Saturday, December 17, 2011
Emotional Art
I Have only taken one art class in my life and I was absolutley no good at it. I have no artisitc talen what so ever but decided to try anyway. My daughter loves to paint so I decided to paint with her. This picture doe snot look much different than that a 4 year old would paint but this is what I did. To me the colors and erratic scheme of the paint represent the emotioanl trauma that children expereince in thier lives. The colore represent calm, anger, frustration, hurt and love. Children interpret the world in such unique manners and experience the world in such a different way than adults and are deeply affected by all that they see, feel and interpret. This was my attempt at portraying how all these experiences are turned into emotiona and feeling....
Sunday, December 11, 2011
"Mom, look at those men"!
We just moved from Alamogordo NM to San Antonio Tx. While we were in NM there was only one place to go shopping in town and that was Wal-Mart. One night my daughter and I were waiting in the line at the check-out and she was noticing the people in the front of the line. All of a sudden my 3 year old screams out “Mommy look at how fat those men are”! There were two extremely large men in overalls directly in front of us. I immediately felt bad for the men and hushed my daughter. I explained to her that although what she saw was the truth, it hurt people’s feelings to point their characteristics out in public. I explained to her that people were all shapes and sizes and that is the way God makes us. I also explained that sometimes people have medical conditions that make them the way they are and that we never want to hurt anyone’s feelings.
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Established Contact with My German Childhood Professional
My contact actually changed from Tonya Schmidt to Thomas Volz. He studied in New York and Turkey. He taught school in Turkey and in Boveria at the Abuture, which they call the place of higher learning durin ghte first years. He also taught Turkish students to speak English for 4 years. He has 3 boys of his own that are 11, 12 and 15 years old. Whe I asked him to tell me about povery in Germany that he might have experienced and how it affects children, this is what he wrote to me:
"In Germany the federal social security system is (still) so comprehensive that you hardly notice any differences between rich and poor students in class. As (still) most of our schools end at 1pm, lunch, nutrition and healthcare is predominantly considered a private matter. People are very touchy about the government interfering in these questions. So it is left to health care providers to inform and teach the public on a voluntary basis. Of Course schools support this, but not as an integral part of the basic curriculum. The stress is on academic subjects".
"However, times are changing. More and more schools exand their lessons into the afternoon and the schools provide lunch. This is generally a cheap alternative to private lunch served at home. Here the schools monitor ingediences and nutrition very closely because many parents are very aware of this topic"
"The gap between rich and poor is, however, quite obvious on a higher academic level. Children that are academically supported at home are more likely to proceed to higher education and achieve better results on the long run. This more a question of how educated the parents/families are. But as education and income are unextricably entwined the link between academic achievement and income is a sad (German) fact"
"In Germany the federal social security system is (still) so comprehensive that you hardly notice any differences between rich and poor students in class. As (still) most of our schools end at 1pm, lunch, nutrition and healthcare is predominantly considered a private matter. People are very touchy about the government interfering in these questions. So it is left to health care providers to inform and teach the public on a voluntary basis. Of Course schools support this, but not as an integral part of the basic curriculum. The stress is on academic subjects".
"However, times are changing. More and more schools exand their lessons into the afternoon and the schools provide lunch. This is generally a cheap alternative to private lunch served at home. Here the schools monitor ingediences and nutrition very closely because many parents are very aware of this topic"
"The gap between rich and poor is, however, quite obvious on a higher academic level. Children that are academically supported at home are more likely to proceed to higher education and achieve better results on the long run. This more a question of how educated the parents/families are. But as education and income are unextricably entwined the link between academic achievement and income is a sad (German) fact"