Saturday, December 22, 2012


Attitudes Toward History and the Way it is Taught

David Buie

University of Houston Downtown

 

 

 

 

 Abstract

This study examined the attitudes that the adult population at large has about history and history instruction.  There were a total of 58 respondents that completed a ten question survey on their attitudes on history in general and history instruction.  To that end, questions were asked about the source of historical knowledge; the subject taught by their favorite teacher; their favorite and least favorite class; and their opinion on why history is taught in schools and how to make it better.  The finding of the survey was not always consistent with the research on the topic in general.

 

  Attitudes Toward History and the Way it is Taught

            It all facets of society there seem to be apathy towards history.  Based on this, it seems that the majority of people do not grasp the fact that events that happen in the past affect the present and by understanding why those events happened, it could lead to solutions to modern problems.  It is a valid promise that if students were more engaged in the learning of history they would be more likely as adults to remain engaged in the active pursuit of historic knowledge.

            One theory that prompted this research is that in general the common approaches used to teach history in the United States for over a hundred years is largely lacking in adequately teaching history to our students (VanSledright, 2011).  One only has to look to examine past studies of historical instruction to see this proved.  A study that was conducted in 1997 by the United States Department of Education found on average students in grades one through four spent only 2.6 hours a week learning social studies of any kind (Perie, 1997).  Another study conducted by the Center for Survey Research and Analysis at the University of Connecticut surveyed 556 college seniors on United States history, United States government, famous quotations, and popular culture.  The average score on the survey was 53% (Paxton, 2003).  Another survey conducted by the Luntz Research Company polled thirteen to seventeen year-olds and found only 41% of those surveyed could correctly identify the three branches of the United States Government (Murdock, 2011).  Yet another survey conducted by the United States Capitol Historical Society found that only 34% correctly identified George Washington as the command general at the battle of Yorktown while 37% erroneously answered Ulysses S. Grant (Capital History, n.d.).  This preponderance of evidence seems to suggest that there is an on-going problem with how history is taught.

            Unfortunately there is no panacea when it comes to fixing the problems with the teaching of history because ultimately like everything else dealing with education you are dealing with individuals.   However, this does not keep researchers and instructors from conducting research to find the best practices to teach history.  That leads to the question what are the best practices to teach history in our schools.  VanSledright (2011), in The Challenge of Rethinking History Education, looks at two very different high school United States history teachers within one high school.  One follows a heritage-infused approach of teaching United States history that focused on history as narrative building a “collective” memory in which students learn about national heroes that toiled to create strong and united nation.  While the other teacher takes quite a different approach.  This teacher approaches history as its own discipline.  This teacher uses primary sources and stresses critical thinking and project based learning.  Though these two approaches are being widely studied, they are not the only ways to increase engagement in history that is being studied.  Though they may be the most widely studied.  Even though teachers know the best practices to use based on research, they do not always follow those best practices. 

Literature Review

            The range of research on effective instruction of history is great and covers topics as diverse as the importance of subject knowledge, teaching history as a narrative, and the integration of historical fiction as a tool that enriches historical instruction.  Though the study of history as a narrative is perhaps the most studied instruction strategy, teaching history as a narrative is not just a phenomenon found in the United States.  In one study on teaching history as a narrative carried out in the United Kingdom it was found that “English schools should teach core British values, such as free speech, the rule of law, mutual tolerance, and respect for equal rights through the lends of history” (Andrews, McGlynn, & Mycock, 2010, p. 301).  This mirrors an American study that states, “Repetition of the American nation building story in United States history class in grade school function as a potentially productive vehicle to become an American…” (VanSledright, 2008, p. 110).  In another study, it was found when history is taught as a narrative it aids students in seeing an overview that is lacking when the focus is only on critical thinking skills (Hawkey, 2004).  In another study it was found that when used in conjunction with frameworks, it helps students make connections that they may not otherwise make (Davies, 2011).  Though there are numerous accounts of this approach being used successfully there are weaknesses to be found.  As VanSledright (2008) points out the American history narrative arc is mainly concerned with military, economic, and political events from British colonization on through to the modern day.  This Anglo-Centric “big picture” can be off-putting to someone who does not fit into that narrative (VanSledright, 2008, p. 114).  However, VanSledright (2008) also points out that one possible solution might be to replace a national arc with local ones though he agrees it would be hard to do for large and ethnically diverse states like Texas and California.  Another drawback that is pointed out by Hawkey (2004) is that “narratives are usually counterposed to analysis” (p.35).  So what can happen is students are taught a narrative and though they know that particular “story” they lack the higher level skills to investigate primary sources in order to their own answers.

            Sandwell (2005) points out that throughout North American history teachers overwhelmingly believe history constitutes a strong linear narrative.  In contrast professional historians have come to understand that history is a process of questioning evidence and drawing conclusions based on evidence from the past (Sandwell, 2005).  Sandwell (2005) found overwhelmingly that even after teaching students to “do history” that instead of investigating sources they move directly to tools like search engines to find a website they feel will give them the answer (p. 12).  It is this kind of thinking that reduces history to a series of indisputable facts (Sandwell, 2005).

