Sunday, March 17, 2019

Global economy lesson leads to conversation about Christchurch

The week was going great. Students were heavily invested in their research. They could pick any country in the world to study. Describe it using the 5 themes of geography and extend our economic vocabulary to analyze the resources of that country (land, labor, capital and management). Every student seemed excited to get know their country better, some picking truly remote places they had never heard of (they weren’t allowed to pick the USA- we did that as our public record).

Direct instruction happened around the Learning Target for the unit (Economics). Most students were at 2- understanding Supply & Demand. We had updated the deadline for the research as a group, allowing for some democracy in the classroom. I wanted it due Friday, they wanted more time, so next Tuesday it is!

Then the incident of Christchurch took place, Friday morning our time. I couldn’t ignore it. It was the neighbor country to many students’ research countries in Oceania. It was an act of terrorism, an act of out fear and lack of understanding. With all the work we’ve done around empathy it was a teachable moment now on many fronts.

So we began Friday’s lesson with some deep breathing. I reminded them about putting themselves in an empathetic place. We talked about the 3 ways to show empathy: 1- putting oneself in an empathetic mindset. Focus on how they feel rather than yourself. 2- active listening. 3- asking “you questions” rather than making “I statements”. Students were given the option to not participate as well. From there we began the discussion. Let’s find New Zealand on the map, let’s look a the political map and understand that the bigger the font, the bigger the city. So Christchurch is one of, if not the, largest city on the South Island. We talked about what a mosque is. I stated facts, being careful to only cite information that came from official press releases from the New Zealand police or. Government. I was transparent with the students about that too. We talked about the why behind it, the historical aspect that many religions have been attacked based on fear of them over history. We ended by talking through what our response could be. Reach out to a Muslim friend or family member, just to offer words of support and let them know you’re thinking about them. Pause before passing judgement, you never know who is impacted by events like this, be them Muslim or not. Look at the news to see how locals are responding. Be aware that there are mosques in our area, notice how people may go there just to say kind words and support our neighbors. My hope was that I continued to teach these students to be globally aware, but use empathy to impact the community in a positive way locally. It wasn’t the lesson I had planned for the day, but as I’m finding in my first year teaching Social Studies, the news around us is often more powerful a lesson framework than anything I would design in a vacuum.

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