MayZin was not in school again
today. I continued to sit in her seat and I worked with some of her tablemates.
One is a young man who has been very quiet the past few weeks I have visited
the classroom. MayZin and him are often working on the same lesson sheet when I
am helping MayZin, and I have noticed that he occasionally listens to our
conversations when MayZin does not understand a problem. As I worked with him
today I noticed that he struggles with many of the same things MayZin does.
There is a language obstacle for him, too, but I think his is more of a
vocabulary obstacle. MayZin and this young man are both in the foundations of
Algebra section of math lab, so they are just beginning to learn different
Algebra rules and terms. I believe that some of these terms are hard for him to
understand. I see this mostly in working with units. Many early Algebra
problems manipulate units, and it can be difficult to grasp if a student does
not have a solid grasp of the vocabulary. When I reworded the questions, so the
units of measurement would be able to sort out he was able to solve the
problem, similar to MayZin. I do not know this young man’s background, so I do
not know if this is an English language learning obstacle or a general
vocabulary obstacle. Guiding questions were helpful for him, and he was able to
get to the answer on his own.
This week was the third week MayZin
was not in class during my visits. I began to assume this week that MayZin does
not want to take advantage of the help I am offering her. We only get a few
short weeks to work together, and I am ready to help her with anything she may
need help with, but she is not coming to class when I am available for her. I
assume this is because she does not want my help. However, I do not know much
about her home life. It is possible that Wednesday nights are long and
difficult for her. She may not come to school Thursday mornings, because she
may have responsibilities outside the classroom the night before or during
Thursday mornings. I will explore more, and see if I can learn more about her
home life. There may be a very good reason why she keeps missing Thursday math
classes.
I have noticed that MayZin seems to
be more bicultural. Jean Phinney defines biculturalism as “the approach that
involves developing a dual identity, one based in the ethnic group of origin
and one based in the majority culture, in the formation of ethnic identity”
(Arnett, 2013, p. 168). A great example I have to show this is in her dress and
how she communicates with her friends. MayZin’s clothes are typically
completely western attire, except for a brightly colored hijab that she wears
along with her western clothes. She is keeping her culture from home by
continuing to wear a hijab, but she also wears shirts and jeans one would
expect a teenager from American majority culture to wear. She blends both
cultures in her dress. Another part of her life where it is evident that she
has embraced both cultures is the way she communicates with her friends. MayZin
has a fifteen-minute break every morning between her math and reading 180
classes. During this break MayZin will often talk to her friends, young girls
around her age who are also Burmese. The group of girls mostly speaks in
Burmese, but I often hear a few English words in their conversations. MayZin
and her friends have adapted to using both languages in everyday speech. They
have embraced both languages, and use them interchangeably. MayZin has an
identity in both cultures and blends them everyday.
I wasn’t able to help MayZin with
the WIDA standards this week, because she was not in school. I plan to continue
working on her writing with her, by asking her to give me the answer to the
problem orally and then having her write it down. After she writes the answer
down I will proof read it, and give her suggestions that will help her answer
be grammatically accurate.
Works
Cited:
Arnett, Jeffrey J. (2012-07-02). Adolescence and Emerging
Adulthood (Page 168). Pearson Education. Kindle Edition.
Is the language issue an obstacle or a barrier? I think it is interesting that you are zeroing in on vocabulary - it would be fascinating to explore if this was indeed the area of need. When you consider all of this, what does it mean for your future teaching? On what will you need to focus? How will you use guiding questions?
ReplyDeleteYou do well not to take absence personally and look from multiple perspectives. What about the possibility that timeliness is not a cultural value? Have you considered this yet?
Is your description more bicultural or hybrid culture?