            Wiersma (2008) points out in a study of the teaching methods of high school history teachers that the majority of history teachers follow the traditional model of teacher centered lecture and rote memorization.  Even though research suggests that this is not the best teaching practice, the author suggests that constructivist teaching methods where students actively seek out the answers on their own is the better pedagogical course of action (Wiersma, 2008).  Seghi writes, “In order to help our students understand the past they need to be engaged in learning about it” (Seghi, 2012, p. 1).  Seghi (2012) also stresses the importance of using primary sources in conjunction with problem based learning.  The goal of problem based learning is to help students think critically (Seghi, 2012).  The same can be said of other forms of constructivist learning; both stress the use of primary source material and engage students in higher levels of thinking. 

            Drake and Brown (2003) draw on experience and research to outline a systematic approach to utilizing primary sources as well as an examination on literature on the subject of historical thinking.  The approach discussed is designed around the concept of dividing documents into first order, second order, and third order (Drake & Brown, 2003).  A first order document is one that a teacher would use to design a lesson around or in other words is a document that communicates an important concept (Drake & Brown, 2003).  Second order documents are primary sources that support or challenge the first order document (Drake & Brown, 2003).  These may be made up of documents, photographs, and tables (Drake & Brown, 2003).  Lastly, third order documents are primary sources that relate to the original document (Drake & Brown, 2003).  The biggest difference between this approach and the other methods using primary sources is that in this approach it blends a skills approach with a narrative approach (Drake & Brown, 2003).  By using both primary sources and a narrative, this approach takes the best from both approaches in that it provides the framework of the narrative while building high-level processes.

            This leads to the question why do not more teachers engage students in interpretation.  Barton and Levstik points out that over the past fifteen years a lot of time and research have been devoted to reforming historical instruction.  The majority of the research points to the fact that students do not get a full historical education if they are just taught a story of past events.  Students must be taught how such stories are formed in order to get a full historical education.  In order to do that, students must be able to analyze and interpret primary sources.  However, many teachers remain unfazed by these concerns and require students to read textbooks and listen to lectures.  This seems to be because though they know the pedagogy they lack content knowledge or more precisely lack the knowledge of how to teach students to analyze history.  Though there are studies that show that this is not the case and that teachers with the knowledge in some cases are just apathetic.  The apathy does not seem to be confined to long-term teachers as shown in a survey of pre-service teachers who had engaged in a document based methods in class.  The main reason for this seems to be because of fear in teachers that they would lose control of their classrooms and not be able to cover the required curriculum.  So, in short, it is a curricular issue more than a pedagogical issue (Barton & Levstik, 2003).  Robert Bain agrees with Barton and Levstik.  Bain points out educational critics have singled out high school history teaching as the model of poor pedagogy (Bain, 2005).  Unprepared teachers turn history into the driest of school subjects (Bain, 2005).  The would-be reformers agree that teachers need to “move beyond lecture, recitation, and textbooks” (Bain, 2005, p. 179). However, there is no consensus among reformers.  Some reformers stress narrative approaches like Hawkey, while others propose a more problem based approach.  However, again like Barton and Levstik point out, Bain (2005) discusses “the challenges high school history teachers confront each day when facing large classes predefined course goals and required textbooks” (p. 180).  One way Bain (2005) suggests is to cast curricular objectives as historical problems.  By placing inquiry at the heart of the instruction, students become engaged and begin to think historically.  This, however, requires the teacher to work harder than just the dry lecture and rote memorization.  Bain (2005) suggests “That history teachers in the United States must play a form of instructional Jeopardy by inventing big questions to fit curricular answers” (p. 182).  To do this, teachers must first design problems that provide links across objectives.  Secondly, teachers must pay attention to the multifaceted of historical knowledge while carefully considering the hidden challenges that their students may face.  Lastly, the problems must be able to fit into the proper time frame, i.e. period, unit, etc.  By problematizing history it allows students to create their own narratives.  However, there are some ideas that must first be understood by students and according to Bain (2005) these are history-as-event and history-as-account.  By instilling these concepts into students it increases their ability to understand historical evidence which allows for better understanding of history.

            Yilmaz (2008-2009) discusses the nature of history and describes two distinct and contrasting perspectives.  The first is history as science or the assimilationist view and the other history as art, also called the idealistic view, though she states that though art and science are diametrically opposed one can take a more holistic approach anywhere along the continuum between purely art or purely science.  Yilmaz (2008-2009) also states the purpose for teaching history “is to promote social understanding and student efficacy” (p. 40).  Another tool that some school districts are looking to for help in improving its history instruction is the Teaching American History grant project.  Ragland (2007) examines a three year professional development program to improve teacher’s knowledge, understanding, and teaching strategies.  Ragland (2007) describes how each session was setup, first with teachers working with professional historians modeling the practices of doing history and then in the second session teachers were provided with not only pedagogical knowledge but pedagogical content knowledge, or in other words how to teach history effectively. 

