Candidate Personal Narrative
NAME:
Judy Huynh
| | | |
| HISTORY (10 points) | TOP |
After graduating from
high school in 1964, I attended Michigan State University and received my B.S.
degree in dairy science in 1968. During my junior year, I attended Massey
University in Palmerston North, New Zealand and studied agriculture. My year in
New Zealand was not part of any organized exchange program; I made all the
arrangements myself. During my year in New Zealand (February to December,
1967), I met my future husband, who was from Vietnam. I returned to MSU to
complete my degree, graduating in June of 1968. I returned to New Zealand and
was married there in August of 1968. In November of that year, we left New
Zealand and traveled home (for my husband) to Vietnam, where we lived for the
next seven years.
Shortly after we
arrived in V.N. we learned that the International School in Saigon needed
teachers. The requirements were a university degree and fluency in English. The
pay was quite good and school was in session only half a day, leaving me time
to study Vietnamese, so I applied for a teaching position. I was hired to teach
fourth grade, and I loved it! My students were from many different countries –
Canada, Korea, U.S.A., Vietnam, Japan, and the Philippines – and I learned so
much from them.
I taught at the
International School for two years, but when my first son was born in 1970, I
decided to stay home with him. During the next few years, I taught English as a
second language in my home. My students were mostly Vietnamese and Koreans. My
second son was born in 1972, and I continued teaching English at home. In
January of 1975, I had the opportunity to take over a preschool program with a
New Zealand friend. Our students were ages three to five and were from Britain,
Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Canada, and the U.S. I loved teaching the
preschoolers, and my own sons were able to be part of the program.
Unfortunately, the political situation in Vietnam was not good, and in March of
1975, we had to flee the country. I was able to leave with my two sons and
return to my home in Michigan, but my husband had to stay behind because he did
not have American citizenship. He was evacuated out of Saigon six weeks later
and was able to join us in Michigan.
During my years in
Vietnam, I discovered that I loved teaching. However, because I was not a
certified teacher, I could not teach in Michigan schools. We spent the first
few years in Michigan getting established. We lived with my mother for a year
while we found jobs and my husband and two young sons adjusted to a new
culture. We bought a house and had a third son in 1978. I thought about being a
teacher, but we couldn’t afford to pay for the classes, and I thought maybe I
was too old to go back to school. In 1983, I began to work as an aide for a
hearing impaired child in a first grade classroom. I took classes in sign
language at the local community college so I could be better able to interpret
for him and to understand more about the deaf culture. I was fascinated with
the teaching and learning I experienced in the classroom, and decided I really
wanted to become a teacher.
I quit my job as an
interpretive aide, took out a student loan, and went back to school full time
to get my teaching certification. It took me one year to complete the necessary
classes. After completing my certification, I spent a semester subbing in the
local schools, and a semester as an aide in three first grade classrooms. In
1988, I was hired as a 6th grade teacher at Palo Community Schools,
where I still teach. Palo Community Schools is a very small school – only 160
students in grades K – 8th. It’s in a very rural area; there is only
one store in Palo (Joe’s Market), and the post office is in the store! Most
students come from lower socio-economic groups and don’t see much of the world
beyond Palo. My greatest love has been teaching social studies, particularly
teaching world cultures. I think it’s so important for my students to learn
about the world and the people in it. If we are ever going to meet the
Millennium Goals proposed by the United Nations and have peace in our world, we
have to educate our students to become global citizens, concerned with the well
being of all our world’s inhabitants, not just their own small community. Our
students need to understand that they can make a difference in the world and to
be empowered to do so. That is why I began teaching about social justice issues
in my classroom, such as world poverty and hunger, child labor, and refugees
and to help my students become advocates for change.
In 1997 I learned
about a group called LATTICE (Linking All Types of Teachers to International
and Cross-Cultural Education), which meets half a day a month in a city about
an hour from my school. The group is made up of international students from
many different countries who are Masters and PhD students in education at MSU,
and teachers from the area who are interested in gaining a more global
perspective in their teaching. I joined LATTICE and have been a member ever
since. We discuss many things at our monthly meetings – from simple things like
how weddings are celebrated in the different countries – to more serious issues
such as 9-11 and the Millennium Development Goals. We gain an understanding of
the many perspectives people have, depending on their culture, gender, and
experiences. We make connections with the international students that continue
after they return to their home countries. We have several ongoing LATTICE
projects. One is a Zulu basket project. We sell Zulu baskets made by South
African women, and we send them the profits to use for scholarships for
children in South Africa. My experiences at my LATTICE meetings carry over into
my classroom, where I use some of the activities from LATTICE to help my
students see things from a different perspective.
