Thursday, December 18, 2014

Creating a bibliography

As you know, it is really important to cite the resources you used to learn more about your social justice topic, whether you directly quoted them in your author's note or not.  In ELA, we use MLA format. Here are some steps to help you create a bibliography for the 2-3 sources you used:

To use the "Easy Bib" tool: 

1. Gather the research you used and make sure you have it nearby.

2. Go to easybib.com site and make sure "MLA" is the format highlighted in orange.

3. Choose the kind of source you are going to cite from.  Most of you used newpapers, magazines, and websites. Click on the "All 59 options" to find the tab for magazines.

4. Using the source information you got from your printed article or what you wrote down on your worksheet, follow the directions to get your citation.

5. On the top of your page, type "Bibliography" and center it. Put your citations below, aligned to the left, in alphabetical order.

To use your agenda book as a mentor: 

1. Turn to page R-5 in your agenda book (in the back)

2. On the top of your page, type "Bibliography" and center it.

3. Choose the kind of source you are going to cite from and use the mentor to type your own.

4. Type in your citations aligned to the left, in alphabetical order.


Monday, December 15, 2014

All Star Mentor Blogs + Upcoming blog post due

For our Quarter 2 Cycle 2 blog post, be sure to use your synthesis page as an outline of sorts to guide your writing process. A few things to remember:

  • Take your ideas out of the text, especially in your opening and closing paragraphs! This will make your work so much more interesting for your reader. 
  • Create an INTERESTING title that will attract readers. "Reading Response 12/18" is boring.  Think of yourself as a headline writer for a newspaper.   
  • You should be commenting on your partner's work.  Be specific and encouraging! Last cycle's all star commenter is Steven in 806! 


These writers did a great job writing a fiction blog post.  Check out a mentor or two from your class to see what you can emulate in your own writing.

Class 803 

Claire
Leela
Zoe
Leonardo
Matt

Class 806

Michael
Najal
Zachary

Class 809

Rithika
Maxine
Angela
Josef
Zunayed

Saturday, November 22, 2014

All Star Synthesis Pages: Quarter 2 Reading Cycle 1

These synthesis pages look great! What they all have in common is that there is a space on their page that takes their ideas out of the text and into the world, making their ideas relevant and extra thought-provoking.  Try this out on your next page.  Here are a few sentence starters that might help you get there...

a. What I learned about __________ was...

b. I realized that sometimes in life...

c. Reading this books really made me think about...

Then, those statements can become great CLAIMS for your blog post. 

Go, readers, go!












Thursday, November 13, 2014

Social Action Research: CNN Heroes of 2014


Here is the link to the CNN Heroes page that we used in class on Friday.  Feel free to continue to explore, watch additional videos, or read more articles as you continue to "read" the world around you!

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Art & Social Justice

Here are a few links and images from our lesson on 11/12!




http://www.onemillionbones.org/the-project/






"The Uprising"
-Diego Rivera




"Peace"
-Luba Lukova


"Guernica"
-Pablo Picasso



Anti-Bullying Dance Performance:



"Reading" the World

Social Justice Issues are everywhere...your job is, for the next few days, to observe the world around while considering: What is fair? Unfair? Where and what and who do I see trying to make the world a better place? Where do I see things happening that make me angry? Inspired? You will probably see a combination of positive and negative things out there in the world...they serve as inspiration AND motivation.

They might be...

1. On the news...Malala Yousafzai with Diane Sawyer

2. In a commericial...#LikeAGirl by always

3. From an internet search...Trash Orchestra

4. From a walk around the neighborhood...trash on the turf after lunch, too many plastic bags

5. From a book...


6. From people you know...
   Do you know people who volunteer? This is my great-aunt who dedicated her life--right up until she died--to helping war veterans in her Washington Heights neighborhood. After she died, they named a street after her! 


Do you know people who try to make the world a better place in small ways that often go unnoticed by most people? These are my parents.  They both have lived lives where they volunteer, donate, and will be there for someone at the drop of a hat.  They recently sent a donation of money for me to buy books for our library and most of the markers in this classroom have been sent from my mom in Kentucky! They also go out of their way to visit friends who are sick, to make food for neighbors to brighten their day, and they even painted my brother's whole apartment! 