            The results of the professional development program were striking.  Before participation in the program history teachers tended to think of history as nothing more than a bunch of dates, names, and places.  This is quite different than professional historians who see history as something to do, not something to be told.  This helped to address the lack of content knowledge among teachers, of which only seven of twenty teachers in the initial program had history degrees.  The program also demonstrated the need to add engaging activities that actually allowed students to do history.

            Another area of research on history education is finding out attitudes of pre-service history teachers.  Virta (2002) did this by analyzing the essays of eighteen pre-service teachers written during their education and interviews with five of the respondents.  She found that the majority of the respondents had in the past a teacher that they referred to as exceptional.  Of those students, most had a strong desire to emulate this teacher, even when the teacher’s methods are what would be considered out of date; while simultaneously chastising teachers for poor teaching methods even when the problem was not necessarily pedagogical.  The most telling is the tendency of pre-service teachers nostalgically wanting to teach class like they had been taught.  Couple this with issues of classroom management, then is it any wonder that an inexperienced teacher falls back on teaching history the way they had been taught (Virta, 2002).

            The idea of teaching students and inexperienced teachers falling back into what is comfortable is also discussed in the 2011 survey done by Bain and Harris.  In their study four pre-service and six in-service teachers were given a stack of seemingly random stack of cards listing eighteen historical events and asked to organize the cards into a big historical picture (Harris & Bain, 2011).  The differences among the ten teachers were stunning.  The teachers drew connections or organized along tempro-spatial scales; however, the more experienced teachers built connections among events that created a coherent narrative that related to real world concepts while inexperienced teachers were more likely to simply put cards in chronological order or simply in categories.  This seemed to point to the inexperienced teacher’s lack of content knowledge which seemed to hamper their ability to make meaningful connections for their students (Harris & Bain, 2011, p. 13). 

            Content knowledge is important in creating a framework and teaching higher order thinking.  However, one must first engage students.  This is the subject of the article by Turk, Klein, and Dickstein (2007) in which they advocate a creative way of engaging students by using fictional literature build on engagement by acting as giving an insight into a historical subject and to act as a metaphorical hook to get students interested in history by making it more real.  The ideal of fiction as history is also covered by Metzger who points out how invasive historical movies have become not only in the “popular history narrative” but also in history classrooms (p. 67).  Though he does not discount the engaging effect of these made for entertainment films.  He does, however, caution that a good resource used badly can be detrimental.  So in order to keep films from doing damage to the historical knowledge of students, Metzger (2007) points out that students should be taught to analyze films as they would any source by doing this it opens up a wide range of teaching possibilities.  The literature and research on teaching history is as varied as history and no single work can touch on it all.  Like a great many things related to educational research one kind find someone to agree they are doing the best thing that is why it is important that educators and instructors to read the research and evaluate the sources just as a historian would evaluate any primary source.  Though the research sighted in this study shows that there is a strong desire by students to be given the right answer.  When in reality it comes to the actual practice of history, asking the right question is far more important than the right answer.

Method

Participants

            The participants of the survey included a total of fifty-eight volunteers of undeterminable gender, age, and location.  The participants were required to be eighteen years of age and to have taken at least one history class.  The participants were asked to state their education level.  Of the fifty-eight responses, there was one participant with a doctoral degree which accounted for 1.8% of the participants.  There were also five participants with a master’s degree which accounted for 8.8% of the participants.  There were also twenty participants with a bachelor’s degree which accounted for 35.1% of the participants.  Another twenty-seven participants had a high school degree which accounted for 47.4% of the participants. And lastly, there were four participants without a high school degree which accounted for 7% of the participants and there was one participant that abstained from answering that question. 

Materials

            The questionnaire, Attitudes Concerning History Instruction and History in General, was measured through an online survey.  The participants were asked to complete a total of ten questions.  These questions consisted of three multiple choice close ended, two multiple choice, and five short answer.  The participants were asked about their favorite and least favorite class, the source of historical knowledge, the class their favorite teacher taught, along with their current education level, the industry they are currently employed in or about to go into, and if the instruction was relevant to that industry. 

Procedure

            A link with a request for participation in the survey was posted on a social media website along with a request that participants re-post the survey request in a method known as snowball sampling.  The survey was to be completed online and complied by a research website.  The survey was free of any identifiers and as such they were completely anonymous.  The participants were required to read an electronically accept the terms on an informed consent form prior to completing the survey.  Each survey could only be completed once from an individual computer.

Results

            The findings of the survey were interesting.  As a whole, the group of participants was more educated than the general public. The sample population was made up of 93% of at least a high school education which is more than the United States at large, which only has about a 75% graduation rate.

            The respondents were asked what their favorite class was and a total of 34.5% (20 participants) listed history as their favorite class.  This was followed by math at 20.7% (12 participants).  Next was science as the favorite class with 10.3% (6 participants) and then English with 6.9% (4 participants).  The last classification of classes fell into “other” which included such diverse classes as Spanish, psychology, and digital illustration.  This classification accounted for 31% (18 participants).  Conversely, respondents were also asked what their least favorite class was and a total of 41.4% (24 participants) listed some form of mathematics.  This was followed by history with 19% (11 participants).  Only three of these eleven participants said math was their favorite subject.  Next was English with 15.5% (9 participants).  Next was science which had 13.8% (8 participants).  The “other” classification came in last with a total of 10.3% (6 participants).  Some of the classes listed in the “other” category were business management, physical education, and games.  This illustrated an interesting finding that two classes were listed as both the favorite and least favorite.  These two classes were math and history, which lead one to think that these classes illicit diametrically opposed responses.