It was at one of
the LATTICE meetings in 2002 that I heard about an organization called iEARN,
which sounded like something I wanted to get involved with. I visited the iEARN
site and decided to sign up for an online class, my first such experience. I
enrolled in the creative writing class and began my first experience with
online collaboration. I was a little apprehensive at first, both about my
limited technology skills and about sharing my writing with people I didn’t
know all around the world! However, my class facilitators were wonderful, and I
soon lost my apprehension and found my online class to be an awesome experience
and a beginning to a whole new world of online collaboration with teachers and
students from around the world. My students became involved in the Lewin’s
project and their interest and motivation in writing grew. They first read what
other students had written and then responded to them. Then my students posted
some of their original poems on the Lewin’s forum; they couldn’t wait to get
responses. Many students spent their free time corresponding with the students
who had responded to their poems. Several visited the youth forum and
corresponded with youth there. I spent time in the teacher forum and began
regular correspondence with a teacher from Egypt and a teacher from Canada, and
occasional correspondence with teachers in other countries. It was the teacher
in Canada that introduced me to our biggest project that we have been involved
in through iEARN, the RESPECT Refugees project. We have been involved with
RESPECT for over three years now, and it has developed into a wonderful
partnership that I will describe more fully in the next section. Our involvement
in collaborative online projects has been both exciting and rewarding for my
students and myself. I felt re-energized as a teacher after becoming involved
in iEARN. I found that I was able to have my students interacting with students
from many different cultures without even leaving the classroom and a lot of
learning was taking place beyond just academics. Seeing the excitement of my
students about iEARN helped me understand how powerful online collaboration
could be for classrooms everywhere.
In May of 2003,
I was selected to attend the CIVICS IV Seminar for iEARN in New York City.
There I met some of the teachers that had been in my online class, as well as
other dedicated teachers from around the world. There were six American
teachers and fourteen teachers from other countries including Sri Lanka, India,
Morocco, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, and Egypt. It was an incredible experience.
We shared what we were doing in our classrooms and talked about ways to
increase collaboration among schools around the world through iEARN projects.
Since then, we continue to share online through a CIVICS forum. We have had a
few online chats, also. I have continued to be involved in iEARN projects and
am a member of the iEARN cadre, a group of U.S. teachers who act as advisors to
iEARN and give feedback on their plans and ideas through online interaction.
In addition to
my involvement with iEARN, my classroom is also part of the Peace Corps
Worldwise Schools program. We correspond with a Peace Corps volunteer in Guinea
at the present time. In the past four years, we have had three different
partners. We have been involved in projects with schools located in the
countries where our Peace Corps volunteers are serving. We recently were
involved in an art exchange with a school in Guinea. My students drew a picture
of a typical day here, and the students in the school in Guinea drew a picture
of a typical day there and wrote a sentence describing the picture. The
pictures were sent through our Peace Corps volunteer. She translated the
sentences from English to French and French to English for this exchange. She
and I are able to correspond through email to plan activities. She also has a
web log, which we can visit at any time to learn of her activities there, and what
life is like for her in Guinea
| | PROJECTS (10 points): | TOP |
1) Our first project that
we were involved in was through our Peace Corps partner in Zambia in 2001. We
corresponded by snail mail and occasional emails. I asked him if he could find
a school for us to work with, and he did. We exchanged pen pal letters and my
class sent a gross of pencils to the school. Our classroom pencil company,
Schoolhouse Pencils, printed the pencils. The students were excited by this
exchange, but it was only a short term one because our Peace Corps volunteer
finished his term of service and returned to the U.S. The participants were my
6th grade students (18 students) and a school in a Zambian village
of about 200 students. Our major learning goal was to learn more about the
lives of Zambian students in the villages. This was really a rather short-term
project, but still exciting for my students. As mentioned, there was limited
email interaction between the Peace Corps volunteer and myself.
2) The second project my
class has been involved with is the Lewin’s Project through iEARN. This is an
online creative writing project, which includes all types of writing from many
different countries. We have been involved in this project every year since
2003. My students post their different poems on the Lewin’s site and correspond
with students about their writing. My students can’t wait to see who has
responded to their poem, and many spend time out of school on the website
corresponding with students who are participating in the Lewin’s project and
visiting the youth forum. This year there has been a new writing prompt posted
frequently, and so in addition to posting their poems on the Lewin’s site, many
students respond to the writing prompts.
The number of
students in my 6th grade class has ranged from 9 to 24 students
involved in the Lewin’s project. (This is my entire class.) I do not know the
total number of other students involved in the Lewin’s project because there
are many schools that participate. Each year the best student poems and prose
are selected and a book is published and sent to the schools involved. Each
year when we receive the copies of the Lewin’s book, my students eagerly search
through the book to see if one of their poems was chosen. There is great
excitement when a student finds that his or her poem has been selected for
inclusion in the book. The major learning goal of this project is to encourage
creative writing of all types and to help students learn about students in
other countries. You can access this project at the iEARN website (www.iearn.org). With the exception of the book
of poems that is published in hard copy, all the participation is done online.
3) The third project, and
our most major project, is the RESPECT-Refugees project, which we have been
involved in since 2003. I became involved in RESPECT International because of
my correspondence with Marc Schaeffer (the teacher who began the RESPECT
organization) in the iEARN teacher forum. He explained the project to me,
saying that students first learn about refugees, then begin a letter-writing
project with refugee students, and then, if interested, become involved in a
project with a refugee school. Again, each year I have a different number of
students involved, depending on my class size. The school we partnered with in
Guinea had 1200 students. I was really attracted to this project because it
went beyond just learning about students from another culture to becoming
involved in helping students in need and learning about human rights issues and
social justice.
