Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2008

"Playing" to the Level of Those Around Us

As I watched the Utah Jazz basketball team the other night lose horribly to one of the worst teams in the NBA I was reminded that all of us more often than not "play" to the level of those around us. Pondering on this brought to remembrance the following:

  • If we want to become a better tennis player choose to play with those who are better than we are even though we always lose.
  • Take the harder classes from the hardest teachers who push us to be and do more in order to learn more even though we may sacrifice an A and our grade point average.
  • Choose peers who have high standards and strive for excellence as we usually attain the same academic level and character level as those around us.
  • Seek out those things which are lovely, of good report, and praiseworthy--such as the best books that inspire us.
  • Remember that less is more such as being willing to pay a higher price for quality even though it means we can afford less items.
  • Seek out the best mentors who drive us to reach our potential.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Both Scholarly and Religious: Dallin H. Oaks

Dallin H. Oaks served as the President of BYU (Brigham Young University) from 1971-1980. From 1980 to 1984 he served as a Utah Supreme Court Justice and was closely considered by the Reagan administration in 1981 to be a nominee for the Supreme Court Justice. On April 7, 1984 Oaks was sustained as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints which is a life long calling.


Obviously Dallin H. Oaks is not only a well-educated and scholarly man of high distinction, but he is also a deeply religious man as well. Therefore, when he speaks, I listen knowing his words convey an extremely important message that I need to apply to my life.


Yesterday as I read his LDS (Latter Day Saint) Conference talk Good, Better, Best given at the October 2007 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Conference, I thought of its application to how we serve our diverse learners.

At the beginning of his talk he reminds us that just because something is good is not a sufficient reason to do it. He goes onto say that there are so many good things to do in this world there isn't enough time to do them all. We must give priority to the best of the good.

Elder Oaks tells of when he was a youngster how they used the Sears and Roebuck catalog as we use malls and the internet today. In the catalog there were three quality categories for shoes--good, better, and best--with a cost increase as the quality increased. He compared this to choices we have in life. Even though something may cost more (in time, energy, or money), the added cost may be well worth it because of the added value it brings.

This counsel relates to our service to diverse learners in a variety of ways:

First, there are now thousands of people who give speeches, write books, and make videos about what we need to do better serve our diverse learners. The majority of them are good, but we don't have time to respond to them all. We must choose the best from the good. I would define the best as those who are focused on what works either because research and/or experience support their claim.

Second, we must think not only of the good things we can for our diverse learners, but rather the best things. For instance, a good thing is for all educators (teachers and leaders) to become ESL endorsed. A better thing would be to apply what is learned. The best thing would be to make sure that the lives of the students are changed and improved because of the efforts. In other words, rejoicing just because more educators are ESL endorsed is not sufficient.

We move from good to best when our desire to serve our diverse learners is founded in love rather than out of duty or arrogance.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Education Savings Account and Books

By helping our diverse students open an education savings account and then contribute to it we are not only telling them that we believe in them, but we are also helping them to focus on education goals.


Some things we can to encourage this: (The focus is going on the Hispanic student population because that is where my experience is but could definitely be adapted to other diverse student populations)


  • In schools with a high Hispanic population when you find out some family is going to have a baby, give the family a book with a $1 (or more) check made out to a bank to open an education savings account. Sixth grade Hispanic students could tape record the books, and they could be given a small amount of money for their education savings account for doing this. A business partner (or grant) could be involved in paying for the cost of this project.

  • For the state Spanish Spelling Bee, have the reward be money for an education savings account and a book.

  • Encourage service and civic organizations to sponsor a variety of contests such as essay contests with the reward being money for the education savings account and books.

  • School and classroom rewards could be money for the education savings account and books rather than other treats.

  • Family members, friends, and neighbors could be encouraged to give money for the education savings account and/or books for such celebrations as holidays, births, birthdays, graduations, quinceañeras and other special occasions. Fellow church members could be encouraged to do the same for special occasions the child or youth experiences in the church setting such as baptisms.
  • Encourage the student to put at least 10% of any earnings from an allowance or job into his/her educations savings account.
  • Hold events such as yard sales where all the profit is divided amongst the participating students for their education savings account.
  • Find someone who will match the amount of money in the education savings account each year. If needs be, set a minimum and/or a maximum the student has to accumulate.

