Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Reflections on Teaching Adult Students in Diverse Contexts

My general response to the material and coursework required for this class is very positive. To be more specific, I found the reading and classroom practices engaging and informative.  The fieldwork assignment was an excellent complement to both the surveyed literature and classroom practices in that my perspective, informed by the classwork, underwent a shift in the field. I was able to better understand what the teacher was doing in the Worker Center because I had exposure to the literacy theories and practices that he implemented in the classroom. In addition, I got to practice ethnographic writing -- a type of writing I rarely do.
     I found it challenging and extremely satisfying to attempt to capture ongoing events through on-site observation and writing. And, then to produce a more formal document based on notes, interviews, reflection back on my observations and field notes, and supplemented with critical theory provided by classroom documents.  I have rarely been as much a participant in my own writing. I am used to writing on all manner of things, but I am unaccustomed to being able to insert my own research into a document produced for school. Not a literacy narrative or analysis in which I provide perspective, but a research paper for which I have provided part of the information to be analyzed. It was an extremely satisfying experience and an experience I plan to duplicate in the not too distant future.
     I enjoyed participating in the class presentations and learning from my peers all of the really good work going on in adult education. It’s heartening to know that there are so many people giving their best effort toward goals related to social justice and the balance of inequalities that often begin in, and are reinforced by, the very field in which I’ve chosen to work: education.  
     I was especially pleased with the large part of the class dedicated to worker education and the educational opportunities that labor unions provide for their members. It was through those very avenues that many members of my own family got the education they would never have been able to pay for, who went on to instill the value of education and provide it for their own children. I’ll never forget my grandfather, Henry, saying something like…you can lose everything, or have it taken from you, everything except what you have learned…what you know. That’s true, I think. And, it’s good to know that there’s a lot that can’t be taken from me or lost.

     If I were asked to define humanity’s purpose, I would say that our purpose is to serve our fellow beings in the best way we can. Success for me isn’t related to material things, or to divine beings, it’s being able to offer help to another person. It doesn’t really need to be on a large scale for me…My father taught in really tough high schools where failure rates were high, people were poor, life was violent, and often short. He used to say…it’s about making a kid happy for one minute in a day that they wouldn’t have otherwise been happy…one minute…one person…or longer…or more….it’s all success to me. 

Monday, May 4, 2015

Response to “Breaking barriers with books: A fathers' book sharing program from prison"

     In “Breaking barriers with books: A fathers’ book sharing program from prison,” Margaret Genesio describes a program for incarcerated men that comprises three parts: instructional, parent/child meeting (family visit), and a parent support meeting led by the fathers that participate in the program.  The instructional component of the program consists of 10 hours of onsite learning in workshops that stress the father’s importance to his child with regard to educational attainment and literacy practices. The parent/child meetings allowed fathers and children to build memories with each other while practicing literacies and the support meeting was a place where fathers could share their experiences and brainstorm solutions to shared problems.
     I found this program especially heartening because of the high level of absentee fathers in current times. The correlation between single parent households and negative consequences for the children in those household is indisputable.  If this program had no other positive result than maintaining a connection between fathers and children, I would still consider it a success. However, judging by the high levels of participation, the long hours fathers spent writing in journals, creating extension activities, and experimenting new ways to enact the program practices, it seems to be effective on a number of other levels as well.  One could hope that programs such as this, if instituted widely, could reduce recidivism rates because fathers would have a greater likelihood of rejoining the family unit upon release.