[AAACE-NLA] AAACE-NLA Digest, Vol 48, Issue 5

Linda Hoover linda.hoover at lnbcc.org
Fri May 4 11:33:17 EDT 2007


Jenny's interpretation is correct.  Thank you Jenny.
Linda Hoover
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jenny Sandlin 
  To: National Literacy Advocacy List sponsored by AAACE 
  Sent: Thursday, May 03, 2007 5:41 PM
  Subject: Re: [AAACE-NLA] AAACE-NLA Digest, Vol 48, Issue 5


  Kearney,


  You have completely misinterpreted Linda's point. Her point is that laws are created by humans, and are therefore NOT infallible. Perhaps current immigration laws need to be challenged, to be BROKEN. Just because a law is in place, this does not mean that law should be followed. Sometimes it is quite justifiable, on ethical, moral, social justice, and humanitarian grounds, to BREAK laws. THAT was the point.


  Jenny


  Jennifer A. Sandlin
  Assistant Professor
  Department of Educational Administration and Human Resource Development
  MS 4226
  Texas A&M University
  College Station, TX 77843-4226
  979.458.0508 (work)
  jsandlin at coe.tamu.edu










  On May 3, 2007, at 2:40 PM, Kearney Lykins wrote:


    Linda,

    It is refreshing to see that someone out there (besides me) acknowledges that the immigration debate is centered on law-breaking, and what to do about it. This is a positive step forward. 

    Kearney







    ----- Original Message ----
    From: "aaace-nla-request at lists.literacytent.org" <aaace-nla-request at lists.literacytent.org>
    To: aaace-nla at lists.literacytent.org
    Sent: Thursday, May 3, 2007 2:16:35 PM
    Subject: AAACE-NLA Digest, Vol 48, Issue 5


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    Today's Topics:

       1. Re:  Where's the teaching? (Linda Hoover)


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Message: 1
    Date: Thu, 3 May 2007 08:20:56 -0500
    From: "Linda Hoover" <linda.hoover at lnbcc.org>
    Subject: Re: [AAACE-NLA] Where's the teaching?
    To: "National Literacy Advocacy List sponsored by AAACE"
        <aaace-nla at lists.literacytent.org>
    Message-ID: <000d01c78d85$e3d321a0$1901a8c0 at HP14185208081>
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

    All,
    Might we remember that, in the United States, it was once illegal for slaves to be taught to read and for Japanese to expect to live outside of an internment camp.  Laws are a creation of human beings. Should slaves not have had the opportunity to read until after the the Civil War or might breaking an unjust law sometimes be the ethnical thing to do?
    Linda Hoover
    Minneapolis
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Kearney Lykins 
      To: aaace-nla at lists.literacytent.org 
      Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2007 4:45 PM
      Subject: Re: [AAACE-NLA] Where's the teaching?


      All,

      The subject line of the Ms. Kashdan's post is spectacularly misleading. The website she recommends ( http://www.nycore.org/ ) has nothing to do with teaching, but everything to do with promoting leftist propaganda, on the tax-payers dime. As the homepage of "New York Collective of Radical Educators", it is a cookbook for extreme extra-pedagogical techniques, centered on brainwashing young minds about assorted fringe agenda items like:

      1.  the "hidden evils" of service on the U. S. Military
      2.  how testing creates "an oppressive and ineffective experience for students"
      3.  advocating social promotion of 7th graders

      The material recommended by Ms. Kashdan is not at all surprising considering the content of the addendum to her post. Note her attempt to change the terms of the illegal immigration debate, by equating the opposition's term, "illegal alien" with "illegal human."  This sort of tactic gets us nowhere because it promotes a rhetorical environment in which adversaries talk past one another. I do not side with those who marched in the streets (and apparently straight out of Ms. Kashdan's recommended activist classrooms) because I generally oppose illegal actions. Indeed, the humans that cross our border without permission have broken U.S. law, and because they have decided to do so, their alien status is in fact illegal. 

      Anyway, I searched her post and links for any materials or resources related to "teaching about immigration" and found none. 


      Kearney Lykins

      ESOL Teacher
      Virginia Beach, VA








      ----- Original Message ----
      From: "aaace-nla-request at lists.literacytent.org" <aaace-nla-request at lists.literacytent.org>
      To: aaace-nla at lists.literacytent.org
      Sent: Wednesday, May 2, 2007 12:00:03 PM
      Subject: AAACE-NLA Digest, Vol 48, Issue 1


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      Today's Topics:

         1.  teaching about immigration (Kaizen Program)


      ----------------------------------------------------------------------

      Message: 1
      Date: Tue, 1 May 2007 10:45:19 -0700
      From: "Kaizen Program" <kaizen at literacyworks.org>
      Subject: [AAACE-NLA] teaching about immigration
      To: "National Literacy Advocacy List sponsored by AAACE"
          <aaace-nla at lists.literacytent.org>
      Message-ID: <002901c78c18$7d2aa900$7100a8c0 at Cablespeed>
      Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="UTF-8"

      Greetings all,

      The below teaching guide on the issue of immigration is highly relevant for
      teachers who work with adults as well as those who work with children. It
      contains reference to many useful resources. Although there are quite a few
      that are primarily related to activities in the New York City area, many of
      the resources also contain information that is useful for teachers and
      students nationwide.

