Posts tagged ‘teachers’
One Thing I Never Learned in School Was How to Come Up With a Proper Title
Tamar | February 10, 2010 | 5:15 pm | Where Have You Been? | No comments

Like Sharon and Jacquie, I’ve also grown up in an Orthodox Jewish family. My mother was raised Modern Orthodox, and my father with no religion at all, and both eventually turned to the Orthodox Jewish lifestyle instead. Because of that, I was raised in an environment where I was always comfortable asking any sort of questions and with a tolerance for irreverence, and I was therefore sent to schools with the same ideals.

The school where I spent third grade through twelfth grade was the one large ultra-religious, all-girls school in my neighborhood, so they had no choice but to accept all kinds of students. I don’t know how much any of you know about Orthodox Jewry, but there are many divided sects that come into conflict elsewhere, and they all came together in my school. There was no real judgment there, not when we’d all grown up together. We had a strict uniform in school, but no one really minded when we were younger, and by the time high school came around, we’d all found ways to express ourselves through accessories and makeup (which was against the rules, but that stopped no one). I never really cared much, and it actually took me a long time to adjust to being in schools where I had to have a new outfit every day.

In elementary school, we had a double curriculum, in which we learned Jewish subjects (we called them “Hebrew classes”) and normal, secular subjects. In the mornings, we studied things like the Hebrew language, Bible classes, and Jewish laws. After lunch, we covered math, science, grammar, history, and all the other standard subjects. I developed a healthy love for all of it, whether Hebrew or English.

In junior high, things changed quite a bit. While before then, we’d only had two teachers- one for Hebrew classes, one for English- now, we were departmentalized with different teachers for different subjects. While before then, the teachers were viewed as distant authorities, no matter how “nice” they were, now we were encouraged to build relationships with our teachers. We joked around with them in class as we reached our teenage years; I guess that it was because we had decided that we were old enough now to carry on mature conversation with our teachers. Classes went more in depth and questions and philosophical discussion were as common as simple text-based lectures. We also put together many presentations and activities based on what we’d learned.

High school took this a step further. Most of my teachers were respected members of the community, and many took on a “mentor” role for students. There was a potpourri of teaching styles, as is common in any school, but we were generally encouraged to ask questions and we were given satisfactory answers. One thing my school did lack, though, was many options for English classes. We took the requirements and there were few classes beyond those, not including Advanced Placement courses. We were encouraged to go to college, but they wanted us to get through it as quickly as possible, so only non-Regents courses through which we could get college credit were offered. (I understand that the new principal has changed that, though, and there are now many other courses offered, but that was after my time.) I was fortunate- the principals encouraged me to skip several English classes and take all my twelfth grade courses a year early, so by the time that I was a senior, I was able to take only Advanced Placement courses, and permitted to take several extra ones on my own.

After high school, I spent a year abroad in Israel, in a Hebrew studies program that really emphasized introspection and individuality above academics, even though we did have a six-day week with more class time than ever before. That year really was about understanding myself and where I wanted to go with my life, and I probably learned more then than I did during any other school year.

Now, I’ve been in Brooklyn College for almost two years, and I’ve really enjoyed it. I love the variety of classes in particular- I’ve been able to take classes on everything from Japanese to counseling to Harry Potter! I do miss the Hebrew subjects, though, and I’ve encouraged my family to engage in absurd Bible trivia games at the Sabbath table so I can still enjoy them.

Interestingly, I think my enjoyment of certain subjects faded once I took them in school and turned fun into work. Now that I no longer study physics, the Bible, philosophy, or even math, I love discussing them and reading books about them during my downtime. Although there are some classes that have increased my interest in subjects (for example, I didn’t like philosophy or Harry Potter until I took class on them), I’m generally happiest when I’m learning on my own, via the internet or even a debate with my brother. And when I’m happy, I learn best.

Growing up in the Bronx as an Asian
Vincent Xue | February 7, 2010 | 3:46 pm | Where Have You Been? | No comments

It’s difficult to say where education begins so I guess I will start off with daycare. When I was 4 or 5 (The age before kindergarten), my parents had to work long hours because they did not have an education. My parents came to America around 1988 and so they had only been in the country for two years. My brother was the first born in ’88 and became the first US citizen in our family. Because my family did not have much of an education, most of their time was spent working. My mom was a seamstress and my dad worked in a restaurant. Both of them dedicated long hours of their day into work and so I ended up going to a local daycare.

I feel that my daycare experience was different because I was the only Asian. Growing up in this African American/Hispanic community, I did not socially connect with any of the children. There initially was a language barrier but this was quickly overcome because my parents were not around to speak to me in Chinese. From TV and daycare, I grew up learning English as my dominant language but as I grew older another language barrier formed between my parents and me. Even to this day, I cannot carry on a conversation with them in either Chinese or English.

