March 2011 Blog Posts

A Graduate Travel Abroad Program in Education to Paris, France

We are proud to announce that this is the sixth year of our Study Abroad Program.  For the past five years many applicants had traveled to Italy and France.  This year our applicants will be traveling to Paris, France.

The School of Education believes in giving our students the competitive edge in the field of education by exposing them to a global environment and having a well-rounded perspective of the field of pedagogy. 

While studying abroad you will be able to experience first hand how another country’s education system instructs their students and this will give you a broader perspective on education.  As an education major there are multiple opportunities for you to explore the education system in other countries.

Learning in an international environment enhances a student’s intellect to become an effective educator.  As an educator we hold a responsibility to the students we teach to be open minded and well rounded individuals. Our students wish to have teachers with life experience and knowledge not just of the subject that they are teaching, but also of what is going on in our growing global community. Being able to relate global events and history in the classroom is essential in providing our students with a broad knowledge of how things work and understanding different cultures and ideas.

This Travel Abroad Program is open, not only too our St. John’s Graduate students, but to all educators.

For more information on our Study Abroad Program, contact Dr. Smita Guha, guhas@stjohns.edu or Bernadette Zacharuk, zacharub@stjohns.edu.

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Bullying in Real and Cyber Worlds: What Needs to be an Ongoing Conversation

By Sandra Abrams, Ph.D.

 

Bullying. Some say it is part of the human condition and culture, a type of territory-claiming exercise similar to a Silverback drumming his chest to establish dominance.  To discuss the existence of primitive or innatei gestures and positioning (a debatable pointii) may help to rationalize bullying, but should we do that—rationalize bullying?   Should we be able to say that we all need to be bullied to ‘develop a thick skin’?   A character-building experience (usually a euphemism to help the pain subside) doesn’t have to stem from victimization.  Rather, doing the right thing and acting ethically is a stronger, healthier character-building experience.

No doubt bullying is a knotty topic, aptly distinguished as a ‘tangled ball’ by Susan Raisch, the founder of the anti-bullying blog, Tangled Ball (http://www.tangledball.blogspot.com). And bullying becomes increasingly complicated by its presence in virtual environments and the viral nature of vituperative (and sometimes subversive) words spreading through a click of an online button. The solution to bullying is not simple.  But, as Susan Raisch suggests on her blog, it’s a matter of “pulling out one strand, one problem and one perspective at a time.”  And, as my students and I discovered through online and face-to-face surveys, people have multiple perspectives regarding bullying in real and virtual spaces—from innocent blindness to passive acceptance to active rejection to passionate activism. This spectrum of understanding suggests that we need to inspire people to be reflective, and as demonstrated on MTV’s If You Really Knew Me, people need to understand that loneliness and pain are universal feelings and portholes to empathy, not signs of weakness worthy of exploitation. Education can help, but it needs to be widespread and include communication and partnership among parents, teachers, and students.  And, most of all, the education and discussion regarding bullying and cyber bullying need to become an ongoing, integrated part of school and family cultures so that ethical judgment, active consideration, and kindness to others become ingrained practices.


 [i] For more, see:

Bullying. (December 2008).  Caslon Analytics. Retrieved from http://www.caslon.com.au/cyberbullyingnote3.htm 

Tiatorio, A. (April 2010). Ethics in the news: Unlearning bullying. The Sun Chronicle. Retrieved from http://www.thesunchronicle.com/articles/2010/04/08/columns/7123079.txt

 [ii] For more, see:

Fisher, E. (September 2009). The bully in pigtails: Girls and bullying. Intent. Retrieved from http://www.intent.com/erikfisher/blog/bully-pigtails-girls-bullying.

Graham, S. (2010). What educators need to know about bullying behaviors. Phi Delta Kappan, 92(1),66-69.

Phillips, D.A. (2007). Punking and bullying: Strategies in middle school, high school, and beyond. Journal ofInterpersonal Violence, 22(2), 158-178.

 
If you would like to get in touch with Dr. Abrams about her work, you can e-mail her at: abramss@stjohns.edu.