      Much of the information can be of great use to teachers of beginning English
      language learners even though it will not be appropriate for using with such
      students directly. And some of the resources can be used directly with
      intermediate and advanced new English learners too.

      Although this guide was put together last year, it is still definitely
      relevant!

      Because the teacher's guide is available for downloading in MS Word format
      as well as PDF format, it is fully accessible to educators and students who
      are blind or visually impaired or need to use computer screen readers and
      synthesized speech for other reasons. And, many of the resources referenced
      are also accessible to those using screen readers and synthesized speech.

      So, if you have not already checked it out, I hope you do soon.

      Sylvie Kashdan, M.A.
      Instructor/Curriculum Coordinator
      KAIZEN PROGRAM for New English Learners with Visual Limitations
      810-A Hiawatha Place South
      Seattle, WA  98144, U.S.A.
      phone:  (206) 784-5619
      email:  kaizen at literacyworks.org
      web:  http://www.nwlincs.org/kaizen/

      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: "bree" <breebree at mindspring.com>
      To: <nycoreUpdates at yahoogroups.com>
      Sent: Monday, April 30, 2007 7:59 PM
      Subject: [NYCoRE] TEACHERS: SUPPORT MAY 1st WALKOUTS


      For any educators looking for resources to support student
      immigration walkouts, the NYCoRE curriculum "NO HUMAN IS ILLEGAL" is
      available as a free download at http://www.nycore.org/
      immigrantrights.html.

      This curriculum was created last year as a response to student
      organizing efforts.  The information on the protest and walkouts are
      dated, but the curricular resources are still very usable.

      ?
      1) The No Human Is Illegal Resource Guide: This guide is for
      educators to take on the important issues that teachers and students
      have been tackling in their activism INSIDE the classroom. We must
      not let our sense of civic duty to engage these critical issues begin
      once the school day is over?we must weave them into our teaching and
      learning. This resource can be best utilized online as a web
      resource. The links and topics will be relevant long past the next
      few marches and protests. It is organized into the following three
      sections and we encourage teachers to join us in fulfilling each goal:
      Let us join voices as teachers, students, and community members to
      oppose this anti-immigrant, anti-human legislation! As teachers we
      can do so in the classroom and in the streets!
      For questions about the demonstration:

      info at nycore.org

      Download No Human is Illegal - Click here for PDF or Word Doc
      ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
      ---

      No Human is Illegal!

      HR 4437, the controversial immigration bill that has been hotly
      contested by Congressman and the American public alike?is affecting
      students? lives all across the nation. Whether they are marching in
      protest or conversing with friends, we have seen students taking
      center stage during the debates over the status of immigrants in this
      country. How can educators engage their students in these critical
      issues in the classroom? How can we serve as the liaison between
      students and the mixed messages the media and politicians are
      sending? Most importantly, how can we support our students?
      initiative to make their voices heard locally and nationally? The
      debate over immigrant rights in the United States, the supposed
      ?land of the free and home of the brave?, will continue to
      increase in intensity and will peak on May 1st ? with the Great
      American Boycott. We offer this curricular resource to educators, as
      a guide to discussing the complex issues surrounding the immigration
      debate and the decision to protest with their students. The topics
      touched on in this guide and in the debate at large, touch on
      economic, historic, political, national, and emotional themes. We
      encourage and support educators everywhere to have the courage to
      bring these concepts from the streets into the classroom and then
      back onto the streets?united as teacher and student activists in the
      struggle for human rights for all humans? because, no human is
      illegal!

      ?Ning?n Ser Humano es Ilegal!

      HR 4437, el proyecto de ley sobre la inmigraci?n que ha sido debatido
      furiosamente tanto por miembros del Congreso como el p?blico
      Americano?est? afectando la vida de estudiantes por todas partes de
      la naci?n. Ya sea en manifestaciones o conversaciones con amigos,
      hemos visto estudiantes ubic?ndose en el medio del debate acerca del
      estatus de inmigrantes en este pa?s. ?C?mo es que educadores puedan
      envolver sus estudiantes en estos temas cr?ticos dentro del sal?n de
      clase? ?C?mo podemos ser un fuerte vinculo entre nuestros
      estudiantes y los mensajes confusos que emiten los pol?ticos y los
      medios de comunicaci?n? Y aun m?s importante, ?c?mo podemos apoyar
      iniciativas estudiantiles de levantar sus voces localmente y a escala
      nacional? El debate sobre los derechos de inmigrantes en los Estados
      Unidos, la supuesta ?tierra de los libres, y hogar de los
      valientes?, continuar? a crecer y tendr? su cima el 1 de mayo?
      con el Gran Paro Americano. Ofrecemos este recurso curricular a
      educadores como gu?a para di?logos sobre estos temas complicados
      trat?ndose del debate sobre la inmigraci?n y la decisi?n de
      manifestar sobre ellos. Los temas incluidos en este gu?a en el debate
      nacional incluyen temas de la econom?a, historia, pol?tica, naci?n,
      u emoci?n?animamos y apoyamos educadores en todas partes que
      traigan estos temas de la calle al sal?n?unidos como activistas
      educadores y estudiantiles en la lucha para derechos humanos para
      todos los humanos?porque, ?ning?n ser humano es ilegal!






