Friday, December 18, 2020

Will you Pay it Forward?


What is the best gift you've ever received? What is the best gift you've ever given? Which is better: to give or to receive?

Pay It Forward is a 2000 American film based on the novel of the same name by Catherine Ryan Hyde. When 11 1⁄2-year-old Trevor McKinney begins seventh grade in Las Vegas, Nevada, his social studies teacher Eugene Simonet gives the class an assignment to devise and put into action a plan that will change the world for the better. Trevor's plan is a charitable pyramid scheme, based on good deeds rather than profit. He calls his plan "Pay it forward", which means the recipient of a favor does a favor for a third party rather than paying the favor back.

Will you Pay it Forward?: "A California man launched a Facebook campaign to get others to Pay it Forward on December 1st. Why not pay it forward every day?"

Your assignment: Devise one way to 'Pay it Forward' in the next week. Carry out your plan and be prepared to share it with the class 



Thursday, November 12, 2020

Coup D'etat

 


Imagine that a ruler of another country lost an election and refused to concede defeat. Instead, he lied about the vote count. He then filed lawsuits to have ballots thrown out, put pressure on other officials to back him up and used the power of government to prevent a transition of power from starting.

1) How would you describe this behavior? 

2) What do we call an attempt to overrule the will of the people, ignore a country’s laws and illegitimately grab political power? 

3) Compare/ contrast the actions of outgoing President Trump? What are the similarities? Differences? 

4) What's next? Do you think President Trump should concede? Why or why not? 

5) What are the implications for the future of America? Is this a security threat? How does this change the way we see elections?


Monday, October 26, 2020

Make America Scared Again



With Election Day right around the corner from Halloween, it is festively fitting for people around the nation to dress up as the next potential president on the scariest day of the year. Since 1996, Spirit Halloween has accurately predicted who would win the presidency based on sales of presidential candidate masks. For 2020 with social distancing and minimal trick or treating it is hard to see this having the same sample size as the past. 


A latex mask of US President Donald Trump is one of the favorites in the run-up to Halloween celebration this year; even in Mexico.

Does this mean 'The Donald' will be our next president?  You decide...

'Trumpacabra'                   'Creepy Joe'

 'Barackula'               'Hillareficent'
 
Print and cut out your favorite.  Attach to a popsicle stick or tie string to wear. 

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Happy Murderous Internatoinal Pirate Day!



Yesterday was Indigenous Peoples Day, the holiday that celebrates the peoples and cultures who thrived before the arrival of Christopher Columbus, the murderous, enslaving explorer who is frequently (and many say incorrectly) credited as the first European to “discover” the Americas. While there is still a federal holiday called Columbus Day, in recent years, the day has been rightly supplanted by Indigenous Peoples Day in order to celebrate the people who already called the Americas home before Columbus's 1492 landfall. (Including here in Cincinnati).

Despite this, Columbus is still championed by many Italian-Americans eager to see themselves as part of the tapestry of U.S. history. But I think we’d be better served lionizing Link Wray, another famous American you've probably never heard of, but who had a huge impact on our American popular culture.




Monday, August 24, 2020

What is Current Events?


1) What made these events Headlines?

2) What similarities or differences did these events share?

3) Which do you think is the most important? Least?  Why?

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Monumental Debate


Few speeches echo across generations. When they do they share important characteristics. They are breathtakingly courageous, or uniquely of the moment, or both. They combine elements of drama, language and context with a manner of delivery that matches the message's significance. The speech that Martin Luther King made on 28 August 1963, to 250,000 Americans who had marched on Washington, was all these things.

The monument commemorating this historic event was not.


The stern look on Dr. King's face, his body language, and even the paraphrased 'misquote' on the statue's side have all drawn criticism.


But could it be worse?  


Carved in rock or cast in bronze, America's monuments are intended to impart an unquestionable truth about the people and the events they commemorate.


The King memorial is not the only contoroversial monument to come to DC.


Even George Washington's statue was found offensive and comical to many Americans of the time.


Check out these 9 most baffling monuments and then design one of your own.



Filmmaker Tom Trinley drove across the United States towing a 1965 Airstream trailer and visited six historic sites to unveil the truth behind the myths of some of our most recognizable, and misunderstood, national monuments.


Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Confederate Controversy


Should these Confederate monuments stay or should they go?




Friday, May 15, 2020

This Changes Everything



The COVID-19 crisis has really screwed up a lot of teenaged lives. In this episode, six students from Talawanda High School, in Oxford, Ohio, talk about how the pandemic has affected them—academically, socially, mentally—and what the experience might mean for Generation Z as a whole. The group also looks at how local, state, and federal officials have responded to the crisis and asks, "What can we learn from all this?" Episode producer and host Eliot Berberich is a freshman at Talawanda High School, but already an experienced student journalist and podcaster. Interview recorded May 8, 2020, with everyone calling into Eliot Berberich's home studio via Google Meet.


1) What have you liked about our 'Online Learning' experiment?

2) What would you change? Why?

3) What are you 'nostalgic' for (do you miss) from the way school was before? Explain.

4) Given the choice would you rather keep learning this way or go back to school in the Fall? Why?

