion

Okay, so we didn't get to finalize our debate topics.  But we did narrow things down to following...



1. In light of the recent trial of the Boston Marathon bomber, should the death penalty be abolished?

2. Should we legalize recreational marijuana in New York State?

*         This will cover the question about whether or not legalization makes it safer.

3. Should people be allowed to carry concealed weapons?
*           We may need to make this topic more specific.
 

4. Should the government have the right to monitor the social media use of its citizens?

5. Due to inconsistencies and difficulties with regards to enforcing the dress code at Niskayuna, should we do away with it?

6.  Should vaccines be mandatory?

 
 
****Is there a way to frame the gender issue questions into a debatable question that isn’t just one sided in this classroom?

 

Other topics I thought might cause a stir and aren't one-sided:

Should schools institute virtual learning on snow days?

Net Neutrality – the FCC wants to reclassify the internet as a public utility to ensure net neutrality (so no one company can control it).  Should the government regulate internet providers?

Should schools regulate the off-campus, online behavior of students?
 

 

Soooooo.....which topics do you want to debate??

Monday, April 13, 2015

SPRING DEBATE IDEAS

As you visit each other's news blogs and have discussions, please post ideas you have for debate topics.


Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Links to individual student blogs


Melissa's blog

http://mschaefer87.blogspot.com


Gus's blog

bro-nii-chan.blogspot.com


Marina's blog

http://marinangelopoulos.blogspot.com/



Nick's blog

http://nicolasignatius.blogspot.com


Zara's blog

http://zarashahbdenglish.blogspot.com


Shreema's blog

http://shreemachandrasekar.blogspot.com/



Alex's blog

http://alexgmerrill.blogspot.com


Rachel's blog

http://rachelsullivan99.blogspot.com


Olivia's blog

http://oliviahilt.blogspot.com


Lauren's blog

http://laurenserotta.blogspot.com


Danielle Feldman's blog

http://danifeldman.blogspot.com



Lydia's blog

http://lkerchner.blogspot.com


Maddie's blog

http://kmaddie.blogspot.com


Kierstyn's blog

http://kierstynelizabeth.blogspot.com



Meghan O'Connell's blog

http://oconnellm.blogspot.com


Erin's blog

http://erindoyle5.blogspot.com


Megan Mausert's blog

http://meganmausert.blogspot.com/



Sarah's blog

http://sarahkowaleski.blogspot.com


Danielle Harrington's blog

http://DaniellecHarrington.blogspot.com



Erica's blog

ericawasserbachblog.blogspot.com



Praise's blog

http://p-cano.blogspot.com


Rhiannon's blog

http://rhiannonsblogisprettycool.blogspot.com/



Sam's blog

http://samoc9549.blogspot.com/

Larissa's blog

http://leave-it-to-larissa.blogspot.com


Emily's blog

http://ekatenappi.blogspot.com/


Rosa's blog


http://rosamesbahi28.blogspot.com


Bhav's blog

http://bobslotblog.blogspot.com/


David's blog

http://davidbuhrmaster.blogspot.com/




















































































































































































Monday, February 23, 2015

Remembrance and Awareness Blog

 
“Sometimes we must interfere. When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy, national borders and sensitivities become irrelevant. Whenever men or women are persecuted because of their race, religion, or political views, that place must—at that moment—become the center of the universe.”
  
                                                                        -Elie Wiesel

This quarter you will research and read news websites and blogs to learn not only about the Holocaust, but to also learn more about current events and humanitarian issues. You will create your own blog and update it throughout the quarter. The eventual goal of this ongoing assignment is to use our study of the Holocaust to examine specific issues and conflicts in today’s society.

Your first assignment is to create your own blog and then write your first blog post. Search the various websites below, and select one artifact to discuss, analyze, and connect to one passage from Night. You are certainly welcome to search other websites. 

 

The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity                The Atlantic                   History.com

The New York Times                  BBC—The Holocaust  

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum               Museum of Jewish Heritage
 


Potential Artifacts: 
  • Art: period drawings, prints, posters, etc. 
  • Excerpts from books
  • Advertisements, propaganda, maps
  • Furnishings, machinery, tools
  • Jewelry, musical instruments 
  • Personal papers: documents, correspondence
  • Photographs
  • Music
  • Speeches
  • Interviews
  • First hand accounts

In your blog post be sure to do the following: 

1. Create a fitting title. 

2. Identify a connection between a specific artifact and one particularly dense passage from Night. We would like to see you use passages other than the ones we analyzed in class. Your passage from Night should be from the first two sections of the book.

3. Develop your connections by examining key details from both the passage and the artifact. What new insights do you gain from these connections? Answer the "SO WHAT?!"  If you are looking at a text, consider diction, figurative language, syntax, and/or other devices that apply. 

4. Link or paste the artifact right into your blog post.

5. Write about 300-350 words and proofread. 

6. When you are finished, email your blog address to my email: cwhite@niskyschools.org


This blog post is due on March 3rd. 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Old School Wrap-Up Fishbowl Questions


To prepare for our fishbowl discussion on Monday, you must prepare notes for BOTH the essential questions for the book AND the questions we generated about the ending of the book.  Bring all notes to class on the day of the fishbowl along with your book.


For each question write down the following:
                 *  ideas or further questions you have
                 *  passages you want to bring to the group to examine together
                 *  insights into those passages (include some analysis of the text)



Here are our essential questions for the book:

Essential question #1:  How is identity linked to storytelling?  If we are authors of our own lives, how do the narratives we create about ourselves influence our behavior, our attitudes, and our actions?  How do these stories help us to make meaning out of our experiences and to make choices that steer the directions of our lives?

 
Essential question #2:  Evaluate the belief in meritocracy.  Do we totally earn our own accomplishments and failures?  How responsible are we for the honors bestowed upon us?  How much are we to blame for our failures?  Are we also responsible for the happiness and success of others?  If we have experienced success, are we obligated to share that success with others who have not earned it?   Can a belief in meritocracy coexist with a belief in the greater good?

 
Essential question #3: How do we know if a piece of writing is good? What makes writing powerful, effective, interesting, or worth reading? If the author intends one meaning but the reader interprets the text to mean something very different, how should we make sense of those discrepancies?

 

Essential question #4: As different writers influence the narrator, how do his values and his identity morph and change? Is that pliability a sign of a weak character? What do you think of him along the way and why?

 


Essential question #5:  What does it mean to discover one’s voice?  How original are our voices?  How do we distinguish between the people/texts/social roles that influence us and those aspects of ourselves and our voices that are truly unique and individual?  What is the difference between influence, imitation, and plagiarism?

 

Essential question #6:  Notice continual references to acting, role-playing, performance and theater.  How does this motif help us understand the characters, the school, and some larger themes in the book? To what extent does this notion of performance become internalized? Is our identity simply an internalization of the roles we play? Are we something more than that?



Here are the questions we generated in class for the ending of the book:

1.  Compare what happens to the narrator and the dean after they leave the school.  What is the significance of the dean's story?  How does it compare to the narrator's life decisions after he is expelled?  What do their stories show about their characters?  What larger meaning do their stories hold for the reader?


2.  Can lies be beneficial?  To what end can they be justified?  Is the truth always desirable?


3.  What is the significance of names in the book as a whole?  What archetypes do the narrator and his classmates assume?  Is the author making a statement about society and its pressure?


4.  What attracts the narrator to "Summer Dance?"  What about himself does he see in the story?  How do his ideas change when he meets Susan?  What did Susan think of the narrator?  What was gained from the meeting?  How much closure did the meeting provide?  What is their relationship about?