We began this project
by learning about refugees through videos, novels, research on the web,
informational books, and even a refugee camp simulation. Next we signed up with
RESPECT to have pen pals from a refugee school. I had 24 students at the time,
so we asked for 24 refugee letters. We were partnered with a school in Guinea
called Mohomou Refugee School. Once I received the letters, I read them all
aloud to my student and they chose their own pen pals. They wrote their first
letters to their pen pals, asking many questions about how they came to be
refugees, what their life was like now, and how we could partner with them. A
teacher from the refugee school worked with the RESPECT students. His name was
Samuel, and he was able to email me once every month or two, whenever he went
to the village. When I asked him how we could best help them out, he said the
students needed “footballs” (soccer balls in the U.S.). My class coordinates a
school-wide International Dinner each year as a service-learning project, with
the proceeds donated to world hunger through Heifer International. My students
decided that we would use part of the money raised from our dinner that year
(2003) to purchase and send soccer balls to our pen pals in Mohomou Refugee
School. We sent them 17 soccer balls that June, and they sent us photos of
their team, “jubilating in their victory thanks to the student at Palo
Community Schools” (written on the back of the photo). My students were
thrilled to be part of this project and were happy to have helped brighten the
lives of some of the students there.
My students
learned a lot from their pen pals that year. The first letters we received in
response to our letters told the stories of our pen pals’ very difficult and
tragic experiences. All were refugees from Liberia, and each had a story to
tell about how they ended up in the camp, many times without any other family
members. Some saw their younger brothers and sisters drowned in the river when
trying to cross to safety. Others saw their parents killed by rebels in Liberia
or watched the soldiers brutally beat their sisters, brothers and other family
members. My students were really moved by these stories. They were really
interested in doing anything we could to help them and give them some joy.
During the
second year of this project, my students brainstormed ideas of how we could
help our new friends. First was a trip to the mall to purchase school supplies
with money we raised from some small fundraisers. We sent markers, staplers,
pens, pencils (printed by our classroom pencil company), hole punches, tape
dispensers, and other necessary items. This was in December of 2003. From there
we just kept coming up with more ideas. We learned that they really wanted a
computer lab, and through RESPECT, we could help them set up a lab and equip it
with 10 computers for a total of $2000. We decided to designate $1000 of our
money raised in our next International Dinner (May, 2004) to go towards
establishing a computer lab for Mohomou Refugee School. Not only would our pen
pals benefit, but also the whole school (1200 students) would benefit. I was
able to get matching funds from my church through our mission group, so we were
able to send the full $2000 to RESPECT, who worked with the World Computer
Exchange to get the computers. The computer lab at Mohomou Refugee School is
now a reality, and my class is really proud that they were able to make it
happen. (You can see documentation of our partnership on the RESPECT site – www.respectrefugees.com; look at the
e-zines for the stories.)
Another project
we did with Mohomou Refugee School was to send them a video we made of “A Day
in the Life of a Palo Student”. We did a video of our school and activities,
and we also included video of common American customs and traditions, such as a
birthday party and holiday celebrations. We then sent them a video camera so
they could send us “A Day in the Life of a Mohomou Student”, which they did. It
was very exciting to see our pen pals in their daily activities. Also on the
video was Samuel’s little boy, Emmanuel Judy. Samuel (teacher) had told me in
an email that his wife was expecting a baby, and that he was going to name the
baby after me in appreciation for all we had done. I was surprised when the
baby arrived (January, 2004) and it was a boy. Samuel still named it after me –
Emmanuel Judy! I had received photos of Emmanuel, but seeing him on the video
was wonderful.
Throughout our
partnership we have continued to exchange small items, such as bookmarks,
friendship bracelets, valentines, and other little gifts. In return, our pen
pals have sent us small handmade purses and beaded necklaces and bracelets.
Samuel sent me an African dress with my name embroidered on it and also another
Africa top. We have sold the purses and beaded jewelry at the World Market at
our International Dinner, so they are helping us to help them.
Last spring we
did a book drive to send books to Mohomou. We collected about 300 books in our
small school. My class did a presentation on their refugee project at a
countywide Service Learning Celebration, and a student from another school who
attended the presentation was very interested in getting involved with us. She
also did a book drive in her school (a much larger school than ours), and she
collected over a thousand books, which we added to ours and sent to Mohoumou.
In November, we
started a new partnership with a refugee school in Ghana called Peter Burrus
Memorial Academy. Samuel (teacher from Mohomou) was resettled in Australia last
spring, and so we decided it was time to begin a new project. So far we have
exchanged letters once, sent valentines, and sent books. We are getting to know
our new partner school and learning what their needs are. The coordinator of
the RESPECT program in Ghana has access to email, so we have been in frequent
contact. I know it’s going to be a great partnership.