5)  Decades down the line will do you think you will look back on this as a defining moment in your lives? Why?

6) What predictions do you make for how this will affect 'Generation Z' as a whole?



Friday, May 8, 2020

Face Mask Fears



Lawmakers are recommending that residents wear face masks in several major cities including New York, Detroit, and Philadelphia, but many African Americans fear they could be labeled a threat if they cover their faces to protect themselves. Jericka Duncan speaks to some black men who believe they were profiled by police while wearing face masks to combat coronavirus.

Sadly this is not the only story where black men have been unjustly profiled.

In Chapter 10: 'The Matrix In Me' we learned that we all have 'Implicit Bias,' or unconscious prejudice, whether we are aware of it or not. But if we consciously agree with what our unconscious minds reveal we can deal with it.

1) Why were the black men in both instances questioned in the first place?

2) Were the white men/ officers in these stories racists? Why or why not?

3) What is the difference between 'racism' and 'bias?'

4) What could have been done to change the outcome if anything?

5) What do these stories reveal about the deeper problem of race in America?

Monday, May 4, 2020

4 Dead In Ohio

50 years ago today, May 4 [1970] -- Four students at Kent State University in Ohio, two of them women, were shot to death by a volley of National Guard gunfire. At least 8 other students were wounded.  But why?



1) Who might Neil Young be referring to in the line “found her dead on the ground”?


2) What do you think Neil Young means in the song with the lyric “we’re finally on our own?”


3) What did students at Kent State think about the Vietnam war then?  What do they think now?


4) Do you think everyone agreed with Neil Young’s view of what occurred at Kent State? Why do you think “Ohio” might have also been a “touchstone of opposition” for people that supported the Vietnam War?


5) In what ways do you think the song “Ohio” might have been a more effective method of expressing shock and opposition than any journalism could have been?

Monday, April 20, 2020

Drone Shot of My Yacht


The coronavirus, we are sometimes told, is a great equalizer, preying on both the elite and the ordinary, the well-heeled and the downtrodden.

"It doesn't care about how rich you are, how famous you are," Madonna assures us in her latest video, sitting naked in bathwater laced with rose petals.

But being rich sure does let you ride out the pandemic in much more pleasant surroundings.

Hollywood billionaire David Geffen recently told his Instagram followers that he was hanging out in the Caribbean to escape the virus. He hoped everyone was keeping safe, he wrote.

For good measure, he included a picture of his 454-foot super-luxurious yacht, the Rising Sun, apparently shot from a drone.





Thursday, April 16, 2020

Life Immitates Art


During a period when art lovers can't simply visit a museum or gallery, a new social media phenomenon has arisen as a creative outlet. Participants isolating at home amid the pandemic are encouraged to recreate a prominent work of art using everyday objects.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Don't Give Up the Ship!



On Monday, Capt. Brett Crozier, the commander of the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt, sent a letter to the Navy pleading for permission to unload his crew, including scores of sailors sickened with Covid-19, in Guam, where it was docked. The Pentagon had been dragging its feet, and the situation on the ship was growing dire.

“We are not at war,” he wrote. “Sailors do not need to die. If we do not act now, we are failing to properly take care of our most trusted asset — our sailors.”

After the letter was leaked to The San Francisco Chronicle, the Navy relented. But on Thursday, it relieved Captain Crozier of his command.

Do you agree with the decision?  Why or why not?  What Would you have done?

Read the opinion of professor Tweed Roosevelt,  Great Grandson of Teddy Roosevelt for whom the aircraft carrier is named, and then type your response in the comments below.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Corona Jesus


Solid Rock (Big Butter Jesus) Church in Monroe, visible from Interstate 75, continued to hold public worship services Sunday despite a request not to from the Butler County Health Department.

Bringing together a large number of people during a pandemic increases the pace at which the Coronavirus spreads, overwhelming our hospital systems, posing a significant risk to members within the congregation, and the public at large.

The church issued a statement saying, “As Christians, we are charged by Jesus Christ to obey the laws of our land. Therefore, if the laws of our nation should ever change with respect to our First Amendment right to assemble, thereby restricting us from having our church doors open, we will willingly comply."

Read the rest of the article and then answer these questions on https://classroom.google.com/h Googleclass.



Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Dr. Amy



The Ohio Department of Health Director, Dr. Acton has stood by DeWine and guided the state through its fight against the coronavirus (COVID-19) over the course of the past month. In that time, Acton has been lauded for her calming and optimistic approach during an inarguably trying time.

Monday, March 23, 2020

CV19 Daffodils



In Governor DeWine’s daily news briefings, streamed live so ordinary residents can pop in, he strikes a somber but not panicked tone, calmly reciting the latest statistics and frequently deferring to his health director, Dr. Amy Acton, to answer specific questions. But with each passing day, DeWine has made a point to emphasize the gravity of what the nation is facing, and what we can do to defeat it.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

The Only Thing We Have To Fear...

When Franklin D. Roosevelt took the stage and delivered his first inaugural address, he beheld legions of frightened Americans. The year was 1933. A quarter of the nation was unemployed.