Another question asked the respondents what class their favorite teacher taught.  The “other” classification included subjects such as agriculture, political science, and inter-personal communions.  This classification accounted for 27.6% (16 of the participants). This was followed by history and English with 24.1% (14 of the participants each).  Next was science with 13.8% (8 of the participants) and math with 10.3% (6 of the participants).  There were four participants that reported that they had no favorite teacher, which accounted for 6.9%.  The respondents were also asked about their feeling about history in general.  There were 54.4% of the participants (31 of the participants) that stated they liked their history class while 24.6% (14 of the participants) stated they like history but did not like their history class.  Another 17.5% (10 of the participants) stated that they were apathetic towards history and 3.5% (2 of the participants) stated that they hated history. 

            Next, the respondents were asked what industry they were currently employed.  The largest section was manufacturing with 37.9% (22 of the participants) followed by education with 20.7% (12 of the participants).  The next type of industry was service at 17.2% (10 of the participants) and then there was medical with 13.8% (8 of the participants).  Last was the legal field with 5.2% (3 of the participants).

            Then the respondents were asked if they felt their current or past classes were relevant in their everyday life.  A total of 89.7% (52 of the participants) answered yes while only 8.6% (5 of the participants) responded with no.  Of the respondents that answered affirmatively, English had the most responses with 86.5% (45 participants).  This was followed by math with 78.8% (41 participants) with social studies being next at 80.8% (42 participants) and then there was science with 59.6% (31 participants).  There were also ten participants (19.2%) that said “other” which among those that listed other accounting, typing, and computers.  Then the respondents were asked which source they get their historical knowledge.  There were 65.5% (38 of the participants) that answered documentaries/history channel while 60.3% (35 of the participants) answered past or current history classes.  Another 43.1% (25 of the participants) answered self-study while 25.9% (15 of the participants) answered historical fiction/literature.  Lastly, historically based Hollywood movies were chosen by 20.7% (12 of the participants). 

            Respondents were also asked why they thought history was taught in school.  The responses to this question were varied as it was an open ended question; however, the responses were placed in four categories.  The first category was cultural identification which accounted for 44.8% (26 of the participants).  The second category was avoiding the mistakes of the past and this category received 20.7% (12 of the participants).  The third category was purely intellectual reasons and this category received 29.3% (17 of the participants).  The last category had three responses that were grouped into a category called “not applicable” and this accounted for 5.2% of the participants.  This last category is called “not applicable” because of responses like “too many notes/lectures” or “I think it is currently taught so that students can pass the STAAR exam” or “don’t know”.

            Lastly, respondents were asked what could be done to improve instruction in history classes.  As with the previous question this was an open-ended response.  Respondents offered many varied ideas on how to improve history instruction; however, the ideas were placed into six categories.  The categories getting the most responses were that the teacher should be a more engaging speaker and provide a more engaging narrative.  There were 22.4% (13 of the participants) that felt this way.  The same number felt that curriculums should allow for more creative lesson plans.  There were 15.5% (9 of the participants) that felt there should be more active/hands on study of history while 17.2% (10 of the participants) felt teachers should create more relevance/connections to today’s students.  The last category received 15.5% (9 of the participants also) that were either inappropriate to the question or did not have an opinion.

The survey also seemed to disprove the hypothesis that there would be a statistical correlation between respondent’s favorite class and the class that their favorite teacher taught; however after performing a Chi Square there proved to be no significant correlation (see figure 1). 

                                                                 Discussion

            This survey looks at the attitudes that the individual formed as a result of the historical instruction they received.  By understanding those attitudes, researchers can determine ways to improve instruction.  By determining where poor attitudes are formed, changes can be made to fix those issues.  Conversely, by determining where good attitudes are formed, researchers can develop teaching strategies to reinforce those behaviors.  The amount of research on the subject of history is great and there are some items that were lightly touched on in this survey.  One area is why history is taught in schools, such as the one, “In an effort to come to some reasonable terms with the firm hold a triumphal national narrative has over the way history education or heritage education if you will—is practiced in the United States.  I have labored to show it serves a powerful sociocultural purpose (VanSledright, 2008, p.137).  This is comparable to what I found in the survey when asked “why history is taught in schools”.  There were 44.9% of the participants that gave an answer that mirrored the reason given by VanSledright by a considerable margin.  The response with the next highest respondents for purely intellectual reasons was 29.3%.  Some 16.5% points lower, though the survey seems to confirm VanSledright.  The survey does not support Metzger (2007):

It must be clear to even the most academic of historians that the visual media have become (perhaps) the chief conveyor of public history, that for every person who reads a book on a historical topic about which a film has been made…many millions of people are likely to encounter that same past on the screen (p. 67).

