Wednesday, December 31, 2008

World History & U.S. History: Extra Credit Reminder

Don't forget that the optional extra credit assignment is due the day you come back to my class (even classes on Tuesday, January 6 and odd classes Wednesday January 7). Be sure to review my previous blog entries to see exactly what is required, then follow those directions carefully. Hope you enjoyed the movies. Remember, no late assignments will be accepted.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

UPDATE: Showtimes and Dates for Benjamin Button and Valkyrie

Hope you all had a great Christmas today. Alright, I checked the show times and dates and I have a bit of a change. I am going to watch Benjamin Button at 10:45 am tomorrow, Friday December 26th as I'd been announcing in class. However, I'm going to change the Valkyrie date and show to Saturday, December 27th at 11:30 am. With family visiting from out of town, it's going to work out better for me to split it up over two days. Don't forget to follow the guidelines for the extra credit assignments. And remember, no late assignments will be accepted: they are due on Tuesday Jan. 6 or Wednesday Jan. 7 (depending on which day you have my class). Hope to see you at one of the showings!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

World History Extra Credit Opportunity: Valkyrie

Over the winter holidays, in addition to the extra credit I'm offering to my U.S. History classes, I will also be offering an extra credit opportunity for my World History classes.

During the spring semester we will be studying World War II and the rise of Adolf Hitler. Valkyrie with Tom Cruise is based on the true story of an assassination attempt on Hitler and will open in theaters on Christmas Day.

To earn extra credit, you must:
1. Be in my World History class.
2. Watch the movie.
3. Write a summary of the story and detail key plot elements and convince me that you were paying attention.
4. Attach your original ticket stub to your summary.

This will be due the day you return from winter vacation (January 6 for even classes, January 7 for odd). No late assignments will be accepted.

Also, some of us will be watching it together on December 26th at the Sierra Vista theaters. Stay tuned to the blog for that showtime.

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

U.S. History Extra Credit Opportunity: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

In my classes students may earn a few extra credit points from time to time during different activities (vocabulary games, review games, etc.). For the first time in years, I am offering an extra credit assignment worth a full...drum roll please...TEN points.

My U.S. History class is entering the 1920s and the American writer that is most often associated with the 1920s is F. Scott Fitzgerald. Most know him for his classic American novel The Great Gatsby among other works. He was also a writer of short stories, one of which is The Curious Case of Benjamin Button which is currently available by itself and in a Penguin edition that includes other Jazz Age stories. Here is what the back cover of that Penguin edition says about Benjamin Button and Fitzgerald's other short stories:

IN THE TITLE STORY, a baby born in 1860 begins life as an old man and proceeds to age backward. F. Scott Fizgerald hinted at this kind of inversion when he called his era “a generation grown up to find all Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken.” Perhaps nowhere in American fiction has this “Lost Generation” been more vividly preserved than in Fitzgerald’s short fiction. Spanning the early twentieth-century American landscape, this original collection captures, with Fitzgerald’s signature blend of enchantment and disillusionment, America during the Jazz Age.


On Christmas Day, the movie version of that story comes out and it stars Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett. Here is the trailer:

To earn extra credit, you must:
1. Be in my U.S. History class (World History will have their own opportunity for extra credit; stay tuned to the blog).
2. Read the story in its entirety.
3. Watch the movie.
4. Write a summary of the story and compare and contrast the book and the movie.
5. Attach your original ticket stub to your summary.

DUE DATE
This will be due on the day you return to U.S. History after vacation, Wednesday January 7th. No late assignments will be accepted.

You might be thinking that this is a pricey venture. It doesn't have to be. First, thanks to Annie V. from my World History class, I found out that the story is available to read online for FREE. Follow THIS LINK to get there. As for the movie, if the price of a movie ticket is out of reach for you or your family, talk to me and we'll see if we can work something out.

You can also buy the story at the bookstore. I saw the Penguin edition pictured at the top of this blog post (and which, again, has other stories from Fitzgerald) at Borders for $13. You may also find that same collection in a previous edition entitled Jazz Age Stories. Borders also has just the Benjamin Button story for about $10.
I say why not get more stories from one of the greatest writers this country has produced for just three bucks more?

Also, I think it would be fun to go watch the movie together over the winter break. And no, you would not have to sit next to me; I realize that would ruin your social life forever.

Details to come.

