Teachers aught to provide students with realistic views of their global community. Students should explore fundamental principles through classroom instruction and peer coaching to stimulate ideas and original concepts to cause positive impacts on society in becoming productive neighbors, equal in every aspect of living.
Philosophy
"Because music is a basic expression of human culture, every student should have access to a balanced, comprehensive and sequential program of study in music." (National Standards for Art Education p. 26)
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Philosophy: Connecting Education To The World
Teachers aught to provide students with realistic views of their global community. Students should explore fundamental principles through classroom instruction and peer coaching to stimulate ideas and original concepts to cause positive impacts on society in becoming productive neighbors, equal in every aspect of living.
Monday, June 24, 2013
What Do We Want? Social Justice!!!
Social Justice is described as an analysis of morality in
the distribution of economic resources and opportunities among different
persons and class structures. Global supporters call for reformation in
societies of inequality, exposing violations of human rights and denial of
dignity for every human being. In the United States, it is the cry of the
oppressed while fighting battles for adequate living conditions and equal
educational opportunities in a land supposed to be brave and free.

Recently, the LAUSD decided to divide the school into three
separate magnet schools. The community was outraged. Protests were met with
thirty-three layoffs and strategy meetings that diverted adversity. Fear of
unemployment and retaliation towards students disbanded the opposition.
Instead of supporting Crenshaw by investing funds to
continue student development in an environment appreciated by the community,
LAUSD disregarded the pleading public and exercised tactics that negatively
impacted students, teachers and discontinued beneficial programs. This agency
is supposed to work on behalf of the community not become the hand of
affliction while people strive to concur an oppressive situation. This school
is a pillar of pride and resource worthy of saving, especially when its destruction
would destabilize a community.
In a socially just environment, this would not be debated. I
disbelieve it would be an issue. Social justice requires equal distribution of
resources, wealth and opportunity. With proper allocation of funds, Crenshaw
High School and others like it would be powerful forces. They would serve as
beacons of light for other communities.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
What Do You Know About Montessori Education?
I choose to reasearch Montessori Education because the schools are common in the southern region. Many parents of the attendees claimed the schools offer a better educating method. Other than personal testimony and the name, I held little knowledge about the method and history.
Maria Montessori (1870-1952) did not conform to the traditional education for women. The daughter of a wealthy political figure pressed for an alternative. Rewarded by effort, she became the first woman to achieve a medical degree in Italy.
Although her work included psychiatry and anthropology, Dr.
Montessori is most recognized in the U.S. for contributions in education. Her
work designed to help children of poverty-stricken areas, nurture the curiosity,
creativity and imagine which providing basic skills. Believing every child
contain a contained unique ability that needed unveiling, she contributed a
method that observed
children in an environment that supported life and help them excel to the greatest possible spiritual, physical and mental level. Accessing and nurturing child potential began with infancy assistance and continued through high school. Classes are the same standard curriculum as conventional school, but incorporate sensory learning to solidify newly introduce knowledge. Children follow their interests by conducting researches using resources pertaining to conventional subject matter and guided by the teacher. Students work independently and typically transcend expectations. Mixed age groups learn from and teach one another while mastering academic subjects. Progress tracking occur, but not through examination of general education skills.
children in an environment that supported life and help them excel to the greatest possible spiritual, physical and mental level. Accessing and nurturing child potential began with infancy assistance and continued through high school. Classes are the same standard curriculum as conventional school, but incorporate sensory learning to solidify newly introduce knowledge. Children follow their interests by conducting researches using resources pertaining to conventional subject matter and guided by the teacher. Students work independently and typically transcend expectations. Mixed age groups learn from and teach one another while mastering academic subjects. Progress tracking occur, but not through examination of general education skills.