In the results section above, the findings for the question “historical knowledge” confirm that historically themed movies are not the “chief conveyor of public history” as this category received the fewest responses.

            As noted, the survey was conducted using a snowball sampling and there are both advantages and disadvantages to this method.  The advantages are mainly in that a sample can be obtained quickly, particularly when it is done online.  However, the sample cannot generally be applied to the population at large because it is not a truly random sample.  The advantage of time needed to obtain a sample population made it the best choice for this survey and despite the drawback found in the sample method this survey is a good jumping off point for several points of research including the original research design of the survey.  In fact, it would be interesting to re-administer this survey with a random sample to test if there would be a significant difference and if so, would it be across the whole survey or only in certain aspects.  Because of time constraints, this survey and the responses could not be analyzed to the extent the subject matter deserved.  However, I think the answers to the survey do raise some thought provoking data and does have some merit.

            For instance, the answer to the question concerning the source of historical knowledge along with the answers given for the question on how to improve education, clearly show that the respondents to the questionnaire are most concerned with the history narrative.  They want to be told what they need to know and do not want to go through the “chore” of verifying sources or weighing the merit of conflicting accounts of an event.  Based on this, it appears the problem is not necessarily instruction but attitudes that need to be changed.  The emphasis should be shifted getting the right answer to how do you get the right answer.

 

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Sunday, April 22, 2012

Conscience of Huckleberry Finn


Conscience of Huckleberry Finn Commentary

            In the “Conscience of Huckleberry Finn” Bennett discusses the morality or more specifically the “bad morality” of the literary character Huckleberry Finn; the leader of Hitler’s secret police, Heinrich Himmler; and early American Calvinist Theologian, Jonathan Edwards.  Bennett does this by specifically looking at the roles played by each subject’s sympathy in their moral dilemma. 
            However, to be able to discuss this article one must understand the definitions of a few key terms.  The first term is bad morality.  This is described by Bennett in the article as, “a morality whose principles I deeply disapprove of (Bennett, pg 16).”  The other key term is sympathy.  This term is described by Bennett as such, “I use this term to cover every sort of fellow-feeling, as when one feels a shrinking reluctance to act in a way which will bring misfortune to someone else (Bennett, pg 16).”  Based on this definition by Bennett one could use conscience and sympathy interchangeably. 
In Bennett’s discussion of Huckleberry’s moral dilemma he uses as an example of bad morality Huckleberry’s feelings of guilt at helping his friend Jim, a slave, to gain his freedom.  Seen through the eyes of current morality this seems to be the right thing to do, but let us look at it as an under-educated child from the 1800s would look at the prospect of a slave being freed.  Though Jim is Huckleberry’s friend and companion he is a slave, which by definition makes him property.  So by him not reporting Jim and allowing him to gain his freedom he is at the very least an accomplice to the theft of another’s property.  Huckleberry feels this is wrong, based on the bad morality of the time and this just gets worse when Jim confides his plan to steal his wife and children if he has to.  In a last ditch attempt to put things right Huckleberry decides to turn Jim in but when it comes time to do so, Huckleberry freezes and is unable to do “the right thing” based on the moral code of the day.  He gives into the sympathy he feels for his friend which ironically is the right thing to do but Huckleberry sees it as a “wicked felony” (Bennett, pg 18).  This leads Huckleberry to reject morality and to rely on conscience. 
This is different from Heinrich Himmler who became a Nazi in 1923 and became head of the SS, which put him in charge of the Nazi’s “final solution of the Jewish problem (Bennett, pg 15).”  The solution leads to the death of over four and a half million Jews and several million other gentiles, mostly Poles and Russians.  This to us might seem completely repugnant and against all morality; however, Himmler believed he was doing what was best for Germany, no matter how personally distasteful he finds it.  These views can be found in a speech made to some generals of the SS in which he states, “atrocities must be performed to ensure the victory of Germany”, including the destruction of the Jewish race.  However, he stated doing this is not easy and should not be so.  This is because he acknowledges the presence of sympathy, the part of a person that leads him or her to feel compassion for another, by stating that even though these atrocities have been committed that they remain “decent fellows” (Bennett, pg 20).  This is a case unlike Huckleberry’s where bad morality won out.  Himmler saw it as more important to do what his morality said, which was to ensure the greatness of Germany, than to show sympathy for his fellow human beings.  But he does acknowledge the presence of sympathy and the fact it is sympathy that made what they had to do so hard. 
Such is not the case with Jonathan Edwards, who Bennett holds up as a man whose bad morality is in his belief that all of mankind deserves eternal damnation.  This I believe most people would disagree with but beyond that Edward’s seems misanthropic in his lack of sympathy for any who are condemned.  So unlike Huckleberry who gives up a bad morality and embraces sympathy or Himmler that embraces a bad morality while ignoring his sympathies, Edwards seems to adjust his morality to one which completely does away with any human compassion.
The examples Bennett gave in his article are not the only ones where there is a dilemma of bad morality verses sympathy.  One that comes to mind is the “Stolen Generation”.  This is what the Aborigines called the children of Aboriginal descent that were taken from their families in the period from 1869 to 1969 to be raised as wards of the state.  They were deprived of their culture and taught the ethnocentric culture of European settlers.  It could be argued that this was done out of a misguided sense of sympathy.  The results of which are inarguable.  I think there are many examples like the “Stolen Generation” happening as we speak; however, like the well meaning European settlers in Australia, who thought they were providing a solution, they were in reality only causing a problem.  It took 100 years for this program based on a bad morality to come to an end because while it was going on the powers that be in Australia honestly thought they were doing a good thing.  This is the rub when it comes to identifying ones morality as being bad.  Did Himmler or Edwards think that their morality was bad?  I would say that in neither case that they would, because it is not in human nature to think ill of one’s own morality.  Granted people can see injustices all around them and can work to fix those injustices that directly affect them; however, these changes do not have an immediate effect on morality.  Which is not to say morality is static and unchanging, it is something akin to a living organism that adapts and changes over many generations; and it is not until ones own morality changes enough that they are able to recognize flaws in a society’s morality. 
Bennett’s premise for writing “The Conscience of Huckleberry Finn” was to exam how sympathy related to a “bad morality”.  In writing this commentary, I feel that there definitely is a relationship present between sympathy and bad morality.  I also feel that as demonstrated by the “Stolen Generation”, sympathy can also lead to bad morality.  In short, morality is something that grows and changes and whether good or bad it takes time and distance to know for sure.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