In Utah (and a few other states) Zions Bank can help with setting up this education savings account. It can be opened with the minimum amount of $1 and the interest is greater than it is for other accounts. An added plus: Zions has Spanish banks where everyone in the bank speaks Spanish. For more information about this, contact Sylvia Haro at sylvia.haro@zionsbank.com. Other banks may have similar programs, but I am most familiar with Zions because I have worked with them.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Academic Rigor With Heart

I am choosing to take a detour today and save until tomorrow the further conversation about civic learning.


Yesterday for class Dr. Hite took us to BYU's (Brigham Young University) library to meet with Rachel Wadham, the library education specialist. Just being in a library inspires and awes me. Yesterday's experience was no exception as I caught Rachel's contagious enthusiasm for learning and accessing information.


When I first discovered libraries as a young girl, I thought I had died and gone to heaven. I couldn't read enough books or gather enough information fast enough to satisfy my curiosity or desire to learn. The more I learned, the more I knew there was to learn, and I wanted to know it all. This insatiable appetite to learn it all is even harder now to address with the rate at which knowledge is expanding exponentially and when it is so accessible through so many avenues.

In spite of this strong desire to use my mind and to learn from books and other sources of intellectual knowledge, that alone won't quench the thirst or feed the hunger. The heart must be included in the search.

A few quotes to explain the importance of the heart in regards to learning:
  • "It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye." Antoine de Saint Exupéry from The Little Prince.
  • "The heart has eyes which the brain knows nothing of." Charles H. Perkhurst
  • The human heart knows things the eyes don't see, and feels things the mind cannot understand."
  • "..it came to a time in my life when my heart told me things that my mind did not know...." Harold B. Lee quoting a prominent university professor
  • "When we understand more than we know with our minds, when we understand with our hearts, then we know that the Spirit of the Lord is working upon us." Harold B. Lee
  • "The heart is wiser than the intellect." J. G. Holland
  • "If I create from the heart, nearly everything works; if from the head, almost nothing." Marc Chagall

In order to learn from the heart and allow it to guide our rigorous intellectual and academic pursuits, it is imperative that we take time to be still and to listen. The heart whispers so we have to listen closely.

It is important that as we pursue the getting of intellectual knowledge with academic rigor that we don't look beyond the mark by being past feeling. There will be times our hearts will provide answers to questions such as how to best meet the needs of our diverse learners that all the intellect and all the knowledge in all the libraries of the world won't provide.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

McCullough and Reading

David McCullough said in his 2003 Jefferson Lecture for the National Endowment for the Humanities: "We are what we read." He added that this was no less true in that distant founding time of our nation. Therefore, when he studies the life of a person, he not only searches for what the person wrote, but also searches to discover what he/she read.

McCullough mentions in this same speech that reading is a means of education and gaining knowledge. But books mean more than knowledge in the basic sense. Books allow minds to meet, ideas to be exchanged, and experiences to be remembered or imagined. Those who don't read impoverish themselves.

Dr. Seuss said it succinctly:
The more you read,
the more things you will know.
The more that you learn
the more places you'll go.

Considering that reading is so important, it is critical that we keep the following in mind:
  • "It is a great thing to start life with a small number of really good books which are your very own," said Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The results of one research project indicated that while the average American home had 137 books, the average Hispanic family with an English Language Learner (s) only had 26. There are many Hispanic homes that have none.
  • A book doesn't have to be read in English to carry the message. For instance, a monolingual Spanish speaking student who is learning English doesn't have to wait until he/she is proficient in English to read books---Let her read Anne Frank in Spanish. According to Dale Rees an ALS (Alternative Language Student) Coordinator in Salt Lake City School District, "Ten years from now the student won't remember whether Anne Frank was read in English or Spanish, but she will know that she read it."
  • Mark Twain said, "The man [child] who doesn't read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them." In other words, focusing only decoding skills, especially for English Language Learners, won't help them to fall in love with books. Exposure to books is what creates a love for books....and a by-product of a love for books is a desire to learn to read them.
  • Children, including our diverse learners and English Language Learners, can comprehend more than they can read on their own. Therefore, we must read books to them that they are unable to read on their own.
  • Great literature comes from many different cultural backgrounds, not just the dominant culture. Therefore, we must not only expose all children and youth to a variety of genres, but also to great literature from a variety of cultures.

May all of us follow the counsel of William Faulkner, "Read, read, read." As we do so, and as we encourage our young to do so, we will reap the benefits that David McCullough claims come from reading.