creative activities and multiculturalism

Review the unit readings and resources, including the NAEYC Code of Ethical Conduct sections  I-1.8 and I-1.10 to learn about our responsibility as educators to teach children the importance of respecting and valuing differences in others. Children are naturally curious to learn about people who look or act differently than they do. Therefore, the early childhood classroom is an ideal place to teach them to understand and care about others so they can become responsible global citizens.
In this video, two teachers balance multiple ethnicities in their classroom. Pay attention to how they work to make all students feel comfortable and at home in the classroom, including students who do not speak English.
Describe the creative strategies and activities the teachers in the video used to make all students feel comfortable in the classroom. What strategies do they use to include students who have low English language proficiency? In your opinion, are the strategies effective in creating an environment that supports the needs of all learners and build critical? Why or why not?
Albert Einstein is famously observed that the only serious method of education is to be an example and for adding if you cant help it, be a warning example. Reflecting on the first part of his statement, describe how teachers own attitudes and values can be reflected in the classroom.  Share an example where you have observed or experienced negative attitudes or lower expectations for some people based on factors such as ethnicity, gender, or culture.  What was the impact on those involved, and what are the lessons of this warning example?

Using Kahneman’s Attention Theory explain a sport specific task. Remember this t

Using Kahneman’s Attention Theory explain a sport specific task. Remember this theory involves the idea of flexible attention that still has a limited capacity – meaning we still have a single “pool” of cognitive effort we are able to allocate and the allocation of these resources are influenced by several factors.
Therefore, explain the skill you’d be performing and the context in which it would perform, what your arousal state is and how that affects your attentional capacity level. Then using the allocation policy provide examples of things outside of the skill itself that would pull attention including enduring dispositions, momentary intentions, and evaluation of demands on capacity. Finally, explain how you would or would not complete the skill based on these allocations (i.e. your response).

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Sex (Ed) Worksheet You are expected to watch the documentary Sex(Ed): The Movie

Sex (Ed) Worksheet
You are expected to watch the documentary Sex(Ed): The Movie (2014) and answer the following questions. This worksheet is due online in D2L on Friday, March 26th by 11:00pm. The film can be found here:
https://tubitv.com/movies/497835/sexed-the-movie?utm_source=google-feed&tracking=google-feed .
This assignment will be graded based on completing all of the areas and the amount of depth that you go into when answering the questions.
1. When was the first sex education film created?________________________________
2. Approximately, how many sex education films have been made?_______________________________
3. What type of content have/do sex education videos cover?
4. How is sex education being taught in the U.S.?
5. What were some of the concerns raised about teaching sex education in schools?

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You are expected to watch the documentary Sex(Ed): The Movie
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OVERVIEW: Chapter summaries should be written and organized as if you were plann

OVERVIEW:
Chapter summaries should be written and organized as if you were planning to teach someone
about the material within the chapter that has never been introduced to the subject matter. You
must include, define, and discuss major concepts, theories/theorists, and real-world examples that
discuss the material in relation to the social word. Design your chapter summary around providing
the reader with a general yet descriptive overview of the material while uplifting its significance
to sociology. Chapter Summaries must be written in Times New Roman & size 12 font; a minimum
of 500 words but no more than 700; in ASA format (i.e. American Sociological Association).
INTRODUCTION PARAGRAPH
The introduction paragraph should provide a high-level description of the respective
chapter you have chosen to summarize. Within the paragraph, you should seamlessly include the
following in essay format:
I. The chapter you have chosen to summarize;
II. The key points throughout the chapter that you will discuss;
III. Key questions that the reader should keep in mind that are answered throughout the
chapter; (e.g. What is a sociological imagination? What makes an issue a social
problem? What are the dominant theoretical perspectives in sociology?)
IV. A thesis statement that explains how the information within the chapter is significant
to sociology as a social science.
BODY PARAGRAPHS:
Within the body of the chapter summary you must include key concepts, theories/theorist,
and real-world examples that relate the material to social world. It is important to explain the
material as if you were teaching it to someone who is learning it for the first time—be descriptive,
detailed, and technical. Write as if you are the professor teaching to a student in an introduction to
sociology class. When you first introduce a key concept and/or theory/theorist it should be
italicized or in bold; this is for readability so that they may be easily identifiable.
CONCLUSION PARAGRAPH:
In the conclusion paragraph you should readdress dominant themes discussed throughout
your paper. Revisit proposed questions from readers that were answered throughout your chapter
summery. Finally, end with explaining the significance of the material as it is relevant to sociology

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Chapter summaries should be written and organized as if you were plann
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