One Way Technology Can Help in the Classroom

One of many concerns facing teachers today is the growing number of students in one class period combined with the fact that teachers are increasingly being expected to teach a growing number of students that have obstacles to learning.  One way to overcome this is through the use of technology.  One way to employ technology in everyday learning is by having a web page.  Building a web page can be very simple.  One resource to help you to do this is weebly.com.  You may be wondering how having a web page can be beneficial to teaching.   Life happens and assignments get lost or students miss class or just have questions as do parents. In order to expedite communication between students, parents, and the teacher, a web page can be designed to provide the assignments and notes.  If parents have concerns about their child they can contact the teacher via the contact page or if a student misses class they can get missed notes from the notes page and assignments from the assignments page.  There is also the content section that contains information about subjects we cover in class but do not have time to get to which may or may not be included as bonus questions on exams.

The first step is to go to weebly.com and then sign in. 


After signing in, you will be on a page that looks like this:


Next enter the Title of your website and then choose the Type of your website menu.  Then click on continue.


If you choose a Sub Domain of weebly.com the web page is free.  If you choose to register a domain you there will be cost of $68, which is a one-time fee and then you will be charged an annual fee of $39.00.  After choosing which domain you want to use, click continue.


You will see a page similar to the one above and then you will choose from the templates provided such as the “gardening hands”.  Then you will pull down the design elements you wish to include.  For example if you want to add a picture (click on the picture icon and it will give you the blue box you see below that says “Click Here to Edit”):


When you click on the “Click Here to Edit” you will see:


Then click on the green bar to upload your picture.  After choosing your picture your screen will show your picture.

The procedure is the same to add text or other text and pictures; just choose the appropriate icon at the top. 

You can also easily add video and audio files by selecting the multimedia option. 


    After clicking there you will see:


Then choose from the appropriate icon shown above. 

For a You Tube video, you will need to go to youtube.com.  Find the video you want, and then click on Share under where the video is shown.


Copy the URL that is shown above and then go back to weebly.com’s website.  Then click on the Large Arrow in the screen shot below.


In the bar below you will paste the URL from youtube.com.  Then press enter.



Continue until page is finished and customized to your preferences.  Then hit Publish.

 

Click here for an example of a finished web page. 

If anyone else has any ideas on ways technology can help in the classroom, I would love to hear your thoughts.  Please post your ideas and share the learning.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012


Preparing effective PowerPoint slideshows for English Language Learners
Students that are English language learners are a growing population of students in today’s classroom.  A 2003 report from National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) shows a thirty percent increase in English language learners.  Of these students Spanish speaking students are the fastest growing group.  Sixty-five percent of all non-English speaking immigrants are Hispanic yet only forty-four percent scored proficient or higher on a reading test in a NCES study conducted in 2004.  There are many ways to use technology to assist students that may be an English language learner.  Typically these students have some mastery of English though it is usually behind that of native speakers and is usually greatest in understanding the written word not the spoken.
            So the challenge is to convey a concept or idea appropriate to a student that may be very intelligent but that has an English reading comprehension level several years behind their physical age.  To do this there are several strategies you can employee.  One of these strategies is to use pictures as much as possible.  Because many times, especially with complicated issues, it is more helpful for students to see a picture.  Another helpful feature to aid in the teaching of an English language learners is video.  This helps because if a picture is worth a thousand words a three minute video clip is worth at least ten times that.  By hearing the audio play while seeing the action and maybe a short written concept, the concept is re-enforced and by re-enforcing the concepts you want to teach it makes it easier for students to grasp.
            Another way for English language learners to benefit from technology such as powerpoint presentation is that it allows for interaction not only with the teacher but with the actual presentation.  This allows technology to be hands on such as a powerpoint that is controlled by individual students that may read slower because of them being an English language learner.  This can be helpful not only with the students making a better grade but with help they maintain a positive outlook on their learning so that they do not become frustrated.
            More and more technology such as smart boards and powerpoint presentations are finding their way into our classrooms.  While at the same time as teachers, we are also finding more and more students that are English language learners.  By effectively using the techniques I discussed, maximizing the amount of pictures that are used using minimal verbiage except in conjunction with pictures/video and using video/audio in presentations whenever possible.  And lastly, make the technology interactive with all students.  By following these techniques you can successfully use technology to break down any language barrier.