      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
      ----


      For any educators looking for resources to support student immigration
      walkouts, the NYCoRE curriculum "NO HUMAN IS ILLEGAL" is available as a free
      download at http://www.nycore.org/immigrantrights.html.


      This curriculum was created last year as a response to student organizing
      efforts.  The information on the protest and walkouts are dated, but the
      curricular resources are still very usable.





      1) The No Human Is Illegal Resource Guide: This guide is for educators to
      take on the important issues that teachers and students have been tackling
      in their activism INSIDE the classroom. We must not let our sense of civic
      duty to engage these critical issues begin once the school day is over?we
      must weave them into our teaching and learning. This resource can be best
      utilized online as a web resource. The links and topics will be relevant
      long past the next few marches and protests. It is organized into the
      following three sections and we encourage teachers to join us in fulfilling
      each goal:
      Let us join voices as teachers, students, and community members to oppose
      this anti-immigrant, anti-human legislation! As teachers we can do so in the
      classroom and in the streets!
      For questions about the demonstration:


      info at nycore.org

      Download No Human is Illegal - Click here for PDF or Word Doc
      ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

      No Human is Illegal!

      HR 4437, the controversial immigration bill that has been hotly contested by
      Congressman and the American public alike?is affecting students? lives all
      across the nation. Whether they are marching in protest or conversing with
      friends, we have seen students taking center stage during the debates over
      the status of immigrants in this country. How can educators engage their
      students in these critical issues in the classroom? How can we serve as the
      liaison between students and the mixed messages the media and politicians
      are sending? Most importantly, how can we support our students? initiative
      to make their voices heard locally and nationally? The debate over immigrant
      rights in the United States, the supposed ?land of the free and home of the
      brave?, will continue to increase in intensity and will peak on May 1st ?
      with the Great American Boycott. We offer this curricular resource to
      educators, as a guide to discussing the complex issues surrounding the
      immigration debate and the decision to protest with their students. The
      topics touched on in this guide and in the debate at large, touch on
      economic, historic, political, national, and emotional themes. We encourage
      and support educators everywhere to have the courage to bring these concepts
      from the streets into the classroom and then back onto the streets?united as
      teacher and student activists in the struggle for human rights for all
      humans? because, no human is illegal!

      ?Ning?n Ser Humano es Ilegal!

      HR 4437, el proyecto de ley sobre la inmigraci?n que ha sido debatido
      furiosamente tanto por miembros del Congreso como el p?blico Americano?est?
      afectando la vida de estudiantes por todas partes de la naci?n. Ya sea en
      manifestaciones o conversaciones con amigos, hemos visto estudiantes
      ubic?ndose en el medio del debate acerca del estatus de inmigrantes en este
      pa?s. ?C?mo es que educadores puedan envolver sus estudiantes en estos temas
      cr?ticos dentro del sal?n de clase? ?C?mo podemos ser un fuerte vinculo
      entre nuestros estudiantes y los mensajes confusos que emiten los pol?ticos
      y los medios de comunicaci?n? Y aun m?s importante, ?c?mo podemos apoyar
      iniciativas estudiantiles de levantar sus voces localmente y a escala
      nacional? El debate sobre los derechos de inmigrantes en los Estados Unidos,
      la supuesta ?tierra de los libres, y hogar de los valientes?, continuar? a
      crecer y tendr? su cima el 1 de mayo?con el Gran Paro Americano. Ofrecemos
      este recurso curricular a educadores como gu?a para di?logos sobre estos
      temas complicados trat?ndose del debate sobre la inmigraci?n y la decisi?n
      de manifestar sobre ellos. Los temas incluidos en este gu?a en el debate
      nacional incluyen temas de la econom?a, historia, pol?tica, naci?n, u
      emoci?n?animamos y apoyamos educadores en todas partes que traigan estos
      temas de la calle al sal?n?unidos como activistas educadores y estudiantiles
      en la lucha para derechos humanos para todos los humanos?porque, ?ning?n ser
      humano es ilegal!







      ------------------------------

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      End of AAACE-NLA Digest, Vol 48, Issue 1
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