4) As mentioned earlier,
we have been part of the Worldwise Schools through the Peace Corps for the last
four years. We use their resources in our classroom and go to their website
often; this has not been as powerful a program as our involvement with iEARN
has been, but it has still been a good learning experience for my students. The
Peace Corps volunteers change every two years, and just as they are really
getting to know the country and are able to set up some projects with schools
for us, the term of duty is up, and we have to start over with a new volunteer.
However, our present volunteer has been excellent and being able to visit her
blog has been great. She communicates frequently with me through email, which I
share with my students. This year we did an art exchange with a school near her
in Guinea, assisted by our Peace Corp volunteer. Each classroom (one in Guinea
and my class in Palo) drew a picture of something typical in their daily lives
and wrote a sentence to describe it. Because the class in Guinea speaks French,
our Peace Corps volunteer translated the sentences for us. Our Peace Corps
volunteer is from Michigan, so she will be visiting our classroom to share in
person when she returns from Guinea next year.
5) During the past four
years, my class has been involved in several other iEARN projects, but not to
as great an extent as the Lewin’s and refugee project. Three years ago my 6th
grade class participated in the Laws of Life Essay Project. This project
invites students to express what they value most in life and the principles by
which they live. They respond to other students’ essays and interact
electronically on the iEARN site. I have used the lesson plans for Feeding
Minds, Fighting Hunger that are given on the iEARN site for that project, but
have only had a few students involved in the online discussion. My students
visit the Youth Forum at iEARN and communicate with students around the world
whenever they have some free time in the room.
| | COLLABORATION (10 points): | TOP |
The refugee project is very effective in
promoting collaboration because my students really feel like they can make a
difference in the lives of the refugee students through their letters and
projects, such as sending soccer balls, school supplies, video camera, books,
and helping to set up a computer lab for their school. The letters from the
refugee students tell stories of their lives and my student are really touched
by them. Each time I receive an email from the teacher there, I share it with
my students, and so even though they are not able to email their pen pals, they
can share in the emails from the teacher. The fact that the students in Mohomou
School sent us hand made purses and beaded jewelry made for a great
collaboration for our International Dinner. We sold the things they made at the
World Market we set up at the dinner, and the money raised went towards setting
up a computer lab for them.
When Mohomou received the school
supplies we sent them, they sent us a video showing the students receiving the
school supplies and using the pens and markers to write their pen pal letters
to us. It was pretty exciting for my students to see their pen pals actually
writing the letters to them. Included on the video was a segment done during
math class. My students were really surprised to see in the video that the
students there were studying the same thing in math that we were – factor trees
and prime numbers. The teacher was drawing a factor tree on the board and
explaining it. The only difference was they had a blackboard, not a white
board, and the students were crowded in the classroom – about 80 students in
the class, compared to 9 students in my classroom that year. It was such a
great way to see how much the same we are, and yet how different our
circumstances.
RESPECT has a website and
publishes an e-zine that promotes collaboration also. I print out the e-zine to
share with my students. They love it when we are featured in the e-zine. We
also visit the website and we have participated in the refugee poster contest
every year since 2004. I am on the Board of Directors for RESPECT now, which
came about from the continual correspondence I had online with Marc Schaeffer,
the person who began the RESPECT organization. The board of directors holds
their meetings through on line chats.
Participating in iEARN projects
such as Lewin’s is a very effective way of promoting collaboration. My students
love to have their poems and other writings read and responded to by other
students around the world. It gives them a real purpose for writing and
encourages them to do their best work. They beg to go to the iEARN site to see
if anyone new has responded to their postings. They like to go to the youth
forum and write to other students and share ideas. I use the iEARN website
frequently to collaborate with other teachers on the forums.
| | LEARNING REQUIREMENTS (10 points): | TOP |
One of the Language
Arts standards that I am required to teach in my school is letter writing.
Writing to our pen pals several times a year helps me meet that standard. My
students are also required to write a cohesive narrative piece and to write an
essay for authentic audiences that includes organizational patterns that
support key ideas. The iEARN audience is an authentic audience for this
writing, and knowing they are writing to a global audience encourages my
students to put forth their best effort. Writing poetry is another standard
that I am required to teach at my grade level, incorporating many different
types of poetry. Again, we write many different types of poems and choose our
favorites to share on the Lewin’s forum. We use Six Traits Writing in our
school, and the creative writing that my students do for Lewin’s is evaluated
using the Six Traits rubric.
I am able to meet
several of the content standards that I’m required to teach for social studies
through our online projects with Lewin’s, our refugee project, and our Peace
Corps partnership. These standards are:
All students will
describe, compare, and explain the locations and characteristics of places,
cultures, and settlements. (They learn lots about the cultures of students they
correspond with through iEARN and through their refugee pen pals.)
All students
will describe, compare, and explain the locations and characteristics of
economic activities, trade, political activities, migration, information flow,
and the interrelationships among them. (We study a lot about refugees before
and during our partnership with the refugee school, and we learn a lot about
economic activities, political activities, and migration through our study and
the letters from our pen pals.)