Montessori education
could be a better way of educating as long as schools maintain the Dr.
Montessori’s original aim to improve the education level in poor communities. If
this give students a better opportunity to become successful people than
children should be allowed the advantage.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Marxism and Education
Marxism analyzes the relationship of humanity to the environment from a sociological and philosophical perspective. It questions the wealth of a society by examining the labor and resource system for producing goods. Historical, labor and resources often became imbalanced creating a free market. The inability to regulate economic development is identified as rapped upheaval. Characterized by mood of production, organized labor, it evolves into social economic classes. Each class has its own interests and experiences creating unique consciousness. Morality, politics, religion, other shared interests and resources are understood to be universally important. Lower class consciousness holds an interest contrary to its interest. Meaning pursuits toward progress lead nowhere. It is an antagonistic class with irreconcilable differences. Governing this arrangement are two chief classes, Capitalism (the Bourgeoisie) and Socialism (the Proletariat). The first rules resources and production devices. The other owns the labor classes. Both sides profit from a cycle of labor production and goods purchased by the laboring classes. Disagreements between the two result in class struggles.
This means educational success is governed by class and class struggle. In the most ideal situation, the higher class receives the best possible educational, middle class, moderate options and lower class, the bottom of the barrel. This intentionally produce generational professionals and labor force of skilled and experienced workers sustaining wealth in the higher class. In the worst possible scenario, middle class population decrease as well as opportunities to receive that level of education. In turn, lower class increases and the level of education remain the same although seemingly below standard.
WHAT CAN BE DONE? If the Marxism is true and these issues derive from the systems then a logical response is "change the system." This appears to be a sold decision, but is it feasible? The statement in itself implies challenging the systems. It would be the equivalent of picking a fight with the Hatfield and McCoy family. Some leaders have walked down this road and accomplished change within the class, but not the system. Others have simply given up and chosen alternative living and education. Honestly, nothing can be done until people as a whole become tire and react.
What do you think?
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/karl_marx_education.htm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4295232.stm
https://www.marxists.org/subject/education/index.htm
This means educational success is governed by class and class struggle. In the most ideal situation, the higher class receives the best possible educational, middle class, moderate options and lower class, the bottom of the barrel. This intentionally produce generational professionals and labor force of skilled and experienced workers sustaining wealth in the higher class. In the worst possible scenario, middle class population decrease as well as opportunities to receive that level of education. In turn, lower class increases and the level of education remain the same although seemingly below standard.
WHAT CAN BE DONE? If the Marxism is true and these issues derive from the systems then a logical response is "change the system." This appears to be a sold decision, but is it feasible? The statement in itself implies challenging the systems. It would be the equivalent of picking a fight with the Hatfield and McCoy family. Some leaders have walked down this road and accomplished change within the class, but not the system. Others have simply given up and chosen alternative living and education. Honestly, nothing can be done until people as a whole become tire and react.
What do you think?
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/karl_marx_education.htm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4295232.stm
https://www.marxists.org/subject/education/index.htm
Thursday, June 13, 2013
How Do You Feel About Inclusion?
I understand the education system
wanting to create an educational utopia. It sounds like a really good idea.
Bring together diverse cultures and provide one curriculum with standards all students
will aspire to reach by the teacher's guiding hand. I would like to see barrier
removed for those with disabilities and inclusion applied successfully. At the
same time, I continue to question if this really the best idea.
Three months ago in St. Louis, an 8-year-old
girl was handcuffed and taken to jail for allegedly destroying two classrooms
during a temper tantrum. This was not the first time she had a temper tantrum
at school. According to the uncle/legal guardian, the little girl is a special
needs student who exhibited this type of behavior on several occasions. The
teacher restrained her then contacted the uncle without police involvement. The
police stated it was necessary to restraint the 70 pound little girl. The uncle
explained, she was handcuffed and shackled then taken to jail without a winter
coat. While in custody her requests to use the restroom was denied. Police
justified their actions by saying the little girl was taken to juvenile jail.
The principle swallowed deep after explaining children are taken into
protective custody when parent refuse to pick them up. A statement from the
uncle indicated that was not the case.
This incident occurred at a special needs school with
professionals trained to address behavioral issues. Clearly, the child’s behavior
is not her fault. The school is responsible for providing the necessary mean and maintaining her safety as well as the other students. Whether or not the correct choices were made is questionable, but I was relieved the situation occurred in an environment that caters to special needs children. I agree general education and special education should interact to remove fears and assumptions. Completely joining the two worlds do not appear to be a great idea.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhVjxdkFOVghttp://www.kmov.com/news/local/8-year-old-girl-handcuffed-and-put-in-jail-for-two-hours-195485751.html
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Teacher's Are You Ready?
Autism affects more than half a million children in the United States.
Contrary to common belief, it is a developmental disorder of brain function. Symptoms
include a wide scope of behavioral and learning issues. While some cases render
children unable to speak others experience the opposite effect, extremely
talkative. This range of symptoms makes it difficult for non-specialized
educators to help in the learning process. Traditional methods of discipline,
such as time-out, are unsuccessful because it requires children to recognize
and explain why the behavior was inappropriate. Children with autism find it
hard to recognize poor social behavior.
In the classroom, teachers are responsible for the safety and educational
development of fifty to twenty students. The typical student can learn one
skill and apply it to multiple situations. Depending on the case, an autistic
child's learning process may require repeatedly learning one skill as it
applies to new situation. This is an individual attention public school student’s
do not receive outside of specialized programs.
I am not sure this will work towards the student's best interest. This is a major integration that could have serious social implications. Are teachers ready?
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Will Blueprint Bailout NCLB?