As he bellowed those now-famous words—the only thing we have to fear is fear itself—Roosevelt couldn’t have fathomed the face of his country a mere 85+ years later. For there’s no doubt that “nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance” seizes the citizenry more tightly today than ever before.

One explanation for the incapacitating nature of contemporary fear is that our brains simply are not wired to process modern life. In his 2008 book The Science of Fear: Why We Fear the Things We Shouldn’t—and Put Ourselves in Greater Danger, journalist Daniel Gardner unfolds the ways we fail to assess risk properly, as well as the sobering consequences.

Our subconscious mind issues lightning-fast judgments about danger based on principles that evolved during our cave-dwelling days. Psychologists refer to this as the 'fight or flight' mechanism: the gut instinct served us well when it steered us clear of places where humans often met with hungry predators. Today, though, the nightly news stocks our subconscious with frightening images of plane crashes, superbugs, and child abductions; faced with related decisions, our guts make the decidedly wrong calls.

Take for example the 12 months after 9/11, during which, researchers now know, an understandably large number of people heeded their guts and avoided flying. Fear itself put millions of additional people in cars. Flying, however, is vastly safer than driving, and in that one year, traffic fatalities on U.S. roads spiked. An additional 1,595 people lost their lives. At the end of the year, air travel numbers returned to normal, and traffic fatalities resumed their disconcerting but regular rates.

Our brains are poorly equipped to weigh risks that don’t result in immediate negative consequences, Psych­ology Today observed last February. One more cigarette, one more fast-food meal: What’s the harm? Marketers, politicians, and entertainers grasp with precision how brains misfire, and they apply this knowledge to great gain. Fearmongering has worked wonders for everyone from real estate agents hawking gated communities to advocacy groups attempting to recruit members.

A "fnord" is pop-culture term used to describe something in the news media that subconsciously generates a feeling of uneasiness and confusion, preventing rationality, and creating fear. The term originally comes from 'conspiracy theorists' who claim we are surrounded by 'fnords' every day and that the governments of the world are using them to control us. Can you see the 'fnords?!'



Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Dangerous Numbers



Numbers have a certain mystique: They seem precise, exact, sometimes even beyond doubt. But outside the field of pure mathematics, this reputation rarely is deserved. And when it comes to the coronavirus epidemic, buying into that can be downright dangerous.

Naturally, everyone wants to know how deadly COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, is. The technical term for that is the case fatality rate — which is, put simply, the number of people who have died from the disease (D) divided by the total number of people who were infected with it (I), or D/I. As of Tuesday morning, at least 1,873 people were thought to have died from the disease worldwide and 72,869 people to have been infected.

Monday, February 24, 2020

Debatable


How much have you been paying attention to the presidential campaign? Do you discuss it with your friends and family or in school? Do you have a favorite candidate or issue? Are you confused or frustrated by it all?
Watch highlights from the ninth Democratic presidential debate in Las Vegas as Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Amy Klobuchar clashed with debate newcomer Mike Bloomberg.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Right or Popular


What is right is not always popular and what is popular is not always right.
-Albert Einstein 
The U.S. Senate has spoken, and President Trump will remain in office. On Wednesday, he was acquitted of both impeachment counts, almost entirely down party lines. Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney was the only senator to break ranks, prompting criticism from his party and praise from Senate Democrats.

What do you think?  Do you agree with Mitt Romney's decision or not?  Why do you think he voted against his 'Party?'  How would you have voted?  Would you have remained loyal or voted for your conscience? Why?

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

RIP Kobe



An obituary acknowledges the loss of our loved one, expresses the pain of their loss and the joy that their presence among us brought.

According to James Loewen in his book Lies My Teacher Told MeSasha and Zamani are two aspects of time as expressed in some Eastern and Central African cultures. Sasha are spirits known by someone still alive, while Zamani are spirits not known by anyone currently alive. The recently departed whose time overlapped with people still here are the Sasha, the living dead. They are not wholly dead, for they live on in the memories of the living ... when the last person knowing an ancestor dies, that ancestor leaves the Sasha for the Zamani, the dead. As generalized ancestors, the Zamani are not forgotten but revered.

Your assignment:  write your own Obituary.  Follow the steps outlined in the linked article.  Assume you live to be at least 80 years old.  What will you have accomplished?  Who will you leave behind?  What will your legacy be?  

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Impeachment?


A fiercely divided House Judiciary Committee has approved two articles of impeachment against President Trump, setting up a historic trial before the full Senate that makes him only the third president to be impeached. The impeachment articles, passed over sharp Republican protests, accused the president of abusing the power of his office and obstructing Congress. The votes and a fractious two-day debate preceding them reflected the realities of the hyperpartisan divisions in American politics that have grown wider during Mr. Trump’s three years in office.

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Conflict In Iran


What is the history leading up to the current conflict in Iran?

Is our US foreign policy in Iran based more on REALISM or IDEALISM?

Monday, January 6, 2020

Decade In Review




What was the most important 'News' of the last 10 years? Why?


1) What made these events Headlines?

2) What similarities or differences did these events share?

3) Which do you think is the most important? Least? Why?