Here is an example of a powerpoint slide that takes advantage of pictures and words to get a concept across. 
 


Wednesday, February 22, 2012



Wake Island POW’s

             Approximately 2,000 miles west of Hawaii sets three small islands collectively known as Wake.  Until the 1930’s the islands were uninhabited.  In the mid 1930’s, Pan American Airlines setup a refueling station for its Pacific clippers.  Then in January of 1941, civilian contractors began the task of turning Wake into a military base.  By December 1941, Wake had become a working military base with a compliment of:
  • 38 officers
  • 485 enlisted men
  • 1,200 civilian contract employees.
This included Marine Fighter Squadron, VMF-211, and comprised of 12 Grumman F4F-3 Hellcats.   The First Marine Defense Battalion had:
Quantity
Description
12
Three inch anti-aircraft guns
24
.50 caliber anti-aircraft machine guns
30
Ground defense .30 caliber machine guns
3
Five inch naval defense batteries

However, only the naval defense batteries were manned at anywhere near full strength, and there were only enough guns for 449 of the Marines.
            On December 6, 1941, the senior officers on Wake were Major James Devereux of the First Marine Defense Battalion; Commander Winfield Cunningham who was the officer in charge of naval activities and commander of the defense of Wake; Major Paul Putnam who was the commander of VMF-211; and Nathan Dan Teters who was the construction superintendent in charge of Wake’s civilian contractors.
            At 0700 Monday December 8, a message was received from Pearl Harbor and Hickam Field stating that Pearl Harbor was under attack.  By 0845 all of Wake’s defensive positions were “manned and ready.”2  By noon, the attack on Wake had begun by a flight of 27 Mitsubishi “Nells” bombers from the Chitose Air Group of Japans 24th Air Flotilla.  The Japanese continued their hit and run attacks with the Wake defenders holding their own.  This continued until 0900 on December 21.  Forty-nine dive bombers escorted by 18 zeros fighters from the Japanese carriers Hiryo and Soryo lead the second Japanese invasion force.  At 0235 on December 23rd; 1,500 Japanese marines landed on Wake.  After the landing, Wake’s marines and civilian contractors gave as good as they got, especially considering there was a lack of weapons and number of service men.  By 0730, Devereaux rigged a white flag.  He then left his command post and headed south.By 1430 the last shot had been fired.  The remaining 433 military and 1,104 civilians became prisoners of war (POW’s).
            The Wake POW’s were rounded up and made to strip to their skivvies and marched to the airfield where their hands were bound by telephone wire and then a second length was looped around their necks and tied to their hands.  Admiral Kajioka, the Japanese commander, seemed uncertain what to do with so many prisoners.  “He radioed his headquarters at Truk.  After a lengthy delay the reply came back ‘you are authorized to take prisoners.’”4  “At 1700 Admiral Kajioka arrived at the airfield and gave the following proclamation ‘here it is proclaimed that the entire islands of Wake are now the property of the Great Empire of Japan.’  Public notice the Great Empire of Japan, who loves peace and respects justice, has been obliged to take arms against the challenge of President Roosevelt.   Therefore in accordance with the peace loving spirit of the Great Empire of Japan, Japanese Imperial Navy will not inflict harm to those people though they have been our enemy—who do not hold hostility against us in any respect so they can be in peace!  But whoever violates our spirit or whoever is not obedient shall be severely punished by our martial law issued by the headquarters of the Japanese Imperial Navy.”The first 48 hours of captivity were torture; prisoners were made to endure two days exposed to the elements with little or no clothing and practically no food or water.  On Christmas day, the prisoners were given a thin gruel of rice and “a gift of sorts when several vehicles appeared at the airstrip, piled with articles of discarded clothing.”6   That evening the POW’s were moved to the remaining barracks.  Where the civilian cooks were allowed to prepare two hot meals a day and bread and jam at night, this lasted till January 11, 1942.  A former passenger liner the Nitta Maru arrived at Wake.  At about noon the next day, Japanese guards informed the prisoners that they had exactly one hour to prepare for departure.  About 1,150 of Wake’s defenders, enlisted men, and civilians would be crammed into the ships cargo hold with a little straw bedding and a few five gallon buckets for sanitary facilities.  Then 28 officers were herded into what had been the ships mailroom.  All of the prisoners had to run a gauntlet of Japanese sailors raining kicks and blows on the newly boarded passengers.  “They made us jump onto the ship and if we did not move fast enough to suit them they beat the hell out of us,” PFC Artie Stocks remembered.7  “A sign which was posted in the hold in the ship stated the regulations the prisoners must obey.  An example would be, the prisoners disobeying the following orders will be punished with immediate death:  disobeying orders and instructions, showing a motion of antagonism and raising a sign of opposition, talking without permission, resisting mutually, climbing a ladder without order, etc…”During the twelve day voyage five prisoners were beheaded and no one knows why or how these five men were chosen for execution by Lt. Toshio Sato, commander at the Japanese guard detachment.9  After about a week at sea, the Nitta Maru pulls into Tokyo where a few prisoners are taken off.  