All students will describe and explain the causes,
consequences, and geographic context of major global issues and events. (My
students are really attuned to the news when it concerns countries that have
students that they correspond with, especially their refugee pen pals. They are
very interested in issues of refugees and immigration.)
All students
will acquire information from books, maps, newspapers, data sets, and other
sources, organize and present the information in maps, graphs, charts and
timelines, interpret the meaning and significance of information, and use a
variety of electronic technologies to assist in accessing and managing
information. (Each year my students have done a presentation on their refugee
project at the countywide service learning celebration. They also do
presentations to other classrooms, both within our school and in other schools.
Technology is incorporated into their research and their presentations.)
All students
will state an issue clearly as a question of public policy, trace the origins
of the issue, analyze various perspectives people bring to the issue and
evaluate possible ways to resolve the issue. (The issue of refugees and
immigration is one issue used for this. My students also study the issue of
world hunger and poverty and evaluate ways to resolve this issue.)
The Michigan
Social Studies Standards can be accessed through the Michigan Council for the
Social Studies website (www.michigancouncil.org)
| | ASSESSMENT (10 points): | TOP |
I use the Six Traits Writing
rubric for evaluating all writing done by my students. I use a presentation
rubric that I developed for the presentations the students do on the Refugee
project. Also, my students do reflections in their journals on an on-going
basis. They respond to prompts such as – What did you learn about refugees
today that surprised you? How did you feel when you read the responses to your
postings on iEARN? What ideas do you have that we can do to support our refugee
pen pals? Was there anything you thought about in a new way after today’s
lesson? (I ask this after we have been participating in a lesson on refugees,
hunger and poverty, or visiting the iEARN site.) What similarities do you find
between your life and your pen pal’s life? What differences? What does it mean
to be a global citizen? Do you think learning about the lives of people around
the world is important? Why? What ideas do you have for peace in our world?
What things are preventing peace? What can YOU do to make the world a better
place? I also write a new quote on the board each week, which students respond
to in their journal. I try to choose quotes that encourage them to believe that
one person can make a difference in the world, such as this quote by Helen
Keller: “I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I
can do something; and because I cannot do everything I will not refuse to do
the something that I can do.”
My students do lots of projects,
which are evaluated by a rubric. One of my favorite projects is making an ABC
book. For example, for our Refugee ABC book, students each chose two or three
letters of the alphabet and decided what words those letters could represent.
They then wrote a paragraph or more about the topic selected for each letter
and illustrated the pages. It’s amazing to see what they come up with for the
various letters and how these words are connected to their knowledge of
refugees. For instance, they had these words for some of the letters:
Afghanistan, bombs, civil war, donations (to UNICEF, Doctors Without Borders,
Red Cross, WFP), education, famine, Guinea, help, internally displaced persons,
jobs, knowledge, land, Liberia, Mohomou Refugee School, nutrition,
organizations, protection, quick, refugee, RESPECT, Samuel, tots, UNHCR,
victims, war, eXample, you, and zone. I am able to assess their learning
through the pages they wrote for the book.
I have also done a refugee
simulation with my students called “Passages” (available from UNHCR). I do a
debriefing afterwards to evaluate what they’ve learned. After doing the
simulation, my students are able to understand better about the things their
pen pals have gone through and the things they write about in their letters. I
really look for evidence of affective learning, which I document through
teacher observation, journal writing, and the use of short surveys. We do lots
of reflection on our learning.
We do many projects that
incorporate technology. My students have done many PowerPoints for
presentations in the classroom and to other classrooms. They are evaluated by
rubric. We made a PowerPoint to send to Mohomou Refugee School to show them our
school and our activities. We printed it out also to send to them. What I like
about evaluating technology is that it’s an authentic assessment; if they can
do it (use PowerPoint, Word, Excel, Publisher), they know it. I usually end up
learning new things from my students when they use technology because they are
so quick to try different things and learn how to use them, and then they teach
me the skill.
| | AFFECTIVE AND OTHER OUTCOMES (10 points): | TOP |
I think the most
powerful learning that comes from online collaboration is the affective
learning that occurs. I work hard in my classroom to help students learn about
and care for people in other countries and other cultures, and to help my
students become global citizens. I try to move them from their comfort zones as
citizens of a small community and of the United States, to thinking about their
roles as citizens of a global community. When they are able to interact with
students from other countries and other cultures, their world expands to
include people all over the globe. They learn that students around the world
share many of the same hopes and dreams, and they begin to think of people
around the world as their friends and mutual sojourners on planet Earth. They
understand that we share one world and what we do in the U.S. affects the lives
of people wherever they live, and what they do affects us.