You can also ask your family and friends who and what inspires them to make the world a better place! 

7. From organizations in your neighborhood or city that inspire you...
What organizations have you participated in? Do you know people who have started any? This is my friend Faith who was so troubled by the fact that human trafficking still exists that she started a non-profit company called Restore to help those who have been rescued here in New York City.

So! Your job is to spend the next few days closely "reading" the world.  By Monday, you need to have a list of what you notice and be ready to share with your table and the class.  Include at least five items and explain each one with at least two sentences.  Check out these older blog posts to find more internet sources related to social justice.  





Monday, November 10, 2014

Sarah McLachlan's "World on Fire"

Check out this link to view the "World on Fire" video we watched in class.  Here are the lyrics and below are the charities she donated to:














World On Fire by Sarah McLachlan

Hearts are worn in these dark ages
You’re not alone in these stories’ pages
The light has fallen amongst the living and the dying
And I'll try to hold it in
Yeah I'll try to hold it in

The world's on fire, it's more then I can handle
I'll tap into the water try and bring my share
Try to bring more, more then I can handle
Bring it to the table
Bring what I am able

I watch the heavens but I find no calling
Something I can do to change what’s coming
Stay close to me while the sky’s falling
I don’t wanna be left alone don’t wanna be alone

The world's on fire, it's more then I can handle
I'll tap into the water try and bring my share
Try to bring more, more then I can handle
Bring it to the table
Bring what I am able

Hearts break hearts mend love still hurts
Visions clash planes crash still there's talk of
saving souls still the cold's closing in on us

We part the veil on our killer sun
Stray from the straight line on this short run
The more we take the less we become
The fortune of one man means less for some

The world's on fire, it's more then I can handle
I'll tap into the water try and bring my share
Try to bring more, more then I can handle
Bring it to the table

Bring what I am able

World On Fire Donation List



Charity

For

Amount

Total

Donation

Caroline for Kibera
  • 12 room clinic and land deeds
  • Medicine for 5000 people for 6 months in Nairobi Kenya

• $22,500

• $7,500
$30,000


  • Running street children’s hospital in India for a year
  • Feeding 10 street children in Calcutta 3 meals daily for 1 year
  • Schooling for 100 street children in Tanzania
  • Education for 200 students in Ethiopia

• $11,050


• $3,000


• $2,500


• $400
$16,950

  • Building of 6 wells in S.E Asia, Latin America & Africa
  • Helping 100 widows to develop income generating activities in Afghanistan
  • Sending 145 girls to school for one year in Afghanistan
  • Equipping 10 classrooms in Afghanistan
  • Training 10 teachers in Afghanistan
• $10,200

• $5,400


• $5,000

• $480

• $400

  • Total running costs of orphanage in South Africa
  • Improving the lives of 10 elderly people in Eastern Europe
• $16,500

• $3,500
$20,000

  • To purchase and implement a Multi-Function Platform in Ghana
  • Christy Yaa: scholarships
  • Nana Yaa: scholarships
• $15,000


• $1,000
• $1,000
$17,000

  • Mobile Medical Unit (MMU) vehicle providing medical treatments

• $15,000

$15,000

  • Entertainment & escapism for refugees

• $9,500

$9,500

War Child

  • 70 former child soldiers to receive schooling & psychosocial support
  • 7 young people in Sierra Leone to receive job training
  • Education, shelter & food for orphans in Ethiopia

• $3,500

• $1,500

• $500
$5,500


  • 1 heifer, 2 goats, 1 buffalo
  • 2 sheep, 4 goats, 2 llamas and 1 heifer
  • A pig
  • Chicks
  • Ducks
• $1,000
• $1,500
• $120
• $20
• $20
• $20
$2680


  • Scheme which would allow 300 families to remove smoke from their homes
  • 10 smoke hoods
  • 5 bicycle ambulances
  • Nuts & bolts to secure houses of monsoon victims
  • Sudanese irrigation
• $1,925


• $250
• $1,300
• $500
• $1025

$5000

  • To aid and implement programs in Khlaipathar village, Orissa, India to encourage families to be able to stay together
  • 5000lbs potato seeds for planting vegetable gardens
• $5000




• $160
  $5160

 TOTAL  $148,270