Not only was I racially different in my daycare, but I also lived in a dangerous community. When I began attending kindergarten in public school, the Bloods were an active gang in my neighborhood and it was dangerous to go outside. I remember my mom colored my DragonBallZ book bag to cover all of the red because she thought that it was safer. I was lucky enough to live only 2 blocks away from school and so I did not experience any of the gang violence firsthand.

In my first grade summer, I went to summers school with my brother. Usually summer school was for students who failed but for me, I went because my brother went. (He accidently mis-bubbled his state exam and because my parents were busy with work, I went with him.) Summer school was when I realized that there was a strong racial prejudice against Chinese. One day a friend had taught me the phrase “Ching chong ma ka hai ya.” I did not know what it meant because my parents didn’t teach me Chinese and I took my friend’s word that this phrase was some Chinese saying that meant hello. When I told my parents, they told me it was like a curse to Chinese people. (There really is no meaning to it)

In second grade, I was accepted into a Summer Program called “Summer on the Hill” held at the private school Horace Mann. This program was an enrichment program that educated students who came from disadvantaged public schools. With my acceptance into this program, my summers and weekends would be spent at Horace Mann learning new topics until 8th grade.

After graduating public school, I was accepted into a school called Maritime Academy. This school was a selective program that granted admission by only by lottery. My brother had recently been accepted 2 years earlier and he was part of the first graduating class. Maritime was an experimental school that started out small and us students were also guinea pigs like Jacquie. It modeled its classes like high school and we had to take 9 periods of classes along with afterschool activities. My favorite part about middle school was our senior trip to Disney World. I graduated Maritime as valedictorian to attend Bronx Science.

Bronx Science was a great experience for me. For the first time, I was not the only Asian in the school and I was able to connect to my own culture. Bronx Science was a school that nurtured learning and all of the teachers loved what they did. I feel that the education I got there was exceptional and it taught me how to love learning like how the teachers there loved teaching.

When it was time for me to apply to college, I like many of my friends wanted to attend an Ivy League school. Though I was denied from all of them, I decided that I would make the best of my choices and chose Macaulay Honors College. I decided that my own passion for learning would pave my future. Coming to Macaulay, however has provided many opportunities I did not expect. I am happy with my choice and feel that there are many more opportunities that Macaulay will offer for me.

My first year in Macaulay was one of my best learning experiences. After finding my way into a Bioinformatics Lab at Hunter, I learned many computer skills, and a lot about time management.  I learned that I had the opportunity to make choices on my own and felt that I could direct myself where I wanted to. I feel that learning how to push myself was my greatest lesson in my life.

Gotta Love Catholic School
Rob DiRe | February 2, 2010 | 9:33 pm | Where Have You Been? | 2 Comments

My first post here in the reflections.  Hope it goes well.

Where have I been?

My formal education may be considered rather boring.

Raised Catholic.  Catholic elementary school, starting in Pre-K all the way through the 8th grade.  What did I learn in those ten years?  No running or ball playing in the playground, and a wide array of filthy jokes.  Sad, isn’t it?

I may be making too light of it, I had my coursework.  Times tables, some algebra, some sciences.  Sadly nothing challenging.  Certainly not what one would expect from a Catholic school that prides itself as one of the best in the city.  I digress, it was a delightful experience socially.  That must count for something.  And to the school’s credit, it sends many students to decent high schools with good scholarships.  After the eighth grade, I may have needed a change of pace.

Welcome to Holy Cross High School, where I would continue my Catholic education.  Fortunately, thanks to my successes in elementary school, these four years would be free (a luxury I liked very much, considering I chose it again on my next stop).  Before I get ahead of myself, we stick with the high school years.  To be honest, academically it Holy Cross was not the greatest choice.  I was rarely challenged, save for a College English course I took for credit in my senior year.  It did wonders for my appreciation of literature and poetry, rekindled a love for reading I had lost due to becoming complacent with pedestrian coursework, and challenged me to develop a sense of myself in my own writing.  My so called ‘academic’ writing was not as much polished as it was salvaged, but I developed a stream of consciousness style I enjoy very much, and often have to hold back in academic writing.

However, in my high school years, there was another type of learning that occurred.  Professor Ugoretz encouraged us to show more than just traditional learning.  Most of my learning took place out of the classroom, and out on the football field.  Too cliche`?  I agree.  Let me explain.  I would argue endlessly about how football, or sports in general, translate to life, but that would validate the cliche`-ness I am trying to avoid.  I mean I learned from my coaches.  Not all of them, but some of them.  They instilled qualities I needed that I was not getting in the classroom.  Commitment, work ethic, challenging myself.  Things most of me teachers did not provide as I coasted along with my A’s and no school bag.  I might have been lost without them.  They taught me more than all the schooling combined.  They prepared me for college better than anything I learned in 12th grade psychology (oddly enough was taught by my football coach.  Ok bad example.  Let us restart.) They prepared me for college better than anything I learned in 12th grade physiology.  That works better.

And obviously now I am here at Macaulay, pushing along, like I learned to do, from all my schooling and all my experiences.  Furthering my education, through new courses, new relationships, and new experiences.