Unfortunately,
with the war in Iraq still going on, many students come to my classroom with
the idea that violence and aggression are the only ways to deal with
differences of opinion. They think the best way to fight global terrorism is to
bomb everyone. I’ve had students say, “We should just bomb the whole country of
Iraq and get rid of them.” When I ask why, they respond with, “They attacked
the Twin Towers, so they deserve to die. Those Muslims are all terrorists. They
want to destroy America.” I get very upset by this attitude, but I know that
it comes from lack of knowledge about other people and other places, and from
not having experiences with people who come from different backgrounds than
they do. I feel that my job is to teach my students to view things from
multiple perspectives, to teach them to have tolerance and respect for people
who are different from them in some way, and to appreciate our differences as
well as our similarities. As my students correspond with students who are
Muslim in the Youth Forum on iEARN, they begin to see things from a different
perspective. We study Islam in our social studies class, and we take a field
trip to the Islamic Center to learn about the religion of Islam, but the chance
to interact directly with a Muslim student online and become friends, really
helps to take away a lot of fear and misunderstanding about Muslims and the
religion of Islam. And that, I believe, will help lead to peace in the world.
Through our
refugee project, my students have learned that many people in the world live
difficult lives filled with much suffering and hardship. They’ve learned caring
and respect for people of all cultures and religions, and they’ve learned that
they have the power to make a difference in the world. One of the most
rewarding experiences in my teaching career was the day we received the second
letters from our refugee pen pals. In their letters to their pen pals, my
students had asked many questions about life in the refugee camps, how they
ended up in the camp, and what their lives were like. The responses to these letters
were really powerful and really impacted my students. One of my students, Matt,
after reading the letter from his pen pal, came up to my desk and said, “Mrs.
Huynh, my pen pal said the day he received my letter was the happiest day of
his life.” I said, “Do you understand how important it is to him to know that
someone cares? Do you realize that you are making a difference in his life just
by writing to him and letting him know that you care?” Matt said he had never
realized how important a letter could be to someone, and he was very excited
that he had the power to make a difference in someone’s life. I think that is
the most important lesson I can teach my students – that they can make a
difference in the world. The power of one person is immeasurable. A quote I
often share with my students is “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
committed citizens can change the world; indeed it’s the only thing that ever
has.” (Margaret Mead)
As we study
geography and learn the locations of countries and the geography, history, and
cultures of those countries, my students are much more interested and engaged
in the learning; those places seem real to them now because of their
involvement in our iEARN projects. They have friends that live there, so they
are motivated to learn more about these places. Current events seem more
relevant to my students also, because they have a link to those places. Social
studies really comes alive for my students.
One of the best
parts of the refugee school partnership with Mohomou Refugee School was the
relationship that I developed with Samuel, a teacher and the coordinator for
the pen pal project there. He and I emailed each other and shared conversations
about many things. He began to think of me as his mother. When he shared with
me that his wife was expecting a baby and that he planned on naming it after
me, I was thrilled! When the baby was born, it was a little boy. However, true
to his word, Samuel named the baby Emmanuel Judy! I felt really honored by
this. Samuel sent many photos of little Emmanuel Judy and also sent a video of
him after they received the video camera that my class sent. My students were
really excited about this, too.
| | PROFESSIONAL IMPACT (10 points): | TOP |
My participation in these online
collaborations has really had an impact on my teaching and my professional
involvement and emphasis. I have always felt that it was important to
internationalize my curriculum and teach my students about the people and
places in the world and to help them see themselves as part of the global
community. However, once I became involved in iEARN, and particularly in the
refugee project, I discovered that my students were much more motivated to
learn about the world, and they began to think more globally. I became a more
impassioned and inspired teacher, and I wanted to share what I was doing with
everyone because I was so excited. Around the same time, I began using service
learning as a teaching methodology. I found that linking service to the global
community was a perfect opportunity to get my students involved in social
justice issues and help them to become global citizens, excited about doing
their part to change in the world.
My involvement
with the refugee project has led to collaboration with many teachers who have
really impacted my teaching. One of them, Samuel, I have already mentioned. He is
the teacher at the refugee school, and we have collaborated on many projects.
We sent soccer balls, school supplies, video camera, books and other small
items to our pen pals, in addition to the letters. In exchange, they sent small
coin purses, beaded necklaces, and beaded bracelets to us, along with their
letters. We have exchanged videos with them and also exchanged many photos with
them. We raised the money to set up a computer lab for their school. Samuel
sent me an African dress, a coin purse, and, most importantly, honored me by
naming his son after me. The relationship has been a rich and rewarding one.
Another teacher
I have collaborated with even more in the refugee project is Marc Schaeffer,
the teacher who began the RESPECT-Refugees project (www.respectrefugees.org),
and who first wrote to me on the iEARN teacher’s forum. I have worked very
closely with Marc for the last three years. I am now a member of the board of
directors of RESPECT. I invited Marc to present at a service-learning academy
in Michigan, which I was on the planning committee for, and he came. He stayed
overnight at our home, so we had a chance to collaborate in person, after
collaborating on line for over a year. Then last October, I was invited to
present at a conference in Manitoba that Marc was on the planning committee
for. I presented at the conference and was able to spend three days there with
the opportunity to again spend time with Marc and discuss the RESPECT Refugees
program and our continued collaboration. We are in touch frequently through
email or instant messenger. The board of RESPECT has their board meetings
online, which I have participated in. I write articles for the e-zine. Marc is
a person I have come to admire and respect greatly.