Monday, December 01, 2008

Cheating and You

I came across this article today from the Associated Press. It discusses cheating and high school students and explains that the problem is getting worse. It also quotes Michael Josephson whose Character Counts material is used by our very own district and in our schools.

I hope that my students will use this information as a challenge to rise above what other high school students are doing and stand up to make the right choices.

Students lie, cheat, steal, but say they're good

NEW YORK – In the past year, 30 percent of U.S. high school students have stolen from a store and 64 percent have cheated on a test, according to a new, large-scale survey suggesting that Americans are too apathetic about ethical standards.

Educators reacting to the findings questioned any suggestion that today's young people are less honest than previous generations, but several agreed that intensified pressures are prompting many students to cut corners.

"The competition is greater, the pressures on kids have increased dramatically," said Mel Riddle of the National Association of Secondary School Principals. "They have opportunities their predecessors didn't have (to cheat). The temptation is greater."

The Josephson Institute, a Los Angeles-based ethics institute, surveyed 29,760 students at 100 randomly selected high schools nationwide, both public and private. All students in the selected schools were given the survey in class; their anonymity was assured.

Michael Josephson, the institute's founder and president, said he was most dismayed by the findings about theft. The survey found that 35 percent of boys and 26 percent of girls — 30 percent overall — acknowledged stealing from a store within the past year. One-fifth said they stole something from a friend; 23 percent said they stole something from a parent or other relative.

"What is the social cost of that — not to mention the implication for the next generation of mortgage brokers?" Josephson remarked in an interview. "In a society drenched with cynicism, young people can look at it and say 'Why shouldn't we? Everyone else does it.'"

Other findings from the survey:

_Cheating in school is rampant and getting worse. Sixty-four percent of students cheated on a test in the past year and 38 percent did so two or more times, up from 60 percent and 35 percent in a 2006 survey.

_Thirty-six percent said they used the Internet to plagiarize an assignment, up from 33 percent in 2004.

_Forty-two percent said they sometimes lie to save money — 49 percent of the boys and 36 percent of the girls.

Despite such responses, 93 percent of the students said they were satisfied with their personal ethics and character, and 77 percent affirmed that "when it comes to doing what is right, I am better than most people I know."

Nijmie Dzurinko, executive director of the Philadelphia Student Union, said the findings were not at all reflective of the inner-city students she works with as an advocate for better curriculum and school funding.

"A lot of people like to blame society's problems on young people, without recognizing that young people aren't making the decisions about what's happening in society," said Dzurinko, 32. "They're very easy to scapegoat."

Peter Anderson, principal of Andover High School in Andover, Mass., said he and his colleagues had detected very little cheating on tests or Internet-based plagiarism. He has, however, noticed an uptick in students sharing homework in unauthorized ways.

"This generation is leading incredibly busy lives — involved in athletics, clubs, so many with part-time jobs, and — for seniors — an incredibly demanding and anxiety-producing college search," he offered as an explanation.

Riddle, who for four decades was a high school teacher and principal in northern Virginia, agreed that more pressure could lead to more cheating, yet spoke in defense of today's students.

"I would take these students over other generations," he said. "I found them to be more responsive, more rewarding to work with, more appreciative of support that adults give them.

"We have to create situations where it's easy for kids to do the right things," he added. "We need to create classrooms where learning takes on more importance than having the right answer."

On Long Island, an alliance of school superintendents and college presidents recently embarked on a campaign to draw attention to academic integrity problems and to crack down on plagiarism and cheating.

Roberta Gerold, superintendent of the Middle Country School District and a leader of the campaign, said parents and school officials need to be more diligent — for example, emphasizing to students the distinctions between original and borrowed work.

"You can reinforce the character trait of integrity," she said. "We overload kids these days, and they look for ways to survive. ... It's a flaw in our system that whatever we are doing as educators allows this to continue."

Josephson contended that most Americans are too blase about ethical shortcomings among young people and in society at large.

"Adults are not taking this very seriously," he said. "The schools are not doing even the most moderate thing. ... They don't want to know. There's a pervasive apathy."

Josephson also addressed the argument that today's youth are no less honest than their predecessors.

"In the end, the question is not whether things are worse, but whether they are bad enough to mobilize concern and concerted action," he said.

"What we need to learn from these survey results is that our moral infrastructure is unsound and in serious need of repair. This is not a time to lament and whine but to take thoughtful, positive actions."