Final Thoughts
As I think back to the ways that I have engaged with my
colleagues, I can distinctly recall four avenues (class discussion/blogs,
videos, Residency, email, Google Hangouts and phone/text). The class
discussion and Google Hangouts has been the most useful and most relied
upon. I look forward to maintaining contact with my colleagues at least
twice per week for clarification, and inspiration.
I engage with the professions in the field of education on a
daily bases. For example, the professionals in my school and I usually
meet face to face in staff or committee meetings, and via email. We work
collaborative to enhance student learning.
I have shared common literature with both my Walden
Colleagues and my Cobb County School District Colleagues through higher
learning and professional development classes/workshops.
The experiences which has contributed most to my development
as an early childhood professional, is the way we interact through internet
activity via post discussions, resources, (videos) and face-to-face
conversations (Skype and Residency). For example, included within each
discussion are original and reply post, with our opinions, research facts, and
references formatted in APA Style. The original and feedback post are
highly important and often used as prompts when responding to discussion post
questions. The discussion post are in my opinion, a support system, where
student voices are heard, and for those reasons, it is undoubtedly the most
memorable way to engage with my colleges.
Reflecting on my experiences in this course, the materials I
connected with the most was the microaggression media video presentations,
(Laureate Education, (2011). I connected with that presentation because I
am from the African American Culture and have often felt direct microagresion
from the dominate culture.
The material that I found to be the most surprising was
found in the reading of The Spirit Catches and You Fall Down, Fadiman,
(2012). I was surprised at the reactions of the hospital staff towards
the family in the story. I could not believe the staff had not been
trained to work with people from other cultures/beliefs. I will
investigate more into the internment camps of the past and the future, meaning
watching to see how our country handles the Muslim Americans in the day/age of
terrorist. If the Muslims are treated like the Japanese were in the past,
it will be detrimental.
Cases like the Shaun-Adrian Chofla directly relate to my
future aspirations, in that I am serving economically, under privileged
children who will need much one-on-one help from teachers. These children
needs someone to meet them where they are and help to give them several
opportunities for success.
The text readings and list of articles (literature) might
motivate me the most in my teaching profession. I gained so much insight
from reading the chapters from Derman-Sparks and Edwards (2010), Fadiman
(2012), and Hanson and Lynch (2013). All three text has motivated me to
invest the time to get to know each child and their family background well
enough to help provide resources to meet their needs. Understanding the
strengths/weaknesses and meeting the needs of each family is beneficial for the
children and also sets the stage for social change.
My research project challenge was on Mental Illness:
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, for which I have gain so much
insight about how stress, and trauma may affect children suffering from ADHD.
I have learned many strategies such as taking deep breaths, and self-management
skills to help children cope with ADHD and continue to focus while in class.
References:
Derman-Sparks, L., & Edwards, J. O. (2010). Anti-bias
education for young children and
ourselves. National Association for the Education of Young Children.
ourselves. National Association for the Education of Young Children.
Fadiman, A. (2012 ). The spirit catches you and you
fall down: A Hmong child, her American
doctors, and the collision of two cultures. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux .
doctors, and the collision of two cultures. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux .
Hanson, M. J., & Lynch, E. W. (2013). Understanding
families: Approaches to diversity, disability, and risk. Baltimore,
MD: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.
Laureate Education. (Producer). (2011). Microaggressions
in Everyday Life [Video]. Retrieved from https://class.waldenu.edu
Laureate Education. (Producer). (2013). Introducing
Marsha Hawley [Video]. Retrieved from https://class.waldenu.edu
Laureate Education. (Producer). (2013). Introducing
Shaun-Adrian Cholfa [Video]. Retrieved from https://class.waldenu.edu