I had never
thought of myself as a teacher leader until I became involved in online
collaboration. However, now I have many teachers coming to me for assistance
and ideas. They see that I am very excited about my teaching and the projects
I’m involved in, and they want to learn from me. I’ve realized that I have much
to share, and that I am a teacher leader. I have begun doing presentations at
workshops and conferences to share what I’ve learned, and have been pleased
that I have influenced many others to get involved in online collaboration.
I participated
in the “ One Book, One World” book discussion through iEARN. Everyone read the
book The Purple Hibiscus, and we participated in a discussion of the
book on one of the iEARN forums. The discussion is enriched because of the multiple
perspectives shared by teachers from many different backgrounds and cultures. I
have learned so much from the insights of the other teachers. Harry Potter
and the Half Blood Prince has been selected as the next book for
discussion.
My collaborations
with Marc, Samuel, and the other teachers through iEARN have given me the
impetus to become involved in presenting at workshops and conferences. I feel
like I have gained so much from my online collaboration that I want to share
with others and show them how they can become involved. My students have gained
from being involved in iEARN projects, and they are more engaged because of the
things we’re doing. Parents of my students are happy that their children are
able to use technology to share with students around the world. They like
seeing their children excited about learning. When we receive the Lewin’s book
in hard copy each year, containing writings of many of my students, both the
students and their parents are really excited and proud to see their work
published.
| | PERSONAL IMPACT (10 points): | TOP |
Online collaboration has impacted
my teaching and my personal life in many ways. In my classroom I am much more
comfortable using technology than I was before I became involved with iEARN. My
students are more motivated to write when they are able to share with a
worldwide audience online. I have access to many resources since becoming
involved in iEARN. When we are studying a certain area of the world, such as
South Asia, I can contact one of the teachers from India or Pakistan who is
involved in iEARN and ask them for their help in deciding what are the most
important ideas to teach about their country. They can give me information
about what a normal day is like for them or for one of their students. For
example, last spring we were studying the countries of Africa and I wanted to
do a more in depth study of Morocco with my students because I had met Jamal,
one of the iEARN Moroccan teachers during the Master Teacher Seminar in New
York City, and we became good friends. I emailed him and asked for information
such as famous people of Morocco, favorite foods, daily life in the countryside
and in the cities, current problems among youth in Morocco, and recommended
books about Morocco. It was great to share information with my students that
came directly from a person in Morocco and not just from a book.
My biggest
problem with online collaboration is that I never have enough time to get involved
in all the projects I’d like to. I enjoy going to the teachers forum and
writing to different teachers. I had a wonderful correspondence with a teacher
in Egypt that began with a discussion of Islam and Christianity, their
similarities and differences, and then continued to sharing about holidays,
places to visit in Egypt, the unequal treatment of women in both our countries,
and just sharing about our families. We continued our correspondence for nearly
a year. When I first signed up to take on online class with IEARN, I was very
nervous about participating with other teachers from around the world through
the Internet. My technology skills were pretty limited, and I was afraid I’d
make a fool of myself by posting in the wrong forum or not understanding the
assignment. However, after about three weeks, I was very comfortable navigating
on the website and posting my assignments. I really enjoyed the interaction
with the other students in my class and found myself anxious to read what they
had posted about my writing. My technology skills improved and my writing
skills improved. Now I love interacting on the forums.
Another problem
with our involvement in online projects is that my class has limited access to
computers. My school is very small and doesn’t have much technology. We have
two computers in my classroom. We have a computer lab with twenty laptops, but
it is shared with our whole K-8 building. When I first began my involvement
with iEARN, I was able to use the computer lab more frequently because not many
other teachers were using it. However, as more of the teachers become
comfortable with using technology with their students, I have had to share the
computer lab more, and so my students have less access than we used to.
| | PROMOTING YOUR PROJECTS (10 points): | TOP |
I have promoted
my projects in several ways. I have presented at local, state and national
conferences. I presented at a county service-learning academy in 2003, at the
State 4-H Global and Cultural Education Conference in 2005, at the state
service learning conference in 2004 and 2006 (in Michigan), and at the Michigan
Council for the Social Studies State Conference in 2005 and 2006. I presented
at the National Council for the Social Studies Conference with iEARN personnel
in 2004 and 2005. I went to Evansville, Indiana to present for iEARN in 2004. I
presented at the ASEC (Adult Secondary Education Council) in Winnipeg, Manitoba
in October of 2005. I have attended the National Service Learning Conference
for the last five years and have shared informally with teachers there. I am a
member of the Ionia ISD (Intermediate School District) social studies
committee, and I have shared several times at those meetings. I have presented
at a LATTICE (Linking All Types of Teachers to International and Cross-Cultural
Education) meeting formally, and have shared many times informally. I have
written about our refugee project for the RESPECT e-zine (can be found on www.respectrefugees.org website) and
have been interviewed for articles for the e-zine several times. I have written
an article for the “Finding Solutions to Hunger” newsletter, which is published
by Kids Can Make a Difference (www.kidscanmakeadifference.org). (I was then
asked to become a member of the Advisory Board for Kids Can Make a Difference,
which I accepted.) My projects have been covered in our local newspapers
several times. I’m known for my enthusiasm for my projects and I’m always
anxious to share whenever I can. I am never reluctant to share about my
projects!
| | DIRECT PROJECT ASSISTANCE (10 points): | TOP |
I have written
lesson plans for my refugee project that are available on the Learning to Give
website (www.learningtogive.org).
