How I perceive her culture
The relationship that my student and I have is more based on who she is rather than where she is from. What I observe from her "culture" has far more to do with her family and her interests rather than where she is from. She moved here quite a few years ago, so much of her adolescence has occurred here in the states-- impacting her culture.
I attached the Myanmar flag as well as a map. The large group of people is because she is always talking about extended family and friends that stay at her house, she says that her house is always full of people that are not just her immediate family. In addition, she really loves wearing bright colored lip stains, and hoped to attend Lyndon State College in the fall. Also included is the alphabet for the language she natively speaks, which is called Burmese.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Development
|
Age Range
|
Theorist(s)
|
Stage Description
|
Teaching Considerations
|
Cognitive
|
Young adolescence
|
Kellough, Manning, Scales
|
They exhibit metacognition and independent thought
|
They prefer active learning rather than lecture-style, and enjoy engaging with their peers while they learn
|
Social-Emotional
|
Young adolescence
|
Brighton, Scales, Wiles, Kellough
|
Conflict between conforming and individuality. Strong need to be part of a group
|
Create activities in class that stimulate debate, as well as healthy collaboration
|
Psychological
|
10-11
|
Erikson
|
Create identity by the things they do well
|
Role-play activities, and the opportunity for students to make their own choices
|
Psychological
|
12-15
|
Erikson
|
Experimentation with ways to shape their own identity
| |
Moral
|
Young adolescence
|
Scales
|
They value fairness, and move away from just doing what they are told, to developing their own morality, normally based upon parents and/or key adults in their lives.
|
“...plan assignments that help students to incorporate their thoughts and feelings in writing”
|
When I was in early adolescence, I definitely experimented with my identity in the Psychological aspect. I grew up playing the flute, and was very good at it. However, being in band was not part of the social group I was in. I created an identity that was very individual, where I had a strong social group that knew nothing about performing music, as well as part of my identity that focussed on what I was good at. In the end, it allowed me to be myself (whatever that was) alongside have a self-esteem booster whenever I went to band practice.
11/7 Election Day
11/4 Science Class
The first day in the Science class, they were working on building 3D models of atoms. I noticed immediately that my student sat with other ELL students-- which makes sense. I would want to sit with people who are like me, too. Interestingly, the other 3 girls had a different native language than my student, which they spoke throughout class. My student looked at me with an annoyed look and I said “I have no idea what they are saying either, its alright” and she appreciated this I think. Then she said “speak English please” and the other girls said “we are talking about [that boy] over there who won’t stop looking at you” which my students went red in the face and said, “oh him? I don’t care”. I found this so funny, that these girls were speaking in their native language so the boy couldn’t overhear them-- what a superior power to have. It was good to know that they weren’t trying to leave my student left out of their conversation intentionally, either.
10/31 Miscommunication
10/28 College Essay
Today is Friday, and my student was not here. I checked with the teacher to make sure I was in the correct classroom and he said yes, and that she was absent, but that I could work with another ELL student. They were workshopping their college essays. I was thrilled because this was my area of expertise. The girl I was working with asked if I could read over her essay and give feedback… and oh my gosh was I blown away. She talked about her transition here, and what happened back in her country, and she has faced more struggles than I may ever in my entire life. I learned the importance of sensitivity. I had to think of how I would respond after reading this. I thanked her for sharing all that with me, and how strong of a person she was. She was upset because her English wasn’t all there so it was difficult for her to portray how she felt-- but I reassured her that what really counts, with things like this, is making it personal, which she had done an excellent job at. I hope that this essay helps her in the college application process.
10/24 Back At It
I became very sick after my first time tutoring due to beginning to work at a preschool in Williston. When I came back, I apologized to my student, hoping that I hadn’t let her down. She was really understanding and made a remark along the lines of “you still sound pretty sick” and then laughed in a sweet way. Her humor is remarkable. I asked her if my notes were helpful last time, and she said they were very helpful and that she even looked over them a few times. I found out that she was absent during a day she was supposed to give a presentation, and the teacher gave her an alternative assignment. This is definitely an option that I will give students when I am a teacher, but I will make sure that their absences aren’t because of any detrimental cause-- I’m still figuring out how I will do this. Her and I worked on a paper together. She had difficulty spelling words, and appeared embarrassed. I reassured her that she was much better at spelling in English than I would be in Burma (her native language), so there was no need to feel bad. This decrease of power was super beneficial in our relationship.
10/10 First Day
![]() |
| Winooski High School Mascot, Spartan |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