The Nitta Maru continued on to Shanghai, China, the location of the Woosung Prison Camp.  In January of 1942, Woosung was home to 1,500 prisoners and was commanded by Colonel Goici Yuse who was notorious for his violent and unpredictable temper.  He organized the prisoners in ten man shooting squads explaining if one man escaped the other nine dies.  He died in March of 1942 and was replaced by Colonel Satoshi Otera who wasn’t much better.  An example of his cruelty is when he discovered a hole in a 100 pound bag of sugar; he retaliated by denying food to all prisoners for 72 hours.  Though this only amounted to about 1,500 calories it was sorely missed by the prisoners.  Despite the starvation diet, Major Deveraux insisted on the same military discipline found at a state side marine base and insisted that the marines exercise daily.  The prisoners continued to fight their captors anyway they could.  “When they were put to work repairing roads they widened or deepened potholes or loose packed the dirt so the holes would soon get worse.  When assigned to clean weapons they polished the metal until it was too thin to be safely fired, lost parts, hid bearings, loosened bolts, and/or substituted parts.”10  The discipline Major Devereaux instilled served the Wake marines well and was one of the reasons that Wake prisoners had one of the best mortality rates of any group of prisoners during the war but no amount of exercise could have saved civilian Lonnie Riddle when a prison guard shot him or kept other accidents from happening.  Another reason for the Wake prisoner’s relative good health was Edouard Eagle, a Swiss representative of the International Red Cross.  He was very insistent on providing medical and dental help for the prisoners.  He also provided warm clothing, food, and medical supplies; although he was not the only person to come to the prisoner’s aid.  American “Shanghai” Jimmy James, a Minnesotan that owned four American style restaurants in Shanghai, provided the Wake prisoners a Christmas tree with trimmings, cigars, cigarettes, and a hot turkey dinner for the Christmas of 1942.  He also continued to send food, medicine, and other help until he too was interned in the prison camp.11
            In all, 44 military personnel and 82 civilians were killed in action on Wake; 442 service men and 1,118 civilians were captured.12  Two civilians died after the seize fire.  Twenty-seven service men and 115 civilian died in POW camps or in route.12  There were 98 civilians that were kept on Wake and forced to assist the Japanese with the rebuilding of the islands defenses.12  However by October 7, 1943, there was nothing left to build and nothing left to build with.  The Japanese Commandant of Wake, Admiral Shigematsu Sakaibara ordered Lt. Torashi Ito to take all the prisoners to the beach near the northwestern extremity of Wake proper and execute them. 
            Not all stories about Wake are as tragic.  One of the most inspirational stories is that of Lt. John Kinney, who escaped from the Japanese and made it across almost all of China before he was picked up by an army C-47 and returned to the United States.13  Although it took longer, a grand total of 415 servicemen and 901 civilians were repatriated.14 
Notes
            1. Bill Sloan, Given Up For Dead: America’s Heroic Stand At Wake Island (New York: Bantam Dell, 2003), 51.
            2. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 87
            3. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 238
            4. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 393
            5. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 394-395
            6. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 400
            7. Sloan, Given Up for Dead, 407
            8. Harry Spiller, American POWS In World War II: Twelve Personal Accounts Of Captivity by Germany and Japan (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company Inc. Publishers, 2009), 16-17.
            9. Spiller, American POWS In World War II, 17
            10. James W. Wensyel, “Wake Island Prisoners of World War II,” HistoryNet (2001), http://www.historynet.com/wake-island-prisoners-of-world-war-ii.htm
            11. Wensyel, “Wake Island”, http://www.historynet.com/wake-island-prisoners-of-world-war-ii.htm
            12. Spiller, American POWS In World War II, 27
            13. John F. Kinney and James M. McCaffrey, “Escape,” in The Wake Island Pilot: A World War II Memoir, (Washington: Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data, 1995), 137-160.
            14. Kinney and McCcaffrey, Wake Island Pilot, 137-160

Bibliography
Kinney, John F. and James M. McCaffrey, “Escape.” In The Wake Island Pilot: A World War II
Memoir, 137-160.  Washington: Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data,
1995.
Sloan, Bill.  Given Up For Dead: America’s Heroic Stand At Wake IslandNew York: Bantam
            Dell, 2003.
Spiller, Harry.  American POWS In World War II: Twelve Personal Accounts Of Captivity by
Germany and JapanJefferson, NC: McFarland & Company Inc. Publishers, 2009.
Wensyel, James W.  “Wake Island Prisoners of World War II,” HistoryNet (2001),
http://www.historynet.com/wake-island-prisoners-of-world-war-ii.htm