It is a part of a larger lesson called “Them and Us”. I have handouts of
resources that I use, including websites, books, magazines, and videos that I
share at the presentations I do. I am always willing to share my email and
respond to anyone who wants information from me. I always share my email when I
present at workshops and conferences, and have had several people email for
further help. As mentioned earlier, I am on the iEARN cadre, on the RESPECT
board of directors, and on the Kids Can Make a Difference advisory board, where
I can be contacted through their website.
| | EMPOWERING OTHERS (10 points): | TOP |
I am a member of both MCSS
(Michigan Council for the Social Studies) and NCSS (National Council for the
Social Studies) and I have presented at both the MCSS and the NCSS conferences.
In 2002, I was selected Middle School Social Studies Teacher of the Year by the
MCSS. I am a member of ASCD (Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development), member of the Board of Directors for RESPECT International,
member of the Advisory Board for Kids Can Make a Difference, member of the
State 4-H Global and Cultural Education Committee, member of LATTICE (Linking
all Types of Teachers to International and Cross-Cultural Education), member of
the iEARN cadre, member of the Ionia county service learning planning
committee, member of Ionia County ISD Social Studies Committee, a Teacher Fellow
for Service Learning, and national spokesperson for Learning to Give.
I participate in our online
discussion group for the iEARN cadre and in the iEARN teacher forum. I have
published articles in the e-zine for RESPECT International
(www.respectrefugees.org), as mentioned earlier, and for the Kids Can Make a
Difference Newsletter (www.kidscanmakeadifference.org). I have made
presentations in numerous local, regional, state and national workshops, and
one international workshop, as listed in 4 A, where I have impacted many other
teachers. One teacher who was at my presentation at a LATTICE meeting became so
interested that she signed up for an iEARN online class, became involved in
iEARN projects, went to NYC to a Master Teacher Seminar the next year after I
did, and now is facilitating an online class for iEARN.
I traveled to Vietnam on a
Fulbright–Hays trip in the summer of 2004. There were 16 teachers in the group
and we were together for five weeks, so I had lots of chances to share about my
projects. In fact, while I was in Vietnam, I got in touch with the iEARN
director there. We met two times to talk about iEARN projects, and she was able
to meet all the teachers in the Fulbright group in Saigon. (I have lesson plans
on the MSU website – www.isp.msu.edu/asianstudies/)
In the summer of 2005, I went to Honduras for 10 days on a trip for teachers
for Heifer International, a non-profit organization that works to end hunger
and poverty in the world. There were 24 teachers in our group, and again I
shared with them about my project.
On the Learning to Give website (www.learningtogive.org) I have a
lesson plan about my refugee project and how to get involved. On the RESPECT
website (www.respectrefugees.org)
you can read articles in the e-zines that are archived there, many of which
contain articles about my project. On the Kids Can Make a Difference website (www.kidscanmakeadifference.org),
there is an article I wrote for the newsletter; the newsletters are archived
there. I have written lesson plans for an Asian studies class I took last
spring, which will soon be up on the web at www.indiana.edu/~easc.
| | GSN's ROLE (10 points): | TOP |
a. My biggest challenges in conducting OCL
projects is finding time to spend on the web to collaborate with other teachers
to come up with ideas for new projects and the limited access I have to the use
of computers for my students in my classroom. There is also some pressure to
use more class time to prepare students for our state standardized tests. I
believe I can prepare them for the test and also be involved in online
projects. In fact, I think my students’ involvement in the projects motivates
them to take charge of their own learning and to learn more than they would in
a regular classroom situation, doing preparation for the test. However, not all
administrators agree.
b. I believe the template
that is used for iEARN projects makes it easy to develop projects to share. I
have been on the GSN website and looked at their projects, but because I am a
member of iEARN already, I have not become involved with any GSN projects.
However, I think that if you can link your projects to academic service
learning, it would attract more teachers. Service learning has been shown to
increase academic learning and improve civic engagement of students. I use
service learning in my classroom and am convinced of its power to engage
students in learning. Service learning has students involved in service
projects in their communities, but I stretch our community to include the world
community when we do service projects. Our partnership with Mohomou Refugee
School and sending them soccer balls, school supplies, a video camera. books,
and setting up a computer lab are all examples of service learning projects.
c. I would be happy to
test new resources, tools, or programs for GSN. I am always looking for new
resources to use in my classroom and would love to test any that GSN develops
that are appropriate to my classroom. At the present time I pilot lesson plans
for the Learning to Give organization and give feedback to them. I am very
interested in any programs that get my students involved in global
collaboration.
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