Obama’s Blueprint Plan does not replace NCLB, but strives to
correct core issues using a seven-point plan. Blueprint is a national effort to
raise expectations and achievement of this counties most valuable resource.

2) States
are responsible for creating the measuring system of student growth and Reporting
Results to the government, teachers, parents, local schools and students.
3) Do
away with one day testing using an arbitrary standard. Develop better assessments
that include critical thinking and problem solving skills.
4) Loosen
Federal Regulation that limits teacher abilities and their use of other
acquired knowledge in classrooms.
5) Recognize
And Reward Success of schools obtaining student growth. More flexibility with federal
funds will be allowed to redirect focus from testing results to student
progress.
6) Provide
a well-rounded education that offer all subjects needed to improve student
lives.
7) Focus
on student growth by strengthening teaching using professionals with a wide set
of skills and knowledge. Teaching effectiveness is measured through classroom
observation, teacher portfolios, student and parent data, and achievement data.
By forcing teachers to model curriculum around AYP test
subjects, NCLB has created a testing culture within our school system. It has
resulted in generations of students not prepared for college or the global
workforce. The Blueprint Plan is attempting to restore elements of the
education system vital to the positive development of this nation’s best
resource. This plan called upon everyone in the education stream to help bridge
the gap.
I do not know how I feel about the plan. Everyone was excited about NCLB until the flaws became visible. Now there are ten generations of unprepared children. Some will struggle throughout life fixing problems they did not cause. Maybe that is the nature of the beast, to fix a few problems and develop one hundred more. What do you think?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LV7od-RU1Jw
http://www.whitehouse.gov/issues/education/k-12
http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/leg/blueprint/index.html

Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Why Become A Music Teacher?

The desire to teach does not fall
from the sky. Many people wanted to be music teachers from childhood, but
choose alternative fields that offer higher salaries, more advancement
opportunities and special benefits. Some enjoy long careers then teach
post-retirement to connect with the music world. Often, mature adults believe
they are too old to start music careers. Instead, they choose to work as
professional substitute music teachers, which allow flexibility to pursue
another musical interest. Others are frustrated musicians tired of living from
gig to gig and working odd jobs with long hours, demanding management and outrageous
workloads in stressful environments that function contrary to requirements for
successful music presentations. This places the musician in a position of
choosing. When a job transforms a musician’s skill into a hobby it is necessary
to search for something better, something that will accommodate both needs. A
common secondary option is teaching music.
To become a music teacher you must
love children. Most teachers possess a natural ability to nurture and provide
for children. They are able to foster an environment that allows children to
benefit from positive attention and interaction. The general responsibilities
of music educators are to continue developing new musicians and music lovers. Music
teachers encourage desires to learn and develop that enthusiasm for music. By default,
valuable teacher-student relationships are established and remembered
throughout life.
Whatever area of music you decide to teach it is very important to know the craft. This can be accomplished by performing and practicing to remain current in techniques, methods, literature and all the culminates your area of expertise. The more focus given to being a musician the better teacher you can become. Attend performances of other musicians. Learn from their successes and mistakes. Gain knowledge about multiple instruments and their history. All will broaden personal knowledge and students understanding.
I believe people become teachers because they love learning and deep down inside they always wanted to be part of that community. The love for children and passion for music merely identifies their unique place amongst educators.
Whatever area of music you decide to teach it is very important to know the craft. This can be accomplished by performing and practicing to remain current in techniques, methods, literature and all the culminates your area of expertise. The more focus given to being a musician the better teacher you can become. Attend performances of other musicians. Learn from their successes and mistakes. Gain knowledge about multiple instruments and their history. All will broaden personal knowledge and students understanding.
I believe people become teachers because they love learning and deep down inside they always wanted to be part of that community. The love for children and passion for music merely identifies their unique place amongst educators.
http://voices.yahoo.com/5-reasons-why-people-become-teachers-197163.html?cat=4
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
The Beginning
My name is Mia Paige. I am a undergraduate student in college achieving a Music degree minoring in Educational Studies. I plan to work as a teacher while pursuing my Masters Degree in Music Edcation. I have spent a few years substitute teaching at elementary schools and tutoring neighborhood kids. So far the experience has been a bidirectional learning process. You give as much as you recieve. I love children and enjoy watching them learn. There little faces light up after comprehending new concepts. Efforts are rewards immediately by expressed appreciation. I love the field and very excited about working in it full-time.
This blog is created to share my thoughts and experiences as I travel on this path. Posts will focus on teaching music at the elementary level, as well as provide music education resources.
This blog is created to share my thoughts and experiences as I travel on this path. Posts will focus on teaching music at the elementary level, as well as provide music education resources.
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