Showing posts with label Healthy-Relationships; Health-Tolerance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Healthy-Relationships; Health-Tolerance. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

Online Shaming

Online ‘Shaming’ A New Level of Cyberbullying for Girls
Reporter: Temitayo Fagbenle
Original air date: January 7, 2013


Student reporter, Temitayo Fegbenle investigates the new phenomenon of online shaming, often referred to as “slut shaming,” where students will bully young girls via social media about their sexual exploits. Often, the cyberbullying stems from pictures or videos the young women naively send to boys they like and then those images are shared with wider audience. Many students don’t recognize the repercussions of their actions, especially from a legal standpoint. This story spotlights not only cyberbullying, but the lack of control parents and administrators have over the salacious material.


Quantitative: Flesch Reading Ease--60.5; Flesch Reading Level--8.3


Qualitative: A story for middle and high school grades (7-12), but could be used in grades 5 or 6 depending on the maturity of the students. This text isn’t overly complex, but it does discuss activity that will most likely impact an older age group. Issues like appropriate media use, student rights, and legal implications make this a text that address school board policies and even child pornography.


Content Area: English; Health--Bullying; Health--Relationships; Health--Tolerance; Government/Ethics; Information Literacy; Peer Resource.


Curriculum Suggestions: This piece could be applied to any unit on bullying. High school students could draw on the modern-day connections to The Scarlet Letter. In a government or ethics class, students might want to examine the laws the “slut shaming” violates (or not). Is this a First Amendment issue? What laws are in place that protect minors from these viral attacks? What responsibility does the school have to protecting children? The article indicates that students are not any more vicious than they were 20 years ago; the venue for the attacks have changed. A school that has a peer resource class could also devise ways to intervene when such acts occur.


Another approach might be to have students investigate other issues--related to bullying or not--on campus to produce an investigative piece just like Temitayo Fagbenle.


Common Core Standards: RI.11/12.7-8; SL.11/12.2-5; RH.11/12.1-2


Additional/Digital Content:


  • NPR’s “Online ‘Shaming’ A New Level of Cyberbullying for Girls”--




  • Literature Connection→ Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson--


Personal Thoughts--The avenues for this hot topic are endless. Students could conduct research and even assess how their campus copes with the issue. It can be touchy, so spending time creating an open and caring environment for sharing is critical when discussing emotionally charged topics such as this one. Expect some shocking and uncomfortable conversations.

*Meets the "Media Item" requirement

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Kids Pick the Funniest Poems

Kids Pick the Funniest Poems
Selected by Bruce Lansky 
Meadowbrook Press(1991) ISBN: 088166149X


This book of poetry is a compilation of poems Lansky “tested” on 300 elementary school children. Lansky, a children’s poet himself, began with over 20,000 children’s poems and with careful selection and elimination by his young panel, he was able to narrow it to the contents of this book.  The poems are organized according to subject: Me, Parents, Brothers and Sisters, Friends, School, Disasters, Monsters, Strange Stories, and Advice. These categories make it easy for any reader--adult or child-to find a poem that connects to him or her. It’s interesting to notice how certain topics generate specific connotations. For example, poems in the “Parents” section, revolve around rules and how parents regulate their children capturing a true rebellious spirit.


Quantitative: Lexile Level--760; ATOS not available.


Qualitative: This book of poetry is best for elementary level students, specifically ages 5-10. According to “Achieving the Core,” this poetry book would be geared towards students in grades 4 and 5. Vocabulary introduced in many of the poems ranks in the Lexile “PowerV” word selector. Many of these words are descriptive or a form of onomatopoeia, which could pose a challenge for a younger reader.
Content Area: English; Health--Relationships; Health-Tolerance.


Curriculum Suggestions: Many of the poems in this book could be used for teaching poetry and literary devices including onomatopoeia and rhyme schemes. In addition, the poems could be used to emphasize relationships between students and the people and their experiences in their lives. Furthermore, the poems could be used as a starting point for teaching tolerance and the ways students can control their emotions and reactions to sensitive situations.


Common Core Standards: RL.4.1, 2, 4, 9.


Additional/Digital Content:


  • Children writing and publishing--



*Meets the "Poetry aimed at ages 5-10" requirement